On the way out of our apartment, just before stepping out on Corso Garibaldi, you pass Camericia Rocca del Perigini, a clothing store so formidable it is not well suited to me. (Bob McKillop is the only one I know who knows his Italian fitted shirts and suits.)

So even though we’ve never done more than a bit of window-shopping now and again, we are passingly acquainted in the literal sense with the shop owner. No less than we, she has a face-recognition scanner that, whenever our eyes meet, exchanges “buongiorno” or “buona sera” between the glass.

Only the first time on our way out this year, the usually diligent one happens to be standing outside next to the presiding green goddess. Words of welcome bubble up from within our welcoming neighbor and immediately sink into our hearts even as they penetrate our brains more slowly:

Torna qui (To come back);
Ultima primavera (last spring);
L’anno scorso (last year);
Amiamo Spoleto (We love Spoleto.)

Yet again our home away from home persuades us of an ever-widening connection–as good a reason as there is, should one be needed, to explain this odd predilection.