Read The Unforgiving Minute Online
Authors: Unknown
shaved and put on a suit, a shirt and a tie. I was the
quintessential Roman gentleman with nowhere to go.
I walked into the hotel dining room with my copy of the
Tribune and sat at a table overlooking a beautiful garden. I
kept my eye peeled for perhaps a woman alone or a group of women.
I felt like a teenager who needed a date for New Year’s Eve. I
ordered a continental breakfast even though I wasn’t in the least
bit hungry. After about fifteen minutes, I saw an elegant—
looking woman being seated at a table quite close to mine. She
was tall, blonde, and wore a dark green sweater, brown tweed
skirt and boots. I tried to catch her eye several times but she
either accidentally or purposely avoided my glances. Finally, I
walked over to her table and in my most charming manner, bowed
slightly from the waist and said, “Bongiorno, parla Inglese?”
She looked up at me imperiously and said, “I should think
so, being that I am English.”
“Oh,” I said. “Fortunately, since I’m an American, it’s
my best language. May I sit down?”
“Of course,” she said. I couldn’t believe my luck, that
an elegant lady such as this should be available. My phenomenal
luck with women was continuing.
I introduced myself and started a conversation. She
introduced herself as Maude Blaney, an English newspaperwoman
covering a convention of Italian automobile manufacturers. She
explained to me that she was attending a gala New Year’s Eve
party which was being thrown by the manufacturer’s group. I
asked if I could escort her, but she was strangely elusive. She
did, however, invite me to attend this gala, black-tie affair.
She instructed me to show up in formal attire and volunteered to
leave my name at the door. I was elated that New Year’s Eve
would not be a zero for me. My day was made. My headache
disappeared miraculously. We exchanged pleasantries and parted.
I immediately went back to my room and slept until noon.
After arising and taking a second hot shower, I went off
in search of formal attire.
I visited a high-fashion men’s shop on the Via Veneto and
purchased a tuxedo, cummerbund, tie and formal shirt. I paid
extra to have them altered within hours and arranged to pick them
up at five o’clock. It was a beautiful winter’s day, about
fifty-five degrees, not a bit of wind and quite sunny. The wide,
tree-lined street that is the Via Vittorio Veneto truly glowed in
the December light. The sidewalk caf´es added a touch of color
and animation and the flag on the American embassy next door gave
me that feeling of patriotic pride I always get when I see Old
Glory in a foreign country. I walked north to the Villa
Borghese, where the view from the gardens is a panorama of the
Eternal City. As I stood in the clear light overlooking the
city, all of the tension and trepidations of the morning seemed
to disappear. I felt that New Year’s Eve was going to be a high
point and that romance with the elegant English lady was
imminent. I eagerly awaited the evening.
I lunched in a small sidewalk cafe on the Via Veneto and
enjoyed the sport of people-watching as I sipped a glass of wine
and enjoyed a cold pasta salad. There was an endless parade of
good watching. Priests in long cassocks and flat hats; elegant
ladies with fine legs walking with that gait that only fine women
and fine racehorses can elicit; street urchins in caps that
looked like something out of an old Dead-End Kids movie; well-dressed Italian gentlemen with an air of nobility, strolling with
their hands behind their backs; and finally, the mandatory
Japanese tourists complete with Nikons and flag-toting guide. I
marvelled that a day that started with such despair could move on
with such elation. I must have sat there for two hours, adding
several espressos to the already-imbibed vino.
At about three o’clock, I returned to my room, lay down on
my bed and proceeded to write a letter to Ann Marie.
My dear and beautiful friend,
I can’t express in words how great I feel today.
Tonight is New Year’s Eve and I am going to a
wonderful party that is being given by some high—
powered Italian auto manufacturers. I feel that the past
five months have been the most enriching experience of
my life and that I am possibly ready for another five
months. Of course, I miss you very much. I think that
some of the great conversations of my life have been
lying naked with you, making love, and then baring our
souls as our naked bodies touched. It was almost as if
our naked souls touched at the same time. You have
been to me lover, teacher, mother, and sister. I don’t
know what I would have done without you. You are
probably, except for my children, the only tension-free
relationship I have ever had in my adult life. I am now at
the Excelsior Hotel in Rome and the way I feel I might
be here for quite some time.
I’ll write again very soon.
Love,
Robert
I put the letter in the envelope, addressed it and laid it
on the desk. I called the desk and left a wake-up call for five
o’clock and napped. I slept the sleep of a happy man.
At five o’clock I walked to the men’s shop and picked up
my formal clothes. I had to admit I cut a dashing figure. I
looked forward to the evening with tremendous anticipation. I
dropped my new clothes off in my room and walked off my nervous
energy by walking west all the way to the Trevi fountain, into
which I tossed the mandatory wish coins. I truly felt this was
my lucky day.
I walked slowly back to the hotel and returned to my room
to await the evening’s festivities.
I thought of last New Year’s Eve. We had usually gone
down to a vacation home we owned in Florida but, due to an
unusually warm December, Julie decided to postpone her winter
hiatus until sometime in January. Our country club was throwing
its usual gala black-tie New Year’s dance. There is a syndrome
in country clubs that I will never understand. It seems that no
one likes to sit at a table for four or six or even eight. It
seems to be a mark of dishonor or a symbol of leprosy not to be a
member of a table of at least twelve people. As usual, we were
sitting at a table for fourteen. To be seated at a table that
size gives you three choices for conversation. You can speak to
the woman on your right or the woman on your left. Since the
seating is always arranged boy/girl, one of these women is your
wife. The third choice is to holler on top of your lungs above
the noise of the band to someone else at your very large table.
The band, by the way, always seems to be hired by an
entertainment committee that is enthralled with music written no
later than 1948. I don’t know why they think that any one over
the age of fifty shouldn’t be in the least bit contemporary.
I was seated between my wife and a woman name Lee Morell,
who is particularly obnoxious to me. She knows everything there
is to know about everything and spouts it incessantly.
There is an old saw that says, “Wise men talk about ideas;
fools talk about people.” I was trapped in a ballroom filled
with fools.
I was not happy to be there at all. This party seemed to
be a symbol of everything I hated. The people were boring and I
had heard all they had to say a hundred times before. The music
didn’t turn me on at all. The intellectual stimulation was nil,
and since the party was for members only there were no new people
to meet. During the predance cocktail party, I don’t know how
many vodkas on the rocks I had, but since I was not in a very
conversational mood I drank more than my usual quota. I became
very cynical, rude and at least as obnoxious as those other
people that I considered to be so. As the evening progressed and
I zeroed in most of my venom on the convenient fat body of Lee
Morell, my wife became more and more annoyed. At one point,
Julie went to the ladies’ room with Lee. Lee’s husband, Danny,
who is usually a quiet, gentle man, came up to me and said,
“Don’t you ever talk to my wife that way again!”.
I looked him straight in the eye and said, “Or what?”
“What do you mean?” he said.
“If I talk to her that way again, what are you going to do
about it?” I said. He just looked at me, waved his arm
derisively and walked away. For the rest of the evening, I sat
there glassy-eyed, staring into space morosely, duly noticing
Julie’s annoyance. I asked Julie to dance, finally, and she
said, “Don’t do me any favors,” and did some of her own staring
into space, which she is very good at when she gets angry. By
the time we left for home at about two a.m., I was totally
blotto. Julie drove home and I scarcely remember getting into
bed.
New Year’s Day, 1985, was one of our major brawls. She
was livid with anger and quietly aloof for most of the morning.
I busied myself getting clothes together to take to Florida.
Somewhere around noon she came to me with tears in her eyes. “I
can’t stand you. We’re not accepting any more social
invitations. You’re a boor and a son of a bitch. If you don’t
like the life we lead, why the hell don’t you just leave. Don’t
think I don’t know you have some other woman in your life. Go to
her. Let her suffer your moods and your drunken evenings. I
hate you!” With that she got into her car and sped out of the
garage in a rage. I don’t know where she went, possibly to the
club, but I didn’t care. I wanted to call Laura and tell her I
was leaving right now, and that it had finally come to a head
with Julie. As usual, the same complications got in the way.
The kids were home for the holidays. (Each was staying with a
friend over New Year’s Eve.) I had an important business
function coming up in two weeks in Miami, where it was absolutely
necessary that Julie attend. Last but not least, I was
negotiating the sale of my business and I did not need financial
complications. In addition, I couldn’t imagine moving in with
Laura, her teenage daughter, and twelve-year-old son in a three—
bedroom apartment in Queens. Looking back in retrospect, I know
now I didn’t really love Laura. She was merely my woman of the
moment. I lay about the house that day, reading and catching up
on paperwork. The kids started to filter in about two o’clock
and by the time Julie, who had gone to the club and stayed to
play cards with some friends, came home, all three kids were
home. We make it a practice never to fight in front of the
children, so the squabble didn’t continue, but I’ve thought for
some time that the decision to drop out and take this trip had
its birth on New Year’s Eve. Like so many things that have gone
wrong between us, this one didn’t come up again, but the seeds
were sown.
I took a luxurious bath in my ornate bathroom at the Hotel
Excelsior, carefully shaved and spent some time styling my
thinning hair. Tonight, in honor of my English lady, I wore it
in the Prince Philip style, combed straight back and flat to the
skull. I donned my formal attire and stepped back to admire
myself in the full-length mirror on my closet door. I checked my
watch; it was nine-thirty. I planned to make my entrance at ten,
so I sat down patiently and read for a half hour. As I descended
to the ballroom in the elevator, I had the frightening thought
that possibly my name wasn’t left at the door after all and broke
into a cold sweat. There was a line at the ballroom and the wait
seemed interminable. When I got to the door, a man in tails
checked a list and said “Ah, yes, Signore Boyd, I see you are a
guest of Angelo Morani. You will be at table twenty-two for the
dinner. The Morani tables are fourteen through twenty-nine.” I
was impressed with Maude Blaney’s connections. Morani made one
of the most expensive high-performance sports cars in the world.
More expensive and more highly rated than Ferrari or Maserati.
There must have been five hundred people milling around
with cocktails. I wandered around for about fifteen minutes,
nursing a vodka on the rocks before I found Maude. She was
standing with a man about five feet eight inches tall, with a
leonine head of white hair. He appeared to be in his early
fifties and was slim-waisted with broad shoulders. His face was
ruggedly handsome and tanned and his piercing grey-blue eyes all
but burned out from his face. In her heels, Maude stood about an
inch and a half taller than the man, whom I instantly recognized
as the legendary Angelo Morani, former world-class racing driver
and most recently the chief executive officer and principal owner
of Morani Motors. I knew that Morani, whose home was in Torino,
was married to a famous diva of the La Scala opera company. She
was a dark and beautiful woman whose face was also
internationally famous. I looked around for her and she was
nowhere in sight.
I walked over to them and said to Maude, “Hello there. I