“We’ll go, and we can meet you at the Colosseum. I have my phone, so just let me know when
you’re heading over.”
I nod in agreement and shoot Pilot a grateful look. I can’t sit and wait for them to get ready
while my purse,
laden with passport and money, is indisposed.
“Okay,” Babe mutters. She rises and heads toward the bathroom.
I turn for the door, feeling naked without my cross-body. How did I leave the restaurant like
this? It feels so wrong!
This is your fault, wine.
Pilot and I walk in silence toward the restaurant. I’m so strung out about the purse that I barely
appreciate the fact that Pilot volunteered to come with me—and not regular me: silent, sweaty,
slightly angry, panicky me. She’s no fun.
What was I thinking letting him come?
As the trattoria comes into view, I speed up, power walking until I’m face-to-face with its closed
door. My eyes lock on the tiny paper in the window displaying the hours. It’s closed. I didn’t even
think about the fact that it’s 8:00 a.m. It doesn’t open till 3:00 p.m.
I whirl around, throwing my hands up in the air. “It’s closed!” I yelp hopelessly.
Pilot comes up next to me to read what the sign says.
“Pies, it’s closed,” I repeat. I pace a few feet away from the door and pivot, turning back. “It’s
closed, and I have no money and no passport and no purse, and we’re in a foreign country, and it
might not even be in there, and it’s closed!” My palms seize the sides of my head, and I focus my
eyes on the ground.
What now? I have to stay here and wait for someone to open the restaurant so I can get my
purse. It’s too important.
I shouldn’t have had that wine. Why did I leave London? I haven’t even started my internship! If
I’ve
lost my passport, I’ve already blown everything to pieces. I didn’t think this through. This
whole experience hinges on my parents never having to look further into this program. What was I
thinking taking a risk like leaving the country!
I feel a cool hand close around my forearm and look up.
“Hey.” Pilot gently pulls my arm away from my face. “Shane, you’re spinning in circles. Maybe
sit down for a sec.”
His hand slides away as he lowers himself onto the curb in front of the closed restaurant. I shake
out my arms, trying to throw off the fidgety feeling crawling over my skin, and collapse next to him.
My heels dance up and down. We’re silent for a whole minute before Pilot speaks again.
“Hey,” he starts, “it’s
stressful now, but think about it this way: However today goes, you’re
going to have a great story for the blog.” He grins.
I shoot him an unamused look and shake my head. “I shouldn’t have trusted myself to leave the
country.” I drop my head into my hands and ramble to the cobblestones, “I’m sorry. You should go
meet up with everyone else. I’m gonna wait here. I have to wait for them to open ’cause this is too
important; my passport’s in there—I’m sorry I made you come with me. You can go back. I just
have to stay. My parents are gonna kill me if I … if all my stuff gets lost.” Stress curdles in my gut.
“Shane.”
I stare at the ground. “What?”
“You didn’t make me come with you. I volunteered.”
I snort, thinking of
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