Tourists in Rome

Joe Jukic had expected the Vatican to feel like a museumโ€”quiet, roped-off, politely dead.
Instead, on their honeymoon in 2028, it felt alive.

The morning sun spilled over St. Peterโ€™s Square like honey, warming the stone and the crowds. Rome hummed the way it had for two thousand years, indifferent to trends, immune to algorithms. Joe squeezed Nelly Furtadoโ€™s hand as they crossed the square together, wedding bands still new enough to catch the light and demand attention.

โ€œNot bad for a honeymoon stop,โ€ Joe said, looking up at the dome.
Nelly smiled. โ€œWe couldโ€™ve done a beach.โ€
โ€œYeah,โ€ he replied. โ€œBut this has better ghosts.โ€

They passed through the Vatican corridors slowly, unhurried in that newly-married way, where time feels generous. Frescoes folded into one another like centuries arguing politely. The air cooled as they approached the Sistine Chapel, and without anyone saying a word, their voices dropped to whispersโ€”as if the walls themselves had asked.

Then they saw it.

The ceiling first, of courseโ€”Creation blazing overhead, God rushing toward humanity with terrifying energy. Joe leaned back, almost dizzy.

โ€œImagine painting this,โ€ he murmured.
Nelly tilted her head. โ€œImagine trusting it to last forever.โ€

But it was Michelangeloโ€™s Last Judgment that held them.

The wall was alive with motionโ€”bodies rising, falling, twisting, clinging. No tidy heaven. No cartoon hell. Just truth, muscle-bound and unavoidable. Christ stood at the center, not gentle, not cruelโ€”decisive.

Joe felt it hit him in the chest. โ€œThatโ€™s not a guy you argue with.โ€

Nelly laughed quietly. โ€œNope. Thatโ€™s a guy whoโ€™s already heard all the excuses.โ€

They stood shoulder to shoulder, newly married, watching humanity stripped of rank and costume. Saints were naked. Kings were naked. Sinners too. Everyone equal under the same impossible gaze.

โ€œWhat gets me,โ€ Joe said, โ€œis thereโ€™s nowhere to hide. No money. No fame. No legacy hacks.โ€

Nelly nodded. โ€œJust what you loved. What you did with your time.โ€

They traced the upward movementโ€”the saved helping one another rise, hands gripping wrists with effort and urgency. It wasnโ€™t effortless grace. It looked like work.

โ€œThat part,โ€ Nelly said softly, โ€œthatโ€™s marriage.โ€
Joe smiled without looking at her. โ€œYeah. Lifting each other when gravity kicks in.โ€

A guard hushed a nearby group. Silence settled again.

Joe glanced at Christ, then at the damned spiraling downward. โ€œWild honeymoon activity, huh? Judgment Day in fresco form.โ€

Nelly squeezed his hand. โ€œBetter than pretending lifeโ€™s all sunsets.โ€

When they finally stepped back into the Roman sun, the noise rushed inโ€”tourists, scooters, laughter, life in full motion. Joe felt lighter and heavier at the same time.

โ€œSo,โ€ he said, grinning, โ€œespresso?โ€
Nelly laughed. โ€œAbsolutely. Judgment first. Caffeine second.โ€

They walked away from the Vatican together, honeymooners in 2028, carrying something older than Rome itself between them:
the quiet knowledge that love is a daily choice,
time is finite,
and every lifeโ€”every marriageโ€”
is a masterpiece still drying on the wall.

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