Leaving
Venice
Long before the sun rose to cast its golden mantle across St.
Mark’s square igniting the incredible iridescent mosaics on the facade of the
cathedral and illuminating the winged lion on top of his pilaster, I couldn't sleep. A deep dark storm front filled with torrential rain blew in from the
Adriatic. It stifled and smothered the faint glow from the small lights
adjacent to the fog covered canals that filtered through the watery passage
where we waited, by a perfectly arched bridge adjacent to our now almost invisible
hotel. I felt as though we were in a 1942 film noir starring Humphrey Bogart
and Lauren Bacall with Sydney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre and other actors in long
black trench coats where something sinister was afoot. Our party had been
awakened at 3:15AM from fitful sleep by calls from the night clerk at the
Columbiana Hotel in Venice in order to meet a Venetian taxi boat driver who
would ferry us to the airport across the distant bay through the fog and rain. The
first and last plane from the Venice airport that day we could not miss! The
airport seemed an eternity away beyond an impenetrable black unknown watery
distance through a curtain of rain! The expected intense rains were certain to
flood the St. Mark’s Cathedral, the square and many of the shops surrounding
the area. The conundrum is that while you can push the flooding waters out of
the shops, churches and other areas, it runs directly back into them. The water
in Venice has no place to go but up, becoming a tragedy of monumental
proportions that will continue to be magnified in the near future, the very
near future. It is in all probability too late all ready to be averted. Venice
is doomed. The magnificent murals in the Doge’s palace, the churches, the
palazzos and everything else in the city will soon be as lost as Atlantis. Currently
platforms have been constructed in order to be able to traverse St. Marks
Square and gain access to the cathedral during elevated water periods like high
tides and excessive rainy seasons.
We all waited in a dimly lit room of the hotel lobby anxiously
waiting for the taxi speed boat to arrive and arrive it did, at exactly 4:00
AM. The driver loaded the luggage into the front of boat while the six of us
were closed in the covered space behind the driver. He expertly ferried us
through the inland canals of Venice, abutted by tall Renaissance buildings
soaring skyward like two poised hands ready to clap. It was silent as a tomb
except for the humming of the boat’s motor. We didn’t talk. By the time we reached the Grand Canal and
the more open waters of the Venetian lagoon it was still really too dark to see
anything except the lights across the water and their glistening reflections on
the inky surface. The Italian driver pressed the throttle and the boat exploded
forward. The speed was apparent by the lunging and skipping of the speed boat, at
times almost leaving the water’s surface sailing through the air as we flew
across the murky water propelled through the darkness. We would obviously make
it on time if we weren’t killed in some fiery crash in the bay with some other
boat also speeding through the night headed God knows where. We did however
make it on time and after dragging our luggage across a paved walkway for a
mile or so we came to the airline counter with time to spare. Checking in at
Lufthansa’s counter, I wondered just who I was in my imaginary scenario; “Humphrey
Bogart”, I hoped but probably Sidney Greenstreet. Linda was Lauren Bacall,
maybe but just who would the others have been? Let me think……