Three dots appear. Then three more. Then mine.
I flipped open the first page, and the smell of salt and cheap sunscreen flooded back.
We ate dinner that night by candlelight – burnt pasta, salad from a bag, the last of the good prosecco. I wore a yellow sundress I haven’t fit into since. Sana, the quietest of us, read tarot cards on the terrace. She pulled The Sun for me. “Joy,” she said, touching the card’s painted child on a white horse. “Uncomplicated. Remember this.” Summer Holiday Memories with the Ladies Special...
Priya, ever the organizer, had a spreadsheet. Maya, ever the chaotic neutral, threw it into the pool on the first evening. I can still see the ink bleeding, the columns of “Beach Day” and “Winery Tour” dissolving into the chlorinated water.
The photo album had been sitting on the top shelf of my closet for seven years. Dust motes danced in the afternoon light as I pulled it down, the faux-leather cover warm against my palms. The Ladies Special – that’s what we’d called ourselves, a rotating cast of five women bound by book club meetings and a collective, simmering need for escape. Three dots appear
My phone buzzes. A new message in the group chat. It’s from Sana. A photo of a familiar terracotta roof, a familiar jade-green pool. A caption: “La Spettatrice is available again. August. Who’s in?”
The photo that made me stop turning the pages was taken on a Tuesday. We have no idea who took it. It must have been the elderly farmer from next door, the one who brought us fresh figs every morning and looked at our loud, wine-flushed laughter with a kind of bemused wonder. I flipped open the first page, and the
On the drive back to the airport, we listened to Robyn’s “Dancing On My Own” on repeat, singing so loudly the Fiat’s speakers distorted. Maya cried when we dropped her at her gate. I cried when I got home and saw my own reflection in the elevator mirror – sunburned, exhausted, and lighter than I had been in a decade.
The plan had been the Amalfi Coast. Instead, a last-minute flight cancellation and a collective stubbornness landed us in a rented Fiat Doblo with a temperamental AC and a boot full of prosecco. We drove south from Rome, not to the sea, but to a forgotten stretch of olive groves in Umbria.
“That was six hours of research!” Priya shrieked, but she was laughing. We were all laughing. It was the kind of fight that only happens when you’re so tired of being responsible that the slightest rebellion feels like a revolution.
