-
Abemus Papam
-
Chapter 1 – The Pope's Death
-
The Pope is dead. They announced it
-
early this morning, but I already knew it for hours. I could feel it in the air, in the silence of the rooms,
-
in the way the secretaries' footsteps echoed in the corridors of the Vatican.
-
I recited the prayers with the other cardinals, but there was
-
only one thought in my mind: now the Conclave begins. We gathered in the Sistine Chapel. The
-
doors closed behind us, slow, heavy. Nobody spoke. Each of us
-
knew what was about to happen: vote, pray, wait, and then vote again,
-
again and again, until the Holy Spirit would give us the right name.
-
I wasn't prepared. No one ever is, they say. But I felt something different,
-
a deep, inexplicable agitation. It wasn't fear. Not yet.
-
Outside the world looked at the chimneys, inside the silence was almost violent.
-
I looked at the faces of the other cardinals and realized that many hoped not to
-
be chosen. Me first. But then why, when I
-
saw that first vote with my name, did my heart start beating fast?
-
Maybe I had always known it. And perhaps this was my greatest fear.
-
Chapter 2 – The Conclave and the choice
-
The votes continued to rise. Every time one of the cardinals
-
said my name, my stomach would clench a little more.
-
I tried not to look at anyone, to appear calm, but
-
something uncontrollable was moving inside me. "Melville." Still. "Melville." And again.
-
I started hearing a ringing in my ears, as if the world outside was receding.
-
Everything became muffled, slow. I could no longer follow the
-
rhythm of the voting. My breath was short, but I didn't want to look up.
-
Then the moment: 2/3 of the votes. Election confirmed.
-
They all looked at me, waiting for my response.
-
I only had to say one word: "I accept." My lips moved on their own. I don't
-
even know how I did it. I felt hands on my shoulders,
-
smiles, whispered prayers. They took me into the room
-
to dress up as the Pope, but I couldn't look at myself in the mirror.
-
"You need to get ready. You'll be entering the world soon," someone told me.
-
I nodded, but my heart was a stone. And as I walked towards the balcony,
-
something in me broke. I couldn't do it.
-
Chapter 3 – Rejection
-
The red curtains were in front of me. One step was enough. It was enough to look out.
-
The master of ceremonies was ready. The crowd in the square, in the rain,
-
was waiting for that moment: "Abemus Papam." I was there, dressed in white. But inside
-
I only felt darkness. My head was spinning,
-
my breathing was short, my hands were cold. “Your Eminence, it's time,”
-
someone whispered behind me. I wasn't moving. I couldn't. I didn't want to.
-
The words ricocheted through my mind like an echo: "You are the Pope. You will lead millions of people.
-
You are the voice of God on Earth." But I… I don't have it. I don't have
-
that voice. I don't have the strength. I took a step back.
-
I whispered, "I can't. I'm sorry. I can't."
-
Silence. One of those moments that seem eternal.
-
Then, chaos. Hands trying to stop me, voices
-
calling me, cardinals looking at each other confused. I walked away. I wasn't running. I was walking slowly,
-
towards a corridor, towards something that even I couldn't explain.
-
I went back to my room and closed the door.
-
I sat down. The Pope has been elected, but the Pope is not there.
-
Chapter 4 – The psychoanalyst in the Vatican
-
The next day I didn't leave my room. I didn't touch any food. I didn't say a word.
-
I heard knocking every now and then. Then nothing more. Just the sound of my breathing.
-
Then, in the afternoon, they knocked again. But this time they entered:
-
a cardinal and a stranger. A distinguished man, elegant jacket,
-
thin glasses. He wasn't a priest. "He's a psychoanalyst," the cardinal said,
-
seeking my gaze. I nodded slowly.
-
Maybe that's what they wanted: someone to fix me.
-
The man introduced himself in a calm voice. He said I wasn't sick, that I wasn't
-
I was alone, who was there to listen to me. "I don't want to be Pope," I said.
-
It was the first sentence after hours of silence. He wasn't surprised. He just asked, “Why?”
-
But I didn't know the answer. It wasn't fear of power. It wasn't weakness.
-
It was something deeper. A lack. A void.
-
We talked for a while. Not much, actually. Then he said that time was needed,
-
that crises are not resolved in a day. I thought: they aren't resolved at all.
-
That night I had a dream. And when I woke up I decided to go out.
-
Chapter 5 – Escape to the City
-
At dawn, before the Vatican woke up, I opened the door and went out.
-
Without the white robe. Without ring. Without escort. Just a dark coat and a cap.
-
Nobody stopped me. I entered a
-
bus, like an ordinary man. Sitting among the people, I listened to the voices,
-
the sounds, the real world. Nobody knew who I was.
-
For the first time, in days, I was breathing.
-
Rome was different from how I remembered it. Or maybe it was me who was different.
-
I walked aimlessly, following only my legs. I found myself in a square,
-
then in a park, then in front of a theater. A company was rehearsing a show.
-
I stopped to watch. A woman noticed me: "Are you looking for someone?"
-
“No, maybe myself,” I replied, smiling. He invited me inside.
-
I looked at the evidence. The actors who made mistakes, laughed, started again.
-
Nobody was perfect. Nobody had to be. One of them asked me: "Do you work in the theater?"
-
I hesitated. "No, but I have often played a part." That evening, for the first time,
-
I didn't feel like a symbol. And for the first time I thought:
-
maybe I'm not meant to be Pope. But how do you say this to the whole world?
-
Chapter 6 – The world waits
-
Meanwhile in the Vatican it was chaos. Television stations around the world
-
kept repeating: "The Pope has been elected,
-
but he has not yet appeared. There was white smoke, but no blessing,
-
no name, no voice. Only silence." The cardinals were trying to protect the secret.
-
"He's praying," they said. "He needs concentration."
-
But by now it was clear that something was wrong.
-
I watched all this from a small room in a hotel near Trastevere.
-
The TV on. My face everywhere, even if blurred, stolen.
-
Journalists were looking for answers. The faithful prayed. Some were already disappointed.
-
I... I still didn't know what to do. I spoke to the
-
psychoanalyst every day, on the phone. I told him about the walks,
-
about the laughter I heard among the actors, about the strange dreams I had.
-
"What if I don't come back?" I asked him one evening. "What if you come back instead?"
-
"But as a man?" He replied.
-
That phrase stuck in my head for hours. As a man.
-
Not as a symbol. Not as a mask.
-
But outside, meanwhile, time passed. And the world waited.
-
I had chosen to escape. But now I had to choose whether to face.
-
Chapter 7 – The return
-
I returned to the Vatican early one morning, as I had left: in silence.
-
Nobody applauded me. Nobody hugged me.
-
Only low looks, sighs of relief and a lot of tension.
-
They welcomed me into a small room where the closest cardinals were waiting for me.
-
Words, decisions, a signal awaited me. But I didn't have anything ready yet.
-
“What do we have to say to the world?” one of them asked, trying to hide his anxiety.
-
I looked at them. And for the first time I spoke with sincerity:
-
"Say that the Pope needs time. Say that he is human."
-
Silence. Then some murmurs. Disappointment, perhaps.
-
But also respect. I asked to see my psychoanalyst,
-
this time inside the sacred walls. He came without hesitation.
-
We sat across from each other, like old friends.
-
"Have you decided, then?" he asked me. I nodded.
-
"Yes. I've decided not to pretend anymore. And so… I'm not ready.
-
Maybe I never will be." He didn't answer.
-
He just looked at me with a calm, almost serene look.
-
I had found my voice. Now all that remained was to use it. In front of everyone.
-
Chapter 8 – Courage and truth
-
That day the square was full again. Umbrellas. Hands clasped. Eyes
-
fixed on that empty balcony. The cameras captured every detail.
-
The journalists talked about everything, just to fill the wait.
-
And I, behind those red curtains, was breathing slowly. I was no longer afraid. I only had truth.
-
The master of ceremonies nodded to me. I could go out.
-
But not to become Pope. To tell the world that I wouldn't be.
-
I appeared. The entire square held its breath.
-
I looked at that ocean of faces and felt small.
-
But finally real. I took the microphone.
-
"Brothers and sisters," I began, my voice firm,
-
"I can't do it. I can't accept the role of Pope.
-
Because a Pope must believe, he must lead, he must speak with the voice of God.
-
I only hear mine." A murmur. Then a long silence.
-
But I continued: "I ask you for forgiveness.
-
But I also ask you to accept my humanity, my limits, my emptiness."
-
Then I lowered the microphone. The world wasn't ready.
-
But I do. And in that moment, for the first time,
-
I felt a new strength within me: not to be Pope, but to be me.