Toady is my final day in Italy. And for how much I have
grown to dislike the Italians attitude towards Americans, it would be my last
day that completely changes that perspective. I won’t go into the gory, horrid
details of my worst traveling disaster yet to come on my travels (obviously had
to go out with a bang) but am going to focus on my guardian angel named Lucia.
2 taxis and 2 trains later I had jumped a train headed for Milan.. I knew I
didn’t have a ticket, I knew I could get fined. But my credit card was reading
in any of the machines and I was desperate. I figured I would hide in the
bathroom for as long as possible to avoid the conductor checking tickets- but
that was not long enough “This ticket is no good for me. You get out at next
stop”. Alrighty, Bologna it is. I am now real worried about catching my flight
that leaves from Milan at 5:45 as it is already 1:30. I try yet again to buy a
ticket, niente. And then I try a Bancomat convinced that it is only the train
ticket automatic machines that won’t take my foreign card, still nothing. At
this point I am in tears realizing I have all of 7 euros to my name and no
phone to call the parents with. I gloomily walk into Customer Service where she
immediately takes me under her wing and assures me everything will be alright.
She walks me over to the track my train is on and personally talks to the
conductor. I’m not sure how the conversation went as it was all in Italian but
it was a great result of me getting on the train. The girl behind me must have
recognized I was American (who could miss my two oversized bags of luggage, my
purse and my 100% desperateness oozing out of my pores for all to sense). She
asked me if I was going to Milan and then I asked her. Thank god! Someone going
to the same place as me I can follow like the foreign shadow I am. I told her
my predicament of my trains and how my flight was early this evening so it was
crucial I make it to the airport.
“Wait! Did you say you’r flight is at 5:45?”
“Yeah, do you know the best way to the airport from Milano
Centrale?”
“No, I’ll call my friend and ask. But we don’t get to Milano
until 4:45.”
Sobs come back…
“Well don’t cry, we’ll figure this out!”
So it was shortly after I had to come to terms that I was
not going to make my flight. The airport was an hour-train ride away from the
city, and a 90 euro taxi ride (90 euros of which I didn’t have). It was a rough half an hour of a
breakdown, which managed to entertain the entire train. One gentleman even came
over from his seat a couple rows back to give me some tissues. Lucia was on the
phone with her mom who was online looking up flights and trains to Madrid. Lucia
kept telling me to eat something so I don’t pass out (Italians solution for absolutely
everything- food). The lady across from me than said something to Lucia (in
Italian of course), which translated to: My brother is a travel agent let me
call him to see what he can do. So as of now, there were 2 people on the train
with my flight itinerary back to Boston.
Her brother had concluded that the cheapest flight he could find was
Ryanair (which I can’t fly since I have too much luggage) and then EasyJet, (my
original airline) but they wouldn’t be able to refund me. I was in a seriously dark place with no
idea what to do. I had 7 euros. 7 euros! That was not going to buy me another
flight. Lucia told me that the woman had offered her home for me to stay in
that night and that she would drive me to the airport in the morning. Lucia
also offered her friends home. SO I had plenty of homes to go to, just no
flights to get on. Lucia’s mom called back and had found a flight for 77 euros
that left the next morning and would get me into Madrid on time. Lucia asked if
she could have my card information so that her mom could rebook it for my
online. I was a little nerve pants about getting declined again, which is when
I miraculously remembered I had saved my Nani’s information in an email. Thanks
Nani!! Not only did Lucia’s mom rebook my flight but she had gotten on the
phone with EasyJet with enough time to change
my flight rather than rebook an entire new one! I was dozing in and out of this
conversation between Lucia and her mom since I was emotionally exhausted from
my panic attack earlier. I was hoping I would wake up and be sitting in the
Starbucks at Logan Airport with Nani, Connor and Daddy. No such luck. But, on
the bright side I now had a flight to Madrid!! When our train finally arrived
in Milano Centrale she carefully walked me to the ticket station where I bought
a train ticket to the airport for…. you bet ya! 7 euros exactly!! Wow my luck really was turning around.
Not quite yet. The handle of my carry on ripped off when it fell off of my big
bag. Guess I won’t be bringing that bag now, have to figure out where I’m going
to fit all of that shit… but I’ll focus on that later. One task at a time. Now
to the train station. Lucia literally walked me onto the train in fear I would
get lost again as the fragile little foreigner I was. I gave her a massive hug
and thanked her profusely. She than reached into my pocket and gave me 25
euros. I began to throw it back in her face and she said “NO! It’s not much but
please take it just in case anything else happens, you won’t be completely
broke.“ She asked me to email her when I finally made it home to my final
destination: Maine.
It is now 2 hours later and I am sitting in the Milano
Malpensa International Airport. I am dreading what is going to happen next,
because with my luck something is bound to happen. Four months ago, I had an
especially hard time getting to Italy from Madrid, and now I am again having a
particularly hard time via my exit route. I suppose Italy and Madrid airport
don’t mesh very well. Or maybe Italy was a little hesitant to let me in, but
now they are having a hard time letting me go? Let me go Italy! I want to be
home with my family! You gave me my Italian angel, which magically transformed
my perspectives of Italians! It was yet another awful learning lesson, but this
one gave me the best results.
Imagine how lost I would have been without you Lucia. Thank you!
The process of traveling is completely torturous, and in
this case even worse, but this just makes the destination that much more
exciting right?!
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