To Venice for Lunch

We didn’t have a lot of time and we had less money, so we had to be creative. “An appetizer,” said Sabine, my friend and Italian speaking travel companion. We would take the night train, spend the day in Venice, then take another evening train back to Austria. A bed on the train costs much less than a bed in a hotel in Venice, especially at the opening of Carnival, so that’s what we would do.

Our selected trains, however, stubbornly refused to exist. For a while, it looked as though we would stop in Venice for two hours, tops. I surfed the web to see if this made any sense at all. Under “one day in Venice” I found any number of posts that said one should go to Venice for an hour, even. “Go to Venice. No matter what.” It was a persistent theme.

A day or two of research turned up the itinerary we were looking for. Under a sky lit with stars, we headed to the Grossetto train station. A handsome barista made my cup of coffee and we boarded the train to Rome.

The train was dingy, the stations dirty and dimly lit, the platforms disappeared in to the dark. Panhandlers worked the only open cafe where we had a quick cup of tea. The barista sang, loudly and quite well, as though he was not behind a counter in a dusty train station. He smiled broadly at me when I took off my jacket, made some probably suggestive remark in Italian, then smiled again and shrugged when I said, I’m sorry, I don’t speak Italian.

The signboards in Termini station sent us in a perfect circle as we looked for the Metro. We arrived via graffited subway car into Tiburtini, another grim transit center. Behind the little conductor’s building a young man softly played the accordion, a cigarette burning in his mouth. A small child bundled up for winter cried and leaned up against his mom. Gypsies appeared with vast quantities of luggage. We waited. And waited some more.

Around 2am, we stumbled in to our sleeper car, tripping over luggage and trying to find the bunk ladders in the dark. Our cabin mate snored; it was nearly impossible to sleep in the stuffy little cell. I slipped in and out of consciousness. At one point I sat up and dug through my luggage for the earplugs I knew I’d packed. Sabine gently awoke our roommate, who profusely apologized in English with an African accent. “I’m SO sorry, I know, I know,” she said.

I must have slept some, but always there was the noise of our roommate, the rattle of the tracks, my feet kicking up against the luggage rack. I was 22 again, my backpack holding a battered Let’s Go and a dog-eared Kerouac.

No. I was exactly my age and blinking in the Bologna train station. We stood in line in the cafeteria behind a swarthy man who was delicately scented with rose water. A bleary eyed American family sat on their luggage in a corner. Japanese girls chattered and circled like little birds. Our morning train had not been to Bologna, nor was it coming, there was no such train. Never mind the ticket in Sabine’s hand or the large printed schedule. “No. No train. 7:45.” The ticket sales girl snapped at us.

The 7:45 was packed. I dozed and stared out the window and tried not to kick the nice gentleman across from me. The landscape flattened and the light lifted. “Look,” said Sabine, pointing behind me. There in the hazy morning light was Venice, the cathedrals and bell towers, the open water, little boats buzzing towards the skyline. It was a Turner painting updated with construction cranes and electrical lines.

Half an hour later, I stood at the rail on the vaporetto, the camera strap wrapped around my wrist. The sun hit the water. The air smelled fresh. The buildings lining the canal were the color of sand, of red stone, of clay, trimmed with green and white and elaborate detailed carvings. The canal opened up and at last, I saw the famous city up close.

It was so beautiful, I started to cry.

We left Tuscany at 7 o’clock on Wednesday night. We arrived in Venice at 9:45 on Thursday morning. We spent about six hours in Venice. It was totally worth it.

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My photos of Venice are here.

10 thoughts on “To Venice for Lunch”

  1. I loved this … thanks for posting of it. It’s all I can do not to beg to go there NOW! My poor Belgian man … I’m not sure any man should bring a creature in from the wilds of wandering.

    Reply
  2. Thanks Di!

    Venice is, I’m convinced, a disease, an addiction, a state of mind, and a bunch of other prosaic nonsense. I was enchanted. I need a support group.

    You should go. Now is as good a time as any. Night train from Belgium?

    I’m currently hatching a plan to go back in late September. There’s some festival on that I’m sure I must not miss…

    Reply
  3. I’m convinced about going. I went to Rome and everyone who read the long letter home felt convinced I had found a new lover … it was just that I had fallen for Rome. Others have said I must go to Venice and Florence … I will, I just have to get legal residency here in Belgium … it’s taking so long, meanwhile I drool whenever I read anything like what you wrote of your trip.

    Reply
  4. Pam, thanks for leaving the link to this! Wow. You have no idea how badly I’m dying to visit Venice (and travel Europe more). Your story is so full of the little details that make traveling fun. Especially the barista, haha. I hope you win the book! You would truly love it.

    Reply

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