28/29 June
The last couple of
days before I headed off for a month in Italy - two weeks of which would be at a school learning the language - were busy, although it had
nothing to do with my imminent absence from the country for the next four weeks.
Hence, due to the distractions of helping a friend with DIY, rushing back
to cook for another friend coming to dinner and then preparing the house for yet
more friends who were staying the weekend I was leaving, my mind was not on
doing any packing until the morning of the day I was due to leave.
After a nice meal
in Corsham courtesy of my friends the Dabsons (it is them staying in my house
tonight) and a lift to the station I caught the train to Gatwick and my plane
out of the country for the next month.
It was all pretty uneventful. I
had an early morning flight and I arrived at the airport late at night so I had to waste about
four hours reading and dozing before dropping my bag off; it seemed pointless
to get a hotel for only three hours.
I arrived at the
airport in Catania, Sicily with an hour to wait for the connecting pick up that
had been arranged by the school. As the time approached and I found the
guy who was there to collect us I was not really worried that I was the only
English person there, after all one of the reasons I had chosen this particular
school was that there were very few English who attended; the majority by far
came, according to the statistics, from Spain and Germany. What was more
disconcerting however was that I was the only person who was not Italian. As
we climbed into the mini bus I was beginning to wonder whether I had somehow
enrolled in an Italian school that taught English... The other alternative was
that this transfer, which I had assumed was part of the school and would take
me to the school for further instructions, was just some regular taxi.
When we were dropped off in the square an hour or so later and only a
stone's throw from the sea it seemed clear that this was the case and given
that the last information I had from the school was simply that I had been
booked on the bus (nothing at all about who I was staying with or where or what
to do once I arrived in the town) I began to feel a little concerned! What to
do now? Where was I staying? I have developed that part of the Italian language
where you wave your arms around wildly and gesticulate so tried it out,
pointing to the address of the school which was on one of the emails I had
printed off. Fortunately I was only a few hundred metres away and so I
wandered down to see if it might help me decide what my next move might be.
I found it up a pleasant little side street not far from the sea.
And of course it was shut. At this stage I was seriously thinking I
might have to find myself a place for the night and was not relishing the
thought of a discussion as to who should pay for it being the very first thing
I did when I arrived at the school. My
last chance saloon was to find a phone box (my mobile was flat and needed a
charge) and to try and ring the number for the school but I was not optimistic
given that it was well and truly shut. But my luck was in and it seems I
had missed Enrico who had come to the minibus stop to collect me (or rather he
had missed me) and a text sent only that morning telling me that was what to
expect. Do you ever get the impression you have been forgotten about until the
last minute? But if I went back to the school I would be collected from
there. And that is what happened. So I am now in a
little bedroom on the top floor of Melissa and Enrico’s flat where if I stand
up I bang my head on the sloping ceiling. But I have my own personal -
very large - patio that looks across the terracotta roofs
under the clear blue
sky to the deep blue sea and the mainland.
I can hear the sea - only a few
hundred yards away - from my bedroom. I
can see myself happily sitting out there and studying for the next two weeks.
My Italian has been
good enough to explain to Enrique and Melissa, the young owners of the flat,
that I can't speak Italian. I decided that the sensible thing to do before
anything else would be to check how to get to the school the following morning
so I left the flat and wandered through the streets to check the route. It was
absolutely dead, hardly a soul around as I wandered down the road, but by the
time I was at the waterside there were lots of old people sitting in the chairs
on the promenade and looking out across the water. I decided to buy myself
an ice cream from a nearby store and joined the ageing of Melazzo who were
chatting and waving hands and eating ice cream themselves. I sat there
for a while, enjoyed the sun and read my phrase book.
Although I am
staying with Enrico and Melissa I am looking after my own feeding arrangements
so, given that it was Sunday and I had not had the chance to buy any food up to
that point, I took advantage of an open pizza restaurant that I passed on the
way back and practised my Italian. By the time I got back to the flat it was
dead and I quietly snuck in and went to bed in readiness for tomorrow; school
starts at 9am!



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