The following night in the adorable hilltop town of Grandas de Salime, a number of famished pilgrims stood in the bar section of a local restaurant.
"The restaurant doesn't open till 7:30."
"Can we see the menu?"
"Not until 7:30."
We stood watching the minute hand slowly inch from 7:20 towards 7:30pm, as a card game, populated solely by old men, moved along and Dimitri "accidentally" began drinking another man's glass of wine.
"Oh, Signora?!" Paul said, while signaling to our very male and very Spanish waiter. As our waiter brushed by, Paul dropped his hand sheepishly, his dimple appearing in his very red face."Well now, we'll never get service!"
Traditional blacksmith and woodworking demonstration! |
Our waiter stopped, touching the shoulder of one of the beautiful Danish women sitting at the table next to us, before turning my way and inquiring over my delicious meal. I responded to his chivalrous inquiry with a smile and a "todo es bien." He returned my smile, his hand brushing my arm before he raced away without a glance towards my three male companions.
As we had discovered earlier in the day, the orange juice box attached to Dimitri's backpack had long since been emptied of it's oranges and actually contained wine. No one knows how he finished each day's stage, staggering to the end with swollen knees and severe dehydration. But in his way, he walked his camino completely on his own terms. About 5'9" and thin, with white hair and two children in their 20s, Dimitri traveled to Spain from his home in Kaliningrade, a tiny Russian seaport outpost sandwiched between Poland, Lithuania and the Baltic Sea. Dimitri had arrived for his grand adventure on the camino Frances, but upon discovering hordes of other noisy pilgrims, he quickly jumped over to the Primitivo, a path considerably more physically demanding, though slightly quieter.
Paul, who had in a sense, adopted Dimitri for the duration of the Camino, later told us that he asked Dimitri why he came to the camino. And his response..? "To learn English!" As if everyone wanting to learn English would choose to travel to a Spanish speaking country. But it is only on the Camino that a man would come from Russia to walk 300+ kilometers with a Brit from Oxford, a German with perfect English diction and two Americans... (We won't mention the questionable things that Americans can do to the English language..)
At each meal, Dimitri would wait for a lull in conversation. "I 'ave a joke," he would say with emphasis on the 'k,' and we all would turn towards him with anticipation. "Stalin humor," he would call it, and though at times the punchline may have been lost in translation, we laughed at the animation of the storyteller himself.
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