
…
“What the hell?” Amelia asked her grandmother, somewhat exasperatedly, after suddenly waking, and finding her missing.
Despite any misgivings that briefly passed through her mind, Amelia threw on some clothes and went looking for her. If this was home, she would not be caught dead outside without the proper preparation, a half-hour system at the very least for makeup application and clothes selection.
Her instructions from her parents were quite clear. Don’t let her grandmother out of her sight. It was not that she couldn’t be trusted. It was just that she didn’t see the evil in people, and Italy was a whole different world than she was used to.
“Breakfast. I did give you a shake, then tell you where I was going?”
“You should have tried harder.”
Her grandmother gave her one of those looks, one that bordered on disdain with a tinge of incomprehension, one she was getting used to because of the generation gap, and things were getting lost in translation
“Who was he? Some rando imposing on you?”
There was that look again. “What is a rando?”
“Some guy who comes up and tries it on.”
“In the restaurant over coffee? I should be that lucky a guy would be interested in me that way. I think your imagination is a little too fertile, young lady. He’s just another tourist, and I imposed on him, not the other way around.” She looked her granddaughter up and down. “You look a mess.”
“Well, I was worried you might have gotten into trouble.”
“Your father has so little faith in me, I see. This isn’t going to work if you’re going to stress out every time I go for breakfast and you’re still asleep. You need to change your habits and be ready when I am. I’ll wait here until you get yourself together. And now you’ve enlightened me about randos; I’ll try to avoid them if possible.”
Amelia simply shook her head. She was between that proverbial rock and a hard place and regretted volunteering to chaperone her grandmother. Of course, the alternative was equally impossible.
She needed to get away from her so-called friends and that weasel of an ex-boyfriend. The idea of enduring the summer holidays with any of them was painful enough, but this gig was probably going to be worse.
She compromised on her morning routine, going with the minimal makeup look and a summery dress that she wouldn’t wear back home. It was not likely she was going to run into anyone she knew.
Back down in the foyer almost fifteen minutes after she left her grandmother in one of the lounges, she spilled out of the elevator and quickly strode into the foyer where … no one was sitting in any of the chairs.
“Damn,” she muttered under her breath. “Now, where is she?”
Her grandmother was going to be a nightmare to supervise. Her father said as much, not exactly denigrating a woman for being independent and also having a mind of her own, but he seemed to be bordering on a man who had definite ideas about a woman’s place. She was surprised her mother put up with it.
The one conversation she had with her grandmother on serious stuff like her life, was about how she had spent more of her time trying to fight against the strict social norms of her day, that she be a dutiful wife and mother, and not entertain any of those nonsensical ideas of going to work or going places, and worse still doing it on her own.
It was everything that Amelia had now without questioning how it came to pass; just that it was a right she had. Like most girls her age, she knew nothing about how hard it had been just to get some of those rights.
She went over to the door and looked out. Out by the dock where the Vaporetto came to collect and drop them off, she saw her talking to that same man and an Italian woman in a very smart suit.
She dashed out and almost ran into several people who made an unpredictable turn outside the entrance.
…
“Ah,” her grandmother said, “just in time. Jay, this is one of my four granddaughters, Amelia. She was the one I was telling you about.”
I looked at her, making out the similarities between the generations. Same eyes, same amusement lurking there. “I’ve never been called a rando before, but in any case, it has a slightly different meaning in my generation, which I was just telling your grandmother about.”
Amelia glared at her grandmother. “Did you have to mention that? Really?” Scratch that idea she was not going to suffer embarrassment.
The grandmother added, “She generally speaks in riddles, and I can never understand a word of it. This new teen language…”
“Oddly enough, I know what you mean. I have a few teens and a few older grandchildren who, as you say, talk in riddles if they talk at all.”
“Gran, we should be getting on the boat. We have places to see.”
The Vaporetto was just pulling into the dock.
“About that, Jay here has a private guide, and it seems to him overkill for just one person to benefit. He thinks we might benefit from Conchetta’s experience and knowledge. I’m inclined to agree, just for today, until we get our bearings. Unless, of course, you want to do battle with the guidebook and impress me with your Italian language skills?”
Put that way, how could Amelia refuse. Her Italian was awful, and the last thing she wanted was to take charge of going to see old buildings and boring museums. And don’t get her started in the number of churches…
“Just for today then, as you say.”
Rather than take the hotel’s vaporetto, Conchetta had arranged for a private water taxi that also had catering. It was going to be a warm day, and we would need water.
I was right when I suggested that having such a knowledgeable guide all to myself was almost criminal, and when I’d ascertained from Millie that she had no other plans than getting the Vaporetto to St Mark’s Square and wandering around, it seemed simple.
To me, anyway. I hadn’t factored in the possibility of a somewhat truculent granddaughter, but then I got the impression she had been sent against her will. It was a surprise she was not at home with her friends.
It seemed there was a little tension between the two, which made me think that the granddaughter might have been co-opted as a nursemaid, and this trip was punishment.
Or perhaps she was a little suspicious of me and whatever my motives were. There were none, but given time to think about it, it did seem like a pickup line, though given my age, that would be almost ridiculous.
But that notion of being called a rando did bring the matter back to a level of reality. A foreign country and a foreign tourist, was anyone really safe?
I assured them both that I had no other intentions other than to share my good fortune, and she seemed to accept it. After all, it was never my intention to seek out a female company or anything like that. I was quite content to be on my own.
We took a roundabout route and covered a few canals and sightseeing points, which Conchetta was quite happy to mark on the map, along with a chart of the route we were taking.
She also gave us a history lesson, because nearly everything was as old as the hills, as my mother used to describe old stuff. Of course, my idea of questions, when prompted, was more relatable to the topic.
Amelia had a more fertile imagination, like I’d expect of a teen, and asked about how many bodies were fished out of the canals and did the mafia run everything in Venice. I was sure they didn’t, but it was not a question Conchetta was going to answer definitively. In fact, she seemed amused at how Americans and the English thought.
She was very patient without being condescending. In her place, I might have been more so. It was just another painful reminder of how our children had abandoned their responsibility to bring their children up properly.
After the canal exploration, the morning was spent in St Mark’s Square, and then the Palace of the Doges. My highlight was the Whispering Bridge and the story behind it. Along with a lot of very old paintings. Amelia, predictably, was bored witless.
When it came to lunch, I politely suggested they might like to join me, though, at the time, I was not sure what Concetta had organised.
To Amelia, it signified the end of a morning of looking at boring stuff and asked if we could have lunch at a real Italian restaurant, and I could see Conchetta roll her eyes, slightly before her grandmother did, so in a quiet moment I asked Conchetta if such a venue existed given the touristy nature of the island, and melting pot of cuisines and visitors tastes.
Fortunately, she did, and I paid her extra to be our culinary host.
It was a divine lunch for many reasons, to have the authentic food, completely dissected and described with the history behind it, the authentic wine to match the food, and the company despite the youthful brashness.
At the end of the day, when the taxi was taking them back to the hotel, Millie was sitting in the cabin looking like she was having a nap, not very far away from Amelia, who seemed lost in thought.
“A penny for those thoughts, Am.”
The girl turned and smiled. “It was not as bad as I thought, even if I had to endure all that old stuff.”
“That’s just the tip of the iceberg, dear. Tomorrow, we’re going to visit churches.”
“Really?”
“You might not be interested, but I am. And the food and wine. It certainly pays to have someone like Conchetta along for the ride.”
“We could never afford that. This guy must be very wealthy.”
Millie looked back into the cabin. Not in the normal sense perhaps, she thought, because not once did he make mention of anything that gave an indication he was rich, unlike so many of his compatriots. Big, loud, brash, and demanding.
There was more to that story, but this was a one-day thing. She had been reluctant at first to agree to his proposal, perhaps a little suspicious of his motives, but as the day progressed, it was clear to her there were none.
“Perhaps, but it is none of our business.”
The girl came back to sit next to her grandmother. “Perhaps,” she said in almost a whisper, “you could cosy up to him, and we could ride his coattails around Europe.”
Millie put on her most shocked expression. “I thought you said he was a rando trying it on.”
“I might have been a little hasty. I don’t mean, you know, just if he offers, I’m sure it would be better than us two trying to muddle through.”
“I won’t ask you to explain ‘you know’, but I don’t think we can impose on him. If he suggests it, I’ll think about it, but this is about you and I going on what your father described as the trip of a lifetime.”
“Yeah. Dad says a lot of stuff, but none of it belonging to this century. As you wish.”
I woke when the boat gently bumped against the dock, and Conchetta gently shook my shoulder.
“We are here,” she said.
“My goodness. What did I miss?”
“Nothing of any consequence. It has been a long day, even for me.”
“Perhaps less formal clothes tomorrow?”
“If only I could.”
At the front of the boat, Millie and Amelia were about to get off. I looked over time the pontoon and gasped.
A surprise. Jasper, second son to my daughter Samanthan was waiting, that usual lopsided grin and shock of red hair making him stand out.
That and the fact he was wearing a suit and looked every bit the formal figure like his father.
I could see that Amelia had seen him too and had that effect he had on women of any age.
I came up behind them. “I see you’ve seen my grandson, Jasper, though why he’s here is a surprise, and hopefully not because something has gone wrong.”
“You have to be kidding, he’s your grandson? He’s like in every magazine on the planet. He is that guy that does those ads isn’t he?”
The red hair sometimes gave it away, but yes, his mother was one of those stage mothers. The movie world shunned him, but the advertisers didn’t.
“Sometimes. He has better things to do with his time.”
We were helped off the boat, and he came over and gave me a hug. I then introduced him to the two women. Amelia all of a sudden couldn’t speak.
“Dumb question,” I said to Jasper to break the moment, ” but why are you here?”
“I had to get away from mom. She was making all these plans, none of which included my input, so I got on a plane and came here. Boring churches seemed so much better than modelling gigs.”
“Then just in time. That’s our tomorrow. Oh, sorry, Millie, if you want to that is.”
“We’d love to, “Amelia said before her grandmother could take a breath.
I looked at her, and she smiled. “Of course, we’d love to.”
In that moment both Jasper and Amelia were heading towards the hotel looking almost like they’d been together forever.
Millie watched them with an amused expression, then headed up the ramp towards the hotel. “This morning, Amelia was telling me this was going to be the most boring month of her life.”
“That might also be the case for Jasper. I wasn’t expecting to see anyone, but my daughter pretends to worry about me. You’ll be glad to know Jasper is the sanest of the seven. Perhaps I am glad he’s here. And I don’t mean to put you in an awkward position. If you have other plans for tomorrow…”
“I have not, and today was a good day. One day at a time, I’ve been saying for a while. I’m sure it’s a philosophy you can understand.”
She smiled, and I held out a hand to assist her in going up the ramp. “Very much so. Now, any particular churches you want to see?”
…
© Charles Heath 2024
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