An Italian Wife

An Italian Wife Read Free

Book: An Italian Wife Read Free
Author: Ann Hood
Ads: Link
told her. “I only hope I’ve given you a son. That when I send for you, there will be two coming to America.”
    Josephine waved to him, and practically ran back home. The entire thing felt like a dream already. In her house, she hummed as she punched down the dough that had just finished its first rising, and brought a platter of small perfect tomatoes outside to sit in the sun.
    NINE YEARS LATER, her mother came running into the house, out of breath, and grinning broadly.
    â€œFinally,” she said, “Vincenzo has sent for you.”
    Josephine frowned, trying to remember this man who was her husband. But in the years that had passed between them, his face had faded into a smudge, and she could not remember what his voice sounded like. From time to time, she had received a letter from him, telling her how hard he was working and all of the things he was doing to prepare for her arrival. He rented a house, and then he bought that house. He planted the fields around it and he began to save money. She read his letters as if they were chapters in a serial novel. They seemed to have nothing at all to do with her life, which was moving along pleasantly at home. There was no baby produced from those long-forgotten three days after the wedding, and Josephine continued on just as she had before the interruption of marriage.
    But now, it seemed, she really would have to go.
    A week later, she, too, had traveled the cobblestones to the dirt path down the mountain. She had ridden a cart all the way into Naples, where water sparkled more brilliantly than any rocks she had found. Excitement rose in her as she boarded the big ship. For a long time, she stood at the railing, watching the lights of Naples twinkle at her until they finally disappeared. By then, the ship was in the ocean. There was nothing but endless sky, water, and stars.
    Josephine shivered in the cold, damp air. But still she did not move. She stood, waiting for her life to unfold. She stood, ready.

The Summer of Ice

    Y EARS LATER, JOSEPHINE WOULD THINK OF THAT SUMMER of 1918 as the summer of ice. Already, it had become the summer of the Great War. People blamed everything on the fact that the world had gone mad. Dogs howled into the night. Hail as big as plums fell from the sky, not once, but twice that summer. Father Leone held special Masses to pray for the boys going off to war. The village filled the church for those Masses, crying as Father Leone, with his head of slick, wavy hair and his large, drooping handlebar mustache, invoked the names of the town boys who had gone. It was said that the Virgin Mary cried real tears after these Masses. A special representative from the Boston Archdiocese was coming to investigate. But for Josephine, even with the howling dogs and brutal hail, even with the weeping Virgin, and her own son, Carmine, being old enough to join the Army, that summer was ordinary, until Alfredo Petrocelli, the ice man, got the Spanish Influenza.
    On Mondays, the rag man came. He walked down the street calling, “Rags! Rags for sale!” His rags spilled from pails attached to a wire pole that he carried across his shoulders. He wore rags too, the rag man. Tied around his head, his neck, his waist, his wrists and ankles. The rag man was colorful, a burst of brightness every Monday afternoon. Josephine looked forward to hearing him call out his arrival, and always felt disappointed if he failed to come, which happened from time to time because the rag man was a drunk.
    The coal man came on Tuesdays. Covered in soot, with grime in every crease and hole, the coal man drove his dirty red truck up and down the streets, spilling coal as he went. The neighborhood children ran behind the truck, collecting the pieces that fell. Josephine didn’t like the coal man. She didn’t like the way black grime lay beneath his fingernails, or how he blew his nose, releasing a stream of black snot into a dirty handkerchief. The

Similar Books

Taken by the Enemy

Jennifer Bene

The Journal: Cracked Earth

Deborah D. Moore

On His Terms

Rachel Masters

Playing the Game

Stephanie Queen

The Left Behind Collection: All 12 Books

Tim Lahaye, Jerry B. Jenkins