Month In Italy: Summer
The bell on the goat rang once as the taxi pulled away. And then the summer month was over—but not gone. It had become a place I could return to, anytime I closed my eyes and heard the cicadas begin.
Here’s a draft of a short story about a summer month in Italy. summer month in italy
On the fifteenth day, a storm came. Not the polite drizzle I knew from home, but a full-throated Italian thunderstorm, purple and furious. I stood on the terrace as the rain came in sheets, soaking me in seconds, and I laughed. The lightning split the sky over the valley, and for a moment, everything was white. Then the thunder rolled across the hills like a long answer to a question I hadn’t asked. The bell on the goat rang once as the taxi pulled away
I packed the next morning. In my bag, a dried sprig of rosemary, a train ticket, and the knowledge that I had not escaped my life but had simply remembered what it felt like to live inside a single day. Here’s a draft of a short story about
The secret, I think, was this: time moves differently here. It doesn’t race; it ripens.
I rented a room in a farmhouse in Umbria, a place so quiet that the loudest thing was the sun. My host was a woman named Signora Loredana, who communicated almost entirely in gestures and the occasional allora . On the second day, she pressed a fig into my hand without a word. It was still warm from the tree.
The first morning, I woke to the sound of a bell. Not a church bell, but a goat’s, somewhere up the hill. Light was already old and golden, slanting through the slats of the shutters. I lay still, listening to the house breathe—the creak of a beam, the distant clatter of a neighbor’s kitchen. Then I remembered: I had thirty more days of this.