'The air's good here.'
They chewed it. 'What are you talking about? It doesn't have any taste at all.'
They climbed almost to the top of the hill. At one turn, the city appeared, way down below, spread flat on the gray cobweb of the streets. The children rolled around on a meadow as if they had never done anything else in their life. A little breeze sprang up; it was already evening. In the city a few lights came on, in a confused sparkle. Marcovaldo felt again a rush of the feeling he had had as a young man, arriving in the city, when those streets, those lights attracted him as if he expected something unknown from them. The swallows plunged headlong through the air onto the city.
Then he was seized by the sadness of having to go back down there, and in the clotted landscape he figured out the shadow of his neighborhood: it seemed to him a leaden wasteland, stagnant, covered by the thick scales of the roofs and the shreds of smoke flapping on the stick-like chimney pots.
It had turned cool: perhaps he should call the children. But seeing them swinging peacefully on the lower limbs of a tree, he dismissed that thought. Michelino came over to him and asked: 'Papa, why don't we come and live here?'
'Stupid, there aren't any houses; nobody lives up here!' Marcovaldo said, with irritation, because he had actually been daydreaming of being able to live up there.
And Michelino said: 'Nobody? What about those gentlemen? Look!'
The air was turning gray and down from the meadows came a troop of men, of various ages, all dressed in heavy gray suits, buttoned up like pajamas, all with cap and cane. They came in bunches, some talking in loud voices or laughing, sticking those canes into the grass or carrying them, hung by the curved handle, over their arm.
'Who are they? Where are they going?' Michelino asked his father, but Marcovaldo was looking at them, silent.
One passed nearby; he was a heavy man of about forty. 'Good evening!' he said. 'Well, what news do you bring us, from down in the city?'
'Good evening,' Marcovaldo said. 'What do you mean by news?'
'Nothing. I was just talking,' the man said, and stopped; he had a broad, white face, with only a splotch of pink, or red, like a shadow, over his cheekbones. 'I always say that, to anybody from the city. I've been up here for three months, you understand.'
'And you never go down?'
'Hmph, when the doctors decide to let me!' And he laughed briefly. 'And this!' And he tapped his fingers on his chest, with some more brief laughter, a bit breathless. 'They've already discharged me twice, as cured, but as soon as I went back to the factory, wham, all over again. And they ship me back up here. Some fun!'
'Them too?' Marcovaldo asked, nodding at the other men, who had scattered over the grass; and at the same time, his eyes sought Filippetto and Teresa and Pietruccio, whom he had lost sight of.
'All comrades on the same holiday,' the man said, and winked. 'We're let out on a pass, before taps… We go to bed early… Obviously, we can't go beyond the grounds…'
'What grounds?'
'This is part of the sanatorium. Didn't you know?'
Marcovaldo took the hand of Michelino, who had stood there listening, a bit scared. Evening was climbing up the slopes; there below, their neighborhood was no longer discernible, and it seemed not so much to have been swallowed by the shadows, but to have spread its own shadow everywhere. It was time to go back. 'Teresa! Filippetto!' Marcovaldo called and started to look for them. 'Sorry,' he said to the man, 'I don't see the other children anywhere.'
The man stepped to a parapet. 'They're down there,' he said, 'they're picking cherries.'
In a ditch, Marcovaldo saw a cherry tree and around it were the men dressed in gray, pulling down the branches with their curved sticks, and picking the fruit. And Teresa and the two boys, all delighted, were also picking cherries and taking them from the men's hands and laughing with them.
'It's late,' Marcovaldo said. 'It's cold. Let's go home…'
The heavy man pointed the tip of his cane towards the rows of lights that were coming on, down below.
'In the evening,' he said, 'with this stick I take my walk in the city. I choose a street, a row of lamps, and I follow it, like this… I stop at the windows, I meet people, I say hello to them… When you walk in the city, think of it sometimes: my cane is following you…'
The children came back crowned with leaves, made by the inmates.
'This is a wonderful place, Papa!' Teresa said. 'We'll come and play here again, won't we?'
'Papa!' Michelino blurted. 'Why don't we come and live here, too, with these gentlemen?'
'It's late. Say good-bye to the gentlemen! Say thanks for the cherries. Come on! We're going!'
They headed home. They were tired. Marcovaldo didn't answer any questions. Filippetto wanted to be carried, Pietruccio wanted to ride piggy-back, Teresa made him drag her by the hand, and Michelino, the oldest, went ahead by himself, kicking stones.
SUMMER
10. A journey with the cows
The city noises that on summer nights come through the open windows into the rooms of those who are made sleepless by the heat, the true noises of the night-time city, are audible at a certain hour, when the anonymous din of motors dies away and is silent, and from the silence, discreet, distinct, graduated according to the distance, emerge the step of a noctambulant, the rustle of a night watchman's bike, a remote muddled brawl, and a snoring from the upper floors, the groan of a sick man, the continued striking of an old clock every hour. Until, at dawn, the orchestra of alarm clocks in the working-class houses tunes up, and a tram goes by on its tracks.
And so, one night, between his wife and the children all sweating in their sleep, Marcovaldo lay with his eyes closed, to listen to as much of this powdering of frail sounds as filtered from the pavement down through the low windows into his half-basement. He heard the swift, cheerful heel of a woman who was late, the patched sole of the man who stopped irregularly to collect cigarette butts, the whistle of someone who felt alone, and every now and then a broken clash of words in a dialog between friends, enough to suggest they were talking about sports or money. But in the hot night those sounds lost all relief, they dissolved as if dampened by the sultry heat that crammed the void of the streets, and yet they seemed to want to impose themselves, to assert their dominion over that uninhabited realm. In every human presence Marcovaldo recognized sadly a brother, stuck like him, even in vacation time, to that oven of cooked and dusty cement, by debts, by the burden of the family, by the meagerness of his wages.
And as if the impossible thought of vacation had suddenly opened the gates of a dream to him, he seemed to hear a distant clank of bells, and a dog's bark, and also a brief lowing. But his eyes were open, he wasn't dreaming: and, pricking up his ears, he sought to regain a grip on those vague impressions, or a denial of them; and he actually did hear a sound as of hundreds and hundreds of steps, slow, scattered, hollow, which came closer and drowned out all other sounds, except, indeed, that rusty clanking.
Marcovaldo got up, slipped on his shirt and trousers.
'Where are you going?' asked his wife, who slept with one eye open.
'There's a herd of cattle passing in the street. I'm going to see it.'
'Me, too! Me, too!' cried the children, who knew how to wake up at the right moment.
It was the sort of herd that used to cross the city at night, in early summer, going towards the mountains for the alpine pasture. Climbing into the street with their eyes still half-closed in sleep, the children saw the stream of dun or piebald withers which invaded the sidewalk, brushed against the walls covered with bills, the lowered shutters, the stakes of no-parking signs, the gasoline pumps. Cautiously extending their hoofs from the step at the intersections, their muzzles never betraying a jolt of curiosity, pressed against the loins of those ahead of them, the cows brought with them the odor of dung, wild flowers, milk and the languid sound of their bells, and the city seemed not to touch them, already absorbed as they were into their world of damp meadows, mountain mists and