Showing posts with label formia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label formia. Show all posts

Tuesday, 1 December 2020

An Odyssey in the Year of the Plague – 12: 22-28 September 2020

 


Monte Circeo from Terracina beach                                          Photos©Nigel Summerley

SEPTEMBER 22 - DAY 29


I was losing things... and not finding things. Maybe four weeks on the road was taking a toll on my brain... In the morning I went to Green to see if I could get my sweater. The place was closed. I tried again later – still closed. I phoned the number on the card they'd given me. The manager explained they were closed today but open tomorrow: "Come at 11am tomorrow."


I had also figured out that I had lost my swimming goggles. The last time that I had had them was on the big rocks by the port. So I took a walk down there and looked through the cracks between the rocks – but there was no sign.


Instead of trying (and failing) to retrieve things that were lost, I decided to give me and my brain a break and I went and sought out the Terracina beach proper. Much of the perfect sand was covered by private enterprise, sun loungers, bars and beach umbrellas – all pretty much empty. Once I got beyond that, there was pure unadulterated sand, sea and sun. I took a couple of hours off.


In town, I bought presents for my friend and her son in Latina – and I bought a bottle of wine to give to Gino if I saw him again at the café near the bus stops.



SEPTEMBER 23 - DAY 30


I said a fond farewell to Luigi at the Hegelberger, after telling him how brilliant he was at running the place, and went to Green as arranged at 11am to get my sweater. There was no one there. Then a cleaner turned up, who knew nothing about it. Then another man turned up and said that he knew nothing and he didn't work here. Then he proceeded to go behind the bar and do what looked like some form of work. This wasn't the first time on the Italian stretch of the odyssey where people who obviously did "work here" said when asked something they didn't want to be bothered with: "I don't work here."


I phoned the manager and reminded him of our conversation.


"Oh we've checked," he said. "You didn't leave your sweater here."


"I definitely did," I said and described it again.


"We've looked. It's not there."


As far as I could tell, the manager had not been there either yesterday or today; and the two people who were here had no interest in being of help. I had a quick look for myself behind the bar and through to the backroom, but I couldn't see any sign of the sweater.


The weather had turned cold and wet, so the loss of the sweater was a pain. But it dawned on me that I had wasted enough time on this and gave up. At least I had had the best test so far of conducting prolonged and difficult (if fruitless) conversations in Italian.


I went down to the café by the buses in the hope of seeing Gino to give him the wine as a thank you, but there was no sign of him.


Amazingly, I didn't have to wait long for the bus to Monte San Biaggio, where that carpark I had seen baking in the heat was now wet and bleak. I walked over to the railway station to find that the ticket office was closed and that the ticket machines weren't working. Things weren't going so well today...


Waiting on the platform for the train to Latina, I got talking to an Australian woman heading back home to Rome. I asked her if you could buy tickets on the train. You could, she said, but they are more expensive. Even if you explained that the ticket machines weren't working? Yes.


In the end the train came and we talked most of the way to Latina about the intricacies of attempting to travel in Italy. In a way I was reassured to find that my experience with no-show trains and unpredictable buses was not unusual, particularly in the south of the country. No one checked whether we had tickets or not.


My hotel – the rather grand-sounding but not quite so grand-looking Excelsior – was straight across from the railway station at Latina Scalo. Because of the prevailing uncertainties over covid rules, quarantines and isolations, my friend Z and I had agreed it was impossible for me to stay with her as previously planned. Her son was about to go back to school, and if any of us had suddenly been found to have the virus, we would all have been in a difficult situation.


The Excelsior was expecting me... but what I wasn't expecting was to have a bathroom with a bath! I hadn't seen a bath for over a month. And this wasn't just a bath. It was a whirlpool bath, complete with a complex system of nozzles and controls. Having once had an unfortunate experience with a whirlpool bath in a penthouse suite at the Mandarin Hotel in Hong Kong (at that time reckoned to be one of the world's top hotels – and I suppose since I was collected from the airport in a Rolls-Royce, it probably was), I decided I would give the whirlpool bit a miss. But a bath! That was going to be wonderful!


Z came and met me in the afternoon and we walked to her place. We talked a lot and drank quite a lot of wine, and I smoked one of the cigars that I'd been promising myself since I bought them in the crazy shop in Andros. We also ate lots of pasta. 


After weeks of remembering streets and paths, I'd quite forgotten to take note of how we had got to the apartment. So when I left Z's late that evening, I pretty much got lost straight away. After a few false starts, I finally figured out the route out of the estate where Z lives and made it back to the Excelsior. The hotel gates were locked but, after a certain amount of buzzing, the night porter let me in.


It was the latest night I had had so far. I went to bed at midnight and actually slept through until 7am.



SEPTEMBER 24 - DAY 31


After breakfast... they do breakfast at the Excelsior, as well as baths... I walked over to see Z. She was understandably anxious because it was her son's first day back at school; but all had gone well, so far...


I still have to sort out a covid test before I can go back to Greece and things are not looking hopeful. Latina hospital seems to be the place to get one but, as I'd been told in Terracina, you have to be in a car.


I'm also thinking about trying to double-back to Sperlonga to see the museum there with its Odyssean sculptures. There's a picture of Sperlonga on my bedroom wall at the Excelsior – and that seems to be telling me that I should go there.


Z was busy tonight, so I went to a local restaurant and sat outdoors, even though it's now getting a little chilly. My Italian must definitely have improved, as I was able to go and complain (gently) about the length of time it was taking for my pizza to arrive. When it did arrive, it was great...



25 SEPTEMBER - DAY 32


I woke up too early yet again. After breakfast and catching up with emails, I went over to the station and got the train to Formia. The helpful man at the ticket office recommended an all-day train and bus pass for €8. So soon I was back in Formia – and back waiting at a bus stop, this time down at the port. There was the usual 30 to 40 minutes wait plus more bus stop sex from a couple slightly older than the one at San Felice – although that didn't stop them from kissing and grinding against each other, which all seemed a bit unnecessary at 11am. The start of rain dampened their spirits and they – and I – went and sheltered until the bus arrived.


By the time we got to Sperlonga the rain really had set in. This time my home-drawn map proved accurate and took me to the edge of this little town. But the rain was so heavy that I had to go from the shelter of one tree to another when it slackened off a bit.


Then I came to a fork in the path and a sign saying Senterio di Ulysse. Rather pathetically, I didn't know what senterio meant so I texted Z. Path, of course. This was the official Odyssean Path... and it was to lead me, in the rain which was now only drizzle, all the way out of town, between the main highway and the sea, to the Archaeological Museum and the ruins of the villa of the Roman emperor Tiberius.


Children's Odyssey drawings posted on the
Senterio di Ulysse
     Photo©Nigel Summerley

These proved to be "must visits" of the Odyssean Coast – not just for the epic statuary recovered and reconstructed here, but also for the remains of the imperial villa by the sea – an utterly impressive setting with the waves rolling right up to the palatial building.


Ruins of Tiberius's villa at Sperlonga                                        Photo©Nigel Summerley

Sperlonga from Tiberius's villa                                                  Photo©Nigel Summerley

And there is the gigantic grotto where Tiberius – another fan of the Odyssey – staged his collection of Odyssean tableaux, including the blinding of Polyphemus, Odysseus cradling the body of Achilles, and Scylla attacking Odysseus's ship. Reconstructions of some of these, from the remains found 60 years ago during roadworks, fill the museum.


Tiberius's grotto and (below) how it used to look                     Photo©Nigel Summerley


View from Tiberius's grotto                                                         Photo©Nigel Summerley

It was difficult to drag myself away from the museum, the ruined villa and its vast grotto, but I had a feeling it wouldn't be straightforward getting back to Latina. And it wasn't...

The blinding of Polyphemus                                                       Photo©Nigel Summerley

The face of Odysseus 
Photo©Nigel Summerley

Back in the centre of Sperlonga, I checked the bus timetable and there was due to be a bus to Formia fairly soon. But as the philosophical station worker at Sibari had pointed out, it is a foolish man who believes the timetable. Three huge private coaches came and went, taking with them a horde of ageing Italian tourists, none of whom had gone to the museum and the villa, but all of whom seemed to have had a good time looking round the shops and cafés and eating ice cream.

I waited one hour and 45 minutes for the bus to Formia – which as far as I know, never did show up. But then a local bus – which the driver (a friendly and communicative one) confirmed was going to Fondi - turned up and I reckoned it was my only hope of getting away. I knew there was a station at Fondi – and from there I should be able to get back to Latina Scalo without too much trouble.


Literally at the very moment we got off the bus at Fondi, the rain came down with such force that we were all drenched to the skin by the time we had run to the shelter of the railway station. Like everyone else, I was cold, wet and bedraggled – but it was great to have got here. The next train to Latina was due in 20 minutes but was being flagged up as 15 minutes late. Only 35 minutes to wait! After nearly two hours waiting for a bus at Sperlonga, this seemed excellent news!


Still soaking wet, I got back to the Excelsior and had the hot bath that I had been promising myself.


In the evening Z took me to a veggie restaurant in Latina Scalo. Great food, great company... and it had been a great day.



26 SEPTEMBER - DAY 33


I slept in late – until 730am! After breakfast I decided to take a bus into Latina, the town, as opposed to Latina Scalo, the suburb. It wasn't that far. How difficult could it be? There were three buses at the stop by the station. Their drivers were doing very little, apart from explaining that they weren't going anywhere – and pointing you in the direction of another bus and another driver. At last, one indicated that he would be going to Latina in 10 minutes. Then, just before departure, he had a phone call from a friend and had to take that. He walked off up the road for a bit, then came back, then started the bus, then walked off again and continued his phone conversation. Finally, he finished the call and we got going through Scalo and then down the long, completely straight road south to Latina – straight, that is, apart from the bus having to navigate the slalom created by countless potholes. The fact that such a major road is in such a poor state of repair – actually, no repair – is shocking.


Latina, with its ordered layout and fascist architecture, was almost deserted and thus kind of spooky – apart from the area around the hospital. I came thinking that I might somehow blag my way in for a covid test but my hopes pretty much evaporated when I got there. There was a covid test queue of at least 70 cars, going right round the block and out of sight.


Cars queue on every side for covid tests
at 
Latina's hospital  Photo©Nigel Summerley

I headed instead for the Cathedral of San Marco. There was only one other person – praying – inside this (like Latina) spacious, modern and rather soulless place.

I took a bus back to Scalo and went for a cup of tea and sandwiches at a café feeling sort of hungover and tired. After a nap at the Excelsior, I went over to Z's. She had printed out stuff that I had emailed to her and which I needed for the rest of the odyssey. Then she drove us into Latina.


The streets were now much busier – with just about everyone wearing masks. The number of young people about increased as the evening went on.


Z wanted to spend some time supporting a friend's anti-racism meeting. While she did that, I went and had one more large chocolate ice cream, and then went and bought a sweater to replace the one left behind in Terracina – because it was starting to get really cold.


I met Z and her friend E after their meeting. They wanted coffee – and I wanted tea, which seriously restricted the choice of café. But E was particularly forbearing and led us to a place that actually had a choice of teas, as well as coffee. After that, Z and I went to a great veggie restaurant called Gorillas; and after that, she drove me back to the Excelsior. A hugless, kissless goodbye seemed sad... but it had been a lovely episode of the odyssey. I shall miss talking with her. And she has been a good influence in many ways...



27 SEPTEMBER - DAY 34


I was up at 5am and out of the hotel by 6am to get the train to Rome. We arrived at Roma Termini just after 7am, giving me an hour to wait for the train to Bari. The train left and arrived pretty much on time. There were fantastic sights of mountains and valleys – and clouds in the valleys with the mountains way above them. Then finally the sea again and the east coast of Italy.


Bari stretched for miles but was mainly closed. I knew it was Sunday but I had forgotten just how closed that made everything here. Foolishly, I didn't look for a café for breakfast at Bari Centrale station; instead I ploughed into town and found nothing.


I carried on to the north-west part of the city where tonight's stopover was and stumbled on an anonymous-looking grocery store selling, today anyway, basically crisps and biscuits. I bought some of these, plus a bag of croissants – which turned out to be only biscuits that looked like croissants. Bizarre!


I sat on a bench by the sea and ate what was essentially rubbish – but it was much better than nothing. Just along from me were a couple of expensive-looking restaurants packed with expensive-looking people in their Sunday best. On balance, I preferred being where I was...


After I'd eaten, I walked past the restaurants and found a fairly scrappy bit of beach and sat in the sun there for an hour before going to find the Casa del Sol, which proved to be another one of those places that was hard to find and nobody seemed to have heard of. I had a street name – Via Assab – but nobody I asked knew of its existence. Losing patience, I went into a small backstreet restaurant and asked the owner; they didn't know where it was, but one of the diners jumped up – Gino-style – and insisted that he would find it.


"I'll take you there," he said, leading me out to his car and saying that he didn't know it but he would find it.


We got it in and he used his phone for directions and for calling someone and also drove at the same time. I fumbled for the seatbelt but it was fixed behind me so I didn't bother.


And suddenly we were there. Casa del Sol was in a little unmarked side street just opposite the minimalist grocery store that I'd been to earlier. I thanked my saviour profusely. He shrugged it off and returned to his meal at the restaurant.


Soon a young woman arrived and let me in. All seemed ok. What about the wifi? I always asked this because it was usually so crucial to planning. After much faffing about, she found the code. But she didn't know which router it was. Or where it was in the apartment. She said she would arrange for her father to come over.


The father turned up... and another ladder incident ensued. He went up a large stepladder found the router – which was not plugged in – on top of an extremely tall bookcase. He got the router going but the password still didn't work. He said he would get his daughter to come back.


This was fast developing into a nomination for the odyssey's best Fawlty Towers tribute performance award.


After he'd gone, I heard his phone ringing, went up the stepladder and found that he had left it on top of the bookcase. Presumably, it was his daughter calling, but I couldn't figure out how to answer it.


Eventually both of them turned up again and between the three of us we got the internet connection working. They left – probably as fed up as I was.


The apartment seemed OK – but actually it wasn't. After a great chat with Gary and Carmen in Spain, I went to bed fairly early but woke at 345am. And I couldn't get back to sleep because of the constant noises being made by the large fridge/freezer that was in the kitchen (which adjoined the bedroom and which had no separating door).


Driven slightly mad by the whole thing, I went out into the hallway and found that there was a power point there. So I went and manhandled the fridge/freezer (which was more or less empty) out through the bedroom and into the hallway. Then I found that the plug on the damn thing didn't fit the power point. So then I manhandled it back to the kitchen. I couldn't take any more of this, so I left the thing unplugged. I didn't really care by this point whether it defrosted all over the floor. After a while I managed to get back to sleep, even though the bloody thing still made noises even when it was unplugged. This was definitely the worst night of the odyssey – no question.



28 SEPTEMBER - DAY 35


I woke to find the bloody wifi not working, so I spent a lot of time getting together on the laptop and on paper everything that I needed to get through the day, including addresses and a map showing six or seven medical centres in Bari (which fortunately I'd already located online when the wifi was working). The main thing I had to do today was get a covid test. And the first thing I had to do was get my ticket for the boat to Patras. I gladly left the Casa del Sol behind and began the long walk from here east along the seafront. 


Perhaps not a total surprise, the port office in town where I had been told I could pick up my ticket was not where I could pick up my ticket. 


"You need to go right into the port," said the woman.


I went right into the port... in pouring rain... a walk almost as long as the one I had already done. Like Patras and Brindisi, Bari's port is designed not for pedestrians, not even really for motorists, but for container lorries. The distances, spaces and security are all designed without people in mind. I finally found the right office, secured my ticket and assured them that I would be having a covid test before boarding – although at this point I had no idea whether that would be possible.


On the way back out of the port I saw a tourist information office and thought it would be useful to pick up a map of Bari, rather than just rely on the one that I had cobbled together on a bit of paper. Again not totally surprisingly, the man in charge of the tourist office was just locking it up.


"Are you closing?"


"Yes," he said, putting his arm round his girlfriend who was waiting to get on his motorbike with him.


It was clear that, between unlocking the office for a minute so that I could get some information and getting on his bike with his girlfriend, he was more inclined to the latter. I swore as they rode off and continued walking in the rain.


I had tea and biscuits (nothing else available) at a café in town and watched the rain ease off. Then I began the quest for a test.


At the first medical centre, there were about three queues and not much clarity. Some people had numbers and were being called. I asked the man next to me how he got his number. It turned out he was a Belgian musician – Victor – who spoke perfect English. He was trying to travel on the same boat as me to Patras, but they had refused to sell him a ticket before he had a covid test – because Belgium is on their danger list. He showed me where the numbered ticket machine was, just inside the door, but when I tried to take a number, I was shouted at by the receptionist on the door and several old ladies who looked as if they could turn ugly.


Victor asked the receptionist if they were actually doing covid tests. We had both assumed from the queues that they were. Perhaps not surprisingly, the answer was: no, they weren't. We were both told to go away.


I took Victor to the next place on my list/map, just round the corner. I tried some of the doctors' doors – all locked – while he phoned a friend at his hostel for help. He said he was going to return to the hostel where someone might know something. We promised to let each other know if we found anywhere that would do a test.


The third medical centre – in a grim backstreet – didn't looking promising. And it wasn't.


The fourth one didn't do testing but a really nice receptionist directed me to a fifth one that was "just round the corner". I went a long way "round the corner" and asked a lot of people if they knew the street the receptionist had told me – but no one knew it. By now, the rain had been replaced by full-on sunshine, which would have been great if I hadn't been fully clothed and pulling a suitcase behind me.


In the end I went back to the fourth medical centre and told the nice receptionist – as politely as I could – that it was impossible to find the place she had told me about. Could she please draw a map? Again, everything was having to be done in Italian and I confess that by this point I was getting stressed out and exhausted. She drew me a map and told me: "It's only ten minutes' walk."


It was at least 20 minutes walk – but I found the place and rang the bell. A woman came to the locked gate.


"Do you do covid tests?"


"Yes." 


Bloody hell!


"But do you have a certificate?" she asked.


"No. What certificate?"


"From your doctor."


"I don't have doctor," I said and did my best to explain my situation and how I had tried and failed to get a test in Terracina and Latina and most of Bari.


"Wait a minute," she said and disappeared back inside. I realised that she was sympathetic and was trying to help – which made quite a difference at this stage.


After five minutes she reappeared: "No. There is no way that we can do it without a certificate. You should go to the hospital."


Memories of the 70-plus cars queueing at Latina hospital came back to me. I thanked her and told her that I was going to give up.


I slogged back the way I had come – I had now been walking, with my luggage, for about four hours.



I saw Caffe Odissea across the road. It seemed meant to be, so I called in, thinking that it might have tea and something nice to eat and even wifi. It had tea. Would I like some disgusting-looking, sugar-laden cakes with it? No!

I was feeling very sorry for myself. I drank my tea and looked at my crumpled list/map. There was one more medical centre that I had failed to find on the way to the fourth one, and it looked as if it really should be quite close to the Caffe Odissea. I resolved to be positive and go and find it...


And I did. A woman came to the door.


"Do you do covid tests?"


"Yes - the serological blood test."


"That would do."


"But we're closed," she said.


My heart sank.


Then she said: "If you come back in an hour, we can do it."


"Do I need a certificate?"


"No."


"How much?"


"€25."


"I'll be back here in an hour," I said.


It was 3pm. If I could get the test done at 4pm, I had time to get back to the port for 530pm when boarding started. Maybe the tea and a rethink at the Caffe Odissea had helped after all.


I found a supermarket nearby and bought grapes, a peach and nuts (anything but the biscuits and pastries of which I had had a surfeit in Italy). I sat on the edge of some grass and had a picnic. The biscuits that I did have left in my bag I gave to the pigeons. Then the pigeons suddenly blasted past me – and I saw that a black cat had been stalking them as they feasted. He had pounced but missed. The pigeons returned, despite the cat still lurking, and they all went through the same drama again...


With all this excitement, the hour passed quickly. I went back to the clinic, where the door stood open. Inside, I met the doctor – who was matter-of-fact and welcoming – and the woman I had already spoken to, who was her receptionist. The fact that they had black-and-white stills from the Italian movie equivalent of Carry On, Doctor on the wall seemed reassuring.


"When will I get the results?" I asked the doctor.


"Presto! It's an instant test."


This all seemed too good to be true – but for once, it was true. I watched as she pricked my finger and inserted a drop of my blood into the instant covid test. I watched as the fluid moved along a little channel. There was a letter C at the end of this channel which I took to signify covid. And the fluid was getting closer to that.


"Is this good or bad?" I asked her.


"Good at the moment," she said. 'But we have to wait another three minutes."


It felt like a long three minutes.


"It's negative," said the doctor.


I wanted to hug her and dance in the street with her. But that was probably not a good idea on all sorts of levels.



The paperwork took a while, but by 430pm I left the clinic with a piece of paper certifying that I did not have the virus.

I had already texted Victor about this place and the previous place, and had had no reply from him. But as I was walking back from the city centre towards the port, he phoned. He had also texted me – about the fact that it was possible to get a test at the hospital – but neither of us had received the other's texts. Anyway he had got his test done and it sounded as if he should get his results the next day; and then, hopefully, be able to buy a ticket to Patras. We wished each other well with our health and with our music.


I walked to the port in increasingly heavy rain – but now didn't care about that. Successfully getting the test done had made any other problem seem extremely minor.


At the port, the rain was about as heavy as rain can get. I sheltered, shivering, for some time in the hope that it would slacken off; and when it did, only slightly, I made a run for the boat.


was soaked. But I handed in my form confirming I was covid-free and I was on my back to Greece... and Ithaca...

Monday, 30 November 2020

An Odyssey in the Year of the Plague – 11: 15-21 September 2020


Lake Avernus                                                                        Photo©Nigel Summerley




























SEPTEMBER 15 - DAY 22


Another bad night's sleep. There seemed to be animated but good-natured conversation until around 2.30am in the street beneath my room. So, up early. Caught up with laundry. Then went for another walk around Lake Avernus. A second look showed the water to be deep and dark and filled with fish, some really tiny... I don't know for sure, but I suspect there must be big ones out there. It's around 200ft deep. It takes an hour to walk around, but that's the path around the lake... the rim of the caldera is set back from that and is, I reckon, about 100 metres higher up.


Back at the Sibilla, I found myself warming even more to the ageing couple who run it – and who reminded me of another lovely couple that I know.


And this feeling continued – despite an incident with my toilet, which was in many ways reminiscent of the Albion Hotel debacle.


On my return from the lake, the owner told me there was a problem with the cistern and that he might have to move me to another room. Between his almost non-existent English and my rudimentary Italian, we had some difficulty making things clear. But apparently the cistern had stopped flushing and would have to be fixed. I said OK... I was happy to move. But then he insisted on showing me the workings – or non-workings – of the cistern in some detail. Again, I said OK.


Nothing happened for a while. And then suddenly he reappeared with two workmen and a ladder and they all made their way into the bathroom to begin doing whatever they were going to do to the cistern.


It seems to have become a recurring theme of the odyssey... I have two workmen in my bathroom... plus the owner of the hotel... doing their best to fix a cistern which is not flushing. 


The owner said that if I didn't mind them fixing it, then I might be able to stay in this room. Again I said OK.


The reason I didn't mind was that this was so different from the Albion Hotel. Mainly because the owner kept apologising and seemed genuinely embarrassed. There was none of the "These things happen" dismissiveness of the Albion Hotel.


Anyway, they fixed the cistern quite quickly and all ended happily. I had successfully visited the Underworld and I had a flushable toilet...


I went for a last swim at the Lido di Napoli, aka Lucrino beach. The Italians just love the beach. They love parading in their minute swimming costumes and bikinis and Speedos. The sun wasn't so hot today, but it's still such a treat to be able to be here.


Back at the hotel there was another confusing but amiable conversation with the owner about whether I should move rooms or not. We agreed there didn't seem much point...


But now the rooms have to be cleaned, it seems. Just as I get back to my room, the very nice and smily cleaning woman asks if she can do her work. It seems a bit pointless as I'm leaving tomorrow, but she has to do it, so I stand on the roof terrace – well, flat roof – and wait. This place could be done up and look amazing – if it were touched up and painted and had lots of flowers. But I guess they haven't got the money – and maybe they are losing the will to keep going. Someone will buy the Sibilla... perhaps...


I'm speaking to a good friend from Sunday Times days, J, this evening to catch up on what's happening...


SEPTEMBER 16 - DAY 23


It turned out that J was working a later shift (from home) than she expected, so now we'll be talking tomorrow.


I got very excited last night because RAI had been heavily plugging the fact that Inspector Montalbano was going to be on at 9.25pm. Such was the level of excitement being generated that I assumed this must be a new episode not yet shown in the UK or released on DVD. In fact, it turned out to be an episode that I'd already seen at least three times – and despite the complexities of the plot, knew whodunnit and why they dunnit pretty much from the opening. Such a shame.


Or maybe not... instead of watching Montalbano, I went to bed, having locked the resident mosquito in the bathroom. That must be the trick, because I had the best night's sleep so far... still waking at 6am... but at least I got eight hours' sleep.


Then it was a fond farewell to Lucrino and the Sibilla Hotel... the owner's wife and I wished each other well and that was it. 


The squeaking, wheezing, often horrendously noisy train made its way to Montesanto, and I made my way through the narrow streets again, not so crowded this time, back to Napoli Centrale.


Pharmacy window, Naples                      Photo©Nigel Summerley

After getting the right ticket office, at the second attempt, I got a ticket to Formia-Gaeta, home of the Laestrygonians, man-eating brutes.

Their descendants may be running the bureau de change at Napoli Centrale... I politely asked the woman behind the counter how much it would cost me if I got €250 on my credit card... She consulted her files (at length – few things are done quickly in Italy)) and then tapped in various calculations on her keyboard (at even greater length). The total cost would be €311.50 she said. 


"That can't be right, can it?"


"It's commission," she said. 


"That's €61.50 commission... That's 25 per cent."


"That's right."


 "It can't be right." 


"It is." 


This seemed to be an offer I could refuse. I went to the Tourist Information desk – which actually seemed to be dealing with a few tourists. The woman there said don't use the bureau de change, use the ATM. I used the ATM, which only scalped €3.95 – a lot but it didn't seem it after the calculations of the bureau de change woman.


The train whizzed me up to Formia. The heat was intense and almost no one moved in the sun-filled streets – except to find shade. I had time to kill before check-in at my apartment and headed down towards the sea. There seemed to be few, if any, visitors, but a lot of locals hanging out on park benches or at a small café with tables in the shade. The café's chocolate-oozing croissants tempted me in, and I sat for a while having them and a pot of tea for my breakfast. 


Then I headed off to find the apartment, marvelling at how cheap that breakfast was, but then realising that the owner had charged me for only one croissant, not two. I went back and pointed out that I had been undercharged (something of a first in my history of complaining) and gave him more money – for which he seemed genuinely grateful...


The apartment was in a big block with a shaded inner courtyard, from where I rang to say I had arrived. A young woman with child in tow came and showed me in. The apartment – fittingly called Omero (Homer) – is really beautiful. How is it that I seem to stay one night in the best places and several nights in the OK places?


Photo©Nigel Summerley

I walked out of town to the west to the Mausoleum of Cicero. Or what remains of it. It seems a a rather morbid remembrance of this remarkable man – a show-off and a smartarse, yes, but still a great and fairly principled man, who was cut down by Mark Athony's thugs in a way that no one should have to die. According to the story, when he was caught by the assassins, he offered them his throat and told them to get on with it. His head and hands were cut off and sent back to Rome, so what if anything of him was buried here in Formia where he had a villa remains to be seen.


Cicero's Mausoleum                                 Photo©Nigel Summerley

The Mausoleum was officially closed – but I hadn't come all this way not to get in and have a look. I waited until there was not traffic on the road either way and then climbed quickly over the locked gate. It may not now look a very pretty monument but it's still pretty, well, monumental. There are Cyclopean stone walls at the base of the tower, which thrusts up impressively into the sky. But it is the surrounding grounds, with their olives, palms and pines, that are perhaps more conducive to meditation on the life of a remarkable man.


After a long, hot walk, it felt like time for a proper chocolate ice cream – from a place just opposite the apartment.


I failed to find Cicero's villa but then no one really knows for sure where it is. When I went to the beach later for a swim I did pass Villa Rubino which is, I think, one of the possible locations, but it's now in private and possibly uncaring hands. I'll check at the Archaeological Museum which is open tomorrow. It was closed today.


A supper of grapes and goat's cheese and sun-dried tomatoes – and a welcome large Peroni beer...


Cicero was one of the writers who located the Laestrygonians – the man-eating giants who gave Odysseus's crew a hard time – at Formia. In fact, those who sailed with Odysseus generally seem to have had a tough time. While their leader always seemed to escape or trick his way out of trouble, they mostly got killed – and mostly in unpleasant ways.


SEPTEMBER 17 - DAY 24


There is a small tourist information centre near the Archaeological Museum. I called in to ask about Cicero's villa but neither of the tourist information men spoke English and my Italian – although improving – isn't brilliant. The upshot was, as I suspected, that no one really knows, and although Villa Rubino could be the place, the private owners won't let anyone near the place to have a look.


More satisfactory was another breakfast of chocolate croissants and tea at the same café as yesterday, then a quick visit to the Archaeological Museum, which is a bit more exciting than the one on Andros – although that isn't saying a lot. There are some striking Roman male nude sculptures, busts of the emperor Augustus and his wife Livia, both of whom became gods, and a two-faced bust of Apollo. As I was now used to, I was the only visitor in the place.


Formia museum piece                              Photo©Nigel Summerley

After the museum I headed straight up the steep hill to the station and almost immediately got onto a train to Monte San Biaggio, from where I would have to get a bus to Terracina.

My first encounter with Italian buses was not a particularly happy or straightforward one. The station at Monte San Biaggio is called, somewhat misleadingly, Monte San Biaggio-Terracina. It is not actually that close to Terracina, although it is the main station that serves the town. And the main feature of MSB that I was to become well acquainted with was its carpark, most of which was empty.


Near the entrance to the carpark was an "information point" – manned by a man who looked like he was having to kill an awful lot of time. I asked him where the buses for Terracina went from. He pointed to the centre of the hot, shadeless carpark, where there was a small shelter. I walked over to the shelter and also began to kill time. MSB seemed like a place where a few people leave their cars and then head for somewhere else by train as quickly as they can. No one else was waiting, apart from a woman on the other side of the carpark who had found some shade under a tree. After about 45 minutes the bus arrived.


"Don't board yet," said the driver. So I continued to wait.


Eventually, after a queue had formed – of people who had sprung from somewhere I couldn't fathom – he said we could start getting on the bus. He seemed very strict about how things had to be done; he even reprimanded someone for trying to jump the queue and get ahead of me.


But then, when I got on, and asked how much it was, he said: "Don't you have a ticket?"


"No. Can't I pay on the bus?"


"If you pay on the bus, it's much more expensive than if you buy a ticket at the bar."


"The bar?"


"Over there," he gestured back towards the station.


"How much more?"


"About seven times more expensive."


"I'll go to the bar. But do I have time?"


"I'll wait for you."


He offered to let me leave my suitcase on the bus while I went to buy a ticket, but I didn't feel that trusting. I had a vision of my suitcase heading off to Terracina while I was stuck in some bar near the railway station trying to explain that I need a bus ticket.


I walked quickly back towards the "information point" whose occupant had been required to do nothing since I'd last spoken to him.


"Where do I buy a ticket for the bus?"


"At the bar."


"Where's the bar?"


"Just round the corner."


It's a pity you didn't tell me that before, you fucker, I thought, but my Italian wasn't yet good enough to express that sentiment.


The bar, remarkably, was just round the corner. And the man serving in there almost gave me the ticket before I had asked for it. It was €1.30 – instead of €7 on the bus.


As I rounded the corner, coming back from the bar, the bus pulled up and I got on board. It didn't feel as if it had even stopped.


I failed to validate my ticket properly in the machine onboard, so a helpful local offered to do it for me. Then he couldn't do it either – which was kind of reassuring. Then eventually he figured it out.


The bus driver didn't hang about. Less than 15 minutes later I was being deposited in the centre of Terracina. After a lot of fiddling with map and compass (the older person's satnav) I figured out where I was – and it wasn't good. I had quite a long, steep climb to get up to the "historic centre" (ie the bit laced with Roman ruins) where my B&B, the Hegelberger, was situated. It was such a slog that I stopped halfway, in the piazza by the stunning Duomo, for an ice cream and a bottle of water – and to watch a couple who'd just got married in this lovely old church having their pictures taken... and taken and taken... They were still having pictures taken when I left to track down the Hegelberger.


Wedding at Terracina                              Photos©Nigel Summerley


Luigi, the son of the Hegelberger household, and who reminded me of my own son, Rory, was extremely welcoming and helpful and explained everything in very good English. His mother is German and there is a kind of sparse, almost threadbare, feel about the place. I liked it. Luigi even offered to organise an early breakfast and transport to the port in the morning, but I said I'd just get up early and walk.

I went to a local pharmacy and asked where I might be able to get a covid test. The very helpful pharmacist gave me the address of a medical centre nearby. I went there, got my ticket and waited in the queue. I didn't have to wait too long. But the receptionist explained that they couldn't do a test here and that I would have to go the hospital in Latina – and I would have to have a car because they would only do drive-in tests. I explained that I didn't have a car. She looked at me with some surprise and said that then I would not be able to get a test. This didn't bode well. The only upside of all this was that I had managed to have a conversation with a doctor's receptionist – all in Italian. My language was definitely improving, probably thanks to the growing number of such encounters with local people – and watching a lot of Italian television in the evenings.


It took a while to find out where the actual port for ferry departures was on Terracina's extensive and winding seafront – but finally I did. I collected my return ticket to Ponza from the office, then I lay in the sun on the nearby "beach" – which was really an expanse of gigantic flat rocks.


After supper in my room back at the Hegelberger, I went to bed early, setting my alarm just in case this was the one night that I slept really well. It wasn't.


At about 1230am what sounded like a fire alarm went off. I heard noise outside in the corridor. Was this a fire? Was this one more Fawlty Towers tribute act? I went out into the corridor where another guest, a German woman in her dressing gown, kept saying "Fire" and pointing at my room. The noise of the alarm was so loud that it was impossible to tell where it was coming from. But she could be right. Maybe it was the alarm on the ceiling above my bed. The ceilings were all very high and I couldn't reach the alarm in my room. I grabbed a drumstick from my case, leapt on the bed and poked the button on the alarm, hoping to reset it. Instead the alarm fell off the ceiling. I took out its battery – and the noise continued. This definitely wasn't where the noise was coming from. It seemed to be coming from an alarm even higher up on the ceiling in the corridor. The German woman had by now phoned Frau Hegelberger, who soon appeared looking extremely glamorous in a crimson nightie, produced a ladder from a cupboard [the third odyssey incident so far involving a ladder], shimmied up it, and disabled the offending alarm.


"Right!" she said, matter-of-factly. "Sorry about that. See you tomorrow."


And slightly stunned, we all went back to bed...


SEPTEMBER 18 - DAY 25


Despite the fire alarm incident, I still woke early and set off down the hills to the port. There were a lot of people – more than I had expected – and the boat, when it arrived, was fairly small. Temperatures were checked and then we boarded. I grabbed a seat on the top deck, hoping to stay socially distanced, but that was not going to happen. The boat filled up completely and, although most people were obeying the rules and wearing a mask throughout the journey to Ponza, quite a few weren't. But the main thing was that I was heading for the island of Circe... there had been many times when I really hadn't thought that I would get this far. The crossing took just under an hour and then we were suddenly in the thick of things. I'd imagined Ponza would be calm and quiet, but it was just the opposite – more busy and more buzzy than anywhere I had been so far (with the exception of Naples).


Buying a bus ticket and finding the right bus proved easy and soon I was heading away from Ponza town, which was packed with Italian holidaymakers, and north to La Piana and my apartment at Casa Mary. The only problem when I got off the bus was that there was no sign of Casa Mary. I walked all around the village and couldn't find it. I phoned the number for it and got no reply. I asked at the pizzeria. No one had heard of it. I walked down a lane where someone thought it might be, got barked at by a lot of dogs, and got told by a local that they had never heard of Casa Mary. In the end I asked five or six people – but still no luck. 


Then I saw the post office. Surely they would know... The woman there was really helpful but, no, she had never heard of Casa Mary either. A man emerged from the back of the post office with a smartphone in his hand and declared that he would find it. And finally he did. Thank god, or I could have still been wandering the streets of La Piana. I followed his instructions and came to an unmarked flight of steps off the main road. I asked at the first villa whether this was indeed Casa Mary. No, it wasn't. But the woman there pointed me up more steps. "It's there," she said. And it was. 


The owner of Casa Mary – possibly Mary... I never did find out – was sitting on the sun terrace. I explained how difficult it had been to find – particularly as the map I had been sent located it nowhere near here. She seemed unconcerned.


"And I did phone," I said.


"Which number?"


"This one, the one I was sent."


"That's the wrong number," she said, again not particularly concerned. "And there are two of you, yes?"


"No, just one."


"Are you sure?"


"Yes." I was getting close to becoming exasperated but decided there was no point.


"Oh well," she said, as if she didn't quite believe that I was travelling alone, and proceeded to show me around. The apartment was really, really lovely, and all the difficulties of finding it melted away.


But then I asked about the internet.


"The wifi is here," she said. "But it is not functioning. Goodbye."


It reminded me of Ann Robinson dismissing a contestant on The Weakest Link.


So I was in this amazing place, with the most beautiful view across the bay to the island of Palmarola. Perhaps it was just too much to expect also to have wifi that worked.


I had a siesta and then started thinking that there had to be a beach nearby. I walked down the road and followed a promising sign... to Achille and Lucia's Boat Hire... At the bottom of the steep and winding path there was no beach, but there was a rocky seafront and a tall, good-looking man, whom I took to be Achille. I asked if it would be possible to take a boat trip around Ponza.


"Not tomorrow," he said. "Tomorrow we'll be taking a boat to Palmarola for the day."


It had to be done. This was probably the nearest I was going to get to sailing like Odysseus. And with a man called Achilles...


I told him I'd be back in the morning. Distant, jagged, rugged Palmarola looks like it should be in a Ray Harryhausen-type sword-and-sandals epic: unreal but it's real!


Sunset over Palmarola                                                                Photo©Nigel Summerley

I watched the TV news... showing pictures of central London and Paris and reporting on the possibility of another major lockdown. Hardly anyone in the pictures is wearing a mask. Are Parisians and Londoners still not taking this seriously? The Italians look on in disbelief...

In the evening I went to the village pizzeria where the ladies had been so kind earlier in the day trying to help me figure out where Casa Mary was. I have a feeling that Mary – or whoever she is – doesn't mix with the locals. The pizza and the local wine were perfect. All seems well...


SEPTEMBER 19 - DAY 26


No sign of the tall, good-looking man I thought was Achille... In fact, Achille turns out to be a nondescript bloke smoking a roll-up and the organiser of getting us into tiny boats to ferry us to the small boat, the Pegasus, which will take us to Palmarola. And the skipper of the Pegasus is the extremely capable and heroic-looking young Giacomo, who definitely could play the part of Achilles. He took the Pegasus flying across the waves with six of us aboard: me, an Italian/Swedish couple, and an Italian man with his girlfriend and her cousin.


The Italian/Swedish couple had met when he was working in London. He'd lived in Hatton Cross, Dulwich and the Holloway Road. Sweden seemed to have done not too bad so far with the virus, despite no lockdown and no rules. The Swedish government doesn't tell people what to do, he explained, it favours personal choice and freedom.


Bound for Palmarola                                                                   Photo©Nigel Summerley

The two young women in the Italian trio wore matching bikinis – the leopard-print bottoms of which were close to non-existent. I wondered if they had dared each other to wear them. I didn't ask. But they certainly had the bottoms to carry off those bottoms...

Halfway round Palmarola they and I all simultaneously spotted another woman on another boat wearing exactly the same bikini. "Another one!" I shouted involuntarily and then noticed a look of slight indignation on the face of one of the cousins. "But she doesn't look as good as you two," I nearly said, but then thought it best to keep quiet before I put my foot further into my mouth.


Photo©Nigel Summerley

Photo©Nigel Summerley

Palmarola was the real stunning beauty of this trip, so much so that it is beyond proper description. Circling its many bays, grottoes, caves, inlets and islets, either low on the water in the Pegasus or swimming in the clear blue whenever we stopped, we were all in awe of its monumental cliffs and peaks thrusting up out of the Tyrrhenian Sea. Apparently, Jacques Cousteau called it the Mediterranean's most beautiful island – and up close to it, it's easy to see why. Not that I'm trying to outdo old Jacques but, as natural wonders go, I would put its atmosphere up there with that of the Grand Canyon.

Photo©Nigel Summerley

Photo©Nigel Summerley

Photo©Nigel Summerley

Photo©Nigel Summerley

Photo©Nigel Summerley

Photo©Nigel Summerley

Photo©Nigel Summerley

We saw so many amazing sights around the island but one that particularly sticks in the memory was seeing a pair of male wild goats (presumably attempting to settle a territorial dispute) headbutting each other ferociously as they stood way up above a sheer drop to the sea. Perhaps they had once been men but had been transformed by Circe...

Giacomo told us how pirates had been in the habit of using Palmarola's natural hiding places to conceal their ships and lay in wait for passing victims. We sailed around the island all day before he finally turned the Pegasus back towards Ponza. 


Heading back to Ponza                                                                Photo©Nigel Summerley

It had to be another night in the pizzeria with calzone and red wine. Lots of young boys were charging up and down the street on their scooters (not completely dissimilar to the goats of Palmarola) to impress young girls. Most of them ended up with girls on the backs of their scooters. The only girl who was riding her own scooter didn't have a boy on the back...



SEPTEMBER 20 - DAY 27


Woke early and left early, since checkout was a not particularly hospitable 9am. In fact, I left at 730am before the sun got too high. It was a 90-minute walk into Ponza town – a lot of it uphill. Across the water I could see the hazy outline of Palmarola. 


Ponza is such a green and beautiful island, with palms, eucalyptus, cacti and vines, and gardens growing aubergines and tomatoes. And the village houses are cubes of many colours.


Now there was just a matter of seven hours to wait for the boat back to Terracina. It helped to remember that I was bloody lucky to be here...


I spent some time on the beach – until it got too busy and too loud. The Italians seem to carry on conversations even when they are swimming and the person they are talking too is on the sand.


In a weird way Ponza town reminds me of Tenby in Pembrokeshire – with its multi-coloured houses, little port full of boats... and lots of seagulls.


The port at Ponza                   Photo©Nigel Summerley

There was an unexpected bonus. Waiting for the ferry back to the mainland, I heard what I thought was people calling my name. It couldn't be, could it? I saw two women calling out from a nearby café but didn't recognise them – basically, I didn't recognise them with their clothes on. It was the bikini cousins from the Pegasus and the boyfriend. They seemed genuinely pleased to see me again – and I them. We talked a lot – especially on the hour's journey back on a perfect evening. They said a lot of people were now leaving Ponza because the weather was going to change. 


As we approached the mainland, the headland of Monte Circeo looked huge in the evening sunlight. This is the other candidate for being Circe's island. For although it is now joined to the land, it was long ago an island – and still looks like one.


I have to climb it of course. It will just be a question of getting a bus over to San Felice Circeo and then walking for, they reckon, four to six hours.


It was strange but good to be back in Terracina, where I was welcomed at the Hegelberger as if I were an old friend...



SEPTEMBER 21 - DAY 28


They said the weather was going to change... and it certainly has. A thunderstorm as loud and as shattering as any that I've ever heard hit Terracina this morning, as I was finalising my plans to go to climb Monte Circeo. It's not looking good. And the storm seems to have knocked out the internet.


I'll have one more try to get a private covid test done in Terracina. I also wanted to go to the museum at Sperlonga but - I should have realised - like the Archaeological Museum in Formia, it's only open Thursday to Sunday. So I'll have to try doing it from Latina.


Trying to be positive, I did some washing, hung it out to dry in the sheltered area outside my apartment... with the rain pouring down.


The thunderstorm moved on, the downpour eased and there were patches of blue sky over Circeo, which up to now had been invisible in the rain. The day started to warm up...


Staying positive, I went into town and checked at the pharmacy again. Was there no private health centre in Terracina that would do a covid test? The answer was an unequivocal no. Latina hospital was mentioned yet again.


I headed to the bus stops in the centre and bought a ticket for San Felice Circeo at the café in the filling station opposite. I asked the woman behind the counter where the bus went from and she pointed me to the bus stop just outside. There were buses going in both directions and I was having trouble marrying up the buses and their numbers and destinations with the timetable. I asked a man waiting at the same stop if this was the one for buses to San Felice and he confirmed it was.


Then after some time, a short and animated elderly man (who reminded me not a little of Danny De Vito) appeared at my side and asked if it was right that I was going to San Felice. I told him it was. I assumed someone in the café had told him this.


"You'll never get there from here," he said.


"But I've been told this is the right stop."


"You'll never get there from here," he repeated.


"Are you sure?"


"Yes. You need to walk from here for about two blocks. And then you see a dual carriageway. And then you take a right. And then you look out for the bus station."


"I thought this was the bus station."


All this was in Italian. And some of it I couldn't grasp.


Then he shouted loudly to everyone in the vicinity: "He doesn't understand me! He doesn't understand me!"


I apologised and try to continue the conversation, now feeling that my chances of getting anywhere near Monte Circeo were slipping away.


"It's no good! No good! Come with me!" he shouted, walking across to the filling station. I followed him.


"Get in!" he said, pointing at a dirty old car.


"Really?"


"Get in!"


I got in. I used to have a relationship with a woman who was lovely but who had the untidiest, grubbiest car I had ever seen. This car was at least five times worse. The passenger seat was covered in tools and bits of things that I could not identify, plus a lot of dust.


"This car is used for work," he explained. 


I searched in vain for a seatbelt. I wondered about the coronavirus risk of being jammed inside this mobile hellhole... And then I thought, "Don't think about it."


We were already out on the main road and heading north at speed.


"I'm taking you. You'll see."


And he did take me – right the way to the right bus stop, which as he had said was at another "bus station", ie road with a few bus stops. Not only that, he cornered a bus driver sitting in his bus and demanded to know if and when he was going to San Felice. Like me, the bus driver did as he was told. He confirmed that he would be going there – and soon.


"Right. This is your bus," said my saviour. "On you get."


"What's your name?"


"Gino."


"Grazie, Gino," I said, without any hesitation shaking his hand. I had to. He had been so good to me. And then I noticed that the hand I had just clasped had no fingers on it... No time to say anything more... I was on the bus and the bus was leaving.


I will always be indebted to the amazing Gino for his uncalled for kindness and generosity. If it weren't for him, the rest of this day might not have happened.


As was often the case on this odyssey, I had drawn a map of the area I was heading for; and as was also often the case, it didn't quite tie in with what I found. The bus dropped me near the centre of modern San Felice and I made my way in the general direction I figured that I needed to go – obviously towards the mountain, but it wasn't as straightforward as that. Roads tended not to go in straight lines here.


On a couple of occasions I thought I must be lost and came close to turning back and starting again. But I pressed on when I saw signs to the old town, Centro Storico, which seems to be Italian for twee restaurants and boutiques selling hardly anything that anybody needs... From here I was able to identify street names and confirm that I was on course for the start of the path leading up Monte Circeo.


The walk was up and up and up, steep but not too tough most of the time. And it was through myriad beautiful trees. From a distance Circeo can look severe and barren, but up close it is covered in this truly enchanting forest, filled with stillness and magic. One could see how an Odysseus might not want to leave...


Circe's forest                                             Photo©Nigel Summerley

Finally, I emerged from the shaded forest and climbed to the sunny summit crowned by the little ruin known as Fortino di Creta Rosa. I'm not usually one for resting on walks but I stayed here for 90 minutes, just lying in the sun and marvelling at how the day had changed from thunderstorms to clear blue skies. The view from up here was stunning and the only sounds were of the hills seeming to talk back and forth to each other by means of the wind. There were plenty of flies and grey grasshoppers but no other life was visible – apart from great birds of prey wheeling overhead.

I had thought that I had reached the summit but as I left the Fortino I realised that the path went on farther and that beyond the trees to my left there looked like higher ground. I reckoned I was only going to be here the once, so I followed the path onward. The going got tougher and I stumbled a few times – fortunately towards the mountain rather towards the uncomfortable-looking drop on the other side. I finally got as far as I thought it sensible to go – although there was still one green-clad tower of rock ahead that looked just that bit higher than where I was standing. To get to that, it looked as if I would have to down before going up. If I hadn't still had to get back down to St Felice and back to Terracina, I would have pushed on. But time was now a factor, and I turned back feeling there was no disgrace in it...


The view from Monte Circeo                                                       Photo©Nigel Summerley

Down and down was definitely quicker than the ascent – but still hard and hot work. All this time on the mountain I had not seen a single soul – I had had Monte Circeo to myself. Towards the bottom I encountered two Italian men setting off upward – maybe starting the climb at 5pm made more sense.

I retraced my steps through San Felice back to where the bus had dropped me. The wait for a bus turned out to be a long one. I asked one bus driver – parked and doing nothing – where I could get the bus to Terracina. He said nothing and pointed to the other side of the road.


"Quando?"


He shrugged.


There was another bus driver parked up nearby, also doing very little. He was friendlier and more communicative and told me that I would definitely get a Terracina bus if I stood at the stop that he directed me to. I waited there. For an hour. And then there was a hopeful sign. A young couple on a scooter turned up – and he was obviously dropping her off to get her bus. After prolonged and intensive kissing, they said goodbye to each other and then the bus turned up. The boy's timing had been impeccable...


In the evening, back at Terracina, I treated myself to an expensive but excellent meal at Green, a trendy eaterie – in the Centro Storico of course. The only downside was that I arrived at the outdoor restaurant in daylight and left in darkness, clutching the remains of a bottle of red wine – but leaving my only sweater behind on a chair and not realising what I had done until the next day...