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Chance
Who or what to blame or to prize for
changings in our lives
by John Hemingway
28/01/09
A good part of the merit or blame for my
being here lies with an Englishman that I met in the summer of 79. (leia em português >>>)
His name was Paul and we were both working as
dishwashers at a Jewish summer camp for kids in Pennsylvania. Hed just finished his
studies at a university in London and was going to work the summer and then travel around
the States. I was just out of high school and had been accepted at U.C.L.A. and when we
left the camp at the end of August I was pretty sure that that was the last I was ever
going to see of him. He was shy and pale and tended to keep to himself. When he
wasnt working he spent hours going over and over guitar chords that he could never
get right. I didnt think that we had much in common. But surprisingly enough I got a
letter from him around Christmas. He was teaching English in Genoa and sharing an
apartment with three other teachers. I wrote back to him and asked him if you needed any
special qualifications for what he did and he said that it would be the easiest thing in
the world to find me a job. Forget about credentials. he said, This is
Italy, just be yourself. It sounded fun and easy, not at all like hard work, and
when I graduated I held down two jobs for a year to get enough money for the trip and then
left.
The people who owned the school where Paul
worked (and where I would work, too) were New Zealanders. They lived in a large penthouse
apartment in one of the nicer residential neighborhoods of Genoa and had become more
Italian than the Italians. When I met them Fabian and Jacqueline were both in their late
thirties. They had a pair of fifteen-year-old twins. One who was short and scrawny like
their father and the other tall and beautiful like their mother. Fabian was a fervent
anti-communist and a great admirer of Ronald Reagan. But he hadnt always been that
way. As Fabian explained it, they were basically ex-hippies who had traveled around
Europe, living out of a van, until they finally settled in Genoa and hit upon the idea of
starting an English language school. The school was a tremendous success, in part because
Fabian was a genius at acquiring and using other peoples money, but more importantly
because Jacqueline was a stunning blond and did all of the hard work. She spent her days
cruising the center of Milan, pitching their English courses. She was a born saleswoman
and usually got what she wanted. Businessmen were putty in her hands. The Italian maschio has a serious weakness for foreign blondes
and she knew how to play it to her advantage. I remember one of my students telling me
that even if you didnt need English lessons it wouldnt matter. You might even
hate the language and everything that had to do with the Anglo-Saxon world, but by the end
of her presentation shed have your money and youd be stuck with a course.
While Jacqueline was away in the Lombard
capital Fabian stayed in shape romping with their maid at home. According to Paul it was an affair that had been
going on for at least a year. Jacqueline knew all about it, and had even caught them in
bed together, but that didnt stop Fabian. He had his own rules. When the finance
police knocked on his door to have a peek at his enormous antique collection and to ask
him why he never bothered to file a tax return he managed to keep them out. He had duel
British/New Zealand nationality, which meant that he was legally entitled to stay in the
country as an E.U. citizen. But to do that he would have had to register with the police
and pay at least some of the taxes that he owed, so he never went to the Questura (police
station).
Everything about the school was illegal
according to Italian law, but that didnt necessarily mean that it couldnt be
done, it just meant that you had to be smart enough, or furbo, to get around the law. Fatta la legge, trovato linganno (or
the laws been made, The loopholes been found) as the Italians say.
Fabian wasnt doing anything that a lot of other people werent guilty of and
while he was paying us peanuts as teachers and we were all being exploited by his school
if I hadnt worked for him I probably never would have met Ornella.
When I finally started to work in Milan
Jacqueline gave me a lesson near Piazzale Corvetto. It was the last lesson I had on
Thursdays and to get home I had to take the tram #14 to the Duomo and from there the Metro
to my apartment on the other side of the city. Usually when I finished it was already dark
and sometimes there was a thick fog. My Italian wasnt very good and most of what I
could hear was incomprehensible but I was determined to learn and so I listened. I liked
the sound of the language and the way it made me feel as if I were really living in a
foreign place.
One night the people behind me were talking
about something that had to do with English. They were debating what was the right way to
pronounce a sentence and without even looking to see who it was I turned around and gave
them my own version. There were two girls and a guy in their early twenties, and I started
talking with the girl who was fluent in English. Her name was Ornella and I asked her if
she was from the States. No, she said, she was Canadian. I told her that I had
a brother in Vancouver and we kept on talking until the tram got to the Duomo, il capolinea where everyone had to get off. I
hadnt given her my address or phone number and she walked away with her girlfriend
to catch a bus and I went down into the Metro with the guy. He was about my height and
very thin and had dark curly hair. He liked to talk and practice his English and asked me
where I was from and if I liked Italy. Then, when we were underground waiting for the
train, he said to me Ornella, she is pretty, no? and I told him that she was.
And you would like to know her,
yes? and I told him that I would.
Good, and he said this with the
air of someone who was about to irrevocably alter my destiny, give me your address
and I will give it to Ornella, O.K.? and I gave it to him and really didnt
think much of it. She was gone, I figured, and when my train arrived I got on and waved
good-bye.
A couple of days passed and I forgot about
the Canadian and her friends. Jacqueline had given me more lessons and I was out of the
house most of the day. Paul, on the other hand, was usually there in the afternoon. His
guitar playing had become obsessive and the more he practiced the worse he seemed to get. He was, as one of the other British dishwashers at
the camp had told me, the kind of Englishman who should never be allowed off the Isle. He
was literally too English and would only be
happy when he was finally back in a place where the beer was warm, the sky a never-ending
slate-gray and the food arguably the worst on the planet.
Of course, when Ornella unexpectedly knocked
on our door he pretended not to hear her. She kept knocking and in an effort to make
whoever it was go away he got up, and without opening the door, said: Who is
it?
Is John there? she asked.
Who wants to know? he shot back
at her.
A friend. she told him.
No. he said. And he was about to
go back to his guitar playing when Ornella asked him if she could leave her telephone
number.
Tell him he can call me. She said
as he cracked open the door with one of the chains still attached and took the slip of
paper from her hand.
He didnt say anything else and when I
got home he gave me the number and made some comment about teen-agers pestering him when
he was trying to practice. I immediately called Ornella and we started seeing each other
and eventually I found out that the guy Id given my address to down in the Metro had
also done quite a bit of PR for me. Hed convinced Ornella that I was dying to see
her again and that I had begged him to give her my address. She was naturally skeptical
but because of what hed told her she agreed to give it a try.
When she left that school she lost track of
him. A friend of hers heard that hed moved out of town. Perhaps down to Rome or
Naples. I cant even remember what his name was and yet I think that if it
hadnt been for him the two of us wouldnt be together. Pure chance. People that
come into our lives, change everything and then disappear.
Copyright © 2002 John
Hemingway
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