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Mitchell Sep 2013
We met on the stairs
Of a 15th century cathedral in Rome.
I was wearing my
Light gray suit that she later told me reminded
Her of the color of fresh volcano ash.

She - cut in half by the moonlight -
Wore red flats,
A ******* linen dress that
Effortlessly pronounced her *******,
While her oaken red and auburn hair
Lunged down both of her shoulders like
A waterfall or an avalanche,
Just touching the top of her belly button.

I, looking up toward the marble spires
Spinning into the scattered stillness of the nights
Opaque and cream colored stars,
Did not know she was hovering behind me watching me,
Until she had decided to speak;

If I had known, I would have ran inside.

"The cathedral is very nice, isn't it?"
I heard her ask to my back.
At the sound of her voice, I was not
Filled with that melodramatic cliché dripping
With soap opera fused emotions.

No, I
Was dipped into a large cauldron of ice-water.

There was a tremor
Somewhere
Inside of me and a heat
Ricocheting in her.

"Yes," I replied,"It is
Very nice and very old and I wonder why it is still here."

I did not know what I meant, but
From the pause and inhalation I heard immediately after, I
Believed she must have thought what was said profound.
Was I profound? Why would she believe that if it was only from
The spontaneous question that held no real physical weight? Or
From me jumping so quickly into this little

Game,

No question's asked?

"These buildings still stand because they
Are a physical memory of what we have achieved
And what we must continue to achieve
In the future
." She had come up beside me now.
Vanilla lavender lotion and mint
Toothpaste were the first smells that came to mind.  

"The future..."I said, trailing off, "The future."

"Yes, the future is very important."

"It is all we have."

"Well, all we truly have is the present, don't you agree?" I asked,
Slightly turning my head to look at her.

She was still looking up at the cathedral. She was focused on the large church bell
That hung there like the moon in the night sky. I continued
To stare at her, my question hovering vulnerable in
The air as a butterfly with its wings damaged would. Then, a
Couple passed by us in a hurry. Their hands were clasped tightly together, the man
In front and the woman looking to be dragged by him. I saw
Neither of their faces, but I imagined them both to be calm and red.

"They look to be in a hurry," she said, "Where do
You think they're going?
"

"Somewhere very important I'd imagine."

"And where is very important for you, sir?"

She turned
To meet
My gaze a

As if challenging it.

Her lips were full and painted with red lipstick. Where I thought her eyes would prove to be light colored or forest green, they were actually colorless and black. I inhaled at the sight of her, then immediately blushed. Again, our questions back and forth to each other were more of an interrogation of one's hearts and minds than flirtation. As she stared at me, I sensed that we had met before. There was something in her face that brought the feeling of an old friend or an acquaintance, like the feeling one gets when they see a past school teacher or love interest back in grade school. There was a warmth and giddy tension between us that made me feel eight years old again. I had felt so old recently. There was a sudden wink in her eyes and I then remembered the question I had asked her before.

"You haven't answered my first question," I stated seriously.

"I agree," she answered quickly, "The present is the only thing we have truly and
Do not have, all at the same time."

"What do you mean?"

"Being present 24 hours a day, seven days a week, is a very exhausting,
Trying thing,
Isn't it?

"Yes, I would agree with that."

"And being present for whatever reason, be it socially, romantically,
Professionally, etc., is really all for the future. One's own's private future goals.
Something one desires in the moment and wishes to have for oneself in the future. Our
Motivations are our desires. Our wishes. The lives we wish to own in the future."

"At times, yes, I do believe
One is present for those reasons, but
Sometimes, and I speak for myself,
I wish to lay back and let the sun burn my skin and
The clouds to blanket me, chilling me, so to remind myself
Of my placement on this planet and the miniscule and
Tremendous affect I have on my surroundings. For example...
"

"You are very talkative," she said cutting me off, "I could
Tell from the way you looked up at this cathedral all by yourself,
Lost in thought or lack thereof, that you were a talker."

She smiled and I forced a tight-lipped smirk.

"Well, I am
So talkative because you have made
Me so.
"

"So be it."

"It is so."

"Are you mad? she asked.

"Not the least bit," I returned, unsure whether I was lying to
Her because I didn't want to offend her and scare her off or because
She was so extremely beautiful.

"Well, I am glad that I can do that to you." She looked back
Up at the church bell, trying to hide her satisfied smirk.

"I have said too much. Let us both watch
The cathedral stand on her own for a bit in silence, ok?"

"That sounds good."

She took a step down from the step she had been on with me. Two steps.
There she let her head and hair fall back, taking everything in she possibly could.
I needed a drink and she needed the sky, the cathedral, the city, but I
Could only give her my company, unsure whether she truly needed it or not.
I shifted my glance from the bell tower to what was behind me. There, I saw
A wooden trolley up against the far wall near a trickling fountain
With puppets hanging from their thin clear strings. The light from the oiled lamp posts
Was a dark orange and cast an array of ****** shadows along the walls that
Encircled the square which me and the woman and many others were standing around. Night
Had set on the square, but no one had decided to go anywhere.
The square was perfect for them; anywhere else would have seemed uncomfortable.

She looked at me from two steps back and asked,
"We are being present for a better future, yes?"

"What we hope will be a better future," I said, turning
My head away from the bottom of the square back to the
Cathedral. I emphasized the word hope.

"Yes, men and women must have
Hope for something better."

"Life does not guarantee anything, does it?"

"No, I guess it doesn't. It gives you chance and we give
One another choice."

"Or," I hesitated to say what I wanted to say, "Or God does."

"God," she laughed, "What's He got to do with anything?"

"Everything and nothing, I hear."

"Don't be so vague," she grinned, turning her body completely around to me
So I could see her full figure. Her dress outlined a woman's body,
But I knew, inside, there was so much more precious things then flesh. "Hear
From who and where?"

"You choose what you wish to believe
And no one can tell you otherwise. What
You need and
What others may need can be different and should be.
This does not mean that we cannot get along.

Is there a way to be wrong in what one believes in?
She looked to want an honest answer, so I gave her one.

"Yes."

"That's it?" she asked, wanting more.

"That can't be it?"

"Yes is a decent enough answer,
But because you looked to be so talkative before,
I assumed you would have more to say on the matter."

"Assuming something
Is a very dangerous, childish thing.

"Yes," she agreed, "It is."

"If one believes in something and tries to share
Those beliefs in an unaggressive, listen-if-you-will,
Dangerously friendly, perhaps even musical way, then
The listener has their choice in the matter. They can

Walk away

No questions asked or feelings hurt.

"That," she said, "Sounds good for the listener,
But perhaps not so great for the speaker.

"
Why?"* I asked, surprised.

"Because then the speaker may turn into something
They originally did not want to be. A prophet or voice for something
They may honestly have no interest or passion for.

"I see."

"
But, please, go on."

"
On the other side, someone may believe in something fully, to their bitter core, but there needs to be a validation from another to prove their conviction. This is a weakness in their faith. They secretly doubt themselves and are trying to prove, by the obedience and following of others, that
Their belief, system, God, what have you, is a truth, a fact like the sky is blue or that fishes swim in the sea. These people with their thoughts and beliefs are the one's that are wrong. The one's that push their way onto other's without any room for being challenged or accused of falsity."

"
There are some that do not want follower's, but as soon
As they turn around, there they are.

"Yes," I nodded, "I can think of a few thinker's
That I've read or heard of that happening."

"
God, though," she laughed again lightly, "It
Is
Funny that you bring Him up."

I didn't have anything to say, so I said nothing.

"
Are you a religious man...?" she asked.

"
My name is Robert Commento and no, I am not religious man."

I gave
Her my name
Out of my uncomfortable stance on religion and
To change the subject to less formal and conversational matters.

She put out her hand and I slipped my palm under hers. I was
Never taught to shake a woman's hand - for it is too delicate -
but to let their hand rest atop mine.

I bowed and gently kissed her hand.
Her skin smelled of fresh milk and uncut grass and
What morning dew feels like across raw fingertips.
I tried to force myself not to trip too quickly into love,
But there are some things
Men are absolutely unable to do.

"
Luria Rose," she said, bowing her head, "Very ncie to meet you
Robert Commento."

"
And very nice to meet you."

"
You are from here?" she asked.

"
Yes,"* I said, "Well, not exactly."
"From a city over where the tail of the river ends."

"I know this place, but I cannot recall the name." I could see
She was embarrassed by not knowing the location, telling me she
Was obviously from Rome and proud of it.

"Cuore Tagliente," I told her with zest,"That is where
I am from and where I was raised. My family still lives there to

Manage their small farm of olive trees.

"Do they make very much money?" At this question, I turned
On my heel and stared at her. By her look, she seemed to be
Unsure whether I meant this in seriousness or in jest. So not to scare her
Off again I forced a smiled, left my eyes upon her as if viewing a painting or a statue, and
Answered as truthfully as I could without insulting the name of my family
In truth, I lied a little.

"They were very
Well off when they bought the
Olive farm and they are still very well off
Due to savings and the like, but, because of the business they sold
And the expenses of starting from scratch in the scorching fields of where olives are grown,
They took quite a beating financially. We are quite fine now, very, very fine now,
But not as fine as if we had stayed with the old company. In a way, we were
Asked very professionally and cordially to step down. Of course, my mother, bless
Her body and soul, was very destroyed by this matter and that is why I find it hard to continue.

Luria, staring at me blankly, but with a slight hint of fascination,
Walked up the two steps she had just stepped down and
Two more past where she had been beside me.
She swiveled around on her flats and faced me. Her
Eyes were now impossible to see in the night, though I knew she was
Looking directly at me. Curious why she decided to say nothing in return
To my story, I said something in her place.

"I say so much about myself...well, then, what about you?"

Instantly, she pounced on the question,
"I am
An orphan of Roma
And grew up on the streets stealing and
Running amok quite happily, though
Sometimes I regret what I stole. Every single one was a

Necessary action."

This took me back, for she looked tanned, healthy, and
Well fed, instantly making me think she must be a very skilled
Thief. Eyeing her up and down, I wondered if this was why
She was even talking to me presently. I checked my wallet. It was there,
Though this fact made me feel only slightly better. I watched her
Blow a thick, crescent moon shaped strand of dark brown hair from her eye,
Seeing if the story had settled. Was she lying? Was she telling me the truth?

Why would she tell me anything at all?

"Let us get dinner someplace," I offered, "You can
Take me to your favorite, local restaurant in the city and I
Will pay. No favors thought to receive or anything. All I'd like
Is to have a conversation through the night with whom I have in front of me."

She nodded, said nothing with a smile, and stood still.

"You must lead the way for
I have no idea where you would like to take me. I, of
Course can take you to any of the many restaurants
I know of in my Rome, but I want to go to the one the thieves knows of.

Suddenly, her face contorted into a shape like
A razor had been dragged down the length of her face.

She shouted,"Do not call me a thief, Robert!
Your a poor son of olive farmer's! What do you know about
Anything of the street? So much so that you can ridicule and
Mock whoever's from it? You know nothing!

I immediately tried to tell her I was teasing, but she ran past me, down the stairs, and across the square. I stood stunned, embarrassed to see if anyone had noticed this outburst. No one
Had. Groups of people were still sitting around the fountain, throwing
Coin into the water as some children played and dipped their toes into the
Clear, tranquil water. The puppets waved back and forth in a light, chilled wind,
And the lamp posts still burned casting a curing light over the square. There,
I saw Luria cast in the dark orange light for just a moment. She turned around to look at
Me in the light and there, I saw her eyes were not black, but sky blue, like
The fresh melted ice I had once seen on my travels to Antarctica. Then she was gone.

Pausing, letting myself be hugged by the cathedral behind me,
Half of me wanting to stay in her embrace and the other wanting me to be in hers.
I could not hug stone forever," I told myself, "Man needs to hug a woman
Into eternity, not the church. Maybe later in life, but now, man needs the physical,
Not the metaphysical. There, I see her as she goes through the alley behind the fountain on the
Path toward my favorite bakery, Grano Gorato. I will follow her and find her.

I ran down the stairs carefully for they had become wet and slick from the light
Fog that sometimes rolls into Rome when it is night. There, I moved through the crowd
Which looked to have double in size with people. Where had they all come from?
The alleys, no doubt. They all felt the warmth and comfort of this secret square with Her
Majesty looking down on them from above, the church bell and moon like two great eyes,
The tinted cathedral windows depicting ancient actions Her heart, and the hard square
Slabs of concrete and smoothed stone Her skin. But, Luria did not care for such comforts, She
Believed in no comforts other then the one's another could give. Did she want that from me?

Once through the alley and passing Grano Gorato, I swiveled my head three-hundred-and
Sixty degrees hoping to spot the white dress with the long brown hair. There were many
Women about, but none that were Luria. I sat on the edge of another fountain in a smaller
Square which I had found myself in. Inside the café in front of me, I observed an old man order
A glass of red wine and a mini-short bread crust filled with cream with bright, light green
Kiwi on top. It is was brightly lit inside and everyone was smiling, even the servers. Looking up
At the sign for the restaurant, I saw its name was Mondi. I made a note to go there with
Luria when I found her.

"Luria! I shouted. The name echoed about the numerous walls that
Surrounded me. A few tourists dressed in sandals with socks and cameras
Wrapped around their shoulders and "*****-packs" around their waists

(Terrible Things)

Gave me a concerned glance, but I continued to
Shout, "Luria!

"Yes, Robert?" I heard Lu
Diego Scarca Dec 2010
Adesso, nella calma,
si vedon muovere i pali
della luce, i fogli di carta
sui recinti di legno dei cantieri.

Un’altra volta
c’era stato il commento
degli arabi, dei negri.
In un vecchio vano della casa,
le povere braccia,
le gambe lunghe e magre legate,
incominciano i racconti.

E si urtano gli oggetti
finiti sul fondo della strada,
mentre, per errore,
un fruscìo dei rami avverte
chi vi cammina
o da una griglia esala ancora
l’odore tiepido dell’umidità.

Si dissolve il colore
dalle pianure disegnate
nel sonno dell’umanità. Le creste delle piante
viste d’improvviso
da un punto oscuro
ravvicinate, mute,
perché si possieda in alto
qualche luce della quiete?
Diego Scarca, Architetture del vuoto, Torino, Edizioni Angolo Manzoni, 2007
Tace ora, mi chiedo se oppressa dal suo Karma,
(so della sua vita, del nome che le dà, e del senso)
mentre mostra a lungo lo schermo
sul selciato una moltitudine
stecchita in una posa tra sonno e morte
levarsi a stento in preghiera e spulciarsi nell'alba.
Né forse la colpisce il primo aspetto
ma un altro più recondito, e vede
una giustizia di diverso stampo
in quella sofferenza di paria
orrida eppure non abietta, e nella sua che le scende addosso.

"Avere o non avere la sua parte in questa vita"
riemerge in parole il suo pensiero - ma solo un lembo.
E io ne tiro a me quella frangia
ansioso mi confidi tutto l'altro,
attento non mi rubi niente
di lei, neppure l'amarezza, ed attendo.
S'interrompe invece. Seguono altre immagini dell'India
e nel loro riverbero le colgo
un sorriso estremo tra di vittima e di bimba
quasi mi lasci quella grazia in pegno
di lei mentre si eclissa nella sua pena
e l'idea di se stessa le muore dentro.

"Perché porti quel giogo, perché non insorgi"
mi trattengo appena dal gridarle,
soffrendo perché soffre, certo,
ma più ancora perché lascia la presa
della mia tenerezza non saziata e piglia il largo piangendo;
"Ascoltami" comincio a mormorarle
e già penso al chiarore della sala dopo il technicolor
e a lei che sul punto di partire
mi guarda da dietro la lampada
della sua solitudine tenuta alzata di fronte.

"Mario" mi previene lei che indovina il resto. "Ancora
levi come una spada, buona a che?,
lo sdegno per le cose che ti resistono.
Uomo chiuso all'intelligenza del diverso,
negato all'amore: del mondo, intendo, di Dio dunque"
e indulge a una smorfia fine di scherno
per se stessa salita sul pulpito, e quasi si annulla.

"Davvero vorrei tu avessi vinto"
le dico con affetto incontenibile, più tardi,
mentre scorre in un brusio d'api, nel film senza commento, l'India.
Tace ora, mi chiedo se oppressa dal suo Karma,
(so della sua vita, del nome che le dà, e del senso)
mentre mostra a lungo lo schermo
sul selciato una moltitudine
stecchita in una posa tra sonno e morte
levarsi a stento in preghiera e spulciarsi nell'alba.
Né forse la colpisce il primo aspetto
ma un altro più recondito, e vede
una giustizia di diverso stampo
in quella sofferenza di paria
orrida eppure non abietta, e nella sua che le scende addosso.

"Avere o non avere la sua parte in questa vita"
riemerge in parole il suo pensiero - ma solo un lembo.
E io ne tiro a me quella frangia
ansioso mi confidi tutto l'altro,
attento non mi rubi niente
di lei, neppure l'amarezza, ed attendo.
S'interrompe invece. Seguono altre immagini dell'India
e nel loro riverbero le colgo
un sorriso estremo tra di vittima e di bimba
quasi mi lasci quella grazia in pegno
di lei mentre si eclissa nella sua pena
e l'idea di se stessa le muore dentro.

"Perché porti quel giogo, perché non insorgi"
mi trattengo appena dal gridarle,
soffrendo perché soffre, certo,
ma più ancora perché lascia la presa
della mia tenerezza non saziata e piglia il largo piangendo;
"Ascoltami" comincio a mormorarle
e già penso al chiarore della sala dopo il technicolor
e a lei che sul punto di partire
mi guarda da dietro la lampada
della sua solitudine tenuta alzata di fronte.

"Mario" mi previene lei che indovina il resto. "Ancora
levi come una spada, buona a che?,
lo sdegno per le cose che ti resistono.
Uomo chiuso all'intelligenza del diverso,
negato all'amore: del mondo, intendo, di Dio dunque"
e indulge a una smorfia fine di scherno
per se stessa salita sul pulpito, e quasi si annulla.

"Davvero vorrei tu avessi vinto"
le dico con affetto incontenibile, più tardi,
mentre scorre in un brusio d'api, nel film senza commento, l'India.
Tace ora, mi chiedo se oppressa dal suo Karma,
(so della sua vita, del nome che le dà, e del senso)
mentre mostra a lungo lo schermo
sul selciato una moltitudine
stecchita in una posa tra sonno e morte
levarsi a stento in preghiera e spulciarsi nell'alba.
Né forse la colpisce il primo aspetto
ma un altro più recondito, e vede
una giustizia di diverso stampo
in quella sofferenza di paria
orrida eppure non abietta, e nella sua che le scende addosso.

"Avere o non avere la sua parte in questa vita"
riemerge in parole il suo pensiero - ma solo un lembo.
E io ne tiro a me quella frangia
ansioso mi confidi tutto l'altro,
attento non mi rubi niente
di lei, neppure l'amarezza, ed attendo.
S'interrompe invece. Seguono altre immagini dell'India
e nel loro riverbero le colgo
un sorriso estremo tra di vittima e di bimba
quasi mi lasci quella grazia in pegno
di lei mentre si eclissa nella sua pena
e l'idea di se stessa le muore dentro.

"Perché porti quel giogo, perché non insorgi"
mi trattengo appena dal gridarle,
soffrendo perché soffre, certo,
ma più ancora perché lascia la presa
della mia tenerezza non saziata e piglia il largo piangendo;
"Ascoltami" comincio a mormorarle
e già penso al chiarore della sala dopo il technicolor
e a lei che sul punto di partire
mi guarda da dietro la lampada
della sua solitudine tenuta alzata di fronte.

"Mario" mi previene lei che indovina il resto. "Ancora
levi come una spada, buona a che?,
lo sdegno per le cose che ti resistono.
Uomo chiuso all'intelligenza del diverso,
negato all'amore: del mondo, intendo, di Dio dunque"
e indulge a una smorfia fine di scherno
per se stessa salita sul pulpito, e quasi si annulla.

"Davvero vorrei tu avessi vinto"
le dico con affetto incontenibile, più tardi,
mentre scorre in un brusio d'api, nel film senza commento, l'India.

— The End —