Italian Lessons
- eBook
- Paperback
- Book info
- Sample
- Media
- Author updates
- Lists
Synopsis
Fresh out of college, Carter Quinn has returned to his home in North Providence, Rhode Island, unsure of just about everything except his plans to go to Italy and pursue the woman of his dreams. To do that, he needs to learn to speak Italian, and only one man is right for the job—Giancarlo Rosa…if Carter can survive him. Giancarlo is nobody’s fool. The middle-aged music professor does offer Italian lessons, but only to those who are truly motivated. If Carter wants to learn, he will have to prove himself: lessons three times a week, hours of studying, strict discipline. And there will be no questions about the professor’s life—why he hasn’t written music in years, why he lives alone, and why he left his homeland in the first place. Carter may see Italy as a land of romance, but Giancarlo knows just what disappointments and betrayals live under the Abruzzo sky. What begins as an apparent mismatch between mentor and student soon blossoms into something deeper—a friendship that carries them into the old country, where forgotten secrets may hold the key to a new lease on life. “Pezzelli makes readers want to believe in love at first sight, and his earnest storytelling should win over its share of readers.” --Publishers Weekly
Release date: February 28, 2017
Publisher: Kensington
Print pages: 352
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
Reader buzz
Author updates
Italian Lessons
Peter Pezzelli
As absorbed in his reading as he was at the moment, the world outside his window held little interest for him. Not that it would have mattered even if he had just then taken a notion to look outdoors. Had he caught a glimpse of the person off in the distance, a young man of twenty-two years, Rosa would most likely have taken little note of him. There was nothing out of the ordinary about the young man’s appearance that would have caught his attention, no immediate indication that his journey across campus was tending in any definitive way toward the building in which Rosa sat, and certainly nothing to convey any augury that his path and that of the professor would very soon intersect.
For his part, the young man strode across the campus with an air of great purpose, though with a slight but perceptible limp, the remnant of an unfortunate though not terribly serious mishap on the rugby pitch some weeks earlier. His ankle had been unceremoniously stomped on while he lay defenseless on the ground at the bottom of a ruck, a pile of players struggling to obtain possession of the ball. The injury had not yet completely healed—every step was a small reminder of the incident—yet he took little notice of it. He was in a hurry, and the small discomfort was of little concern. Not completely certain of the exact location of his ultimate destination—the building housing the college’s music department—he paused as he passed the soccer field and track oval, and gazed ahead at the cluster of structures before him to get his bearings.
It was a warm, pleasant day with just the hint of a breeze whispering across the grounds, nudging the light brown hair hanging down over the young man’s brow. Above, the brilliant blue of the noonday sky was unbroken save for a smattering of puffy white clouds gathering on the horizon far away to the west. It was the type of day best given to lounging beneath a shady tree, or perhaps taking an excursion to the beach or enjoying some other form of outdoor recreation, but the young man had more serious pursuits on his mind. He oriented himself toward what he felt certain was the appropriate building and continued on.
By the time the young man reached the side entrance to the building, ascended the stairs to the third floor, and poked his head out into the corridor to ascertain whether he had come to the right place, Rosa had already turned away from his computer. The professor was now standing at his desk, collecting into stacks the various papers and notebooks he intended to take with him.Two of these he gathered into his hands and dropped into a cardboard box destined for the backseat of his car.Taking the box into his arms, he turned and walked headlong out of his office door just as the young man, who had followed the lively strains of the piano music down the corridor, was about to walk in. Only the agility of the young man, who managed to twist himself to the side at the last moment, saved the two from colliding.
Taking little notice of the newcomer, now pressed against the wall, Rosa muttered a perfunctory apology as he squeezed by, consolidated his grip on the box, and started on his way down the corridor.
“Professor Rosa?”
Rosa stopped and turned around, wondering if perhaps he had inadvertently ignored a student from the semester just passed. His students occasionally stopped by his office for one reason or another before heading home for the summer—though usually well before this late date—but, he realized, this young man was not one of them. Dressed as he was in shorts and sneakers and an oversized polo shirt bearing the insignia of some club or team, he looked like any other student Rosa might have encountered on campus, but his face was unfamiliar. He was a sturdy sort, Rosa noted, with a thick neck and rugged shoulders. An athlete, no doubt, but there were many on campus, and Rosa paid little attention to sports.
“Yes?” he finally said, eyeing the young man skeptically.
“Excuse me, you don’t know me, Professor Rosa,” he said in a respectful but urgent voice, “but my name is Carter, Carter Quinn. I was wondering—that is, if you had just a minute—if I could talk to you.”
“Well, Carter, Carter Quinn, you’ve already started talking,” Rosa noted with a bit of acerbity, which his foreign accent had a way of accentuating, “so I suppose whether or not I have a minute is now a moot point.”
“Actually,” said the young man with a sheepish smile, “it’s just Carter Quinn.You know, one ‘Carter,’ not two.”
“You should learn to speak more precisely.”
“Well, in a way, that’s why I’m here.”
“Really?” said Rosa. “And how might that be?”
“I want to learn how to speak Italian.”
“You’re in the wrong place,” Rosa told him. “This is the music department.The foreign language department is in the next building over.”
“Actually, I called them already this morning,” said Carter. “They’re not offering any introductory classes this summer. But the woman I spoke with—I think her name was Patricia—she said I should try getting in touch with you before you left for the summer. She told me that you come from Italy and that sometimes you give private Italian lessons, so I took a chance that I’d find you here. I would have called first, but she said not to bother because you almost never check your voice mail.”
“Hmm,” Rosa grunted. “That sounds just like Patricia.”
“Then it’s true, you do give lessons,” said Carter.
“Yes, sometimes I give lessons,” Rosa admitted, somewhat impatiently. “Sometimes, but not always—and not to just any stranger who walks through the door, I’m afraid.”
“I never really made it through the door,” Carter observed. “Does that help?”
“Not really,” Rosa replied. “Forgive me, my friend, but I don’t think I’ll be giving any lessons this summer. If you look around, perhaps in the yellow pages, I’m sure you’ll be able to find someone who can help you. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m a little busy at the moment.”
With that the professor turned and continued on his way down the corridor to the stairwell and out to his car. Looking up into the sky as he crossed the parking lot, Rosa took in the warmth of the sun and the touch of the soft breeze. He had not realized just how lovely a day it had turned into.That morning, he had brought with him a bagged lunch, intending to eat it at his desk while he finished his work. Now, breathing in the warm, pleasant air, the idea of taking a few minutes to enjoy his meal outdoors seemed to him a much better option. He stowed the box in the backseat of his car and headed back to his office.
To his surprise, when Rosa climbed the stairs and stepped out into the corridor, he found Carter Quinn sitting on the floor outside his office. Seeing the professor approach, Carter jumped to his feet, an apologetic but hopeful expression coming to his face.
“I still haven’t walked through the door,” he said, nodding to the office.
His arms crossed, Rosa shot him a look of consternation. “Mister Carter—”
“Um, Quinn,” he said, clearing his throat.
“I beg your pardon.”
“It’s Mister Quinn,” he said affably, “but of course you can call me Carter.”
“Mister Quinn, who are you? Are you a student here at the college?”
“No,” Carter explained with a shake of his head. “Actually, I live in North Providence, just a little ways up the street off campus. But I just graduated from UNH last week.”
“New Hampshire seems like a long way to go to obtain an education when you have a perfectly fine college right next door,” Rosa pointed out. “Pardon me.”
Rosa stepped past him and into his office. His back to the door, he went to his desk and continued organizing his papers.
“Just needed a change of scenery, I guess,” said Carter with a shrug, lingering outside the door. “It’s a nice place.”
“So I’ve heard,” said Rosa with an air of detachment. He hoped that an attitude of indifference on his part would discourage the younger man and entice him to go on his way. Undaunted, however, Carter stood there, lingering in the corridor just outside the door. His persistence piqued Rosa’s curiosity, and so, against his better judgment, for he had no intention of changing his mind on the matter of the Italian lessons, the professor said, “And what did you study there in New Hampshire, Mister Quinn?”
“Financial management.”
“And for what purpose?”
“Purpose?” Carter said. “I don’t know. I guess because I want a career in business.”
“A career in business,” repeated Rosa with a mildly derisive laugh. “That’s like saying you want a career in breathing.What is it that you truly want to do with your life?”
A moment passed before Carter replied. “I dunno,” he finally admitted. “I’m working on that one.”
“After four years of college, you’re still working on it? What were you doing all that time? Daydreaming?” said Rosa. He looked back over his shoulder and nodded at the insignia on Carter’s shirt. “I’m guessing you are an athlete, yes?”
“I played football,” said Carter with another shrug. “And some rugby in the spring.”
“A scholar athlete,” Rosa noted, turning back to his desk again. “Tell me, which were you more of, the former or the latter?”
“I studied pretty hard . . . sometimes,” he answered, sounding less than convincing, and even less convinced. “But sports were important to me, too, I guess.”
“Sports often are to people,” said Rosa with a sigh. “Too important in my opinion, but in your case I suppose I could understand why. Financial management doesn’t sound like the stuff to stir one’s academic passions.”
“Seemed like a good idea at the time.”
“And why are you coming to me now?” asked Rosa. “Didn’t they have any Italian courses at your university for you to take?”
“Oh, sure they did,” said Carter. “But it wasn’t until just a few weeks ago that I decided to take a trip to Italy sometime this summer.”
“I see. And just what was it that inspired you to do that?”
At this question the young man grew ill at ease. He shifted his stance and looked down at his feet.
“It’s hard to explain,” he said after a time.
“Try.”
“Well, it’s just that lately I’ve become really interested in Italian culture,” he offered. “I’d like to learn more about it, so I thought studying the language would be the best place to start.”
At this pronouncement, Rosa paused and looked once more over his shoulder, eyeing the young man with a look of bemusement. He chuckled to himself as he turned around and leaned back against the edge of the desk, his arms folded.
“So tell me,” he said in a far gentler voice than he had thus far used to address the young man, “what was her name?”
“What do you mean?” said Carter, his face reddening.
“Please, Mister Quinn,” said the professor with a dismissive wave of his hand, “let’s not play games. When and if I agree to invest my time in teaching, I do it only for people who I believe are truly motivated. Otherwise it’s a waste of my time and their money. Now I know some might construe what I’m about to say to you as less than politically correct, but when a young woman comes to me and tells me that she wants to learn to speak Italian because she is interested in studying Italian culture, I usually believe that this is her true intention, because more often than not, this is truly the case. On the other hand, when someone such as yourself comes to me and says that he wants to speak Italian because he is interested in studying Italian culture, more often than not what he is really interested in studying is an Italian woman. So, Mister Carter, Carter Quinn, I’ll ask you again. What was her name?”
A long pause ensued. From what Rosa could see from the pained look on his face, the young man was feverishly turning the question over and over in his mind. At last he dropped his arms to his side and heaved a weary sigh, as if all the energy that had driven him to that place had suddenly left him.
“Elena,” he finally said, speaking the name in an almost reverential voice.
“Elena,” Rosa repeated upon hearing this confession. “A beautiful name. I trust it belongs to a beautiful young lady.”
“Very,” Carter murmured. Then, squirreling up the side of his mouth, he sighed again and added, “How did you know? I mean, is it that obvious?”
“How did I know?” scoffed Rosa, throwing his hands up. “Tell me, what is it that drives a man to leave his home and seek his fortune? Hmm? What is it that makes him want to conquer the world? What is it that finally roots a man in one place, or that can just as easily uproot him in the blink of an eye? What makes him come and go? My friend, for better or worse, it’s always a woman. Trust me. It is just one of the simple facts of life.”
“Yeah, well, I don’t know how simple all of this is,” muttered Quinn.
Rosa stood there for a moment, rubbing his chin thoughtfully, before gesturing to the chair across from his desk. “Sit,” he told him, “and tell me how you came to know this Elena.”
Surprised that his confession had brought him an invitation into the professor’s office instead of immediate ejection from his presence, Carter stepped tentatively inside and sat down in the chair.
“Where do I begin?” he said disconsolately.
“Begin at the beginning,” suggested Rosa. “Tell me about how you first met, or better yet, how it was that you first saw her.”
“That’s easy,” said Carter, looking past Rosa with a faraway gaze. “I can remember it like it was a minute ago. It was during a rugby match over in Newport—the New England collegiate tournament. I was carrying the ball, and when I got tackled I ended up flat on my back, trapped at the bottom of a ruck. There must have been ten guys on top of me, all fighting for the ball, and one of them, probably one of my own teammates, had his knee jammed into my midsection. So besides getting crushed, I could barely breathe. I tried screaming, but nothing came out. It was like being born. I was in agony, and I thought it would never end, but then the ball suddenly came loose and everyone unpiled, leaving me there on the ground while they all ran down the field. I sat up to catch my breath, and I was just about to pick myself up and go running down the field after them when I saw her standing there on the sidelines, looking straight at me, smiling.”
“What did you notice about her?” asked Rosa, studying the young man’s expression.
“Everything,” said Carter dreamily, reliving the moment in his mind. “But not just about her. All of a sudden it was like time had stopped, and I became aware of all these things I never bothered to notice before. How sweet the grass smelled, and how soft it was. How warm the sun felt on my face, and how colorful the uniforms of the players and the clothes of all the people on the sidelines looked. And how beautiful the sky and the clouds were, and how the trees swayed in the wind. It was like everything suddenly came into sharp focus. And Elena was right there in the middle of it all.”
“What did she look like?”
“How can I describe her?” sighed Carter. “She was the most beautiful girl I ever met. She had this long wavy hair like strands of gold, and her face was like the one in that famous painting you see all the time of the girl standing inside the clam shell.You know the one I’m talking about?”
“The Birth of Venus,” said Rosa. “I’ve seen it. But I believe it’s more like a scallop shell.”
“Whatever,” said Carter with a dismissive wave of his own. “It’s a shell. Anyway, she looked at me and smiled, and all of a sudden I forgot about the match and the guys running down the field and the pain in my gut. I couldn’t take my eyes off her. It was like nothing else in the world mattered to me anymore except her.”
“Hmm, I would say that you got hit by the thunderbolt,” chuckled Rosa. “It happens.”
“Yeah? Well, that wasn’t all I got hit with.Two seconds later the ball came bouncing back my way and I was right back in the thick of it. I got whacked but good. But you know, I played the rest of the match in a fog, not feeling a thing. Everywhere I ran on the field I kept looking back to see if she was still there, you know, to make sure I hadn’t just imagined her.”
“And then what happened?”
“The match ended and she was gone,” said Carter. “I figured she must have been a mirage, but then I saw her again a little while later on the other side of the field. I couldn’t help myself, so I just walked straight across the field—right where another match was going on—because I had to talk with her.”
Rosa gave a little laugh and turned back to his desk. He started to sift through the remaining papers stacked there, stuffing those he wished to take with him into a leather satchel. “And how did that first encounter go?” he asked over his shoulder.
“I felt so at ease when I went up to her, like I’d known her my whole life,” said Carter, full of wonder. “And I could tell that she felt the same way, too. The way she smiled and told me her name after I introduced myself. The way she looked at me and touched my cheek on the spot where I had gotten kicked in the face. The way she laughed because I didn’t seem to care about it. And when she talked, her voice, it was like she was singing.You know?”
“I suppose,” said Rosa.
“Anyway,” Carter went on, “I could tell from her accent that she was a foreigner, so I asked her, and she told me she was from Italy. She was an exchange student at Salve Regina.”
“Hence your newfound fascination with Italian culture,” the professor noted. “What happened next?”
“We ended up walking a little ways up the side of the hill next to the field,” said Carter. “We sat down together to watch some of the other matches and just started talking. Actually, she did most of the talking, which was fine with me because I was happy just listening to her—even if her English was a little shaky.”
“What did you talk about?”
“The weather,” shrugged Carter. “Small talk. Then she asked about the rugby matches, so I tried to explain to her what was going on down on the field. After a while she started telling me about Italy, and how nice it was this time of year where she lived, and how I should come and visit it someday.”
“And where would that be?”
“A town called Roccasale,” the young man replied.
“Roccasale?” said the professor, suddenly turning to the young man, an eyebrow arched in curiosity.
“She said it’s a little town not far from someplace called Pescara, wherever that is,” said Carter. “Have you ever heard of it?”
Rosa stood there for a moment, rubbing his chin as he considered the question.
“Yes,” he said thoughtfully after a time. “I have heard of it.Very interesting.” Then, resuming his former impassive expression, he asked, “So, how long did this blissful interlude go on?”
“Not long,” said Carter miserably.“Our next match was about to start, so I had to leave her to go warm up with my teammates. Before I went back to the field, I told her it would be nice to see her after the match. She said she thought it would be nice, too, but friends were coming to pick her up because she had to get back to her dorm to get packed.Turns out she was flying home to Italy the very next day.”
“Ah,” sighed Rosa. “And so . . . ?”
“And so nothing,” griped Carter. “I didn’t know what to say. All of a sudden my teammates were coming up to me, nagging me to get back to the field to get ready, and she just smiled and waved goodbye. ‘Ciao, Carter,’ she said. And that was it. I haven’t seen or heard from her since. I know it’s crazy, but now, no matter what I do or where I go, I can’t get her out of my head. I can’t think straight about anything. It’s like my whole world has come to a stop, and it won’t start again until I see her—at least one more time.”
“And so am I to understand that your idea is to learn Italian and go to Italy in search of this girl?” said Rosa.
“That’s pretty much it,” Carter replied, as if this plan sounded perfectly reasonable.
“Seems a little half-baked,” Rosa opined. “Tell me, exactly what would you do if you were to see her again?”
“I don’t know,” admitted Carter. “Maybe try to explain to her how I feel about her. Find out if she feels the same way—and in my heart I know that she does. I know it. But you see, that’s why I need to learn to speak Italian—so that I can be sure she understands me, and that I understand her. That’s why I came to you today, because I need someone who really knows the language. Will you help me?”
“Mister Carter—”
“Quinn.”
“Mister Quinn,” said Rosa. “Your story is quite touching, very heartfelt, but I was very much in earnest when I told you that I wasn’t planning on giving any Italian lessons this summer. I would like to help you, truly I would, but—”
“Yeah, okay,” said a disconsolate Carter before Rosa could complete the sentence. “I understand.” With a dejected nod, the gesture of a desperate man who, not finding the help he needs, simply moves on to continue in search of it, he got to his feet and started for the door.
Rosa was prepared to watch him go, but then found himself raising a finger into the air. “Aspett’ un attimo,” he said, bringing Carter to a halt. “Wait.”
The professor paused, heaved a long sigh, and passed his hand over his face as he eyed Carter with a look of mild annoyance. “If you give me a telephone number where you can be reached,” he finally said, “I will give it some consideration over the next day or two.”
Carter’s face lit up.
“Don’t get your hopes up,” Rosa quickly added. “I make no promises. It is my vacation time, you know, and I was looking forward to a nice rest. Maybe I will, and maybe I won’t. If I decide no . . . then perhaps at least I can help you find someone else.”
“Whatever you can do to help me would be great,” enthused Carter, excitedly searching through his pockets for a pen. “You won’t be sorry.”
“I’m sorry already,” observed the professor. He took a pen from his desk and handed it over.
Later, after Carter had gone, Rosa stood at the window and watched him make his way back across campus until he was out of sight. He stayed there for a time, gazing out into the distance, his thoughts turning over and over inside his head. At last he turned away from the window and shook his head.
“Roccasale,” he muttered.
Then he reached for the bottle of water and the paper bag resting on the corner of his desk and headed outside to eat his lunch.
“Ciao, Giancarlo!”
Giancarlo Rosa was sitting on the ground, his back up against a tree, eating his lunch while he looked out at the track that circumnavigated the soccer field. There little clusters of people were walking or jogging round and round together beneath the midday sun. Rosa rather enjoyed watching them from the cool of the tree’s shadow. The inherent monotony of their journeys had a way of lulling him into a daydream, and he was staring out at them, his thoughts far away, when he heard the familiar voice. He looked to his side and saw, approaching him, the woman to whom it belonged.
“Ciao, Patrizia,” he called back, nodding a greeting to the woman as she drew close.
“What a beautiful day,” said Patricia, beaming him a smile from behind her sunglasses as she sat down in the grass beside him. “And what a nice spot to have lunch.”
Dressed in burgundy running shorts, a faded Rhode Island College shirt, and sneakers, she looked ready to join the others out on the track. Indeed, as youthful looking as she was, she might easily have passed for a coed instead of a member of the faculty.
“Can I offer you something?” said Rosa.
Patricia lowered her sunglasses enough to reveal a pair of playful, inquisitive blue eyes. “Hmm, what’s on the menu?” she said, leaning closer.
“I have some olives and half of a roasted pepper and provolone sandwich left,” he replied.
Patricia laughed, and pulled her sunglasses up onto the top of her head.
“What is it with you?” she teased him. “Whenever I see you at lunch, you’re always eating prosciutto or provolone or mortadella or something else. Haven’t you ever heard of just a plain old peanut butter and jelly sandwich?”
“Sorry, I tried that once,” said Rosa, feigning a shudder. “It was not an experience I wish to relive.”
“You’re a finicky eater.”
“I was born that way,” he said by way of explanation before adding, “So, you are not interested in the sandwich?”
“Thanks, but I’m going to be running soon,” said Patricia, feigning a shudder of her own. “I’m sure it’s delicious, but roasted peppers probably wouldn’t be the best thing for me to eat right now.”
“Suit yourself,” said Rosa, helping himself to a bite of the sandwich.
Patricia stretched her legs and arms straight out before her and folded her upper body forward until her head was a few inches over her knees. She took a deep breath and then slowly exhaled while she held the position.
“Tell me, why do you run, Patricia?” said Rosa, looking away to the track. “What is it that makes everyone want to go out there and run around in circles all day long?”
“It’s good for your body,” she answered, easing back. “Even better for your head. I like the track.You can go for miles and miles if you want and never have to worry about anything, about traffic or getting lost. And if you go far enough, you start to forget everything, whatever’s on your mind, all the things you’ve been worrying about. It’s really very relaxing in its own way.You should give it a try sometime.”
“Someday, perhaps,” he said with little enthusiasm.
Patricia smiled and bent forward again, this time sliding her hands down to her ankles and stretching out completely until her head rested on her knees. Holding there, her back and arms perfectly extended, she looked at him for a moment.
“Did that student I talked with ever get in touch with you?” she said after a time.
Rosa gave a grunt and swallowed the last of his sandwich. “Ah, Mister Quinn, I presume,” he said, flicking the crumbs from his fingers.
“That’s the one,” she said brightly, a twinkle in her eye as she raised herself back up.
“He accosted me outside my office just a little while ago. And he told me what you said about me and my voice mail.”
“Well, it is true, isn’t it?” she chided him. “It’s terrible, you know. You never check your messages. Or if you do, you almost never return the calls.”
Rosa gave a shrug, as if to say that it really made no difference.
“I really wish you had recommended him to someone else,” he groused.
“Why do you say that?” laughed Patricia. “I thought you enjoyed giving private Italian lessons. You always said it was a nice change of pace from teaching music all the time.”
“Yes, but for once in my life I was looking forward to having absolutely nothing to do for the summer. I’ve been feeling burnt out lately. I’m tired, and I need a rest. It’s been a long year.”
“Well, if that’s the case, you can always just say no.”
“That’s what I did.”
“Really?”
“Well, at least at first,” admitted Rosa. “To be honest, he didn’t seem like the type I wanted to teach.”
“Why not? Was there something wrong with him?”
“No, nothing, not really,” he said. “It’s just that he’s a rugby and football player, and well—”
“Ah, he’s a jock,” said Patricia. She opened her legs into a V and reached out to grasp the tips of her running shoes. “You don’t like athletes,” she added, pulling herself forward.
“It’s not that I have anything against them,” said Rosa, looking away once more to the track. “It’s just that my experiences with them in the classroom haven’t always been so good.Too often their heads are on the playing fields instead of in the classroom. And many of them seem to do the least amount possible to get by. It’s very disappointing sometimes. I just don’t like wasting my time if they’re not going to do their part, that’s al
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...