by Robin Wrigley
Campari & pink grapefruit Juice
When I
finally got to England I thought I had died and gone to heaven. After nearly a
year of avoiding the police, authorities, traffickers, liars, cheats and so many
horrible people in many different countries I had reached my goal physically
unharmed. Never mind what it did to my head.
Growing up in a small town in the Sind Province of Pakistan, a member of
the only Christian family in that town had been a miserable life. When my eldest
brother Rodney confided in me that he was planning to go to the UK I begged him
to take me with him. It took weeks of convincing him to agree and even then only
after I threatened to tell our mum.
I will not dwell on the details of the
journey because I prefer to forget about it. The only time I think about it is
when I am reminded in my sleep and I wake up in the middle of a nightmare. The
night my brother drowned. Leave it at that please.
I would not be telling the truth if I said
it was any easier once I finally got to the UK. At least it was safer but life
as a refugee in a strange country adds to the scars that you pick up on the way.
At least here I had no problem with the language because my father insisted we
all learn English from an early age. We went once a week to a Catholic
missionary in another nearby town firstly to pray and secondly to learn
English.
Thankfully that is all in the past. After
three hard years of doing all kinds of jobs, most of them illegally my status as
a landed refugee came through and I could accept employment legally. I was so
overjoyed I wrote a long letter to my mum and dad and went to the local post
office to send it. While I was waiting in the queue to be served I began reading
the small advertisements on a board. Most of them were for selling items but one
was advertising for a cleaner prepared to do laundry.
I looked around to make sure no one was
paying attention to me. The girl behind me was looking at her phone so I quickly
took the card and stuffed it in the back pocket of my jeans. You learn a lot
when you have nothing but your wits.
I ran outside after posting my letter and
rang the number on my phone. The lady who answered was very surprised because
she said she had only put the card up earlier this morning. She sounded nice but
was a little bit suspicious at the speed in which I applied. Then she said she
would wait until the next morning to see if there was any other people looking
for the job. She said she would call me back. Though I knew nobody else would
see the advertisement I never expected to hear from her. My life as a refugee
prepared me for disappointments and broken promises.
But she did and I got the job. Again she
was more than a little apprehensive when I arrived at her house the following
Saturday as requested. What sealed it for me was when she asked me lots of
questions including was I a Moslem which of course I wasn’t. I told her I
am a Catholic and luckily so was
she.
The house that I was employed to clean was
very nice. Much nicer than any house I had ever entered. Given a guided tour
where the lady explained everything she expected of me as we went. I felt quite
scared but kept it to myself I hoped. She kept stopping and insisting that she
had very high standards of cleanliness looking at me very intently rather like
my mother had done to make sure I was listening.
Then it came to the question of washing
and ironing. My fear went up another level. I had only used a machine in a local
laundromat where the instructions were printed on the wall and there was always
someone to ask.
That
was six months ago. I’m still in the job. Have I made any mistakes? The honest
answer is yes. Funnily enough what saved me was my laundry work. It was my
ability to wash and iron her husband’s shirts. I don’t know what he did when
they left the house every day but I do know he needed to be wearing a freshly
ironed white shirt. Sometimes two if they were entertaining.
My brother Rodney used to change his shirt
twice a week and probably only once during the rainy season. This man needed a
fresh one every single day no matter what the weather. I have never seen weather
like this. Of course they had an electric drying machine; I hardly ever used it
as nothing compares to a shirt dried naturally and ironing is so much easier and
better.
But today is Monday and the weather
forecast on the BBC says showers. I never had to pay any attention to a man or
woman telling me about the weather but I do now and they are not always
right.
I dream of those cloudless days back in my
village. I imagine my dad’s kameez shalwar drying in the sun on the bush outside
the front door. I am brought back to reality by remembering the number of times
a neighbour would throw dirt on it.
Nobody throws dirt on Mr. Hodges shirts
but having to get them properly dried in this awful weather often gets me down.
Especially on Mondays after the freedom of the week-end.
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