The
Aroma of Coffee
Delia woke to the aroma of dark coffee and the
ringing of bells in the tower above her. She rolled over on the bed
and looked through the open window across the stonework and painted
rooftops to the sea beyond.
The shutters were peeling and the hinge on one
was broken so that it framed her view on one side at an odd angle as
if there too many sides to a painting. She sighed and pulled the thin
sheets over her legs and watched a sailing ship cross bare blue
horizon from the headland at Porticciolo out toward the open sea and
beyond.
After a while, she shifted on the bed and put
an old down pillow under her head and listened to the sounds on the
street below her. Bicycles rattled on the cobblestones and old wooden
wheels rolled with random thuds as the fisherman hauled their catch
in wrecked carts to the market at top of the hill. Voices, slow and
deep murmured as they greeted the women in the doorways who replied
to each other in shrieks, ignoring the old men passing between them,
bent to their day.
Delia smiled to herself and then rolled off the
bed and stood naked in the light by the open window. She stretched
her arms above her stood on her tiptoes pulling herself taut and then
releasing and shivering with pleasure she bent to touch her toes.
Awake now, she took the bread and a slice of
salami from the plate on the dresser where they'd been since the
night before and chewed her way through her breakfast.
She lifted a light cotton dress from the back
of the only chair in the room and slipped into it, passing the bread
from one hand to the other as she pulled the thin material over her
head and let it slip over her skin. She stepped to the window and lit
a cigarette and drew deeply from it. The ship with its mainsail
strained passed out of sight as she smoked.
Above the bed, on the huge dark cross hung the
crucified Christ, his slumped white body disagreeing with the simple
oak beams. She looked away, as she always did from the old icon to
the younger more alive body of the young man on the bed below. Brown
in the places she could see and white where she couldn't, his
shoulders bulged even in sleep. The muscle on his arm was made huge
by the edge of the bed where it hung down to the tiled floor and the
pile of heavy workman's clothes.
Her lips parted a touch and she ran her tongue
along them tasting the salt of the salami and the heavy aroma of
coffee wafting again through her open window. She knew Maria would be
roasting the second batch of beans already, ready to take to the top
of the hill to sell to the tourists who wold make the journey later
in the day all the way to the island and then the long climb to the
monastery to enjoy the view back across the bay to the mainland.
She knelt by the bed quickly and placed her
head on her joined hands. She prayed for forgiveness for sins even as
she smiled at the pleasures she'd enjoyed in the many small hours
of the night before.
Maria would be calling her soon anyway, her
chores could not be ignored again and she knew Maria would not make
excuses for her two days in a row. And the coffee drew her as if she
were on a silk rope toward a masked ball.
With a last glance across the old village to
the clear blue bay, she slapped the young man's behind and grabbed
her cowl from the floor.
She bundled his clothes to him as she pushed
him through her door with a kiss on the cheek and a squeeze of his
almost soft manhood.
"Ciao. A Domani." she winked and pulled her
scapula over her head.
As she ran down the tiny wooden staircase she
tied her belt adjusted her veil.
At the door with the wooden cross portico she
paused and closed her eyes and breathed in deeply the dark heady
scent of coffee, freshly brewed, all the way from the hills beyond
where the empty sail ship sailed and brushed down her habit and took
comfort from the heavy familiar rosary beads in her fingers and
pushed open the door.
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