( I KNOW THE FORMATTING IS KIND OF WHACKED OUT, BLAME IT ON BLOGGER FOR BEING STUPID, SORRY!!!)
Ben, Devin, and I
set out to find a special place, a spot where nobody else in the writing
program was thinking of going, or seeing. A location so real, and untouched
that tourists would be foreign, and the experience would be new. We left for
Sorrento, a beach tourist town, and we would stay there at night and go out the
next day for the remote. Just getting to Sorrento was an odyssey all on its
own. We hopped on the fast train out of Rome Termini next to The Capitol after catching the tram there from our place in Trestevere.
It had to have
been the most interesting yet berserk train ride I’ve ever been on. About an
hour and a half in I was awakened by what it seemed like 3 tanned chubby
brothers yapping at each other walking through our cart, half way through the
biggest likely to be the oldest brother planted a foot, pivoted, looked the
poor soul of the medium sized boy in the eyes and absolutely slapped him into
oblivion. The culprit without any doubt turned back around and kept walking.
The brother that was struck let out a gasp and kept walking too; he seemed to
have known his place. Almost immediately after that the train came to a
complete stop next to a wild and raging brush fire. My flight senses shot to my
bag, which I slung over my shoulder, and I jumped in the direction of the
nearest exit, completely oblivious to Ben and Devin still sitting but wide-eyed
watching the flames grow,
“What the fuck, why is the train stopped?”
“Dude this is not good.”
“Damn if I blow up in the Italian
country side, not yet.”
Then the train slowing started
chugging again leaving the ripping flames behind, I sat down and just shook my
head and closed my eyes.
I woke up in what
seemed to be the Detroit of Italy, Naples. From Naples we were supposed to take
another train to Sorrento. We wanted to leave immediately; the place seeped of
dirt, and fear. It wasn’t a place to stay, or see, at least from the train
station. We jumped on the second train, which was more reminiscent of a subway
than anything. The damn thing came after we waited in the dank train station
for it to roll up for 30 minutes. The amount of people waiting was far more
than its legitimate capacity, and as soon as those doors swung open everyone on
that platform ran through as if their lives depended on it. We pushed and
pulled through the maze and got to an area where we could stand and hold on
through every screech and stop. We met a couple from New Jersey that were backpacking
right down and around the whole continent. The man, a history teacher, and the
woman, a nurse. Real salt of the earth, I turned to Devin, and said, “Those are
the kinds of people that make countries.”
He nodded as if he was thinking the
exact thing.
Eventually we were
able to sit and I wrote down each stop’s name. The road, or way to Sorrento was
long and hot, flying through Ercolano, Pompeii, Portici, Bellavista, Cavavilla
de Bronzo, flowing in and out of dark tunnels with rattling trains blowing by,
past South Gorgio a Cremano, Pozzo. Us guys had been split up and Ben was
sitting with 3 other men, and Devin with 2 and a younger lady. She was on the
phone going back and forth with the person on the other end. The Barra stop
came, and the man sitting across from her got up and left. I went over and sat
down and started talking with Devin, mostly cursing the elements, and the dark
atmosphere of the subway even with the cabins scorching hot. The younger blonde
lady looked up at me and said, “Ciao.”
I looked back, and said, “English?”
She smiled, and nodded her head.
“You ever been to Nettuno?” I
asked.
“No, I heard it’s beautiful, but
hard to get to kinda.”
“Yeah, we are from America, and
want to see real Italy, the small towns, and stuff.”
“You staying in Napoli?”
“No, no, Roma, we are students,
writers.”
“Aaah, I study Economics, much
easier than writing.”
“I don’t know about that.”
We sat talking for a few more stops
until hers rolled up, San Giovanni. She added me on Facebook, and said she’d be
in Rome for the Holi Festival. I nodded and waved goodbye.
About
20 more minutes and we were in Sorrento. We dropped our things off, grabbed
some sandwiches, a few beers, and a couple bottles of wine and went to the
beach. It was already about 8:30 or so, and we just sat there on the beach and
watched the night come in. It was all good and okay there, no real worries
about anything.
The
next morning came and we hopped on another bus to take us to our special
location and beach. Netunno. The winding crazed road in made me think that
every bus driver must have been a real professional, there was no messing
around in those parts, you had to have ice cold veins, and strong white
knuckles, because past the small brick ledge was infinity down the plush
beautiful hills. I imagined the headline: 3
good old American boys, and a few random Italians blow up in beautiful
spectacle seen from every corner of the coast.
About
an hour past and we woke up in Nettuno. We found the nearest bar, grabbed a few
beers, and sandwiches and laid out on the rocks. At first you see a rock beach
and it looks terrible and crude, but after a while it wasn’t too bad, and I
came to appreciate the fact that I didn’t have sand in every corner of my body.
We sat there talking, sleeping, making stacks of rocks. I saw two young Italian
boys playing volleyball in the water, and I went in for a swim. I went over to
them and asked if I could play, 10 minutes past and Devin was in on it as well.
We dove, jumped, fell over, laughed in the water for 45 minutes or so. The
little boys probably around 10 or 12 were just as old as Devin and I were, and
me and Devin as old as them, they didn’t speak English, we didn’t speak
Italian, but it didn’t matter, we were all just kids playing in the water
enjoying a break from the heat, and I thought sitting back on the beach, these
are the things I’ll remember. I won’t remember an assignment sitting on my
deathbed moments away, I won’t remember the score of that game, or how great
that song was, I’ll remember the interaction, the meeting of people, her smile,
the ways the boys would laugh, the essence of things, places, real beauty, and all
the colors.
One
of the mothers got my attention, and said that us playing with them was very
nice. She spoke great English, along with a few of the other ladies that were
with her.
“You have to go there for dinner,
and get an ‘uggo’, good seafood too.”
“All right, yeah we will.”
“And how’d you find out about this
place? We never see tourists.. well, tourists from so far away.”
“You know, I’m not really sure.”
“I guess things just happen
sometimes.” She said.
“Yeah, I suppose.”
The last bus left
for Nettuno at 11, and it was only 8 or so by this time so we headed up for dinner.
A kind middle-aged Italian man sat us to our seats, and I ordered 3 uggos off
the jump. Minutes later he came out with the cold beverages, along with some
appetizers that never were counted into the bill. The drinks were so perfect,
and the view so gorgeous, watching the sun drop into the sea that I thought now
everything will be underwhelming, not a goddamn thing will beat this moment. We
sipped 3 more glasses of the celestial drink, and all got the spaghetti, with
seafood just as the women advised, and jesus I’ve never felt so alive. We sat
there and watched the colors become more purple, and rapt, and the upper
regions come alive. There was nowhere else then, nobody else, just the stars,
and the open sky. It eventually got dark enough that the moon came out and it
was almost right on the edge of the horizon, huge, and bulbous, and the darkest
shade of orange. Over the next half hour it rose, and ascended into the high
sky illuminating more with color in every stage. It didn’t seem real, and I
don’t know if it still was, we all could of been dreaming drunk off the
celestial drink just imagining life to be that wild, and impulsive, mother
nature was truly messing with our minds right then with no regret, just
whispering, “just keep watching boys, you haven’t seen shit yet.”
And I kept sitting there and thinking, hell, I don’t know if I even want to anymore.
And I kept sitting there and thinking, hell, I don’t know if I even want to anymore.
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