Mario – A Story
Only
minutes beforehand there was not a cloud in the sky as he watched overhead, the
planes speeding past on a mission, literally. Young, still just a boy inside,
he ran across the street in search of shelter. Fright and intrigue for the
planes’ cargo crawled around inside him. He raised his hands, cupping them only
to vomit nothing into the air. There was no point pretending like it wasn’t
coming anymore. It was. The war had been only a small drumming on the door of
his life until this point but now it was a loud and abusive bashing that could
not be sent away…
For an entire month he reminded
himself he was incredibly lucky, losing his family and friends, livelihood,
homeland, that was nothing compared to losing your life, right? The trip was
dangerous and difficult. Cramped and dank, unpleasant at the best of times as
if those little men were haunting him from afar, seeking revenge for shooting
through at the call of duty.
His eyes were watery from the
blaring sun as he got off the boat in the harbour. They widened as finally, the
smallest slice of excitement found a reason to stretch out and venture from the
darkness that had been consuming him. Sydney ,
his new home or so he had thought at the time. It did not take him long to
realise the work he so desperately needed to get by, having brought only
himself and a suitcase from Italy ,
was not to be found there. Unable to speak a word of English, he struggled
through conversation after conversation not really saying much at all. Tired
and alone, he finally chanced upon some other Italian migrants who said they
were to board a train in the morning to a town called Lismore on the far North
Coast of New South Wales and that he should join them, not that any of them had
any idea where that was. They too were in dire need of work and according to
sources the Northern Rivers of which Lismore was the beating heart was where it
waited.
Upon finally acquiring land he
could call his own, the work only increased. It never ended and became that by
which he led his life. It shaped his character as he became a man of pride and
honourable hard work. His back bent, sweat crawling the length of his spine
each week as he walked the bags of beans, tomatoes and bananas to the roadside,
five kilometres away, for the market in town. At forty kilos each, they were
like his small children, too valuable to be dropped and bruised. He never once
complained, just took it all in his long stride, his work and farm his only
love. And then he met Edda.
As she walked towards
him that late May afternoon, glistening, angelic and beautiful, he was unable
to draw his gaze. A chance meeting had brought them together and now he was
about to marry the blonde girl who so easily made him laugh. He clenched his
fists closed tight, then released them uncurling his fingers only to repeat the
motion over and over.
The wedding was a typical Italian
affair, the smell of food rich and intense and in grand abundance. The guests’
conversations flowed almost as freely as the wine. It was one of the days in
Mario’s life that filled with shear joy, rivalled only by the birth of their
children, the little bundles they made and brought into the world.

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