Fake Tan and White Stilettos
By Janet Baldey
There’s black marks, smeared all over me
piller an me eyes are so swollen I can hardly see. Must’ve been crying all night. Bet I
look a proper fright. Plus, me back’s on
fire. It’s that mattress, you can feel
every effing spring.
God, this is a dump. No room to swing a cat and there’s no
carpet. To fink I’m stuck here for
another three weeks. Don’t fink I can
stand it. Wish I was back in me own bed,
under me pink satin duvet cuddling the teddy nan giv me.
It’s all Lauren’s fault, silly moo. Fancy daring me? Done it on purpose, o’course. Mind you, we were all half cut. We usually go places on a Saturday. This time it was the Rocking Rhino, wicked
groups they get there. Mind you, we
sobered up a bit as we marched back to Chantelle’s, straight down the middle of
the road, singing at the tops of our voices.
“S’okay.’ She’d said.
‘Me parents are in Marbs.”
Once inside, she’d kicked off her
stilettos and scampered over to the bar.
“What’s it going to be then?” She’d waved a bottle in the air.
We sprawled on the blond leather sofa
and
All of a sudden, Lauren squealed. “OMG, It’s Joey”
“What?
From TOWIE.”
“Yeah.
Ain’t ‘e smexi!”
“Din’t know he was on the Riki Rich
show. BOGOFF, eh girls?”
“Joey’s all right,” I said “but Riki’s my fave. He’s real bang tidy.”
That was true then, but not now. Not
after what ‘appened next.
There
was a deafening blast of music and Riki stepped forward. Teeth flashing out of ‘is tan, he opened his
arms, ‘ugging us all.
“Ladies and gentleman. You’ve heard of ‘Wife Swap?
Forget it. Now bigger and better, you’ve got ‘Life Swap!” The drummer went bananas and the audience
went mad. It was well-staged.
Eyeballing Riki, we giggled and nudged each uvver. Apparently, there was this bird in
“Wha’s he say? Swap places with her and
live in
Then, Lauren went and opened her stupid
mouth.
“Hey, you do nothing but chill, Chels. Why don’t you go in for it?”
“Bee-ayve…”
“Go on, I dare you”.
Well, that done it. Mind you, I never expected to be picked. Forgot all about it till I answered me Beyonce
ring tone a few weeks on. It were only
the producer of the prog weren’t it?
Nearly wet me knickers. “They’d
had a good response”, he said, but I’d been chosen and could I come and discuss
it?
I was dead excited but when I met him
it was a right let-down. He seemed a real nerd.
Well educational and skinny wiv it.
His glasses kept slipping down his nose and he had white eyelashes that
blinked all the time. He had odd socks
on and what looked like me grandad’s fair
He said that this was a new venture for
the programme and Riki was very excited about it. It was to be a sort of social document. LO flippin L! Then, he said, would I be prepared to rough
it?
I sat fiddling with me Louis Vuitton handbag
wondering how to say ‘no’ when, suddenly, Riki appeared. ‘E was amazing, even more fit in the flesh
than on the telly. He was wearing a
pair of skin-tight black leathers wiv a white silk shirt open to the waist with
a gold medallion round his neck. Well, me
heart started beating so fast I couldn’t say a ruddy word, so I just nodded.
Afterwards, me and Nigel had another
chat. The girl’s name was Nadya and she
was an orphan and worked in a shop. I’d
go over there, live at hers and do her job - sort of fly on the wall thing. He realised I didn’t speak the lingo, but he
didn’t seem to think that’d matter, the customers could always point, or maybe
I’d just do shelf filling. In turn,
Nadya would come over and live at ours.
She could help mum and dad wiv the ‘ousework and maybe do a bit of
gardening.
‘Course, then I had to sort it with the
olds. Dad was well vexed but I’d always
been able to manage him and even Mum calmed down when she heard Nadya would
help around the house.
“That’s more than you ever do, me
girl.” She said.
In the plane going over, they told me
that
The worst bit about the whole thing is that I’m wired for sound every
minute of the day, can’t even fart without the whole world knowing. There are cameras fixed to every wall and
every time I go out one follows me. I
had to force meself the first time.
Well, it’s part of me contract, so I sort of ‘ad to. There’s a lift, about the size of a coffin
and you ‘ave to seal yourself in by pulling a sort of metal trellis shut. Din’t trust it, so I walked all the way down
six flights of stairs, every one smelling of pee
Outside, it’s grim. Dirty streets wiv crumbling concrete
buildings and on every corner there’s groups of ugly old men playing dice.
Me wages don’ go far. At the end of the first week, I’d just got
paid and went for a walk. After a bit,
the area picked up, there were avenues with trees and shops, some of them very
smart, like you’d find in the
Once or twice, I passed groups of
beggars; young blokes mostly. They’re
gear was all ragged and they looked well spaced out. Some of em muttered as I passed by, prolly asking for money. I couldn’t help
wondering if one of ‘em was Nadya’s brother.
Then, it
started to get dark, the wind got up and there was sleet in the air. I shivered and thought about winter. I bet Nadya’s room is an icebox. There’s a big old-fashioned radiator under
the window but it probably don’t give out much heat. Not like our Baxi back home.
Mind you,
all this made me fink. I always blank
the Big Issue sellers who whine at yer down the High Street back ‘ome but maybe
some come from places like this. Thass a thought. ‘Cos this place ain’t reem. It really ain’t reem at all.
Copyright Janet Baldey