That Saturday night, the starry sky and the cool air were good reasons to go for a walk outdoors. An Arabian moon, cut out with precise definition, allowed a glimpse of the rest of the moon which was in the shade, just as a beautiful woman wearing a robe, reveals her figure through a fine silk fabric. The neighbourhood had already been asleep for a while.
The streets were going to be cleaned at three oclock in the morning; therefore the area was clear of the cars that usually parked there. A summery wind, which carried a faint sea fragrance, played with a tin can on the ground, causing it to tumble from time to time with a metallic sound, which was the only sound in the silence of the night, when Damien opened the gate and walked out of his property.
Chopin walked silently at his side, turning his nose to the right and to the left, but in a distracted and bored manner, with no desire to go hunting.
Giovanni had already gone to bed. He cleared the table and rearranged the kitchen before going to his room; he said goodnight to Damien and told him that he had prepared a new flavour Ainòs.
Tzu tusk! Damien made a sound to call back the cat.
Miaooooo! Chopin replied, turning his head back toward his friend who was already a little far away from him.
Come here! Stand by Me! Psssssst!
The cat stopped and waited for Damien, yawning. Then, together, with the same quiet step, they made their way to the store, just around the corner of the street.
Once they arrived in front of the closed door, Damien observed that the security guard had already passed by, for he noticed the white slip that proved he had passed by the store placed in a track of the shutter.
Next to that track, on the ledge, was the stores mailbox. From the opening protruded a yellow envelope.
How strange... a letter, why didnt the mailman bring it to the store this morning? he thought as he pulled it out with guarded curiosity.
Attracted by the colour of the paper, lit by the light of a nearby street lamp, a plump but still hungry mosquito went to lie on Damien's hand. And it died right then and there.
He felt, with a certain pain, the stab that pierced his muscle between his thumb and his forefinger.
Well... I no longer can do anything for you! speaking to the small insect that was already in the cats mouth.
Taking advantage of the street lamp, he opened the envelope, which was addressed simply to: Mr Damien G., and was written and delivered by hand, because it had no postage. Inside the envelope was a chequered sheet of paper, the kind that can be pulled from a small notebook and in fact, it had tear marks on the top edge.
If that mosquito had not had the arrogance to bite his hand, Damien would have been able to feel, although slightly, if the sender could be a potentially receptive individual.
But, since his hand was sore, he put the paper in his left hand. He didnt feel anything.
What a shame! He said to Chopin, who looked at him with his little head tilted sideways, and then, as if he understood him, (and indeed he had), he shook his head and sat down, waiting for the rest of the comments on the letter.
Dear Mr Damien,
You sold an electronic cigarette
and a liquid refill with nicotine to my daughter,
who it is still a minor.
I'm sure Its not the first time that you break
the Law and therefore I warn you that soon youll receive the visit of the Anti-Adulteration Squad, Im sure that they will find something for which theyll fine you.
Indeed, I hope so.
A pissed off parent
A slow motion movie played fast in Damiens memory, who tried to remember who that girl to whom he had sold cigarettes and nicotine could be, although he was convinced of the absurdity of those accusations. Surely it had to be something recent, less than a month ago. Could it be that he had sold a cigarette to a minor? No, it wasnt possible, when he had doubts he always asked for a document. What if a friend bought it for her? This could be the most conceivable explanation.
How much time passes before a good parent realizes that his daughter vapes or smokes?
Oh God... its not hard to understand that your child smokes. Their breath, clothes, hair, everything is saturated with the smell of smoke. But its hard to notice that they vape! Of course the electronic cigarette is not a tool that comes on its own. It has a battery charger, a bottle of liquid, perhaps even a box, or a strap. A lot of things that need to be hidden, Dont you think so Chopin? He questioned the cat by thought alone.
The animal stood up on its feet, walked around itself, as if he was chasing his tail and resumed the direction from where they had come. Damien folded the paper, put it in his jacket pocket and continued walking towards the main street.
He turned just a moment to see if the cat had actually taken the road home.
Part four (Massimo)
While Damien folded the anonymous letter, not far from him, Massimo put the letter he had received from the Italian Social Security Service in a drawer. In it was written that he was granted the attendance allowance he had requested for his elderly and disabled mother. That long-awaited financial help had finally arrived, and Massimo was to show up on the following Monday at the specific offices to formalize everything.
The letter, made up of just a few valuable lines, arrived on Friday morning. That Saturday night, before falling asleep, he read it over again. Good news usually heralds a good dream, as bad news brings bad ones. Without even thinking about it that much, Massimo related the many positive things that had happened to him in that short lapse of time, to his meeting with Damien. Not that he thought that Damien had some kind of special power; rather he credited the events in his favour to his courageous decision to quit smoking. And he had made that decision prompted by Damiens encouragement. Something in his mind had changed.
In re-reading the letter, in Massimos head happened the same thing that happened to Damien. Just like two people sitting in a movie theatre at the same time, watching two different movies, in two different theatres at the same cinema: Memory Cinema.
Following his fathers death, when Massimo was just eighteen years old, the world had become a hostile place to him. Finishing school and graduating as a surveyor had involved considerable sacrifices. His father was the only one who had a steady job, but he didnt even accrue the minimum of his pension contributions, while his mother, a housewife who did a little domestic work here and there, was able to earn just enough money for their daily expenses. They needed to pay their mortgage. When they signed the papers with the bank for the purchase of the apartment, they didnt even consider insurance in case of death. Who'll kill me? Massimos father asked. But in the 90s, cancer killed a lot of people.
So Massimo had to find an evening job and found one in a bar in the historic centre of Florence. One of those bars that closed at two in the morning, if all went well. Therefore, he worked the shift from seven p.m. to two a.m., got home at two thirty in the morning, slept five hours and went to school. After lunch, he napped for an hour, studied, had a snack and ran off, back to the bar. When he was twenty years old, he was so skinny, he seemed ill.Immediately after graduation things seemed to get better. An established engineering agency was looking for a technical designer and Massimo found his ideal job for ten years. Then came the moment when his pride beat his rationality. He decided to take the plunge and open his own Studio as a Surveyor and try to become a self-employed professional. And thats when his problems began. The construction crisis, the few customers who paid him, did so late or at a very low price; the weight of bureaucracy, the thousands of complex rules which limited his project ideas and, finally, his mother was stricken with Alzheimers disease. This combination of circumstances triggered a steady and progressive dissatisfaction in Massimo, which turned into a state of depression, from which, however, he now seemed to be slowly coming out of.The decision to quit smoking and the fact that he was succeeding; his meeting with Sonia, (and the fact that he liked her!); having found a new world, the VAPE world, which led to new acquaintances, such as Damiens shop and other Vapers that he had met in the meanwhile; these events were, in Massimos mind, giving a new sense to his life. Maybe it wasnt that bad at all.
In his room, when he turned off the light and went to sleep it was pitch dark.
Unlike Sonia, he preferred to sleep in absolute darkness. Two years of evening work at the bar made him adopt these sleep habits. After the natural light of day, and the artificial lights of the long night at the bar, once he got home, it was nice to be able to close his eyes and stay in the dark. It was also nice to open his eyes for a second and still be in the dark. He had few hours to rest at night, and those few hours had to be night. Deep night.
But until then he had never felt that unsteadiness, in his sleep; that feeling of being precariously balanced on the edge of a rock, like a very high trampoline on a black and wavy sea, which he felt but couldnt see, because it was totally immersed in the dark night, no moon, no stars.
He could distinctly hear the roar of the waves, he felt his face being whipped by the wind and he knew that his body was wavering on an unstable surface, insecure over that horrible abyss.
He couldnt open his eyes. He was trying to move the muscles of his eyelids, which were so heavy they overcame all his efforts. He was aware of the fact that, if he opened his eyes, he would still be in the dark, but in his room. He knew it, therefore he was between sleep and wakefulness, but he felt as though he was hypnotized. Surrendering to that feeling, he felt the urge to let himself fall into space, for he realized that it would be an imaginary jump, and he was sure that through that leap he would finally wake up. But could he be sure of it?
At last, a man from behind took his hand, held it and miraculously pulled him back, saving him from falling off the cliff. Massimo didnt have time to see his face because he woke up.
Good news doesnt always herald good dreams. And even the opposite isnt true.
Part five (Giorgio)
When Sonia went back to sleep, that same Saturday, her nightmare was soon followed by other thoughts and dreams, luckily less troubling, and it vanished like a vague and clouded memory.
Sunday morning she woke up in a good mood, and she switched the alarm button on to radio mode, already tuned to her favourite frequency: Radio Italia solo Musica Italiana [a radio channel which plays only Italian music]. In doing so, she felt the usual satisfaction, for she beat the clock, anticipating the ring. Maybe she had never even heard that sound, except for the first time, in order to set the volume.
Sonia had an inner timer, if she had to get up at a certain hour; she did it automatically, as if she had set within herself a very reliable and accurate mental alarm.
The radio seemed to make fun of her, for at that moment they were playing Vendittis song: ...What a nice Sunday, spent at home waiting, but the phone wont ring anymore, and your boyfriend ran off...
Thats not true, my boyfriend will call me, you can be sure of that! Said Sonia, yawning.
As a matter of fact, she didnt have time to finish her breakfast and the phone rang, contrary to the singer Vendittis predictions.
Good morning! Giorgio greeted her from the other end.
Hi Giogiò, did you sleep well? Answered Sonia, almost choking on the toasted bread she was chewing.
Yes... Im leaving the house now; Ill be at your place in twenty minutes, start inflating the wheels of your bike!
Hmm... No, Ill wait for you. I dont feel like pumping so early in the morning! She laughed mischievously.
Hahahaha! It wouldnt hurt you! All right, Im on my way! He hung up, already excited.
Twenty minutes for Giorgio were five minutes for Sonia. A ridiculously short time to dress, put her make-up on, make her bed and clear away the breakfast table. The morning was sunny. Being so warm already at that hour in the morning, she could wear a pair of khaki-coloured shorts, a green polo, of a fairly consistent fabric, so her breasts wouldnt show, a pair of tennis shoes and a colourful clip to hold her hair back. A little eye shadow to contrast with her brown eyes, a dab of foundation and mascara, a coat of lip gloss, a spray of Bulgari perfume on her neck, wrists and she was ready.
Her bike was on the terrace. She checked the condition of the wheels and they seemed okay. She had already prepared a couple of sandwiches and drinks and put the parcel in her front basket.
She pulled the bike onto the landing, while Giorgio rang the intercom.
Giorgio, can you come up and get my bike please? Sonia pleaded as she opened the door.
With his athletic physique, Giorgio climbed the four flights of stairs taking the steps two by two. His lock of long golden blond hair, swayed at every hop. He wore sportswear, shorts and a white shirt with an unbuttoned Korean collar, ankle socks, running shoes, and on his wrist a gold Rolex. He had locked his Mountain Bike to the light pole in the street. Just to put the lock on, (Sonia thought), it must have taken him five minutes, knowing him, the lock and his precious Giant bike.
Sonia could smell the scent of the Armani fragrance Acqua di Giò, while he was still on the third flight of stairs.
Giorgio knew how to dress, but always exaggerated with perfumes, deodorants and aftershaves. Anyhow he had no intention to save on such products. His parents were the owners of one of the most sought after perfume shop in Florence.
They made a lot of money. Giorgio was used to a worldly life since he was a boy, for he grew up between private parties in prestigious villas, fashion shows where his fathers company logo was omnipresent as official sponsor and important gatherings to which the whole family attended, including Buddy the bulldog that everyone feared, not for his bite but for his drool.
Giorgio was a handsome guy. He was rich, (and this made him even more handsome), well-educated, (sometimes unbearably so), gracious, (sometimes...).
But he was empty. Yes, empty like an empty Nutella jar. Or rather, like an already labelled jar, left-over by Nutellas manufacturer.
Sonia often wondered if she had ever even gotten a whiff of that chocolate hazelnut cream. However, she was content. It was a nice jar after all, she would have filled it with something, and she would find a way to do it.
The jar tumbled into her house, while Sonia was putting her electronic cigarette into her backpack.
Im here!...Whats that? The jar... Giorgio asked Sonia, (without panting).
My electronic cigarette! I bought it a while ago, from that shop nearby. It works, you know.
Does that mean that you've decided to quit smoking? Giorgio asked, intrigued to the point that he stuck his head into the backpack to see that thing better.
Well, at least Ill try. Shall we go? Meanwhile she kissed him on the lips.
Bring the bike downstairs, then we can talk, I have some things to tell you.
Actually, Sonia was not so sure she wanted to tell Giorgio of her tests, not today at least, not during a nice bike ride.
But she had to do it anyway. It was her boyfriends right to know about it. Giogiò, (as she called him), would have been hurt if she had kept it hidden from him, even just for a few days, or even worse if he had heard it from someone else.
They had been going out for about six months, since they met in his fathers perfume shop, where she shopped every once in a while. He liked her for her kindness and her refined elegance; it was almost as if she belonged to another era. She was testing the new Cavalli line, when he came up to her to suggest a fragrance, (which she ended up buying). So he was a man who knew her tastes. They spoke only two words, maybe three, one by her and two by him. Giorgio was the most loquacious between the two of them. It took only a lunch date at the Sushi bar in the centre, then a dinner date in Greve in Chianti. A candle and a good bottle of Chianti wine was enough to bring them together, eye to eye, hand in hand.