In the staProom of the police station the young policeman bumps into an older officer. The young man is fetching water, the older man is drinking coPee. Their relationship is complicated, as is often the case between police officers of diPerent generations. At the end of your career youโre trying to 1nd a point to it all, and at the start of it youโre looking for a purpose.
โMorning!โ the older man exclaims.
โHi,โ the younger man says, slightly dismissively.
โIโd oPer you some coPee, but I suppose youโre still not a coPee drinker?โ the old officer says, as if it were some sort of disability.
โNo,โ the younger man replies, like someone turning down an oPer of human Aesh.
The older and younger men have little in common when it comes to food and drink, or anything else, for that matter, which is a cause of ongoing conAict whenever theyโre stuck in the same police car at lunchtime. The older officerโs favorite food is a service station hot dog with instant mashed potatoes, and whenever the staP in the local restaurant try to take his plate away on buPet Fridays, he always snatches it back in horror and exclaims: โFinished? This is a buPet! Youโll know when Iโm 1nished because Iโll be lying curled up under the table!โ The younger manโs favorite food, if you were to ask the older officer, is โthat made-up stuP, algae and seaweed and raw 1sh, he thinks heโs some sort of damn hermit crab.โ One likes coPee, the other tea. One looks at his watch while theyโre working to see if it will soon be lunchtime, the other looks at his watch during lunch to see if he can get back to work soon. The older man thinks the most important thing is for a police officer to do the right thing, the younger thinks itโs more important to do things correctly.
โSure? You can have one of those Frappuccinos or whatever theyโre called. Iโve even bought some of that soy milk, not that I want to know what the heck they milked to get hold of it!โ the older man says, chuckling loudly, but glancing anxiously toward the younger man at the same time.
โMmm,โ the younger man murmurs, not bothering to listen.
โGetting on okay with interviewing that damn real estate agent?โ the older man asks, in a tone that suggests heโs joking, to cover up the fact that heโs asking out of consideration.
โFine!โ the younger man declares, 1nding it increasingly difficult to conceal his irritation now, and attempting to move toward the door.
โAnd youโre okay?โ the older officer asks. โYes, yes, Iโm okay,โ the younger man groans.
โI just mean after what happened, if you ever need toโฆโ โIโm 1ne,โ the younger man insists.
โSure?โ
โSure!โ
โHowโsโฆ?โ the older man asks, nodding toward the bump on the younger manโs forehead.
โFine, no problem. Iโve got to go now.โ
โOkay. Well. Would you like a hand questioning the real estate agent, then?โ the older man asks, and tries to smile rather than just stare anxiously at the younger officerโs shoes.
โI can manage on my own.โ โIโd be happy to help.โ โNoโthanks!โ
โSure?โ the older man calls, but gets nothing but a very sure silence in response.
When the younger officer has gone, the older man sits alone in the staProom drinking his coPee. Older men rarely know what to say to younger men to let
them know that they care. Itโs so hard to 1nd the words when all you really want to say is: โI can see youโre hurting.โ
There are red marks on the Aoor where the younger man was standing. He still has blood on his shoes, but he hasnโt noticed yet. The older officer wets a cloth and carefully wipes the Aoor. His 1ngers are trembling. Maybe the younger man isnโt lying, maybe he really is okay. But the older man de1nitely isnโt, not yet.