There were two sets of stairs:
 the front ones curving and formal
 while the backstairs rose steep
 as a canyon wall. As a girl, I used to fly
 from their heights when I wasn’t falling.
And now I climb a footbridge
 to what remains
 of Civita di Bagnoregio, a small hilltown
 like an island in the sky, surrounded
 by spectacular nothingness.
Moments ago, I was terrified
 looking up at the projected journey,
 but now, safely inside the walls,
 there’s a rush of energy, a feeling
 of never being more inside my body,
exploring small lanes
 over two thousand years old
 that all end at the brink.
 The stone church with relics of Bonaventura,
 a wooden manger in an Etruscan cave,
a bruschetta with garlic toasted over coals,
 and a framed photo of a man on a horse
 barrelling down
 an earlier incarnation of the footbridge,
 his face lit by something wild.
My older brother’s room was at the top
 of our backstairs. I am haunted still
 by the sounds of his weeping
 beyond the door. But other times
 there were the golden notes of his trumpet,
creating a space in his bedroom
 for something so much larger.
 I hear him playing Bach
 in this Italian town where every century or so
 another house or lane lets go.
Annie Deppe is the author of Sitting in the Sky and Wren Cantata. She lives (mostly) on the west coast of Ireland.
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