The Good Left Undone(97)



“How are you doing today?” Olimpio said from the doorway. Anina followed him into the room.

“I feel grand. Tell him the good news, Dottore.” Matelda looked up at the doctor.

“Matelda can go home.” He smiled down at his patient, took her hand, and gave it an affectionate squeeze.



* * *





“Aren’t you glad I put the elevator in?” Olimpio wheeled Matelda off the lift into their apartment.

“I’m so happy.” The sun split the apartment with stripes of white light illuminating the place and things she loved most. “But I’m thrilled you convinced me to take the penthouse. I love the light.”

Anina emerged from the kitchen. “I juiced some kale for you, Nonna.”

“Oh, bella, you enjoy. Pour Nonna a Campari and soda.”

“Coming up.” Anina brought Matelda’s bag to her room.

“I’d better call Nicolina and tell her we’re home,” Olimpio said.

“Before you do, leave me outside in the sun.”



* * *





Anina brought Matelda’s cocktail and an oil pretzel on the terrace. She pulled a chair over to sit next to her grandmother. “It’s early for alcohol.”

“Not when you’re over eighty. It’s never too late,” Matelda said.

Anina tore the oil pretzel in two. The spongy center was buttery and fresh, while the outer shell was glossy and hard. She handed half to her grandmother.

“I’m going to miss oil pretzels.” Matelda dunked a piece into her drink to soften it. She tasted it. “The nuns in Dumbarton used to make the Scottish version. They called them popovers. I miss those too.”

“We could try to make them for you,” Anina offered.

“Sometimes the memory is sweeter,” Matelda said. “At least for me.”

“Italians never forget what they eat if it’s good.”

Matelda nodded. Her granddaughter had just summarized her entire life in an oil pretzel.





PART THREE





LET WHOEVER LONGS TO ATTAIN ETERNAL LIFE IN HEAVEN HEED THESE WARNINGS:

When considering the future, contemplate these things:

Death, than which nothing is more certain

Judgment, than which nothing is more strict

Hell, than which nothing is more terrible

Paradise, than which nothing is more delightful





CHAPTER 34


Glasgow


JULY 3, 1940


Domenica moved quickly through the crowded streets before stopping at a newsstand. She bought the morning newspaper and unfurled it, searching for a mention of her husband. The news of the fate of the prisoners and crew on the Arandora Star had spread through Ireland and Scotland, though few facts were available. Sister Matelda had shared the news that McVicars died with the captain and most of the crew, but Domenica refused to believe it. Her husband would have found a way to return to her.

Her search for McVicars had become more desperate as the hours passed. Finally, the newspaper printed a list (though incomplete) of the passengers and crew. The photographs were not clear: she did not find her husband’s face among the survivors. She winced as she read the spotty details of the attack. The story as reported seemed fanciful; the facts were vague. Domenica turned the page. Victims of Attack. She traced her finger down the list. She found her husband’s name. She felt her heart shatter inside her body as all hope was lost. Droplets fell onto the newspaper. She looked up, but it wasn’t raining. She put her hand to her face. Domenica was drenched in a feverish sweat.



* * *





Domenica stood at the screen door of the McVicars homestead and took a deep breath before knocking.

Grizelle appeared at the door. “I know why you’re here.”

Domenica followed her inside to the kitchen. The house held a dank smell even though the windows were open and the hawthorn tree outside the window was in full bloom with white blossoms.

“I’m so sorry, Mrs. McVicars.”

Grizelle kept her back to Domenica and gripped the counter. “I went into town this morning. I saw the paper and I didn’t buy one. I didn’t have to. I knew. I walked by the list of the dead at the post. I knew his name was there and I did not want to see it in ink, on a wall, with all those people standing around. But I looked. He was on the list.”

“He was a devoted son. The funeral—” Domenica began.

“There will be no funeral,” she said without emotion. “He died at sea.”

“The merchant navy would like to—”

“I don’t care about the merchant navy. I told him to join the British navy. Better assignments. Did he listen? Not once.”

“But, Mrs. McVicars—”

“They took my son and now he’s dead. There is no medal or certificate etched in gold that will bring him back to me. They can keep their trinkets.”

“He died a hero.”

Grizelle spun around and faced Domenica. “To whom? To the Tallies? Your people? Bunch of crooks. The Germans? You watch. They’ll own us in short order. They have bombs. They will flatten us from the air with the Luftwaffe. The Austrians? Who cares about them? Do they care about me?”

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