Mrs. Cadafora, who I believe is a widower, hefted two worn but colorful recyclable plastic shopping bags down the street. They were heavy, and the old, stout woman stooped slightly as she carried them.
She was stronger than she looked; rarely, would she accept my help - and it took her a long time to accept mine. I knew from the distance I saw her turn the corner to her apartment in the first floor walk up, the restaurant wouldn't mind my leaving my long occupied table ever so briefly. Today, I watched as one tourist, then another, offered to help bear the burden. She refused one after another - she was stronger than she looked - and far from helpless.
From my usual table, I could see her as she just rounded the bend from the market. I had finally urged the privilege to take the bags and bring them to her first floor walk up, leaving my table at the restaurant briefly - only so briefly.
"Come stai, caro mio?" the maitre'd, who I think was also the owner, was at my side. Looking politely pitiful and with just a hint of love at me - as all native Italians seemed to be able to do at birth.
"Bene, graze. This is excellent as always, signora. Grazie, anchor."
She giggled at my coarse pronunciation but nodded at my effort as I broke my way through her forced Italian lessons with her. Especially on slow weeknights, over additional free glasses of wine, she'd sit and ask questions, I'd respond, fumbling and stumbling through answers.
My life has been pushing against what other people have in their minds about me. I've had plenty of time at this table, night after night, to examine my life. I realize my efforts were never as fruitful as I'd wanted. I learned Italian with her now, to pass the time, perhaps for the better - perhaps not. I gave in to patiently seeing what time would bring me.
I realized beyond a shadow of a doubt it had been easier for me to pretend I was someone important and expect people to come to that conclusion based on my actions than go through the deep work of building patience, credibility, and skills to make it more than veneer. I faced the incredible disgust of accepting the only gratitude and validation I received was obligatory; ceremonial yearly reviews, employees leaving the team, and my romantic partners letting me down easy. At each, it was an obligation to say someone nice about me, it was always a similar thread; I was a listening ear or I was a hard teacher, I was decisive, or they appreciated my methodical diligence in weighing each option, I was caring, but not in the way that was compatible with where their life was going. Anyways, they made an effort and I am grateful.
I decided instead to just show up. If that got me the free glass of wine or Italian lesson - or the attention of a radiantly amazing woman, I knew however small or brief the moment was, it was genuine and not obligation.
Facing a huge impenetrable wall of sadness that was my life, I went nuts. I wanted to "leave it all" and run down to a beach in Florida. I dreamt unrealistically of walking shirtless in the sand and wearing strings of colorful tropical nuts on my next and wrists. My life, tragically, wouldn't be in a shack selling coconut water to ravers. I wouldn't know how to survive, would I?
"Barry, are you there?" The grid of faces looking into their laptop cameras. My profile had no photo, just that circle in the odd neon color with "BE" in it - my initials. I hated turning on my camera. I was constantly reminded to just "be" - be present, be here, be available.
"Yes, I'm here, sorry, tell me again what's the median across the different forecast models? Why don't we offer that average? Let them know it was a compromise."
I didn't touch or smell anyone anymore. I didn't see how their pants were wrinkled, how they wore colors that didn't match, how they forgot to shave in specific areas or ate smelly food at lunch. They were becoming inhuman, godlike and perfect. Because without seeing and being reminded of those flaws every day, I had to fill in what was missing from my battered, imperfect perspective - they always received the benefit of the doubt. Their lives were better than mine. Their rooms didn't smell of dust, their days weren't waiting for a meal at a simple restaurant in tucked away in the Italian sector of the city.
So it started with a sticker on my computer monitor with the simple order "Go to dinner alone." My last relationship didn't work out. She called me a dreamer and my expectations were too high. I thought hers were too low, but I didn't say that to her. I wouldn't say I liked confrontations. They made me uncomfortable. Especially those where I knew I was right, they were wrong. And I'd never convince them. So who better to have dinner with but someone as agreeable as yourself?
"Barry you drop?"
I relished wine, after having had so many. I savored the good ones and drank the bad ones quickly. This was deep red. Its legs extending down to where the liquid met the side of the glass. There was the thinnest of brown lines, speaking of plums, grass, and raisins. Of being harvest in an orchard speckled with white stone and harsh sun. I took a sip and felt relief, I thought I'd never get out of that meeting.
"Yes, what? Sorry just taking notes." I was drawing a picture of a pig with the hind legs of a rabbit.
"If we can get those forecasts to you. Would you be able to add them to your spreadsheet and get them back to us by tomorrow?"
The note on my computer screen said "Remember?"
"Yes, of course. No problem." I resigned to be at my desk for far longer than expected. I moved the note from distracting me on the monitor to a heap of papers on the corner of my desk.
When the text came my reservation had been canceled, I was watching my third set of movie trailer compilations. The forecasts never arrived. I was relieved, as I wasn't looking forward to challenging myself - I'd find another place, get takeout and be done with having a nice time - maybe.
"Hello, Meredith."
"Barry?"
"Hey, how are you?"
"Fine, what's up?"
"Hey, I know that... we're broken up, but would want to come by and have dinner together?"
"When?"
"Tonight?"
"Tonight? It's 7 pm. For dinner? You're still at the office, aren't you?"
"Yeah, but I could get a pizza, green olives, and onion?" It was her favorite.
"I'm good, Barry, but thank you."
"You can't make it? At all?"
"Barry, do you remember we broke up?"
"Yeah, but you did ask 'when,' right? Maybe it's ok to spend time together? I think we can be friends, right? It's a good excuse for a nice mean - not a date just a good - "
"- right, Barry. Thank you, but I do have opportunities to have a nice mean without needing to reach out to my ex."
"Well, I don't - I was wondering - why not, y'know?"
"Why not?" Her voice went high with disbelief. "Because I don't need you and you shouldn't need me, Barry. We're not donating livers and kidneys here, you're getting dinner for fuck's sake."
"So, why make a big deal out of it? C'mon..."
"We just dated for three months, why are you calling me? I don't know what you were expecting, but I don't want to fall back into where those three months were heading - even over dinner."
"Today, it will just be about the dinner, I promise."
"You're trying to get a booty call," She laughed despite herself, "Please have a good night, Barry. OK? Enjoy your 'you' time."
"I can listen to me. I accept that."
Well - I'm glad you accept it, Barry. I don't believe you."
"Well, Meredith. I miss you. I miss this, the banter."
"God, you suck the energy out of the room. Goodbye, please don't call here again."
I imagined slamming the phone down. Her pretty round face, clear blue eyes, frustratedly breaching mussy, dishwater blonde hair away from her eyes as she huffed and sat heavily down on her ugly worn couch. Maybe she will get up a little later and go to those cheap brown particleboard cabinets. Macaroni cheese again? I'm sure she would. Enjoy it.
Fuck it. I'm glad she didn't take me up on the offer.
The sticky note was backed up on my computer screen. I may have absentmindedly put it back up as we spoke. It was there. It didn't mention the appointment. The message was simple - go outside and get dinner.
Take out even.
Take a shower.
Reinvigorate.
Smell Better.
Get to the door.
Go to a restaurant. Any restaurant. Luckily it was this one. It was the one I found myself in every weekday evening having dinner.
The inside was far smaller than I expected, a handful of tables and an assortment of mismatched chairs. A short counter separated the kitchen and the dining floor. The waitress, clad all in black, was leaning against the counter, quietly watching the room.
I could barely get into the room from the door. Almost in the doorway, I was standing over one table. A pretty woman sat alone with a glass of wine - but glaring at me to shut the door.
"What you wandt?" A huge man materialized in front of me wearing checked pants, a white shirt, and a white apron offering me a menu.