Scoop

Life Beyond Zoom

EARLY SPRING

T B really H. It’s bleak. Life. Lockdown. London. The view. Zoom.

I stare out of the window, while I listen to the teacher. OK, it’s a great view – if you like concrete, canals, shopping trolleys and railway lines … even the graffiti is boring: same tags, same colours, same style. The sun is going down so there are some pink streaks – they’re nice.

Mum is chatting away in her room next door. She’s doing OK with it. I think she prefers her slippers to stilettos but I’ve lost count of how many lockdowns we have had now. She’ll be zooming for hours – she loves all new technology. ‘It’s our future,’ she says.

There are so many windows out there, so many computer screens lighting up small boxes containing people who just sit there. Is this it … for ever?

I’m out of here.

The street is beyond quiet. The cool air feels good.

Rusting cars with no tyres line the road – someone stole every single tyre one night. Someone desperate, probably, as not many people have a job now or need to use their cars.

The street lamp

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Scoop

Scoop5 min read
READER Reviews
Chicken House, £6.99 Review by Jake, age ten I really enjoyed reading City of Rust because it was a definite page-turner and the storyline was fast-paced and intense. The reader is taken on a sci-fi adventure into the future where there are drone
Scoop2 min read
Childhood Diseases ... 100 Years Ago
If you were born in Britain in 1921 you could expect to live to sixty years old if you were female, and just fifty-six if you were male. Today, the average age people live to in the UK is 79 years for men and 83 for women. One reason people are livin
Scoop3 min read
The Covid Cure
We will never really know how many people are currently alive who wouldn’t be if it wasn’t for Katalin Kariko. We do know that however many thousands it already is, the number will be many times that next year. And, in the years to come, that number

Related Books & Audiobooks