One 20-something sojourns to Italy...
Which I am.
And I can do this, obviously, if I still know the current location of my passport.
Which I don’t.
Ah vita.
I mouth the words in practice as I step off Flight United 966 to
Suddenly, the view opens up into plaza after plaza, the colors of the tanned stucco so crisp against a cloudless royal blue sky they look like cardboard cut-outs. I rack my brain to name each landmark as we pass. Trajan’s forum! I spot the thousands of figures etched onto a marble pillar and blurt to the car: “The emperor Trajan was known for his diplomacy and vast extension of the
Piazza Biscone, no?
Dave, our patriarch, replies in gruff English it is after checking the reservations he’s printed. A lot of this goes on during our trips: Dave hailing the cab, Dave sitting in the front to direct the driver, Dave haggling over which room we get, Dave creating/distributing/enforcing the itinerary. And while the control occasionally borders on militant, I welcome the preparations and traveling expertise with open, responsibility-free arms. Traveling with Dave means no thinking, bargaining, or carrying very important do-not-lose-or-you-will-be-stuck-in-a-foreign-country-indefinietely documents. Traveling with Dave means visiting an unknown world without the unknown part mattering. The man knows how to travel.
I grab the itinerary from my purse, already crumpled and ripped (I’m serious, you cannot trust me to take care of anything) and read our location. We appear to be stationed around Pee-ats-uh Na-von-ah—I delight in sounding out the words— five blocks shy from the Pantheon. While the two men negotiate a taxi price, more interesting things can be seen. I heave my luggage up the street to our apartment door, memorizing the view: quaint stone streets, a pescaria across the way, bell towers that chime just slightly off the hour. Ever the American tourist, I can’t help be reminded of the charming hotels of Vegas. But I shake my head to dispel the image; this is real.
As Dave pushes open the heavy wooden door at our stoop, I turn around once more. A seagull has perched itself on the fishery’s canopy, and I think to smell the air: the fish wafts strongly. But beyond that, a hint of gasoline from the van, a wee whiff of bread and the scent of my own sweat all accumulate to what I can only label ‘Italian town.’ I cross the threshold into the apartment and collapse on our bed. Bella Roma.
“So we take a…left here. And then a right and then…” Dave is navigating through the town as our happily delegated GPS. He finds a nook where we can grab some crispy bruschetta later; he points out a bell tower that was used during World War II for snipers; he also scares away the pesky vendors who are trying to take advantage of a young American girl who wasn’t that interested in the paintings—she was just trying to be nice.
But that’s all hypothetical. So he’s guiding this group of American ladies on a twilight tour through the mysterious alleys of
“Look, I got a great photo!” I show him my picture of the fountain, its ivory curves tinted blue by the darkening sky, with a whiskey-yellow sun setting behind it.
“Good photographers take images, not photos,” Dave’s harsh voice has a hint of playfulness as he glances at my viewfinder.
“Did you see the one I got?” He teases me with his camera. It’s the same picture, but somehow he captures the purest blue in the sky, the shiniest marble on the statue, and an aura in his sunset that somehow escapes my notice until then. This is not his first photograph. Excuse me, image.
He unzips the bag, the trusty black sack that holds our dear passports, visas, boarding passes and such and tucks in his camera so gently I expect it gets a bedtime story. The evening adventures come to close as we happily return to our beds.
“So, Miss Art History. Tomorrow is your day. You tell us which galleries we’ve got to see, and where they are.” Dave hands me the map and a pen before heading off to bed, and I put off nine-hours of jetlag to create a perfectly crafted schedule for
The morning finds me refreshed and talking to Dave’s back.
“Wait, why can’t we go?” I’m dressed in a red blouse and khakis, square glasses frame my face and my hair is pulled back in a bun: what I call my “art history” outfit. Half of the day has already passed and my helium-filled happiness is slowly leeching out of my system as I enter the living room. Dave is still wearing pajamas and rummaging through piles.
“Well, unless you know where our passports are, we’re not going anywhere but the embassy.” My secret hopes of this being a rather unfunny prank have disappeared as I see the black backpack: empty. As Dave looks up from his search, I see another empty space right where his left front tooth belongs. He notices my stare.
“And we’re also making a stop to the dentist. My tooth cracked off from the bread last night.”
It’s almost funny. I laugh. It is funny. Here is Dave, traveler-extraordinaire, and my 6-month-old nephew has more front teeth than him. Not to mention after four decades of assuming traveling responsibility he finally tastes that unfortunate dish of “I have to tell them I lost it.” I realize my reluctance to take responsibilities has cost me my favorite statue of all time. But I summon pity for the man; after all, a demi-god has fallen.
We start the day’s excursion by seeking a dentist, our fractured Italian barely getting us past “mouth” and “where.” But Dave spots a farmacia, marked by a green neon sign shaped like a plus, and we rush to its counter. The cracked tooth problem is apparently common here, because with little gesturing the cashier figures it out and rings up some denture cement. Dave presses the tooth into place and mumbles thanks. I turn to shout a grazie but the automatic glass door is already zooming shut. Damn. I still haven’t gotten to talk.
By mid-afternoon we arrive at the U.S. Embassy; its white columns and broad pediment look like something official and impressive you’d see in D.C., but amidst the pinnacle works of Western civilization, it stands out no more than a McDonalds in
Once inside, we go up a set of spiral staircases into a small lobby, taking a number even as the only occupants. I use a piece of my green gum to stick the number in my journal—proof this is seriously happening. On the wall I notice posters of baseball fields and jazz singers and a picture frame for both the current president and secretary of state. I wonder who assembled the decorations: an American or an Italian? I suppose if it was the latter, there’d be more KFC posters, monster trucks, and cowboys. But as I approach the counter to turn in my paperwork (why do they have to know when grandma was born?) I am served by a young woman with—oh, thank the lord—an American accent. I have to admit, after the day’s dental detour, I am worn out and unwilling to decipher yet another Italian accent. As I check my watch while she stamps the forms, it dawns on me: today’s art extravaganza will not happen at all; the churches with the Lindsay Talbot canon of greatest works of art close in 30 minutes. Still sleepy and filled with resignation, I manage a weak smile as she takes a replacement photo. Sorry, image.
Four hours later, we have temporary passports and are eating dinner at the HardRock Café, a traveling tradition with our group. As we munch on cheddar cheese burgers and fries, I start a new mantra in my head:
I sit back in my squeaking patio chair and inhale the city air as it slowly chills for evening, laughing with my friend and enjoying the filling meal. I know that today has cost me dearly; trips across 5,000 miles don’t happen too frequently for most and when they do occur, there are no do-overs for a bad day. But the glass of ice water feels good in my hands, the café down the street serves excellent, meaty cannelloni, and
“Grazie.” He smiles and responds.
“Prego.”
Ah vita.
