Mamma is standing at our doorway like a 160-pound Roman gladiator. She has not glanced at Sebastiano’s wound. Rather, she is solidly staring at his mom, eye to eye—a gaze quashing any notion of hospitality.
Our three-level, grey rectangular stone building sits within the center of the medieval town of Tarquinia, which, with its nearby necropolises, is proof of an ancient Etruscan civilization. Mamma feels more friendship with the remains of the six thousand graves cut out in the rocks just outside of town than with our neighbors.
Tarquinia’s narrow, winding Renaissance- era streets and row housing thwart privacy and secrecy. With outstretched arms, I can almost touch the grey, stone-cast buildings on either side along the streets. I live on Via Roma. Northern buildings bake in the sunshine. Southern buildings only partly shine golden. Sunrays rarely light east-west pavements. North-south crossroads fry each step I take.
It is a wonderful place to live. I have few friends. Sebastiano Terrazzo, pudgy and pleasant, is my best buddy. We attend the same kindergarten
class at the hilltop. We play soccer in the small square in front of St. Giovanni’s church; we run through narrow cobblestone pathways as if chased by griffins; and, share a pizza slice at the San Marco Café, across from Piazza Cavour, that Giuseppe Salvo, my neighbor, regularly treats us.
I love to win. Conquer. It issuch an energizing emotion. My fear of Sebastiano’s mother has passed. I continue to eat my fresh-baked panino, drenched in olive oil, while peering around from behind my mother’s military stance.
I eye my friend’s forearm with naïve curiosity. I am surprised to see the teeth gash. How did I get rid of the missing skin? Did I spit it out or swallow it? I smile and wet my lips. I sense my chest expanding just short from the point of launching one or two shirt buttons into Mrs. Terrazzo’s face. It must be natural pride, do you think? It brings to mind the day I took a hammer to the head of my demanding, teenage babysitter. One blow was enough to get my way.
Mamma patiently listens to the protestor’s high-class outcries: add-ons to other stings of small- town gossip. A spotlight always follows us shopping, strolling or attending the local opera house, my mamma’s singular satisfaction, escorted by hurtful chatter and finger pointing. Now the beam of shame shines into our home with neighbors coming together to survey and snicker.
I have accepted mamma’s suffering. Unwed motherhood brings screaming and physical abuse as single-parenting practices. I get it. I try my best to be a good son.
The woman calls mamma a strega (witch). Mamma smiles. I know she feels flattered. Philosophically, she has faith in pagan Stregheria (witchcraft). Safeguarding against this evil woman, mamma makes the sign of the horns with two of her fingers on each hand.
Mamma is tolerant but there are certain words best hidden from her. She is merciless when accused of being a lesser human being. She is a proud woman. She is not reserved when it comes to her beliefs.
To the lady’s horror, mamma attacks instantly to the label, ‘slut-shaming single mother’. With an eloquence that belies her status, mamma counters with an electrifying verbal assault. I, not understanding the words, relish the tone. The cowed woman and gentle son scurry away in horrified, stunned silence.
“Mamma, you were great!”
The stream of sunshine eclipses by what appears to be a dismembered, spiritual hand positioned to strike. Blinking, I am shaken by the evil-eye stares of my mother.
“Porco (pig). How dare you embarrass me,” she yells. Her stern look and clenched teeth devour me.
I did not see my mother’s strong arm coming.
All I can do is scream.
“No, no. Please don’t. Stop it! Stop it! I love you mamma. I…I can’t breathe!”
The beating is ruthless. Uninhibited blows smashevery part ofmy body. Nosoonerdoes another bullet hit its mark that a cannonball explodes.
The domestic disturbance echoes, at the speed of light, out the door and the small open window.
I see Giuseppe dashing through the open door. I do not see Esterina, his steadfast spouse, but I can hear her pleads shrouded in tears. Mamma is striking me with abandon with both hands accentuated by fierce kicks. I can’t speak. I have lost my voice.
Giuseppe jumps in struggling to get mighty mamma away from me. I cannot inhale. I am spastic. I have lost all feeling. I think I am dead.
I see Esterina grasping her own hair. She shouts, “Stop, you’re going to scar him for life. Dio mio, he’s dying!”
Chapter 2
Via Roma, Tarquinia, central Italy
We missed Sunday mass. Mamma said I was too weak and that I needed to eat my Stracciatella (egg-drop soup), and rest to shake the fever. Mamma is not religious. I think she brings me to church because she wants us to fit in. She stares more at people’s clothing and conduct than praying. According to mamma, many hypocrites attend mass. She participates little in the proceedings. I dare not call mamma a hypocrite.
I did go back to school on Monday.
I love my kindergarten teacher, Sister LaRosa. She always calls me her little Prince (mio piccolo Principe). She has the prettiest face and the sweetest voice. Her talking is more like singing. I
smell honey whenever she leans over to look me in my eyes. The scent makes me hungry for more of her encouraging words.
At the end of every class, she questions me with kindness as we walk to the front door of the school.
Do you know what to do this afternoon for homework? You are going to help your mamma and tell her she is special, right? You are not going to run and fly down the street like an eagle, are you? You are going to be very careful. Understand my Little Prince?
I love my school, attached to the church. It is right across the piazza from city hall, a magnificent building with an exterior two-story diagonal stone staircase across its front leading to the second- floor balcony. There is a tunnel archway under the building leading to the western part of town. There are much bigger homes there, with gardens. My friend Sebastiano lives there. Often I scramble to the summit to get an aerial view of my school, my church, my fountain, and my part of town.
Tarquinia has its own obelisk, topped with a crucifixion, and circular fountain. After school, noontime, I walk very slowly to the fountain and take a lingering drink of water. Once I think Sister LaRosa has gone inside, I wrap my uniform cape around me, knot it into a necktie around my collar, grab my bag of books and take off down the boulevard around the first bend and down the hill along Via Felice Cavallotti headed for home. Once, I glimpsed Sister
LaRosa smiling down at me from atop the square, but I could not stop racing. I was a superman before I learned that such heroes existed in comic books.
I run, and run down the narrow streets ducking overhanging laundry, dodging meandering pedestrians and parked Vespas barely slowing down at intersections. As a creature of habit, I turn at the first juncture and head back along Via Garibaldi with its throng of folks frequenting numerous shops and cafés. Often, I see my grownup friend, Giuseppe, having his regular espresso with his companions yelling out, “What was that, the wind?” His friends, laughing, urge me to touch the ground and not fly so high.
I am possessed. I want to see mamma and eat my daily surprise treat.
With reckless abandon, I sprint back to Via Lunga that flanks the old wall of Tarquinia. I imagine wicked angels with swords swishing the air chasing me. I am not scared. My guardian angel is soaring above me, smiling; brandishing gigantic fired shining steel in both