Authors: Marisa Mackle
When I got home later Tanya had the place looking
spick and span and had even put flowers on the kitchen table to brighten the place up. I felt like hugging her and planting a big kiss on her cheek. It was like I had died and gone to heaven the day Tanya came to live with us. I was sure that my guardian angel up there or maybe my dad had sent her to me to help me get my life back on track. She was up first thing every morning, had the kitchen polished, the floor swept, the bathroom spick and span, and John up, dressed, fed and watered before
the
postman had even arrived. She had an abundance of enthusiasm and fun. Nothing was ever too much for her. Baby John adored her and she doted on him too. Tanya would skip off to the park with him before noon every day, and then pick up the groceries on the way home. She had a permanent smile on her face, always looked fresh and as pretty as a
picture
and was unfailing in her goodwill. What amazed me even more was that she was always thanking me rather than the other way around. As though
I
was doing her some kind of favour!
There was no tension in the house whatsoever. If I
needed some time by myself Tanya seemed to instinctively know and would take John out for little walks or else play with him on his play mat in the sitting room. She kept telling me over and over again that she was so grateful for her new job and that she was no longer exhausted from having to mind Joanne’s children, tiptoe around her cranky husband and slave away with the household chores. She even said she didn’t need Saturday and Sunday off but I insisted. I wanted to treat her as well as possible. I think if you treat people well you get back what you put into the relationship . . . well, unless you’re dealing with the likes of Samira . . . or Bernadette . . . or Sally . . . or Clive . . . But one thing’s for sure, nobody stays somewhere where they are undervalued. Not in the long run anyway.
I asked Tanya if she would like to go to English
classes. Her English was really good as it was but lots of au pairs go to classes and it’s a nice way to meet friends in a foreign country.
But Tanya seemed surprised at the question.
“Classes?” She looked at me blankly.
“Well, yes, I mean, you won’t learn any English from
John and I know you said your dream was to be an interpreter one day. I’m sure you were learning a lot more from Joanne and all her kids. You would probably find the classes sociable too.”
But despite my encouragement Tanya didn’t seem
that keen. “I have my own friends already,” she said. “I always meet the girls from the Secret Nanny Club when I’m out and about. So I’m not at all lonely. Honest!’
I decided to quietly drop the matter. If she didn’t want
to go to classes she didn’t want to go to classes and it was none of my business. However, I did think it was strange for somebody who wanted to become a professional translator not to want to go to English classes. I decided not to dwell on something that didn’t really concern me. It was time to focus on my own life now and try and get back into some kind of routine.
I took a deep breath and phoned my boss,
Creea, to say I was ready to come back to work part-time in the office, in addition to working from home. I had thought she’d be pretty pleased to hear from me as Sally had emailed me on Facebook several times to say they were snowed under with work and extremely short-staffed at the moment. But I was disappointed to find her response was lukewarm at best.
“When exactly are you coming back?” she asked
without even enquiring about me or Baby John. She sounded harried and fretful.
“I was thinking of next Monday?”
“Monday
,
hmm
m
, well, that might be a problem because we have two interns here at the moment filling in for you and they take turns at using your desk and computer so we don’t have a desk for you right now. Monday week would suit better. Then we have our
monthly
meeting and you can get straight back into things.”
“Oh, okay!” I tried to sound upbeat.
“By the way, did you get the group email I sent this morning?”
“This morning?
Oh no, I’m afraid I haven’t even opened the laptop at all today. Was it important?”
“Well, it’s not great news to be honest,
Kaylah. Everyone here at the magazine has been told we need to take a five-per-cent pay-cut with immediate effect. I hate to be the bearer of bad news but the orders come from the top. We’re all in the same boat . . . magazine sales are way down . . . you know yourself . . . it’s tough out there.”
“I know,” I said in a small voice, feeling crushed. “I
know it is.”
Then I thanked
Creea for her call even though I was the one who had called her and I said goodbye. I think I may have also said that I was looking forward to coming back to work but I’m not sure. It’s all a bit of a blur now.
I remember feeling dizzy anyway. I was really struggling
as it was. How on earth was I going to be able to pay Tanya and buy nappies and food for the three of us? How was I going to afford my electricity bills and health insurance bills which were already crippling me? Winter was looming and it was going to be a harsh one, there was no doubt about that.
“Is everything okay?” Tanya asked, looking concerned.
She had Baby John in her arms and her head was slightly cocked to one side. How did she know I had just got bad news? That girl was able to read my mind so much it was uncanny.
I sat down on the sofa. I was almost shaking. “Not
really, but it will be fine.”
“Would you like a cup of tea?”
I smiled in spite of myself. Tanya may have been foreign but she had already grasped the Irish way of life. No matter how bad things are, or how many problems we have, we always manage to find the solution in a nice hot cup of tea.
“Thanks, Tanya. I would love one.”
She handed my baby to me and I cuddled him close. He smiled at me, so full of trust and love. I knew I had to cope with this bad news. But I was already stretched to the limit financially and there was no point asking John’s dad for any maintenance as when I had phoned him to tell him we were having a boy after having my twenty-week scan, he told me that he wasn’t interested, and that he had a lot on his mind after being forced to take a fifty-per-cent pay cut at work. He also told me that he was now sharing a bedsit with his brother as he could no longer afford the rent on the swanky bachelor pad.
Everybody that I knew was up to their neck in debt
and there didn’t seem to be any shining light at the end of the tunnel. Tanya was back with the tea and a biscuit which she placed on the coffee table in front of me. “How bad is it? Or should I not ask? Tell me to mind my own business if you like.”
I gave a wry smile. “It’s bad but it could be worse,” I
said. “I have a lot to be thankful for. I have my health and I am mother to a beautiful boy. I shouldn’t really complain. It’s just that things have not been good for me financially since I went part-time in the magazine and
now
they’re looking even worse. I’ve been asked to take a significant pay-cut.”
Tanya didn’t bat an eyelid. “I see,” she commented
without any emotion whatsoever. “But you won’t starve this winter, will you?”
“I’ll try my best not to,” I sighed. “But the price of
everything is going up and wages are going down. I don’t know how the government expects us to keep going like this.”
“At the village where I come from people survive on
very little,” said Tanya thoughtfully. “When I was growing up the only designer clothes we saw were in foreign magazines. I wore my sisters’ clothes and never got anything new. We got one pair of shoes a year if we were lucky.”
“I suppose we were spoiled here in Ireland the last
few years,” I said, putting John back down on his play mat. “We all thought we were rich. Everyone was telling us that we were rich. And we weren’t.” I sipped my tea. It was comforting.
“Some people are rich, or else they act like they are
very rich. Take some families in America or England for example,” Tanya continued. “I talk to the girls in the Secret Nanny Club online and they tell me about the huge houses they work in and how the ladies wear
something
once and then they bin it because they don’t want to be seen wearing the same thing twice.”
“Well, I didn’t know anyone pre-recession who was
that extravagant myself. But it’s true that for a while in this country we all went a bit crazy spending money that we never actually had. And the banks are mostly to blame because they gave money they didn’t have to people who could never afford to give it back. We couldn’t stop spending on the never-never and now we’re broke. I am thankful I have a job to go back to. Some of my friends who had great jobs a couple of years ago are now on social welfare.”
We sat in silence for a while. I lost myself in my gloomy
thoughts and Tanya cradled John, rocking him until he drifted off to sleep. I wondered if I could possibly do anything – anything – to boost my income. But unfortunately fashion stylists weren’t exactly in hot demand in the middle of a recession. There was a time I could have demanded a fee of a couple of grand just to take out some clothes from a shop and dress models for a day in a fancy location. Not anymore. Now the same clients wanted you to do the same work for half the amount they used to pay. Even very big clients such as major clothing companies now approached you and asked you to email them your fee. They would get all the known stylists around town to put in their respective fees and then, in most cases, choose the cheapest one. It really was dog eat dog in this industry. Or stylist eat stylist.
I hadn’t seen many of the stylists since giving birth to
my son. We weren’t friends as such but we all knew each other socially of course because we would bump into each other regularly at press days, or be seated next to each other in the front rows of prestigious fashion shows. The older stylists who were well established and had their own clients for years always seemed stand-offish and reluctant to welcome any new kid on the block.
The stylists guarded their clients like trained
Rottweilers. You could almost see them baring their teeth if you stepped onto their territory. Most of the stylists were female although you did get the odd male who was as bitchy as or even bitchier than them.
When I started out as a freelance a few years ago
there were only a handful of stylists on the scene but now it seemed like every second woman in the country was a stylist or at least had aspirations to become one. The market was getting saturated and the competition for clients was fierce. You needed to network like hell to remain at the top of this cut-throat industry and I was at a big disadvantage living out in Bray like a hermit.
You see, anyone can be a stylist. You don’t need to have
a qualification. All you need is a phone and an email address to get started. I have a degree in science which is about as far removed from being a stylist as you can get. I just fell into the whole styling thing actually. I had always assumed I’d go into research and maybe find a cure for something important but then I shared a flat with a girl I met online called Emily. Emily was a stylist and got great
discounts
on fashionable clothes and always seemed to be invited to celeb-filled fashion shows where people guzzled champagne like mother’s milk. She regularly appeared on
TV talking about the season’s trends and every second day
the postman would arrive with a parcel containing a bag, or a scarf or a bracelet or something nice. I used to hate the
way
the only post I got were brown envelopes and wished I could have a job like Emily.
Emily, despite her wonderfully glamorous job, was quite a lazy thing though. Often she would hit the town
after the fashion shows and wouldn’t get home until all hours. Then she would be all hungover in the mornings, curled under the duvet with the curtains closed. She would beg me to go to the shop to get her some Lucozade and sweets, and then she’d bribe me to take clothes back to shops. Half of Emily’s life seemed to be spent taking clothes from shops for fashion shoots and then delivering them back again after the shoots. Some of the shops were very strict about wanting the clothes returned to them the very next day. So if Emily wasn’t feeling the best, she would ask me to go to the shops with the clothes and
sign
them back in again.
After a while the shop girls
started to recognise me and some even believed that I
was
the stylist! Then one day I had to go to an upmarket boutique to give back a luxurious coat that Emily had borrowed for a photo shoot and the shop manager asked me if I would
be
attending their fashion show later that evening. I said I would love to but I hadn’t received an invitation. Immediately she put my name on the guest list. I went along that night with my mother and we were put in the front row with a glass of champagne in our hands and
treated
like celebrities. I watched in awe as the glamorous models sashayed up and down the catwalk and I also tried not to get too excited as I spotted some high-profile celebrities sitting opposite me showing off their designer bags and shoes.