by Monica Graz
I was pushing my huge cleaning cart emptying
the waste baskets and getting ready to visit the three toilet complexes that I
was responsible for. It was about 11.30 am, peak time for Malpensa airport and people
were wheezing around me without paying any attention to the cleaner.
I stopped
briefly and looked at the passport queue. The EU citizens were moving very
fast, their passports barely checked. The non EU citizens’ queue was at a
standstill, passports thoroughly checked, visas required.
A faint
smile appeared at the edge of my lips as I remembered myself arriving in Milan some months ago as Julia a UK citizen
looking at the exhausted migrant cleaner pushing her cart.
Now I was this
exhausted migrant cleaner. I looked at the plasticized card that I had to wear around my neck.
‘Molegunda Apuya – airport cleaner’ it said and the photo attached was my
Filipino passport photo the one in which I was dressed in a maid’s uniform.
Today I had to start my shift at 6.00 am and I was going to finish at 1.00pm,
seven continuous hours of hard manual labor except for a fifteen minutes break
at 10.00 am for a coffee and sandwich courtesy of the airport catering services.
I looked at
my cheap wrist watch, I had to rush and start the cleaning of the toilets, as I
would need at least one full hour to finish cleaning the three complexes, each
one containing six WCs three for men and three for women plus a toilet for
people with disabilities. I smiled to myself when I thought of it. In an hour
give or take I had to clean twenty one toilets!?... And I had to work around people in a rush all
the time. I had to block each complex for twenty minutes, put the label
‘cleaning in process – mind the wet floor’ and really attack the mess people
tend to leave behind. Men were usually more disgusting than women peeing quite
often all over the toilet bowl.
My only
consolation when I was doing the toilets was that I was aloud to wear rubber
gloves. That gave me some sort of protection from all sorts of germs, thank God
for that.
I was
heading for my first toilet complex when I saw an airport security guard,
walking fast towards me waving at the same time.
He stopped
in front of me in a few seconds, looked at my plasticized card and said, a tone
of urgency in his voice, “Molegunda, just follow me, A young boy got sick and
made a mess in the waiting area of gate 34, not far from here, you have to
clean it.”
“Yes Sir,”
I answered knowing that I had no option; I had to do what I was told.
My heart
sunk when I saw the mess. I put my rubber gloves on and I started the
disgusting job of cleaning the vomit of a young boy all over a chair and the
floor. The smell was obnoxious and everybody moved several feet away of me as I
was doing my job.
As I was
working I could hear some comments around me.
A man’s
voice was saying, “Thank God for those poor migrant cleaners that come from the
other end of the world to literally clean all our messes. Can you imagine an
Italian or any other Western woman doing that job?’
And a
woman’s voice answering, “Of course not. God knows where this girl is coming
from. She looks Filipina to me, but she could also be Indonesian or even Sri
Lankan. Probably she has already several children back home relying on her for
their survival.”
“No Sri
Lankans are definitely darker than her, she is a Filipina, I saw her name
before,” I heard the man’s voice again.
“Perhaps
you are too observant, dear,” I heard the woman’s voice again being ironical
then I lost their voices as they moved away.
As I
finished cleaning the parents of the little boy approached me and the mother
put discreetly in my hands a two Euros coin with a thank you.
I blushed
and tried to refuse it but she insisted telling me, “Keep it dear, have a
coffee on us, you did a great job.”
“Thank you
Ma’am,” I answered truthfully because for over a week that I was working at the
airport this was my first human moment, the first time ever someone talked to
me in a kind manner.
I looked at
my watch again as I started pushing my cart towards the toilets, I really and
truly had to rush now, I was running out of time.
As I
started cleaning the first toilet complex my mind drifted away to the events of
the past week with mixed feelings.
The ungodly
hour I had to get up to be at work at 6.00 am. The two buses I had to take, the
people traveling in them mostly migrant domestic workers like me. Then the
return to Signora’s house which took me more than two hours. I usually was back
after 3.00pm. Conchita and Riana were right; all I wanted when back was a hot
shower and a rest.
But of
course I still had to contribute in the house. At about 7.00 pm back in uniform
I had to help Conchita with the dinner preparations and in some occasions I
even had to serve the evening meal.
I was in
bed by 10.00 pm with a tiny television always on watching from a satellite
channel Filipino soapies. I was falling asleep with the TV on. Conchita was
certain that during my sleep I was absorbing the language, something like
Hypnopaedia the wonderful Greek world for sleep learning. The alarm was set for
4.00 am. I would quickly prepare, put my cheap clothes on and start traveling at 4.30 to be at my airport work at 6.00 am.
Jennifer
Connolly and Daniela Bonifacio were both right as well. I was certainly living
in a protected environment before, being a live-in maid in Signora’s house
however harsh the work was. Now I was exposed to the real life hardship of a
migrant domestic worker.
I was about
to finish the floor moping of the first
toilet complex and move to the next one pushing my oversized cart when I froze
in my tracks by the sound of a familiar very posh sounding English voice right
behind me.
“Well,
well, look at you Molly, the Filipina airport cleaner. I knew I would find you
somehow!”
I turned
around, feeling that I was blushing all over though I wasn’t certain if that
could be visible because of my dark skin, and of course I came face to face
with Jennifer, looking the epitome of elegance, carrying a small suitcase the
kind you could take aboard the plane with you.
“Halo
Mum,” I said reluctantly remembering my Filipino accent, not knowing
how to handle her in a public space like this. My instructions were very
specific from the cleaning supervisor, stay away from any conversations or any
other kind of familiarity with the passengers, just do your assigned job
quietly and efficiently.
Jennifer
kept looking at me an amused look in her face. “This uniform is even more
elegant than the one you are wearing in Signora Matei’s house; I love in
particular your comfy tabard - pinny that protects your dress from all the
impurities of this vast crowd.” She said ironically, a smirk in her face
I decided
to be more direct with her, a security guard was already looking towards our
direction, “Sorry Mum, me not allow talk to passengers, have to keep doing my job
and have two more toilet complex like dis one to clean bepore de end op my
shipt.” I said in excellent Filipino English in a half illiterate mode.
“What a
Filipina you became, this accent is so much like the maids in the Consulate,”
She said and then continued in a more teasing and ironical tone “Isn’t that
exciting Molly, having to clean all those toilets?”
By that
stage the security guard was standing next to us. He ignored me and turned to
Jennifer, “Is everything all right Miss?”
Jennifer
looked at him impatiently, “Of course, everything is fine, I just said to your
cleaner here to be careful with the wet floor, it has to dry completely before
she removes the ‘wet floor - mind your step’ label.
“Certainly
Miss,” he answered formally seeing Jennifer’s haughty look, “I am sure our
cleaner is aware of that, she has strict instructions about that, she could be
dismissed if she is not careful.”
“I’m glad
to hear that officer,” Jennifer answered back giving a last contemptuous look
at me as she turned and started to walk towards her gate.
I watched
her back as she was moving so elegantly, her fashionable clothes fitting
perfectly. She clearly was flying back to London
for work or pleasure or both.
I looked
down at me as I started pushing my cart, my drab uniform, my heavy clogs, my
mops, brooms and dusters protruding from the cart. Was I jealous of Jennifer,
her good job her elegant clothes, her prospects in life?
A jolt of
pleasure in my spine like an electric shock gave me the answer to that. No I
was more satisfied in my present station in life. My submissive slave genes
were kicking on again. I was exhausted but not regretting anything that
happened to me the past few months. I couldn’t help it though of being
apprehensive about my Filipino future as planned by Signora. I had this strong
feeling that after my two weeks job at the airport I was going to depart from Milan . Where, how, for
how long were unknown factors to me and also a source of anxiety.
I looked at
my watch again as I arrived at the second toilet complex. It was already past
midday, I had less than an hour to finish two more toilets complexes, I should
really rush now!
It looks like Molly will get her wish. Thanks you for the continuation, have a great Christmas.
ReplyDeleteI like Molly's adventures and her life as maid very much!
ReplyDeleteI'm waiting for the next.....
Thanks!
mg
Very nice Christmas present, thank you.
ReplyDeleteMolly is being pressed working in a public place, but she still likes it.
In order to increase her training I feel that she should be forced outside her comfortzone.
That will probably happen during her future training in the Philipines.
Best wishes for a Merry Christmas to you all, Lady Charlotte, Monica Graz and Camille Langtry.
Sincerely Yours
Grey Master
excelent job really,...
ReplyDeletecan she get a philipine boyfriend ? maybe get pregnant...
Another wonderful chapter to a wonderful story. The extensive possibilities for further continuation make me wonder what will happen next.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the great work and have a happy holidays.
Sincerely,
Belladonna