I’m due to have a date in Rome with Stefano, who was introduced to me via Karen. I remember her introductory letter well:
Stefano is a naval architect. He is highly educated, well-travelled, attractive and charming, charming, charming.
Which had sounded positive, but it wasn’t until Stefano’s own email that I really became intrigued. When someone asks for a photo, ‘one of those taken without being aware. It is important to know people with all the twenty-four senses . . .’ you know you’re onto someone special.
Indeed, I hadn’t realised there were twenty- four senses, and after counting the five I knew on one hand, and then adding in a few rude ones, I’d given up. But perhaps Stefano will educate me further.
Stefano’s most recent email had left me in a bit of a lather too. I’d told him that the day after our date I was going to the Vatican to research my ‘V’ country, whereupon he’d responded with, ‘Just as well you are going to see the priest at the end of our time together . . .’ which nearly made me fall off my chair.
As I wait at the train station for Stefano, I try to strike an attractively nonchalant pose such as Sophia Loren might adopt in a photoshoot for her signature perfume, but I’m too nervous. Before I can quite perfect the look I’m after, Stefano arrives. He’s very tall and slim, with pale olive skin and fairish hair, starting to recede ever so slightly, but which makes him appear attractively professorial.
He’s definitely more northern Italian than the swarthier southerners, with a face that’s long and handsome – not handsome in a classical way like Michelangelo’s David, carved from marble, but more malleable, friendly and interesting. His grey-blue eyes sparkle behind cute frameless glasses, and he has the most enormous smile spreading right across his face, sporting a fabulous set of huge white teeth that must use up half a tube of toothpaste every week.