There is no pity in Berlin, a place of prickly wounded pride.
A city of angels who fell like scars of lightning from gunmetal grey skies.
I watch old silvered rolls of film and see flying columns of seraphim as they march on by row upon row eyes ablaze flaming swords drawn in a parody of paradise. They descended into hell and are seated at the left hand of the Kaiser: Gott mit uns.
This sullen scene of no regret stains the present with the dead and past: It fits the flinty nature of the blunt Berliner under the ashen skies of winter.
I trudge across a gravel path in the bowels of Berlin, hear the grinding crunch of brittle bones below, and gird myself for the grim winter ahead.
Inspired by a visit to the Spandau Citadel in Berlin, an old star fort used by the Prussian military right up to World War I.