Read Italian for Beginners Online

Authors: Kristin Harmel

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #FIC000000

Italian for Beginners (29 page)

“Cat,
please
, let me explain!” Michael said.

“There’s really nothing to say,” I said. I forced my eyes away from him and turned back to Karina. “Thank you for inviting
me out this evening,” I said with forced formality. “I hope you have a wonderful time.”

“Cat, you don’t… ,” she began.

But I cut her off. I took a step forward and kissed her on both cheeks. I told Raffaele it was nice to meet him, and I said
good-bye to the other waiters. I nodded to Michael’s uncle, and then I took one last look at Michael’s face. He looked stricken,
as if he couldn’t possibly have anticipated that I would still be unwilling to embark on an affair with a married man. It
made me feel almost ill.

“Don’t come after me,” I said to Michael. “I don’t think there’s anything to say.”

“ But—” he began.

“No,” I said firmly. And before anyone else could say anything, I turned on my heel and walked quickly away without looking
back.

Once outside the restaurant, I broke into a run as fast as my heels would take me. I had the feeling that Michael would try
to follow me, and I didn’t want to hear his explanation. As far as I was concerned, there was nothing he could say that could
make any of this excusable or understandable.

I initially headed toward the apartment, but as I drew closer, I realized that Karina would probably come back soon to find
me. I didn’t want to talk to her tonight, not about Michael. I needed to be alone.

I hailed a cab and asked to be taken to the Ponte Sant’Angelo. I would have walked, but with the heels I had on, I suspected
my feet would have been destroyed in a mass of blisters before I got there. I paid the fare and walked slowly across the bridge
toward the Castel Sant’Angelo, which was casting a glow over the river beneath it. I finally settled near one of the statues
on the far side, the angel holding a cross, and leaned into the marble railing. All around me, Rome glowed in the darkness.

I closed my eyes and let the breeze from the water tickle my face gently.

I knew that my anger at Michael was out of proportion. I barely knew the man, and in truth, we’d had an undeniable connection,
but it had lasted only a few days, until I found out the truth.

What bothered me most, though, and what made me feel so terribly angry at him, was that seeing him try to cheat on his wife
was like watching my mother at work. I had no doubt that, in the time she was gone, she’d had many affairs. And wasn’t Michael
doing the same thing to his spouse and child?

I sat on the bridge, lost in my own thoughts, until I heard church bells in the distance tolling midnight. I shook myself
out of it. There had been a small, foolish part of me that had hoped, a little bit, that Michael would come find me on the
bridge. I had, after all, told him it was my favorite place in Rome. If he really had something to tell me, if there was some
explanation I was missing, he would have come after me, wouldn’t he?

But the truth was, there was no excuse. He was married. I was just as alone as ever.

I pulled out my cell phone, took a deep breath, and called my father, the one person who had never let me down.

“Hi, Cat!” he said when he answered the phone. “How are you, sweetheart? How’s Rome?” It was still early in New York, just
past 6 p.m., and I knew he was probably tuning in to the evening news while he cooked himself a dinner for one—Hamburger Helper,
maybe, or a frozen meal. I could almost see him in my mind, and it made me miss him and miss my life back in New York.

“Hi, Dad,” I said. I closed my eyes for a moment. It was good to hear his voice. “Rome’s been great. I’m sorry I haven’t called.”

He laughed. “You don’t have to check in with me, honey. I’m doing just fine.”

“Good,” I said. I took a deep breath. “Dad, I need to know something.”

“Sure, sweetheart. What is it?”

I paused, not quite sure how to phrase it. “Dad, when Mom left, why did you wait for her?” I asked.

He was quiet for a moment. “What do you mean?” he asked in a flat voice.

“I mean, why didn’t you ask her for a divorce?” I said. “Why did you wait for her to come back to you? Why did you let her
hurt you?”

He sighed. “Cat, it’s not as simple as that.”

“What’s not simple about it?” I asked. I could feel my temper rising a little, as it did every time I heard my father defend
my mother.

“Cat,” my father said slowly, “I know your mother made a lot of mistakes. And the biggest was to walk out and miss most of
your childhood.”

I swallowed hard, but I didn’t say anything.

“But, honey,” he continued, “I wasn’t perfect, either. Your mother and I had a lot of problems, and I did some things to push
her away.”

“So what?” I asked. “Couples fight. That doesn’t mean one of them gets to leave while the other one hangs on.”

“Cat, I loved your mother with all my heart,” my father said slowly. “She made a lot of mistakes. But so did I.”

“Dad, you can’t blame yourself for what happened,” I said.

“Cat,” he said firmly. “You don’t understand everything.” He paused, and his voice softened. “What is this all about, honey?
Are you okay?”

“I’m fine,” I said quickly. I was blinking back unexpected tears.

“Then why all the questions?” he asked.

“I don’t know.”

He paused. “Are you planning to see your mother’s family over there?”

“No,” I said instantly.

The silence stretched on so long that, for a moment, I was sure we’d been disconnected. “Cat, I think maybe you should,” he
said.

I looked out at the dark street, the buildings of the ancient city casting shadows all around me. “No,” I said. “I think maybe
I should let Mom go and forget about her.” Before my father could respond, and before he could hear my voice shaking, I said
a hasty good-bye and told him I’d call him later in the week.

“I love you, Dad,” I added.

“I love you, too,” he said slowly, his voice sad.

I hung up, and blinking back tears, I flagged down a cab and asked the driver to take me to Marco’s.

“Hi,” Marco said, blinking sleepily at me from his doorway when I arrived fifteen minutes later. His sandy hair was flattened
by sleep, and he was wearing only a pair of boxers with little white ducks on them. “What are you doing here?”

I felt instantly foolish. My mind had been spinning with thoughts of Michael and of my parents; I hadn’t even stopped to consider
how inappropriate it would be to drop in on Marco unannounced in the middle of the night. Not to mention the fact that he
had returned from Venice today and hadn’t called me yet.

“I’m sorry,” I said quickly, looking down at my feet. “I shouldn’t have come.”

I could feel his eyes on me as my face flamed. “Of course you should have,” he said finally. He reached out and pulled me
into his arms, pressing me into his bare chest. “You can always come here.”

I could feel the hot moisture of my tears on his chest before I even knew I was crying.

“Cat,” he said in a soothing voice, stroking my hair. “What’s the matter?”

“I don’t know,” I said, sobbing harder. “I don’t know what’s wrong with me.”

“Shhhhh,” he whispered into the top of my hair, ruffling it with his breath. The sensation sent chills through me. “It’s going
to be all right.”

He pulled me into his apartment, kicking the door gently closed behind us.

“Do you want to talk about it?” he asked after a moment.

I shook my head. “No,” I whispered.

I looked up. Our eyes met first, and then I closed mine, and a moment later, I could feel his lips pressing against mine,
gently at first. I responded with a hunger I didn’t realize I had, pressing myself into him as our kisses became deeper and
more intense. Since his studio apartment was so small, we had only a few steps to go to reach his bed, and we tumbled into
it clumsily, with both of us working to tug off first my shirt, then my jeans.

“Are you sure?” Marco asked as he fumbled with the hook to my bra.

“Yes,” I said firmly, into his mouth.

“You want to do this?” he asked. “You’re sure?” he asked again.

“Yes,” I repeated. I wasn’t thinking; I was on autopilot as I helped him with my bra and then reached down for his boxers.

A moment later, after scrambling to find a condom in his underwear drawer, Marco was inside me. I closed my eyes and lost
myself in the moment, holding on to him tightly, afraid that if I let go, I’d drift away forever.

Chapter Eighteen

I
left early the next morning before Marco woke up, kissing him lightly on his forehead and then again on his lips after he
stirred. I stared silently out the cab window on the way home, numbly wondering what I’d just done. My emotions had been stripped
raw.

Karina had slipped a note under my door, but I didn’t read it; I picked it up and put it on my bedside table, then I changed
quickly into pajamas, washed the night off my face, and crawled into bed.

When the phone rang a few hours later, I felt like I’d fallen asleep just moments before. I cracked an eye open and squinted
at the clock. It was seven in the morning. I looked at the caller ID. It was my father. It was the middle of the night in
New York. Something had to be wrong for him to be calling.

I grabbed the receiver, fully awake, a panicky feeling inside me.

“Cat?” It was my father.

“Dad, are you all right?” I asked right away.

“Yes, yes, everyone’s fine,” my father soothed quickly.

“Oh,” I said. My heart slowed and I took a deep breath. “So what’s going on? It’s, like, one in the morning there.”

“I know,” he said. “I’m sorry to call like this. But I’ve been thinking about your phone call all evening.”

“I’m sorry,” I said. “I didn’t mean to make you upset.”

“I know you didn’t.” He paused. “But there are some things you should know.”

“What things?”

There was a long silence. “Dad?” I asked tentatively.

“I cheated on your mother, Cat,” my father blurted out.

I think my heart stopped beating. “What?” I whispered.

“It was just a one-night stand,” he said quickly. “It didn’t mean anything. But it was a few months before she left, and when
she found out about it, I think it was the final straw.”

“You cheated on Mom?”

He sighed. “Things had been bad between us for a while. But there was no excuse for what I did. No excuse. I tried to apologize.
I tried to tell her it didn’t mean anything. But she said it had ruined everything. I had betrayed her trust. And she was
right.”

I was speechless.

“Cat, honey?” my father asked after a moment of silence.

“Why didn’t you tell us?” I said softly. “I mean, when we were older, at least?”

“Because your mother asked me not to,” he said. He sounded choked up. “She knew how badly she had hurt you by leaving. She
didn’t want you girls to hate me, too. Even when she came back, she made me promise to never tell. ‘The girls need someone
they can respect,’ she always said. She said it would never be her, because of what she had done to you by leaving. She wanted
you to be able to respect me.”

I was silent.

“Cat?” My father said tentatively after a moment. “Say something.”

“I don’t know what to say.”

“If you want to hate me, honey, that’s okay,” he said. “I hope you don’t. But if you do, I understand. I spent years there
hating myself. Blaming myself for your mother leaving.”

I thought about it. “Dad, you didn’t make her leave,” I said finally. “No matter what happened, you didn’t make her leave
her family. That was her decision. She left us.”

“I know, honey,” he said. “She regretted it the rest of her life. I know she did. And you have every right to feel the way
you do.” He paused. “I guess I just needed you to know that it wasn’t all as black-and-white as it might have seemed to you
at the time. And it’s a big part of why I never wanted to give up on her. We loved each other, Cat. We always did. We just
both made a lot of mistakes.”

I thought about love and loss, decisions and consequences. “Why are you telling me all of this?”

“Your sister, she’s okay,” my father said. “I’ve never worried much about her. But you, you’re still carrying around this
heavy heart about your mom.” He paused. “Knowing that you’re over there, where she came from, still refusing to let yourself
forgive her, well, it breaks my heart.”

“You think she deserves to be forgiven?” I asked him.

“I think everyone deserves forgiveness, Cat,” he said.

My father told me sadly that he knew it was a lot to take in but that he hoped I would think about things and call him when
I was ready. I agreed and, still shaken to the core, said good-bye.

I sat there on the edge of my bed for a while, thinking about things.

My dad’s revelation hadn’t really changed anything, had it? I mean, sure, perhaps my father wasn’t the faultless martyr I’d
made him out to be in my mind. But I’d known that anyhow, on some level. I had never expected an admission of cheating—he
didn’t seem the type—but I knew he had an Irish temper, and I had many memories of my parents screaming at each other in the
living room when they thought Becky and I were asleep. I used to crawl into bed with her and cover her ears so that she wouldn’t
hear them, but when I was protecting her, there were no hands left to cover my own ears. I always heard every word through
our apartment’s thin walls.

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