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Authors: Ann Hood

BOOK: An Italian Wife
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Josephine swallowed hard. She believed she'd had a holy experience. While she had given her milk to God through Father Leone, something deep within her had stirred. She was damp everywhere, under her arms, between her breasts, even between her legs.

“Go home, Josephine,” Father Leone said, “and be a wife to your husband. God orders you to do this.”

PERHAPS, JOSEPHINE THOUGHT
as she made her way to the witch's house, it was possible to do her duty as a wife and to stop having babies. Ever since that day last week in the church, Josephine had felt closer to God. The priest was indeed a holy man. At church on Sunday, she had gazed up at him as he stood delivering God's words, and that same something had stirred in her.

With Bella in a sling swaying in front of her, Josephine walked all the way to the
strega
's house through the woods so no one would see her. One thing everyone knew that the witch could do was to stop a pregnancy before the baby got too big. This was a sin, but women regularly came to the witch for that. Josephine didn't want anyone to think that was what she was doing.

Barefoot, she walked through the quiet woods. Except for her daughter sleeping against her, Josephine could have been back in the Old Country, walking to the stream. The moss was soft and squishy beneath her feet, and she spotted mushrooms that would be good cooked in red sauce. Josephine couldn't remember when she had last felt so peaceful. At home, there was always a baby needing to be nursed or fed or changed or washed; there was always a meal to cook, clothes to clean; there was Vincenzo, already wanting her, even though Bella was just ten weeks old. She could tell the way his puffy eyes lingered on her breasts as she nursed Bella and Chiara, then Elisabetta.

Her breasts were so sore and swollen, covered in fat blue veins, that Josephine could not understand how they brought desire to him. But they did. He had never once even touched them, or seen them, until Carmine was born and she was nursing him. But Vincenzo ogled them anytime she had them out, which was most of the day. Sometimes Josephine wondered if other women's husbands touched them. Or if every man did what Vincenzo did. She was too embarrassed to ask, but there were times when something in her longed for Vincenzo, fat Vincenzo, to caress her, to kiss her mouth, to touch her thighs.

Once, so long ago now that she could not even remember when, between babies, she was washing herself in the big silver tub they kept outside, and her soapy hands gently scrubbed her thighs, then her inner thighs. Small charges, like electricity, shot through her. Tentatively, she washed where her babies came out. Usually, she did this hurriedly and with great efficiency. But this day, because she was alone in her yard and the touch of her own soapy hands had sent these small jolts through her, she washed herself there more carefully. Slowly, she rubbed herself, keeping her hand soapy and slippery. Yes. It felt good to be touched there. But also silly. And wrong. Josephine got out of the tub quickly and went and confessed this to Father Leone, who made her say a rosary for trying to find pleasure in such a sinful way.

But it wasn't pleasure she had been after, Josephine thought as she made her way to the
strega
's house, which had come into view. It was tenderness. How tenderly Father Leone had taken her milk. Tenderness like this was a holy experience, wasn't it?

Josephine realized that the witch was standing outside the house, hands on her hips, watching Josephine approach. To Josephine's surprise, the
strega
was beautiful. Her hair was in a thick black braid down her back, and her skin was smooth and clear. She had surprising violet eyes, and she wore pants, like a man. She was smiling at Josephine.

“Don't worry,” the witch said, “you will find that tenderness. But not for ten more years.”

Josephine stopped in her tracks. The woman was most definitely a
strega
, to know what was in Josephine's heart.

“That's why you came, isn't it?”

“No,” Josephine said slowly. But even as she said it, she wondered if perhaps it was why she had come.

The witch looked down at Bella, still sleeping, and something crossed her face, then passed.

“What?” Josephine said.

The witch's violet eyes rested on Josephine's face. “Why did you come then?”

Unsettled by the way she had looked at the baby, Josephine struggled for the words. “This is my seventh baby in ten years,” she began.

“Too many, eh?”

“No. But enough.”

The witch laughed. She told Josephine to wait and she disappeared into the house. When she returned, she held a brown bag filled with sticks and twigs and dried flowers. “After you and your husband have intercourse, make tea with this. It will get rid of any babies you make.”

“Oh, I don't want to get rid of them!” Josephine explained. “I don't want any more at all.”

The witch laughed again. “Then tell your husband to leave you alone,” she said. “That's the only way to prevent babies for certain.”

“But the priest says I have to be with Vincenzo. Jesus ordered it.”

The witch laughed, a sharp, rough sound.

Then, unexpectedly, she drew Josephine into her arms, and soothed her, like a mother comforts a child. Her embrace, so strong and tender, brought tears to Josephine's eyes. She thought of her own mother, back home—for Josephine always thought of that tiny village as home. Josephine could picture her rough, red hands, the line of dirt beneath her fingernails, the coffee-colored mark on her cheek. She could picture her mother the day Josephine left. She had stood straight and tall and dry-eyed.
This is what we do for our children,
her mother had whispered.
We let them go, even as our heart breaks in two.

But as soon as the
strega
released Josephine, she turned and walked away.

Josephine called out to her, but the woman went inside the house without even looking back. Her mother had not waited for her either. Josephine had turned around once on that road that eventually led to Naples, expecting her mother to be standing there, only to find her gone. Now, unsettled, Josephine made her slow way toward home.

ON THE FRIDAY
in June that the ice man did not come, Josephine had not been a wife to Vincenzo in a long time. Although there had been a night here and there over those years when he had managed to make her open her legs to him, she always got up and made a cup of that tea from the bag the
strega
had given her. The children were no longer babies, and Josephine's body had remarkably returned to its former slender self. Her breasts still sagged more than she would have liked, but the blue veins had vanished, and she noticed men admiring her when she leaned forward or wore certain dresses that showed off her full bosom.

Vincenzo had grown so fat that he waddled when he walked. His hair had thinned, and he'd bought himself a black toupee that sat on top of his head like a crow. At night, he put the toupee on the lamp by the bed, and more than once Josephine had woken to think a cat had gotten into their room. Every once in a while, Josephine tried to talk to her husband. But he never seemed very interested. After dinner, he burped loud and long, sending giggles through the children, then shoved himself away from the table, heaving his large body up. He straightened his toupee and went to play cards and drink grappa down the street.

No ice for a week in June meant meat went bad, drinks grew warm, everything had to be eaten right away. There were rumors that Alfredo Petrocelli had the Spanish Influenza and surely would die. But Josephine chose not to believe this. She thought of his cool hands, his muscles straining as he hoisted blocks of ice, his clean clear face. If anyone got the Spanish Influenza, surely it would be the filthy coal man. Or that Jacques LaSalle with his thing hanging out all the time.

The next Friday morning, with all of the children at school or at work in the mill, Josephine was surprised when she heard a racket in the backyard.

She stepped outside, still in her thin housedress, and found a man who was not Alfredo Petrocelli standing there with a block of ice. Aware of the sweat marks staining under her arms, and of her breasts against the flimsy dress, Josephine folded her arms across her chest.

“You there!” she called to the man. “You startled me.”

He turned and Josephine's knees wobbled. Tall, with blond hair and green eyes staring back at her from a tanned face, the man in the black pants and white sleeveless T-shirt was the most beautiful thing she had ever seen.

“Sorry,” he said in English. “I don't know the drill.”

Josephine frowned. “Drill?” she repeated.

“I'm filling in for my cousin Al,” the man said, in rapid-fire English with no hint of an Italian accent. An American. “He's pretty sick.” He studied her for a minute, then laughed. “You don't know a word I'm saying, do you?”

She shrugged and took a tentative step toward him. That's when she realized she was barefoot, and her legs were bare as well. Bare arms, bare legs, no shoes, a flimsy dress hardly concealing what was beneath it. What was this man going to think of her? He was looking at her, and a blush rose on his cheeks.

“Sorry to stare,” he said in terrible Italian. “But you're really beautiful.”

Now color rose in her cheeks. “No,” she said, waving his compliment away with her hands.

His hand grabbed one of hers, and before she could pull it away, he was shaking it and saying, “Tommy Petrocelli. Your new temporary ice man.”

“Your Italian is awful,” she told him, the heat from his hand spreading up her arm, making her sweat even more.

“Sorry,” he said again. “I was born in the good old U S of A. My father is Al's father's brother.
Tio?
” he said, raising his eyebrows.

“Tio,”
she said, then. “Uncle.”

He laughed. “Your English is terrible,” he kidded her. “My mother is French, but she's been here forever.”

Josephine nodded, even though she had no idea what French was.

“Ah,” she said. “Do you want to come inside for a drink?”

“Sure,” he said. “Great.”

He still held on to her hand, and when they both realized this, he dropped it quickly.

Sitting in her hot kitchen at the table, beads of sweat on his forehead, he quickly drank the lemonade she gave him. They sat quietly.

“Even the glass is sweating,” Josephine said finally, pointing.

He laughed. Then they were silent again.

“Mrs. . . .” he began.

“Josephine,” she said.

“Josephine. Have you ever heard the saying that every person has a soul mate?”

She frowned at the word.

He reached across the table and placed his hand on her collarbone. “Soul mate,” he repeated. “Some people, like me, believe that everyone has a soul mate, wandering the Earth somewhere. Not everyone finds theirs. But if you do, you recognize her immediately.”

“Like fate?” she said, the pressure of his hand on her collarbone making her heart do strange things.

“Stronger, even. Two souls wander the planet, and if you are very, very lucky, you find each other.”

He dropped his hand quickly and stood. “I've got to go,” he said. “I'm sorry.”

She wanted to tell him to stop apologizing. Was it them he was talking about? Soul mates? When he turned and looked at her out there, something had happened to her. Was he saying it had happened to him as well? Was this what people meant by love? Josephine wondered. But by the time she raced outside, he was gone.

THE WHOLE NEXT
WEEK,
as first the rag man, then the coal man, came, Josephine thought about soul mates. Two people wandering the Earth, searching for each other. Hadn't he said soul mates recognize each other immediately? She fed her children and slaughtered a chicken and sewed new dresses for the older girls and watched her fat husband eating, slurping and chomping. Maybe she had married Vincenzo simply to get her to America on that Friday when Tommy Petrocelli would find her. Soul mates, reaching across time and continents. She wondered what Father Leone thought of this idea. Did souls have mates?

Tino the Turnip left her a half-rotten pineapple. Jacques LaSalle clanked by, his penis swinging. Josephine asked about Alfredo Petrocelli. Had anyone heard anything about him? Was he better? And although she didn't wish Alfredo any harm, she was happy when Rose Palmieri said she'd heard he was still sick with the Spanish Influenza.

On Friday morning, after Vincenzo waddled out of the house, after she'd fed all the children and sent them off, Josephine took a bath in the big silver tub. She put lavender in the water, and rubbed aloe from the plant she kept by the stove to treat burns on her feet and elbows. Then she put on a dress, one of the ones that made men look at her when she wore it. And she swept her hair up with a sparkling pin.

Then, Josephine Rimaldi sat and waited. Just when she decided he wasn't going to come, he appeared. He walked right into the house, and said her name, so soft and tender that tears spilled from her eyes. He reached for her, and she nodded.

Tommy Petrocelli kneeled in front of her. He slowly lifted her dress and ran his large, cool hands up her thighs, as if he knew this was the very place where jolts of electricity shot through her. When his hand touched her down there and found her wet, Josephine was embarrassed. But then Tommy did the most remarkable thing. He kissed her down there. He licked her and sucked her and she heard someone moaning, loud. That feeling she'd had so long ago in the tub was back again. But at the point she had stopped, guilty and ashamed, Tommy kept going. The noise grew louder. Such moaning! Josephine was gripping Tommy's head now, shoving herself into him, and she realized she was making all the noise. But she couldn't stop herself. He was doing something to her, something she had been longing for. And when she found it, she knew. Her scream was like the cats in heat, but longer and more intense.

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