Authors: Jenna Evans Welch
“Okay.”
“Where are you and Ren headed tonight?”
“He just said he wants to go into town.”
“Lina?” Ren poked his head into the kitchen.
“Speak of the devil,” I said.
“Sorry I'm late.” He caught sight of Howard and startled. “And I probably should have knocked. Sir.”
Howard smiled. “Hey, Ren. Would you like some dinner? I made
pasta con pomodori e mozzarella
.”
“
Buonissimo
. But no thanks. I already ate. My mom tried to re-create a Kentucky Fried Chicken meal and she made this giant pot of potatoes that basically turned to glue. I'm still trying to get over it.”
“Ewww.”
Howard laughed. “Been there. Sometimes you just have to have KFC.” He picked up his plate and walked into the kitchen.
Ren sat down next to me and grabbed a noodle from my plate. “So, where should we go tonight?”
“How should I know? You're the one from Florence.”
“Yeah, but I get the feeling you haven't spent much time in the city. Anything you've been dying to see?”
“Isn't there like a leaning tower or something?”
“Linaaa. That's in Pisa.”
“Relax, I'm joking. But actually, there is something I want to see. Come upstairs with me for a second.” I took my plate to the kitchen, then Ren followed me to my bedroom.
“Is this really your room?” he asked when we stepped inside.
“Yeah. Why?”
“Haven't you unpacked anything? It's kind of bare in here.” He opened one of my empty dresser drawers, then slowly rolled it shut.
“All my stuff's over there.” I pointed to my suitcase. Everything was piled on top of it, and it looked like there had been some kind of explosion.
“Aren't you going to be here awhile?”
“Just for the summer.”
“That's like two more months.”
“Hopefully it will be less.” I shot a look at the open door.
Yikes
. Was it just me, or had my voice just reverberated through the whole cemetery?
“I don't think he can hear us.”
“I hope not.” I crossed the room, then knelt to get the journal from under the bed and started flipping through the pages. “I just read about this place . . . Pont Ve-chee-o?”
“
Ponte Vecchio
?” He looked at me incredulously. “You're joking, right?”
“I know I said it wrong.”
“Well, yeah, I mean you totally butchered it. But you've never
been
there? How long have you been in Florence?”
“Since Tuesday night.”
“That means you should have seen Ponte Vecchio by Wednesday morning. Get dressed. We're leaving.”
I looked down at what I was wearing. “I am dressed.”
“Sorry. Figure of speech. Get your purse or whatever. We're going now. You have to see it. It's in my top ten most favorite places in the entire world.”
“Is it open? It's almost nine.”
He groaned. “Yes, it's open. Come on.”
I grabbed the money Howard had given me the night before, then stuffed my mom's journal into my purse. Ren was already halfway down the stairs, but he stopped abruptly at the bottom and I crashed right into him.
Howard was sitting on the couch, his laptop balanced on his knees. “Where are you two headed in such a hurry?”
“Lina's never been to Ponte Vecchio. I'm taking her.” Ren cleared his throat. “With your permission, sir.”
“Permission granted. That's a great idea. Lina, you'll love it.”
“Thanks. I hope so.”
We headed for the door, and just as Ren stepped out on the porch Howard said, “I'm keeping my eye on you, Ren.”
Ren didn't turn around, but he straightened up like someone had just sent a jolt of electricity down his spine. Howard caught my eye and winked.
Great. Now Ren was never going to relax.
It was a hot night, and Florence seemed twice as crowded as the night I'd gone with Howard. Traveling by scooter was a little faster because we could just drive around stopped cars, but it still took us a long time. Not that I minded. Riding the scooter was really fun, and the cool air whipping past us felt like my reward for surviving such a long, hot day. By the time Ren parked his scooter, the moon had risen round and heavy as a ripe tomato, and I felt like I'd taken a long, cool swim.
“Why's it so crowded tonight?” I asked, handing him my helmet to stow under the seat.
“It's summer. People like to go out. And tourists come in droves. Droves, I tell you!”
I shook my head. “Ren, you're kind of weird.”
“So I hear.”
“What are we going to see exactly?”
“A bridge. âPonte Vecchio' means âOld Bridge.' It's on the Arno. Come on, it's this way.” I did my best to keep up with him as he elbowed his way across the street, and before long we were standing on a wide sidewalk running the length of the river. The Arno stretched black and mysterious in either direction, and the banks were lit up like a runway with strings of glittering lights that stretched and disappeared in either direction.
I gave myself a second to take it all in. “Ren . . . this is really pretty. I can't believe people get to actually live here.”
“Like you?”
I glanced at him and he was smiling. Duh. “Well, yeah, I guess so.”
“Just wait. What you see next is going to make you want to stay here forever.”
People kept pushing us away from each other, so Ren linked arms with me and we headed up the river, stepping over a long-haired guy sitting with his back to the water. He was playing a banged-up guitar and singing “Imagine” in a heavy accent.
“ââEe-magine all da pee-pull,'â” Ren sang. “My dad has this book that's supposed to teach English song lyrics to Italian speakers. I think that guy back there could really use it.”
“Hey, at least he got the feeling right. He sounds really nostalgic.” My arm was kind of heating up where Ren's was interlocked with mine, but before I could think about it, he pulled away and put both hands on my shoulders.
“Ready to swallow your gum?”
“What?”
“Ready to see Ponte Vecchio?”
“Of course. That's why we're here, right?”
He turned and pointed. “This way.”
The sidewalk had led us to a small commuter bridge. It was paved with asphalt, and a bunch of tourists were milling around blankets set up with displays of knockoff bags and sunglasses.
So
not impressive.
“This is it?” I asked, trying not to sound disappointed. Maybe it was cooler at sunset.
Ren guffawed. “No. Not
this
bridge. Trust me, you'll know it when you see it.”
We headed toward the center of the bridge, and a dark-skinned man stepped out in front of his blanket of stuff, blocking our way. “Young man. You want nice Prada handbag for girlfriend? Five hundred euro in store, but ten euro for you. Make her fall in true love.”
“No thanks,” Ren said.
I nudged him. “I don't know, Ren. That sounds like a pretty good deal. Ten bucks for true love?”
He smiled, stopping in the center of the bridge. “You didn't see it, did you?”
“See whaâoh.”
I ran over to the railing. Stretched across the river, about a quarter mile ahead of us, was a bridge that looked like it had been built by fairies. Three stone arches rose gracefully out of the water, and the whole length of it was lined with a floating row of colorful buildings, their edges hanging over the water. Three mini-arches were cut out of the center, and the whole thing was lit golden in the darkness, its reflection sparkling back up at itself.
Gum officially swallowed.
Ren was grinning at me.
“Wow. I don't even know what to say.”
“I know, right? Come on.” He looked to his right, then his left, then launched himself over the side like a pole vaulter.
“Ren!”
I leaned over, fully expecting to see him dog-paddling toward Ponte Vecchio, but instead came face-to-face with him. He was crouching on a table-size ledge that jutted out about five feet below the side of the bridge and he looked ridiculously pleased with himself.
“I was waiting for a splash.”
“I know. Now come on. Just make sure no one sees you.”
I looked over my shoulder, but everyone was too involved in the whole fake-Prada-bag thing to pay me any attention. I climbed over, dropped down next to him. “Is this allowed?”
“Definitely not. But it's the best view.”
“It's amazing.” Being just a few feet lower somehow cut out the noise of the people above us, and I swear Ponte Vecchio was glowing even brighter and more regal. It gave me a solemn, awestruck kind of feeling. Like going to church. Only I wanted to stay here for the whole rest of my life.
“So what do you think?” Ren asked.
“It makes me think of this time my mom and I drove to a poppy reserve in California. The flowers all bloom at once and we timed our visit just right. It was pretty magical.”
“Like this?”
“Yeah.”
He shimmied back next to me and we both rested our heads against the wall, just looking.
I have finally found the place that feels right to me.
It was like she was waving at me from just across the water. If I squinted I could almost see her. My eyes fogged up a little, turning Ponte Vecchio's lights into big gold halos, and I had to spend like thirty seconds pretending to have some mysterious Arno dust in my eye.
For once, Ren was being totally quiet and once the crying jag had passed I looked over at him. “So why is it called âOld Bridge'? Isn't everything old here?”
“It's the only bridge that survived World War II, and it's really, really old, even by Italian standards. Like medieval old. Those house-looking things used to be butcher shops. They'd just open the windows and dump all the blood and guts into the river.”
“No way.” I glanced at the windows again. Most of them had green shutters and they were all closed for the night. “They're way too pretty for that. What are they now?”
“High-end jewelry shops. And you see those windows spaced out across the very top of the bridge?”
I nodded. “Yeah?”
“Those go to a hallway. It's called the Vasari Corridor and it was used by the Medici as a way to get around Florence without having to actually walk through the city.”
“Elena's people.”
“
Esattamente
. That way they didn't have to mix with us commoners. Cosimo Medici was the one who kicked out all the butchers. He wanted the bridge to be more prestigious.” He looked at me. “So what was that book you were reading? The one you had under your bed.”
You trust him.
The words elbowed their way into my head before I even had a chance to wonder. So what if I'd known Ren for only two days? I did trust him.
I took the journal out of my purse. “This is my mom's journal. She was living in Florence when she got pregnant with me and it's all about her time in Italy. She sent it to the cemetery before she died.”
He glanced at the book, then back up at me. “No way. That's pretty
heavy
.”
Heavy.
That was exactly it. I opened to the front cover, looking again at those ominous words. “I started reading it the day after I got here. I'm trying to figure out what happened between Howard and my mom.”
“What do you mean?”
I hesitated. Was it possible to condense the whole messy story into a couple of sentences? “My mom met Howard when she was here going to school, and then when she got pregnant, she left Italy and never told him about me.”
“Seriously?”
“Once she got sick she started talking about him a lot, and then she made me promise I'd come live here with him for a while. She just never actually told me what went wrong between them, and I think she left me the journal so I could figure it out.”
I turned and met Ren's stare. “So last night when you said you don't know Howard very well, it was like a huge understatement.”
“Yeah. I've officially known him for . . .” I counted on my fingers. “Four days.”
“No way.” He shook his head incredulously, sending his hair flying. “So let me get this straight. You're an American, living in Florenceâno, living in a
cemetery
âwith a father you just found out about? You're even stranger than I am.”
“Hey!”
He bumped his shoulder against mine. “No, I didn't mean it that way. I just meant we're both kind of different.”
“What makes you different?”
“I'm sort of American, sort of Italian. When I'm in Italy I feel too American, and when I'm in the States I feel too Italian. Also, I'm older than everyone in my grade.”
“How old are you?”
“Seventeen. My family lived in Texas for a couple of years when I was really young, and when we moved back I didn't speak Italian very well. I was already kind of old for my grade, and they had to hold me back a year so I could catch up. My parents ended up enrolling me at the American school a few years later, but the school wouldn't allow me to skip forward to the grade I'm supposed to be in.”
“When will you be eighteen?”
“March.” He looked at me. “So you're really only staying for the summer?”
“Yeah. Howard and my grandma want me to stay longer, but the circumstances are obviously pretty weird. I barely know him.”
“But maybe you'll get to know him. Chainsaw aside, I kind of like him.”
I shrugged. “It just seems so bizarre. If my mom hadn't gotten sick, I probably still wouldn't know anything about him. She'd always just told me that she'd gotten pregnant young and decided it was best to keep my father out of the picture.”
“Until now.”
“Until now,” I echoed.