The obituaries posted on a board where the newspapers might otherwise hang tell the story of an Italian village living through a disaster the mayor calls "worse than the war".
The war Vertova mayor Orlando Gualdi refers to is World War II -- a cataclysmic event more and more Italians cite while describing the damage wrought by the coronavirus pandemic.
Italy's death toll is somewhat hard to grasp when they are read out every evening in Rome. The total across the country soared to 6,820 by Wednesday.
It is 36 in Vertova. But the village -- its ancient stone houses hugging the side of a mountain 70 kilometres northeast of Milan --- has 4,600 inhabitants and usually sees around 60 deaths the entire year.
"It's worse than the war," Gualdi told AFP in one of the village's empty squares.
Four freshly made coffins are bunched together near the entrance of a chapel nearby.
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They are waiting to be cremated and then buried in the cemetery in the back.
Funerals have been banned for weeks and the ceremony will be a muted affair attended by caretakers wrapped in protective suits and masks.
The cemetery itself remains closed to the villagers because public gathering are banned -- so grieving for your loved ones with flowers at their grave is no longer allowed.
"No one deserves such a horrible death," the mayor said.
"It is absurd to think that there could be such a pandemic in 2020."