“When you travel, remember that a foreign country is not designed to make you comfortable. It is designed to make its own people comfortable.” – Clifton Fadiman
30/8/2013
-Ventimiglia, Italia-
A photo to peak your curiosity |
"What the heck should we do?" asked Ken. I had nothing to respond to him. I didn't know what to do either. Adam was trying to find a way to get inside our rented car, a silver Ford Fiesta, working his way around the doors to make it open. Hafiz was helping him. People around were figuring out what we were doing with the car, and I fear that some people thought that we were stealing our own rented car. A
police patrol car came and two policemen asked us what the problem was. We
explained everything in French, they understood French and told us to break one of the windows. There was no other choice.
We were at an R n R near Ventimiglia, on our way to Florence, Italy. It was in the middle of the day and it was still summer here in Italy, the heat here felt more or less the same as in Malaysia.
So, my fellow blog readers, you may wonder what actually happened here. Let me rewind and start from the beginning;
2 days after I arrived back in France (I was in Malaysia two months with my family), I was invited by my juniors to join them
for their trip to Florence. We rented a car and departed from Aix-en-Provence at 10 am, and
soon reached Nice at 12 pm. Along the way, I was hoping we would come across the lavender fields like the year before, but unfortunately we didn't. Nevertheless, I have photos of the lavender fields plus sunflower fields we took, back in summer 2012.
The air smelled fresh and fragrant |
We were all Aixois (students studying in Aix-en-Provence) |
Lost in the sunflower fields |
The city of Nice itself is clean, and looked ravishing this time of the year. We didn't have the time to dive or relax on the beach. So we continued on our journey.
From the top of Nice, a photo taken in 2012 |
Le French Riviera |
When we got back to the car, that's when we realized that we left the car keys inside the car, and the car had an auto-lock system. So it locked itself from the inside, leaving us no chances of getting back the key. Genius.
The first thing we did was blaming each other. Me, I was thinking that the vacation was over before it started. Well shit, maybe we should go back to France and call it a day. But wait, we can't get inside our car. Basically, we can go nowhere. Then, we started to think rationally. Ken and I went to ask for help at the nearest shop, he was speaking in Italian and I don't understand Italian, but in the end the man gave us a hammer, which meant breaking one of the windows was the only option. Qisti, Maryam, Halim & Faris, my juniors who were going to Venice stopped and helped us. One hour later, that was when the police arrived (we're back to the start of my blog entry).
Two hours have passed, some people tried to help but didn’t succeed, we watched as many people come and go. We didn't want to break the window as it was a rented car.
Finally, we decided. "Let's break the small window near the windshield, and tell the rent company that we've been robbed,"Adam said. And with the help of an Arab man, we broke the glass of the smallest window, and reached the car keys. As the car was rented, we would have a lot of explaining to do. We thanked him and his family for staying with us for at least half an hour to help. Thank you to Qisti, Maryam, Faris & Halim for staying with us too. Sincerely from us, merci beaucoup et Grazi :')
Oh la la, Grand Theft Auto |
We were glad that we could still continue on our trip. But that wasn’t the last of our problems.
3 hours later...
-Italian Hinterlands-
Deep areas of Italy, right before it went dark |
"Push!Push!" I yelled as we pushed the car backwards (gear set in reverse mode), with Adam inside the car on the pedale. Light was quickly disappearing, we were stuck in the small village in a rural area of Italy, nowhere near Firenze (Florence in Italian). We realized that the GPS brought us to a flight of freakin' stairs (long-wide ones) that are normally used by pedestrians of the Italian village.
That was it. We were officially LOST.
I remember that there were Italian children and their parents looking bizarrely at us from their homes, two teens mumbling in Italian, and an old man wearing only his boxers, cursing at us in Italian. They must have wondered what the heck were these Asians doing in the middle of nowhere, at this time of day. Getting out of the small space of pedestrian road was also a bit tricky. A few helped us turn the car around. I asked one of them ‘Firenze? (Florence in Italian). Many tried to explain, but I did not understand a single thing. They don't speak English nor French. Yeah, despondency at its best.I heard they say some word, ‘Carrara’ and ‘Autostrada’ but did not know what they were. After a while, the sky had gotten dark, the moon was already glistening palely through the trees. And we were still lost. Everywhere we went, we only saw trees and more trees. We asked a few more people and they said the same thing, Carrara and Autostrada. Honestly, it scared me to be lost here.
I looked at my watch, it was 8 p.m. which means it's 2 a.m. Malaysian time. It was already 31st of August 2013. Malaysians were celebrating Hari Kemerdekaan (Independance Day) and we were stuck here in the hinterlands of Italia. Yay us.
At last, miracle arrived. We saw a sign marked Carrara. It was a name of a town. I finally got it. Autostrada meant Highway or 'Autoroute' in French. We went straight for 20 minutes and finally found the highway which led directly to Florence. We reached Florence at 10 p.m. when we were supposed to arrive there at 3 p.m. (according to Google Maps). It was one hell of a day.
Thank you for staying with me till the end of this entry. Everything went well in Florence. I'll tell you more about it in The Lost Journal #4, stay tuned.
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Thanks for reading this entry.
Bye! Au revoir!
Bye! Au revoir!