Page 88 of Dante


Font Size:

I learned to cook in the Sartori kitchens. Watched Giula, their maid who is more like family, make pasta from scratch when I was seventeen and angry at the world. She never asked questions. Just handed me a knife and told me to chop onions.

I cried for an hour.

Blamed it on the onions.

The bowl is clean. I set it in the drying rack and reach for the spoon.

My side protests. A dull throb that sharpens when I twist wrong.

I ignore it.

The spoon is clean. The mug is clean.

I look around for something else to do.

The counter has crumbs on it. I find a cloth and wipe them away.

The stovetop has a few spots of dried sauce. I scrub those too.

The faucet is dripping. I tighten it.

Still dripping.

I tighten it harder.

The dripping stops.

I stand there for a moment. Hands braced on the counter. Breathing through the pain in my side.

What the fuck am I doing?

I'm washing dishes. In Marina's kitchen. At eleven o'clock at night. While she hides in the bathroom and talks to someone about god knows what.

I hear the bathroom door open.

Footsteps in the hallway. Soft. Hesitant.

Then she appears in the kitchen doorway.

Her eyes are red.

She stares at me.

I stare back.

"What the hell are you doing?"

Her voice is sharp. Confused. Like she walked into her kitchen and found a stranger rearranging her furniture.

I look down at the cloth in my hand. At the spotless counter. At the dishes drying in the rack.

"Playing soccer," I say.

She blinks.

"What?"

"You asked what I'm doing." I toss the cloth onto the counter. "I'm playing soccer. Obviously."