In the ancient mountain-top village of Fossa, surrounded by the soaring snow-capped peaks of the Appenine mountains, the aftershocks of Monday's earthquake are still being felt.
Fossa was badly hit when the quake first struck but some of the houses that remained standing are far from secure.
Just before I arrived in the village - home to about 500 or so people - a large aftershock rocked the mountain.
Four officials had a narrow escape as the building they were inspecting at the time started to collapse. They ran for their lives as it crashed to the ground around their ears.
The first earthquake seems to have weakened some of the buildings so they now collapse from the inside. The men who escaped were very lucky.
Now the village has been closed once again amid fears that more buildings could fall as the aftershocks continue.
Those shocks are an unhappy reminder of the earthquake to the thousands who now find themselves with no home to go to. As many as two thirds of the buildings in L'Aquila and surrounding villages like Fossa are unsafe.
Last night many chose to sleep in their cars rather than leave the town they call home.
But that is no long-term solution, so at an army base not far from the centre of town the Italian Red Cross is building a temporary field kitchen that will provide 10,000 meals a day for families who have nowhere else to turn.
Volunteers are busy putting flooring down and unloading pallets of food - borlotti and cannelloni beans are stacked along with huge tins of plum tomatoes.
There are also large supplies of milk as well, of course, as water. The centre seems well resourced and well run.
The head of the Italian Red Cross, Francesco Rocca, says the situation is very grave. Tens of thousands face months of uncertainty.
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