ROMA
After our last day in Tunis, we caught a late afternoon flight to Rome - the closest connection to Israel, our next and last tour. Thoughts of a mezzo litro casa vino rosso and a simple pasta with green salad teased our imaginations. Our stay for two nights was in Trastevere on the west side of the Tiber River opposite most of the tourist attractions. Romans consider this the "real" Roma. We arrived at our AirBnB at 9:30 pm and our excellent host Lorenzo recommended a restaurant around the corner, but it closed at 10:00. We hustled over and our anticipation was not disappointed.
Robin in our first Trattoria with Casa Vino Rosso |
Like Paris and London, we did not feel the need to see the sights, but only to walk around the city on our only day here. That said, any walk in Rome will take you by antiquities and attractions. Walking due north we entered Piazza St. Pietro in Vatican City, who's embracing arms designed by Bernini welcomes you in. It was a fitting first stop because the large Egyptian obelisk placed in 1586, over 100 years before the colonnade and plaza, brought back recent travels.
Piazza St Pietro, Obelisk, and Bernini's Colonnade. Usually packed with Tourists. |
From there we walked across the river and south through Piazza Navona, the site of the Stadium Domitian, or Circus for athletic games from first century Rome. It has a lovely fountain in the center designed by Rome's ubiquitous Bernini.
Piazza Navona, Roman athletic field and race track |
Heading east we passed another favorite building The Pantheon, suitable apolitical monument to all the gods. Here we confirmed the return of the tourists. You now need reservations to enter the fabulous domed building, and there was a long queue waiting outside. I suspect this will remain after Covid due to the crush of tourists.
Tourists queuing to enter the Pantheon |
The top of the sphere is the dome while the bottom touches the floor.
From the Pantheon we walked by Trevi Fountain, which during our last visit in 2015 was covered for restoration. Now gloriously restored in gleaming white marble, a police presence prevented people from acting out La Dolce Vita. Amid the mass of tourists, we were reminded of a new phrase we learned from our Egypt companions: Boyfriends of Instagram. Apparently, this website is where boyfriends of selfie-gals post photos of their girlfriends in pouty or provocative poses.
We returned north but east to the Spanish Steps, this was also under restoration in 2015. Another instagram moment. Heading west we walked Rome's High Street with all the luxury brands and the "beautiful" people; ladies with filled lips and other body parts, designer bags, high heels, and men with waxed eyebrows and two-day old beards with neatly trimmed edges. I was reminded how outdated (old?) I am in ExOfficio and running shoes.
Turning south past the Pantheon again to the beginning of the Roman forum is one of the most miss-proportioned buildings in Europe. Vittorio Emanuele II Monument is to first king of unified Italy. I think only Nicolae Ceausescu palace in Bucherest exceeds its extravagantly grotesque design.
Vittorio Emanuele II Monument |
Most of this is under the existing road and will be excavated. |
The Colossus of Nero stood to the right out of the frame. |
The Arch of Titus at the southern end of the Forum, the oldest in Rome. |
Recrossing the Tiber, birthplace of Rome where Romulus and Remus were suckled by the she-wolf. As in so many foundation myths, one brother eventually killed the other. |
Walking through Trastevere back to our AirBnB. Fortunately, while close to restaurants, we were on a side street and quiet. |
In line for our boarding pass I see others presenting documents to the agents. I opened the email again, and read past the initial instructions about getting a PCR after arrival, and at the very end was another paragraph "All persons flying to Israel need a negative PCR test to board the plane." I said to Robin "gee I hope I didn't screw up". Sure enough, less than two hours before our flight the agent informs us that they can't issue a boarding pass without the negative test. She suggests there is a Red Cross testing facility at the lower level. We hustle down, but no Red Cross. We hustle back up. "Oh, it's in the next terminal". Thanks! We hustle down again and to the next terminal. There's a line to get in line for a test. Before you can get in line for the line, you need to fill out a form on an iPad in the corridor to save time. Robin gets in the first line. I start completing the form with passport numbers and other personal information. I keep getting bumped out, operator error or fussy system I don't have time to figure out. Fourth time's the charm - hit submit. Robin is now next to meet the nurse who reviews what I submitted. We get into the second line to wait for our number to be called.
When called, they ask when our flight departs and we tell them. They are very polite and say they'll do what they can. After the test we are guided to chairs and await the result. 10:45 - we can make it if they're fast. 11:00 - we can still make it if we can get through security. 11:10 - it's looking unlikely. 11:15 - it's not going to happen. I'm in total problem solving mode. Maybe there's a later flight that day and still make the tour in the morning. If not we get the same flight tomorrow and extend our time in Israel to see what we missed on the first day. Options upon options are considered. Except one. At 11:30 the nurse comes out with a concerned face. "William! I'm so sorry, you are positive. Ms Holt, you are negative." The Ministry of Health representative guide us away from the others to a sequestered seating area and asks for our passports (to prevent us from running out I think - an option I briefly considered and dismissed). Another Dr., this time in a Hazmat suit, asks for a throat swab. I'm hoping it's a second test because maybe the first was inconclusive. No, it's for a more detailed analysis to determine which of the various strains it is.
I ask the health official what's next. We'll be taken by private health vehicle to a nearby Sheraton Hotel to quarantine for seven days minimum. There'll be no charge for the stay and they will provide all the meals at no cost. Acceptance settles in and I'm now on the next problem to solve. What should Robin do? Should she quarantine with me; go on the tour without me; stay in Rome; go back to London. My quarantine ends (if I'm negative) the day we were to return to London from Israel. At least our flight home won't be screwed up. Robin and I agree, she doesn't want to go on the tour without me and no need for her to stay in the quarantine hotel. She decides she'd rather spend the week with Teigan in London than stay in Rome. People in hazmat suits arrive in health van, we get in back with a plexiglass panel separating us from the driver and nurse, and drive the 20 minutes to the hotel. It feels like the movies Andromeda Strain or Contagion. And I feel fine!
Covid Van |
At the hotel we are given a white paper bag with lunch and taken to our rooms. Robin's is next door. I suggest we talk in 20 minutes after I make new flight reservations for her to leave today. I call and she's a mess. Weeping about having to abandon me and that I'll be isolated for a week. It's very sweet she's so concerned, but it's time to move on. I remind her there's no reason to stay, I'll be fine, and she should leave now for the airport to make the next flight. She heads out but calls from the lobby that they won't let her leave. I tell her to just walk out, she's negative and they have no right to stop her. Well, it turns out they do - and stop her. Because she checked into the Covid hotel, even though negative, she needs a Dr's approval to check out. It's resolved in about five minutes and she heads to airport.
CELL #2854
Now I'm alone. Having gone from walking five - ten miles a day, meeting new friends, and experiencing other cultures it's like going 60 mph into a brick wall. Dead stop.
It's a 13' x 13' square cell. It has two twin beds and a desk. There's a 4' square window that opens with a view to a parking lot and distant trees but plenty of sky. I realize the window doesn't have a handle to lock it closed, and assume that's to maintain fresh air. Scenes from previous movies or books about adapting to prison flash though my head. Get into a routine, be present - don't count the days, be productive - don't sleep or watch TV all day, and exercise. Very quickly I decide I'm counting the days - there's only six. Usually, in hotels I do not unpack, I just live out of the suitcase. I decide to settle in and use the second bed as my dresser. And exercise will be limited as there's no prison yard and I'm not allowed to leave the room. But I can do some stretching and floor exercises.
Cell #2854 |
I also decide I'm in Italy and would love a couple glasses of wine a night to go with my TV time. But all the Uber Eats apps don't deliver that far out of the city. I text Tara, Teigan's friend, and see when she plans to return to London. She graciously agrees to drop off some wine on the way to the airport at 5:00 the next morning. What a champ! I don't want to spend my time in a drunken stupor for the next seven days so suggest she bring only three bottles, that will nicely regulate two and a half glasses a night. She questions my decision. I think I'll start a cleanse (in my mind anyway).
Next morning deliver (surprised the nurses didn't take it) |
My twice daily vital sign team. |
My first morning is like every other morning during my stay. I make my bed (not my normal routine - Robin does that complete with decorative pillows). A knock on the door delivers the already familiar white bag. The contents are the same every day: A couple ounces of lukewarm espresso, a half cup of lukewarm milk (supposedly for Cafe latte), a sweet roll, a bread roll, a biscotti, a little tub of jam, a foil of olive oil, juice and a bottle of water. I toss the juice, bread roll and olive oil on a shelf to save for an afternoon snack. I toss out the biscotti.
Breakfast of bread, with some bread, and bread for desert. Oh, and lukewarm coffee. |
I choke down the sweet roll with the lukewarm coffee. Later in the day when picking up my lunch bag I spy a hot water electric kettle outside another room door. Like scrounger in "The Great Escape" I escape my room and grab it. Now at least in the morning I can add hot water to the espresso and make a semi-hot Americano with milk.
After breakfast, the hazmat suits come again. We have our brief banter and all is still normal. The days flow with time spent on my photo data base adding Keywords, and organizing photos into Albums. I break that up with writing the blog and downloading appropriate photos from the data base to add to the posts. I am behind by seven posts so this will be productive.
Lunch is the same most days: pasta, mysterious protein, a piece of fruit, bread roll, olive oil, and water. The pasta sauce varies: pesto or marinara, and the protein varies: I think pressed ground chicken or some kind of sausage. A couple days I get a soup for lunch; not a luscious minestrone chock a block with vegetables in a rich broth. No, it's flavorless watery liquid that they might have boiled some carrot peelings in a week before diluting it. Even salt doesn't bring out any flavor.
"Soup" with potatoes and slice of pressed meat and a roll. |
Couple days collection of food bags with unused sugar packets, rolls and olive oil on shelf |
After the second hazmat visit of the day, dinner comes which is a replay of lunch with maybe a chicken breast instead of mystery protein. I settle in for several episodes of Poldark, and my ration of red wine. On Tuesday night, not even hump day, I failed the "Marshmallow test" for five year olds. I consumed two nights of my wine ration. Thus, my last evening on Friday I was cold turkey.
Mid-week, I took an antigen test and was clearly negative, so I made a flight reservation departing for London early afternoon on Saturday. On Friday I told nurse that I booked a flight and would like to be tested early on Saturday. At first she only quoted their process which was not comforting "we'll call you when to come down. We test all day". I asked to speak with the Dr. and, understanding my situation, he assured me they'd get me in first at 9:00 am. I waited until 9:20 before calling them. They said I could come down in 10 minutes. When I came down they weren't set up yet for testing and asked if I'd been called. I just repeated that I was told to come down in 10 minutes.
Converted hotel lobby for antigen test the day I leave. |
A fine Italian mixed salad with buratta cheese, anchovies, olives, whole grain roll, and white wine. Sigh! At last. |
EPILOGUE
We had three days in London before we departed for home. While Robin stayed in Teigan's apartment during my quarantine, we rented a hotel room at the NW corner of Hyde Park. As mentioned in an earlier blog, London really doesn't have a cocktail culture. But we found an Italian lounge at the SW corner of Hyde Park called Amaro. I use that herbaceous liquor to create my own version of a Manhattan and asked them to make it. I substitute Averna for the dry vermouth in the typical recipe. It adds a darker character to the drink. The very Italian and friendly waiters made my version for us and said they'll add it to their offerings. We liked the lounge so much, we invited Tara on our last night.
Cocktail lounge Amaro near Hyde Park. |
Gate to Russian Embassy |
On our return to the hotel, we noticed extra Bobbies around the Russian Embassy - and all the security cameras. I spontaneously gave the camera the "American Eagle". Robin quickly walked away from me. I must now be on their watch list. On our walk back to the hotel, there were several memorials and protests to the Ukrainians. A Ukrainian couple shouted in front of one house to stop the war. We gave them a high-five.
Protest signs against Russian aggression in Ukraine on way to Amaro. |
Statue of St. Volodymyr, ruler of Kyvian Rus 950 to 1015. Vladimir (Putin), Voldomor (Zelensky), and Voldemort (from Harry Potter) are all from the same root. |
While Britain didn't require a PCR test to enter, the USA still did. So Robin got tested in London the day before we left, and I had my letter from Italy stating I recovered from Covid. At check in for our flight home we had one more stress moment. Robin couldn't get the app that showed her test result to download, and my Covid letter was in Italian! During several minutes getting the agent trying to confirm my letter was valid, Robin kept trying to download results. The agent was very reassuring to Robin as her anxiety built; "there's plenty of time". Finally, Robin got on the airport's WiFi and successfully downloaded the results. We checked our luggage through Iceland to Seattle, and got our boarding passes.
Departing Iceland bound for Seattle. |
Next Post: None planned.
No comments:
Post a Comment