Katie Botkin

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To the lighthouse

The old lighthouse door. Photo by Katie Botkin.

A Letter from Katie Botkin in Rome:

We’re heading to the only uninhabited island in the archipelago, to Alex’s favorite spot for a private interlude. Fatma does not understand what he means when he says he likes to go there for some open-air fun with special people, since, after all, we are special people too.

We back the boat up against a stone pier and I jump out with the rope. I find a hole in the rock and tie the boat to it, yanking it as I do with any gear placement on a rock climbing route to make sure it’s not going to slip out. Then we clamber up to Alex’s secret hideaway, which turns out to be an abandoned lighthouse, crumbling at the seams.

Getting up the spiral staircase involves navigating large mounds of plaster dust. I’m not sure how safe this is, but I decide to trust Alex. At the top, the view is spectacular, though the wind whips us violently. We see nothing but the water and some ships in the distance. “This is what I mean,” says Alex “It’s completely private, and you can see anybody who’s coming close.”

I squint into the sunlight. Fatma is saying she’d like to spend a month here. I’m not sure I agree; after all, this was once a spot of exile. The Emperor Augustus kept his granddaughter, Julia, here for something like 20 years. But Fatma is charmed. If you get bored, she says, you just move your chair over a little, and you’ve got a different view. Of course, I’d bring my dog. It would be great.

We traipse back down to the boat. I’m afraid that my knot may not have held and the boat will have drifted away, but it’s still there. We find a sheltered inlet and lean over the edge of the boat looking at the sea creatures through the perfectly clear turquoise water.

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Castello delle Badia

A postcard view of the fortress and the Adriatic. Photo by Katie Botkin.

A Letter from Katie Botkin in Rome:

As our ferry rolls into port, I can see the Castello delle Badia, an ancient fortress atop a hill across the bay. It was meant to defend Italy against Turks and pirates, so of course I want very badly to go explore it. But the ferry is rolling into the wrong island. However, as we disembark, Alex announces that we’re going to be renting a small motorboat for exploration purposes. Hence, I am soon running up and down the fortress’ narrow streets (“They were narrow so they could roll boulders onto the invaders,” says Alex) and up to the lookouts, above the sparkling, clear waters of the Adriatic.

The dried grasses blow gently in the wind against the rocky outcroppings. It is just as I have imagined the islands of the Adriatic, when I lay awake as a child reading of Grecian conquest. Besides which, I have my very own Alexander the Conqueror to show me around. Though the place is supposedly overrun with tourists in August, now there is nobody but us and some seagulls when we make it around to the outside fortress wall. The wall is sloped outwards at the bottom slightly. I study it for a second, and tell Alex and Fatma that I could climb it. They don’t believe me, so I demonstrate. “Yeah,” says Alex “but they would roll boulders onto you before you could get to the top.” He points to a sizeable murder hole in the ramparts. Later, as we circle the island by boat, scouring the walls for weakness, I point to an even better point of attack. “I think we could conquer this island,” I say. “There doesn’t seem to be many inhabitants.”

Alexander the Conqueror, however, does not think this will work in the long run. He thinks Italy will rush to reclaim it. I suppose he should know, since he’s in the Coastguard-Navy. In fact, he would probably be the one to fly overhead and attack from the air.

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Breakfast at the gas station

The Adriatic Sea. Photo by Katie Botkin.

A Letter from Katie Botkin in Rome:

Fatma arrives shortly after 6:30 for our trip to the islands and Alex proclaims gleefully that we have time to get breakfast. He stops at a gas station on the way south, which surprises me slightly, but I think, OK, I can make do with gas station food.

Apparently, however, gas station food in Italy is a bit different, because there’s a nice little bakery-café inside, where I eat the first sfogliatella of my life, along with a demitasse of excellent cappuccino. The sfogliatella is a multi-layered pastry shell filled with ricotta, and is mildly sweet. I wonder why I haven’t eaten these before — other than the fact that I’ve never seen them for sale anywhere that I remember. Then we continue our drive along the coast of the Adriatic for another hour, all the way to Termoli, where we buy tickets for the ferry to the archipelago of the Tremiti islands.

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Arriving in Pescara

The beach at Pescara, Italy.

A Letter from Katie Botkin in Rome:

Pescara is almost due east of Rome, on the Adriatic. I go by bus, and wait at the station for Alex, another person I’ve been corresponding with on Couchsurfing, a pilot for the Italian Navy — or Coastguard, depending on how you define his job. I’m not entirely sure what he looks like, because his profile photos are relatively small, but he recognizes me. He gives me a big hug like we’ve been friends for forever, puts my suitcase in his car, and shows me Pescara’s beaches, which are lined with umbrellas and Italian men in speedos playing volleyball, and we go in to have a little drink at his friend’s bar.

“What are you having?” Alex asks me. I ask what he’s drinking. He tells me.

“I don’t know what that is,” I say “but I’ll have one of those.”

“I like this girl,” Alex tells his friend. The drink turns out to be a semi-bitter cocktail made with ginsing, which we consume quickly, standing at the otherwise-deserted bar. Then Alex asks me if I want to go to a set of islands in the Adriatic tomorrow. I say yes.

“We’ll have to get up early,” he tells me. I say no problem. We go to a dinner with his friend Fatma, a girl from Toulouse, who is coming with us, and get to bed shortly after 1 a.m. “See you in five minutes,” Alex says as he heads to his room. It doesn’t feel quite as short as that, but it’s still too early when Alex’s two alarms go off repeatedly at 6 a.m., loud enough for me to hear them and to decide to get up.

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The best pizza in Rome, definitely

A Letter from Katie Botkin in Rome:

Antonio is intrigued, but still very confused, so he takes me back to the pizza oven and finds someone who speaks slightly more English than he does. It is enough to get the point across. I find a photo on the wall of Marc, Louis’ father, from when all the family but Louis came to visit the Italian cousins, and point. Antonio asks me, in Italian, which one of the brothers pictured is my boyfriend. I shake my head. He says, oh, he was the one in Iraq. I nod. “Si, si,” I say. Is he still in Iraq, or did he come back? Asks Antonio. I beckon cheerfully to indicate that in fact, he has come back.

At this point, two other older men, the other two brothers who own the pizzaria, come out and kiss me on both cheeks. They welcome me in Italian, and I sit down, and order in (bad) Italian. That much I can do. My pizza comes, along with my sparkling water, and a few locals come in and sit down. I can hear Antonio explaining to one well-dressed couple who I am. The man speaks English, and he tells me, grandly, that this is the best place for Roman pizza in all of Rome. It’s the best pizza I’ve had in Rome, anyway. It is nothing like American pizza, and the crust is so thin in spots that it crumbles like a cracker. The olives, salty and plump, still have the pits in them.

I finish the entire pizza, and I ask the waiter for the bill. He goes off, and Antonio comes back. “No, no,” he says, waving his hand at me. He turns and asks the couple to translate for him.

“No, no,” the woman repeats, waving her hand.

“It’s only one pizza,” the man finishes for Antonio.

The other two brothers come out again and kiss me goodbye, along with Antonio. They say to give their regards to Luigi and Marco. I nod. The well-dressed man repeats this for me in English case I haven’t understood.

And then I head back towards the metro, with a full stomach, smiling.

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