“When we were your age, we wanted to change the world, make it a better place. All you lot want to do is tag the signposts.”
‘It’s art!”.
“You can’t call that art! It’s scribble! If you insist on calling it art, at least have the sense to use a capital F.”
“What did ‘your lot’ ever do to change the world? It looks like a total mess to us.”
“Well, for a start we don’t use AI.”
“Why the fuck not, it’s cool.”
“Cool!? It’s aggressive capitalism, enriches tech bosses that bankroll a fascist president and it uses up more water in an hour than a lot of people use in a day. And if you think tagging an electricity substation is art, have a look at what Keith Herring was doing in 1970.”
“For god’s sake! You ignoramus, he was scribbling on walls in Berlin!”
It’s cold in Berlin, snow is falling and Jack is lying in the back of his van shivering, the flame from a small gas oven just about prevents ice forming on the window. He wipes a small hole in the condensation and peers out, looking along the abandoned street to the Wall. Street lights reflecting from the snow give the wasteland where he is parked an almost enchanted look.
The drive here had been all but enchanting. Miles and miles on the one land corridor, no right to turn off, monitored time allowance and checkpoints at the beginning and end. He had stopped at the one service station hoping to find soup and nourishment, only to find suspicion and hostility. He was happy once he had arrived. But now he is cold, waiting for the morning to break over the gun turret by the wall. Another hour? Maybe two. He dozes off hoping that the flame doesn’t go out and the gas asphyxiate him.
She is there again, sitting at a cafĂ© this time. She is smoking, the red ash looks angry as she inhales, smoke hangs around her in a halo. He walks over to say hello … and wakes.
It’s still only half-light but Jack is so cold he needs to move. And shake off the dream, he is not sure who she is nor what she might represent but she bothers him. He steps out into the snow, it cracks and crunches under his feet. He loves the way walking on fresh–fallen snow sounds like a creaky floor and follows the sounds over to the crudely built viewing stairs up against the wall. He climbs up and looks over into no-one’s land – he can’t bring himself to say no-man’s, it divides women just as meanly. He waves at the guards in the gun tower, he is wearing a Russian issue woollen hat but do not mistake him as one of theirs. They do not return his wave. There is a desolation in the emptiness as well as their ignoring him.
It is still too early to call on his friend who lives two roads away, he will still be sleeping. But the local imbiss is already open and his friend will send him there for sausage and onions once he has woken, started drinking and smoking, so he could save time by going their first. But the smell makes him nauseous, he is vegetarian. Instead, he walks past his friend’s road and turn into the woods, looking for rabbits, birds, a mouse perhaps. Any sign of life to tell him that this is not the end of the world.
There is nothing.
