He Mocked Her in Sicilian—Not Knowing the Waitress Understood Every Word

He said it was exactly right.

When he stood, his height was even more imposing up close. He told me to think about his offer. The number was on the card. I could call anytime.

They left, and I stood holding the business card, feeling as if my life had shifted on its axis.

Later, after my shift ended, I studied the card beneath the streetlight outside the restaurant. Alessandro Marchesi. A phone number. On the back, written in bold script, were the words: Call when you are ready to come home.

I should have thrown it away. I should have recognized the situation for what it could have been: a wealthy man’s interest in a waitress dressed up as a job opportunity. But as I walked home through the city streets, I could not stop thinking about Alessandro’s eyes when I spoke Sicilian, the recognition there, the hunger. Not sexual, or not entirely sexual. Something deeper. A longing for connection to something he had lost.

God help me, I felt it too.

My phone buzzed. The number was unknown. The message asked if I had made it home safely.

My breath caught. I asked how he had gotten my number.

He replied that David had been very helpful when Alessandro explained he wanted to ensure his favorite server arrived home without incident.

I told him I was not his favorite server. He had just met me.

He answered that nevertheless, there we were. Then he asked if I was home.

I looked up at my apartment building and told him yes.

He told me to lock my doors because the neighborhood was not safe at night.

I replied that I had lived there for 3 years and knew how to take care of myself.

He said he did not doubt it, but knowing I was safe would help him sleep better.

I stared at the message, uncertain how to respond. It felt intimate in a way that scared me.

I wished him good night.

He answered in Italian. “Buona notte, Julia. Dream of Palermo.”

That night I did dream of Palermo. Narrow streets. Market smells. My mother’s laugh. My grandmother’s cooking. Somewhere in those dreams, Alessandro was there too, watching me with dark eyes that seemed to see straight through to my soul.

When I woke, there was a new message. His mother wanted to meet me. Sunday lunch, if I was free.

It was moving too fast. I had served him one dinner, spoken a few words in Sicilian, and now I was being invited to meet his mother. I told him I did not think it was appropriate.

He asked why not. I had said my grandmother lived in Palermo. His mother knew everyone in Ballarò. Perhaps they knew each other.

I told him that was not the point.

He asked what the point was, because from where he stood, the point was that he had heard me speak his dialect and felt something he had not felt in 12 years. I had reminded him what home sounded like, and he wanted his mother to meet the woman who had done that.

I told him he was being dramatic.

He said he was being honest. Sunday at 1:00. He would send a car.

I reminded him I had not said yes.

He said I would, because I was curious and had felt it too.

He was right. Damn him, he was right.

I agreed to one lunch. That was all.

Those 2 words should have been a warning. They should have made me cancel, block his number, and forget Alessandro Marchesi existed. Instead, I spent Saturday agonizing over what to wear to meet the mother of a man I barely knew, a man who somehow felt as if he had been waiting for me my entire life.

Sunday arrived too quickly. The car Alessandro sent was not the ostentatious limousine I had half expected. It was a sleek black sedan driven by a quiet man who introduced himself as Tomas. He opened the back door and said Signor Marchesi had asked him to ensure my comfort. The drive would take about 40 minutes.