When I
was an undergraduate I enrolled in an Introduction to Italian
class. It met from 8 – 10:30 am on Tuesdays and
Thursdays. Since I could hardly be considered a morning person, my
mother fairly shrieked with laughter at the thought of my actually arriving
there any time before 10, but there were no openings in any other sections and
I was feeling Continental. It had to be Italian, too – I mean, how
could you not like a place that’s shaped like a high heeled boot?
The first
day, I stumbled in, disheveled and grumpy, wondering just how badly I really
wanted to do this, and saw that this whole becoming bilingual process was going
to be better than I had imagined. A lot better.
The
instructor was already in the front of the room, leaning on the table that
functioned as a desk, arms and legs crossed casually, elegantly. He
wore perfectly tailored khakis and an impeccable white linen button-down
shirt. This alone made me stare. NYU in the early 1990’s
was full of black-jeans-and-leather-jacket clad poseurs. Everyone looked like
Lou Reed, including the girls.
Not this
guy. He looked like Jean-Paul Belmondo - tall, slender,
dark hair, dimple in the chin, strong forehead, lush lips, and one slightly
raised eyebrow, giving him an insouciant, Gallic air. He smiled,
exposing white teeth and a tiny dimple in his left cheek.
“Buon
giorno. Il mio nome è Romano. Sono il vostro istruttore. Benvenuto
ad introduzione ad italiano.”
I had no
idea what he said but I was hooked. After that, I was never absent and smiled
at him throughout the entire session. He must have thought I
swallowed Chiclets whole.
Every day
he looked more or less the same, sharply pressed khakis, crisp white linen or
cotton shirt. Once a week or so, probably on department meeting
days, he wore a silk tie. They were always of casually elegant
design, a foulard or small paisley. I was dazzled. After
that first day, I went to class completely groomed, too. I washed
and blew dry my hair every morning. I scoured places like Alice
Underground for chic 60’s styles. On a weekend visit home I even
swiped my mother’s last bottle of Narcisse Noir.
Eventually,
my own sartorial efforts paid dividends. He smiled his crooked grin
(I just knew a Gauloise should hang from the corner) and leaned over my
shoulder smelling of something spicy whenever I asked for extra
help. He was always very encouraging to me, marveling at both the
construct and subjects of my sentences. (“Gradirei il
rivestimento di Armani nella finestra, prego. Formato sei!”)
One day
he asked me to join him for coffee after the class. He had about an
hour before he had to return to his office to grade papers. I
swooned.
I had
hoped to converse in chic foreign tongues but since I didn’t actually speak
anything but English, we talked like everybody else. It didn’t
matter. I was enchanted. We continued having coffee
together nearly every day after class. Sometimes we chatted about
our backgrounds. He was the only son of an Italian father and
French mother and spoke 3 languages. I never really said much, just
listened to the timbre of his sonorous voice and slid into gossamer daydreams
about walks around the Tower of Pisa in the moonlight.
One day I
got to class a little late. The lesson had already begun and since
no seats remained up front, I chose one in the back row. He looked
up and smiled at me. I smiled back. I could see that it
was a tie day, but the tie wasn’t one of his usual tasteful ones. It
was one of those garish, techno-colored Nicole Miller ties, the ones with
fluorescent colored designs on a black ground. The design was pink
and white. While I couldn’t make it out, I could tell it was
awful.
I had no
idea what was the subject of that day’s lesson. Vorrei
voglio something or other, I think. I couldn’t pull
my eyes from the fabric strip hanging from his neck. It looked like. . . I
squinted . . .Barbie? I stared and twisted my neck as
discreetly as possible. Barbie? Barbie.
At the
break midway through the class, I picked up my notebook (il taccuino)
and tiptoed my way through the backpacks (i zaini) ostensibly to ask a
question but really to get a closer look at that tie. Praying I was
wrong I approached. It was Barbie, all right. Her name
was spelled out in big pink letters, randomly scattered with figures of the
original ponytail Barbie and blonde bubble-haired Barbie and shoes, those
little open toed mules that Barbie wore.
“Interesting
tie.” I gestured. “Gift?”
“No, I
bought it. I wear it the first Thursday of every month.”
“Why?”
“That’s
the day of our meeting.”
“Meeting?”
“Yes. I
am the President of the Long Island Chapter of the Barbie Club.”
At the
exact second that those words left his mouth, my infatuation ended with a sharp
internal yowl, like a cat’s tail caught in a door.
Jean-Paul
Belmondo would not wear a Barbie tie. He would not join a Barbie
club. He would sneer at the thought as his Gauloise hung blithely
from the corner of his mouth.
This
story appeared in a slightly different form in What Was I Thinking: 58
Bad Boyfriend Stories; St. Martin’s Press; 2010
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