โI am well aware that my name is ridiculous. It was not ridiculous before I took this job four years ago. Iโm a maid at the Regencyโ
Grand Hotel, and my name is Molly. Molly Maid. A joke. Before I took the job, Molly was just a name, given to me by my estranged mother, who left me so long ago that I have no memory of her, just a few photos and the stories Gran has told me. Gran said my mother thought Molly was a cute name for a girl, that it conjured apple cheeks and pigtails, neither of which I have, as it turns out. Iโve got simple, dark hair that I maintain in a sharp, neat bob. I part my hair in the middleโthe exact middle. I comb it flat and straight. I like things simple and neat.
I have pointed cheekbones and pale skin that people sometimes marvel at, and I donโt know why. Iโm as white as the sheets that I take off and put on, take off and put on, all day long in the twenty-plus rooms that I make up for the esteemed guests at the Regency Grand, a five-star boutique hotel that prides itself on โsophisticated elegance and proper decorum for the modern age.โ
Never in my life did I think Iโd hold such a lofty position in a grand hotel. I know others think differently, that a maid is a lowly nobody. I know
weโre all supposed to aspire to become doctors and lawyers and rich real- estate tycoons. But not me. Iโm so thankful for my job that I pinch myself every day. I really do. Especially now, without Gran. Without her, home isnโt home. Itโs as though all the color has been drained from the apartment we shared. But the moment I enter the Regency Grand, the world turns Technicolor bright.
As I place a hand on the shining brass railing and walk up the scarlet steps that lead to the hotelโs majestic portico, Iโm Dorothy entering Oz. I push through the gleaming revolving doors and I see my true self reflected in the glassโmy dark hair and pale complexion are omnipresent, but a blush returns to my cheeks, my raison dโรชtre restored once more.
Once Iโm through the doors, I often pause to take in the grandeur of the lobby. It never tarnishes. It never grows drab or dusty. It never dulls or fades. It is blessedly the same each and every day. Thereโs the reception and concierge to the left, with its midnight-obsidian counter and smart-looking receptionists in black and white, like penguins. And thereโs the ample lobby itself, laid out in a horseshoe, with its fine Italian marble floors that radiate pristine white, drawing the eye up, up to the second-floor terrace. There are the ornate Art Deco features of the terrace and the grand marble staircase that brings you there, balustrades glowing and opulent, serpents twisting up to golden knobs held static in brass jaws. Guests will often stand at the rails, hands resting on a glowing post, as they survey the glorious scene belowโ porters marching crisscross, dragging suitcases behind them, guests lounging in sumptuous armchairs or couples tucked into emerald love seats, their secrets absorbed into the deep, plush velvet.
But perhaps my favorite part of the lobby is the olfactory sensation, that first redolent breath as I take in the scent of the hotel itself at the start of every shiftโthe mรฉlange of ladiesโ fine perfumes, the dark musk of the leather armchairs, the tangy zing of lemon polish thatโs used twice daily on the gleaming marble floors. It is the very scent of animus. It is the fragrance of life itself.
Every day, when I arrive to work at the Regency Grand, I feel alive again, part of the fabric of things, the splendor and the color. I am part of
the design, a bright, unique square, integral to the tapestry.
Gran used to say, โIf you love your job, youโll never work a day in your life.โ And sheโs right. Every day of work is a joy to me. I was born to do this job. I love cleaning, I love my maidโs trolley, and I love my uniform.
Thereโs nothing quite like a perfectly stocked maidโs trolley early in the morning. It is, in my humble opinion, a cornucopia of bounty and beauty. The crisp little packages of delicately wrapped soaps that smell of orange blossom, the tiny Crabtree & Evelyn shampoo bottles, the squat tissue boxes, the toilet-paper rolls wrapped in hygienic film, the bleached white towels in three sizesโbath, hand, and washclothโand the stacks of doilies for the tea-and-coffee service tray. And last but not least, the cleaning kit, which includes a feather duster, lemon furniture polish, lightly scented antiseptic garbage bags, as well as an impressive array of spray bottles of solvents and disinfectants, all lined up and ready to combat any stain, be it coffee rings, vomitโor even blood. A well-stocked housekeeping trolley is a portable sanitation miracle; it is a clean machine on wheels. And as I said, it is beautiful.
And my uniform. If I had to choose between my uniform and my trolley, I donโt think I could. My uniform is my freedom. It is the ultimate invisibility cloak. At the Regency Grand, itโs dry cleaned daily in the hotel laundry, which is located in the dank bowels of the hotel down the hall from our housekeeping change rooms. Every day before I arrive at work, my uniform is hooked on my locker door. It comes wrapped in clingy plastic, with a little Post-it note that has my name scrawled on it in black marker. What a joy it is to see it there in the morning, my second skinโclean, disinfected, newly pressed, smelling like a mixture of fresh paper, an indoor pool, and nothingness. A new beginning. Itโs as though the day before and the many days before that have all been erased.
When I don my maid uniformโnot the frumpyย Downton Abbeyย style or even the Playboy-bunny clichรฉ, but the blinding-white starched dress shirt and the slim-fit black pencil skirt (made from stretchy fabric for easy bending)โI am whole. Once Iโm dressed for my workday, I feel more confident, like I know just what to say and doโat least, most of the time.
And once I take off my uniform at the end of the day, I feel naked, unprotected, undone.
The truth is, I often have trouble with social situations; itโs as though everyone is playing an elaborate game with complex rules they all know, but Iโm always playing for the first time. I make etiquette mistakes with alarming regularity, offend when I mean to compliment, misread body language, say the wrong thing at the wrong time. Itโs only because of my gran that I know a smile doesnโt necessarily mean someone is happy. Sometimes, people smile when theyโre laughing at you. Or theyโll thank you when they really want to slap you across the face. Gran used to say my reading of behaviors was improvingโevery day in every way, my dearโ but now, without her, I struggle. Before, when I rushed home after work, Iโd throw open the door to our apartment and ask her questions Iโd saved up over the day. โIโm home! Gran, does ketchup really work on brass, or should I stick to salt and vinegar? Is it true that some people drink tea with cream? Gran, why did they call me Rumba at work today?โ
But now, when the door to home opens, thereโs no โOh, Molly dear, I can explainโ or โLet me make you a proper cuppa and Iโll answer all of that.โ Now our cozy two-bedroom feels hollow and lifeless and empty, like a cave. Or a coffin. Or a grave.
I think itโs because I have difficulty interpreting expressions that Iโm the last person anyone invites to a party, even though I really like parties. Apparently, I make awkward conversation, and if you believe the whispers, I have no friends my age. To be fair, this is one hundred percent accurate. I have no friends my age, few friends of any age, for that matter.
But at work, when Iโm wearing my uniform, I blend in. I become part of the hotelโs dรฉcor, like the black-and-white-striped wallpaper that adorns many a hallway and room. In my uniform, as long as I keep my mouth shut, I can be anyone. You could see me in a police lineup and fail to pick me out even though you walked by me ten times in one day.
Recently, I turned twenty-five, โa quarter of a centuryโ my gran would proclaim to me now if she could say anything to me. Which she canโt, because she is dead.
Yes, dead. Why call it anything other than what it is? She did not pass away, like some sweet breeze tickling the heather. She did not go gently. She died. About nine months ago.
The day after her death was a lovely, balmy day, and I went to work, as usual. Mr. Alexander Snow, the hotel manager, was surprised to see me. He reminds me of an owl. He has tortoiseshell glasses that are very large for his squat face. His thinning hair is slicked back, with a widowโs peak. No one else at the hotel likes him much. Gran used to say,ย Never mind what others think; itโs whatย youย think that matters.ย And I agree. One must live by her own moral code, not follow like a sheep, blindly.
โMolly, what are you doing here?โ Mr. Snow asked when I showed up for work the day after Gran died. โIโm so sorry for your loss. Mr. Preston told me that your grandmother passed away yesterday. I already called in a replacement for your shift. I assumed youโd take today off.โ
โMr. Snow, why did you assume?โ I asked. โAs Gran used to say, when you assume, you make an A-S-S out of U and ME.โ
Mr. Snow looked like he was going to regurgitate a mouse. โPlease accept my condolences. And are you sure you donโt want the day off?โ
โIt was Gran who died, not me,โ I replied. โThe show must go on, you know.โ
His eyes widened, which perhaps suggests shock? Iโll never understand itโwhy people find the truth more shocking than lies.
Still, Mr. Snow relented. โAs you wish, Molly.โ
A few minutes later, I was downstairs in one of the housekeeping change rooms donning my maidโs uniform as I do every day, as I did just this morning, as Iโll do tomorrow even though someone elseโnot my granโ died today. And not at home but at the hotel.
Yes. Thatโs right. Today at work, I found a guest very dead in his bed. Mr. Black.ย Theย Mr. Black. Other than that, my workday was as normal as ever.
Isnโt it interesting how one seismic event can change your memory of what occurred? Workdays usually slide together, the daily tasks blending into one another. The trash bins I empty on the fourth floor meld into those
on the third. I would swear Iโm cleaning Suite 410, the corner room that overlooks the west side of the street, but actually Iโm at the other end of the hotel, in Room 430, the east-side corner room, which is the mirror inverse of Suite 410. But then something out of the ordinary occursโsuch as finding Mr. Black very dead in his bedโand suddenly the day crystalizes, turns from gas to solid in an instant. Every moment becomes memorable, unique from all the other days of work that came before.
It was today, around three in the afternoon, nearing the end of my shift, when the seismic event occurred. Iโd cleaned all of my assigned rooms already, including the Blacksโ penthouse on the fourth floor, but I needed to return to the suite to finish cleaning their bathroom.
Donโt think for a moment that Iโm sloppy or disorganized in my work just because I cleaned the Black penthouse twice. When I clean a room, I attack it from top to bottom. I leave it spotless and pristineโno surface left unwiped, no grime left behind.ย Cleanliness is next to godliness,ย my gran used to say, and I believe thatโs a better tenet to live by than most. I donโt cut corners, I shine them. No fingerprint left to erase, no smear left to clear.
So itโs not that I simply got lazy and decidedย notย to clean the Blacksโ bathroom when I scoured the rest of their suite this morning.ย Au contraire,ย the bathroom was guest-occupied at the time of my first sanitation visit. Giselle, Mr. Blackโs current wife, hopped in the shower soon after I arrived. And while she granted me permission (more or less) to clean the rest of the penthouse while she bathed, she lingered for rather a long time in the shower, so much so that steam began to snake and billow out of the crack at the bottom of the bathroom door.
โ
Mr. Charles Black and his second wife, Giselle Black, are longtime repeat guests at the Regency Grand. Everyone in the hotel knows them; everyone in the whole country knows of them. Mr. Black staysโor rather, stayedโ with us for at least a week every month while he oversaw his real-estate affairs in the city. Mr. Black isโwasโa famous impresario, a magnate, a
tycoon. He and Giselle often graced the society pages. Heโd be described as โa middle-aged silver fox,โ though, to be clear, he is neither silver nor a fox. Giselle, meanwhile, was oft described as โa young, lithe trophy socialite.โ
I found this description complimentary, but when Gran read it, she disagreed. When I asked why, she said,ย Itโs whatโs between the lines, not on them.
Mr. and Mrs. Black have been married a short time, about two years. We at the Regency Grand have been fortunate that this esteemed couple regularly grace our hotel. It gives us prestige. Which in turn means more guests. Which in turn means I have a job.
Once, over twenty-three months ago, when we were walking in the Financial District, Gran pointed out all the buildings owned by Mr. Black. I hadnโt realized he owned about a quarter of the city, but alas, he does. Or did. As it turns out, you canโt own property when youโre a corpse.
โHe does not own the Regency Grand,โ Mr. Snow once said about Mr. Black when Mr. Black was still very much alive. Mr. Snow punctuated his comment with a funny little sniff. I have no idea what that sniff was supposed to mean. One of the reasons why Iโve become fond of Mr. Blackโs second wife, Giselle, is because she tells me things plainly. And she uses her words.
This morning, the first time I entered the Blacksโ penthouse, I cleaned it from top to bottomโminus the occupied bathroom because Giselle was in it. She did not seem herself at all. I noted upon my arrival that her eyes were red and puffy. Allergies? I wondered. Or could it be sadness? Giselle did not dally. Rather, soon upon my arrival, she ran off to the bathroom and slammed the door shut behind her.
I did not allow her behavior to interfere with the task at hand. On the contrary, I got to work immediately and cleaned the suite vigorously. When it was in perfect order, I stood outside the closed bathroom door with a box of tissues and called out to Giselle the way Mr. Snow had taught me. โYour rooms have been restored to a state of perfection! Iโll return later to clean the bathroom!โ
โOkay!โ Giselle replied. โNo need to yell! Jeez!โ When she eventually emerged from the bathroom, I handed her a tissue in case she was indeed allergic or upset. I expected a bit of a conversation, because she is often quite talkative, but she quickly whisked herself away to the bedroom to get dressed.
I left the suite then and worked through the fourth floor, room after room. I fluffed pillows and polished gilt mirrors. I spritzed smudges and stains from wallpaper and walls. I bundled soiled sheets and moist towels. I disinfected porcelain toilets and sinks.
Halfway through my work on that floor, I took a brief respite to deliver my trolley to the basement, where I dropped off two large, heavy bags of sullied sheets and towels at the laundry. Despite the airlessness of the basement quarters, conditions aggravated by the bright fluorescent lights and very low ceilings, it was a relief to leave those bags behind. As I headed back to the corridors, I felt a great deal lighter, if a tad dewy.
I decided to pay a visit to Juan Manuel, a dishwasher in the kitchen. I zoomed through the labyrinthine halls, making the familiar turnsโleft, right, left, left, rightโrather like a clever trained mouse in a maze. When I reached the wide kitchen doors and pushed through, Juan Manuel stopped everything and immediately got me a large drink of cold water with ice, which I appreciated greatly.
After a short and agreeable chat, I left him. I then replenished my clean towels and sheets in the housekeeping quarters. Next, up I went to the fresher air of the second floor to begin cleaning a new set of rooms, which suspiciously yielded only small change in tips, but more on that later.
By the time I checked my watch, it was around three oโclock. It was time to circle back to the fourth floor and clean Mr. and Mrs. Blackโs bathroom. I paused outside their door to listen for evidence of occupancy. I knocked, as per protocol. โHousekeeping!โ I said in a loud but politely authoritative voice. No reply. I took my master keycard and buzzed into their suite, dragging my trolley behind me.
โMr. and Mrs. Black? May I complete my sanitation visit? I would very much like to return your room to a state of perfection.โ
Nothing. Clearly, or so I thought, husband and wife were out. All the better for me. I could do my work thoroughly and without disturbance. I let the heavy door close behind me. I surveyed their sitting room. It was not as Iโd left it a few hours earlier, neat and clean. The curtains had been drawn against the impressive floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the street below, and there were several small minibar bottles of scotch knocked over on the glass table, a tumbler beside it half-empty, an unsmoked cigar beside that, a crumpled napkin on the floor, and a divot on the divan where the drinkerโs bottom had left its mark. Giselleโs yellow purse was no longer where Iโd seen it in the morning, on the bureau by the entrance, which meant she was traversing the town.
A maidโs work is never done, I thought to myself as I pulled the pillow off the divan, plumped it, returned it to its spot, and smoothed any lingering divan imperfections. Before cleaning up the table, I decided to check the state of the other rooms. It was looking very much like Iโd have to clean the entire suite from scratch.
I headed to the bedroom at the back of the suite. The door was open, and one of the hotelโs plush, white bathrobes was strewn on the floor just outside the threshold. From my vantage point, I could see the bedroom closet, with one door still open, exactly as Iโd left it in the morning because the safe inside was also open and was preventing the closet door from closing properly. Some of the safeโs contents were still intactโI could see that much immediatelyโbut the objects that had caused me some consternation in the morning were notably missing. In some ways, this was a relief. I turned my attention away from the closet, stepped carefully over the bathrobe on the floor, and entered the bedroom.
And only then did I see him. Mr. Black. He was wearing the same double-breasted suit he had on earlier when he bowled me over in the hallway, only the paper in his breast pocket was gone. He was lying down, flat on his back on the bed. The bed was creased and disheveled, as though heโd tossed and turned a lot before settling on his back. His head was resting on one pillow, not two, and the other two pillows were askew beside him. I would have to locate the mandatory fourth pillow, which I most
certainly put on the bed this morning when I made it, because the devil is, as they say, in the details.
Mr. Blackโs shoes were off, on the other side of the room. I remember that distinctly because one shoe pointed south and the other east, and immediately I knew it was my professional duty to point both shoes in the same direction, and smooth out the nasty tangle of laces before I left the room.
Of course, my first thought upon beholding this scene was not that Mr. Black was dead. It was that he was napping soundly after having enjoyed more than one afternoon tipple in the sitting room. But upon further observation I noted some other oddities in the room. On the bedside table to the left of Mr. Black was an open bottle of medication, a bottle I recognized as Giselleโs. Various small blue pills had cascaded out of the bottle, some landing on the bedside table and others on the floor. A couple of pills had been trampled, reduced to a fine powder that was now ground into the carpet. This would require high vacuum suction, followed by a spot of carpet deodorizer to return the carpet pile to a state of perfection.
It isnโt often that I enter a suite to find a guest sound asleep in bed. If anything, much to my dismay, itโs more common that I stumble across guests in another state entirelyโin flagrante, as they say in Latin. Most guests who decide to sleep or to engage in private activities are courteous enough to employ the โDo Not Disturb: Zzzingโ door hanger I always leave on the front bureau for such eventualities. And most guests call out immediately if I inadvertently catch them at an inopportune moment. But not so with Mr. Black; he did not call out and order me to โbugger off,โ which is how he would normally dismiss me if I arrived at the wrong time. Instead, he remained soundly asleep.
It was then that I realized I had not heard him breathe during the ten seconds or more Iโd been standing at his bedroom door. I do know something about sound sleepers, because my gran happened to be one, but no sleeper rests so deeply that he gives up breathing entirely.
I thought it prudent to check on Mr. Black and ensure that he was quite all right. This, too, is a maidโs professional duty. I took a small step forward
to scrutinize his face. Thatโs when I noticed how gray he appeared, how puffy and howโฆdistinctly unwell. I gingerly moved even closer, right to his bedside, where I loomed over him. His wrinkles were entrenched, his mouth drawn down in a scowl, though for Mr. Black that can hardly be considered unusual. There were strange little marks around his eyes, like red and purple pinpricks. Only then did my mind suddenly ring alarm bells. It was at that moment that I fully cued to the disturbing fact that there was more wrong with this situation than Iโd realized at the outset.
I eased a hand forward and tapped Mr. Blackโs shoulder. It felt rigid and cold, like a piece of furniture. I put my hand in front of his mouth in the desperate hope that Iโd feel some breath come out of him, but to no avail.
โNo, no, no,โ I said as I put two fingers to his neck, checking for a pulse, which I did not find. I took him by the shoulders and shook. โSir! Sir! Wake up!โ It was a silly thing to do, now that I think about it, but at the time it still seemed largely impossible that Mr. Black could actually be dead.
When I let him go, he plunked down, his head banging ever so slightly against the headboard. I backed away from the bed then, my own arms rigid by my sides.
I shuffled to the other bedside table, where there was a phone, and I called down to the front desk.
โRegency Grand, Reception. How can I help you?โ
โGood afternoon,โ I said. โIโm not a guest. I donโt usually call for help. This is Molly, the maid. Iโm in the penthouse suite, Suite 401, and Iโm dealing with a rather unusual situation. An uncommon mess, of sorts.โ
โWhy are you calling Reception? Call Housekeeping.โ
โIย amย Housekeeping,โ I said, my voice rising. โPlease, if you could alert Mr. Snow that thereโs a guest who isโฆpermanently indisposed.โ
โPermanently indisposed?โ
This is why itโs always best to be direct and clear at all times, but in that moment, I can admit that Iโd lost my head, temporarily.
โHe is very dead,โ I said. โDeadย in hisย bed. Call Mr. Snow. And please dial emergency services. Immediately!โ
I hung up after that. To be honest, what happened next all feels surreal and dreamlike. I recall my heart clanging in my chest, the room tilting like a Hitchcock film, my hands going clammy and the receiver almost slipping from my grasp as I put it back in its place.
It was then that I looked up. On the wall in front of me was a gilt-framed mirror, reflecting not only my terrified face back at me but everything Iโd failed to notice before.
The vertigo got worse then, the floor tilting like a funhouse. I put a hand to my chest, a futile attempt to still my trembling heart.
Itโs easier than youโd ever thinkโexisting in plain sight while remaining largely invisible. Thatโs what Iโve learned from being a maid. You can be so important, so crucial to the fabric of things and yet be entirely overlooked. Itโs a truth that applies to maids, and to others as well, so it seems. Itโs a truth that cuts close to the bone.
I fainted not long after that. The room went dark and I simply crumpled, as I sometimes do when consciousness becomes overwhelming.
Now, as I sit here in Mr. Snowโs luxurious office, my hands are shaking. My nerves are frayed. Whatโs right is right. Whatโs done is done. But still, I tremble.
I employ Granโs mental trick to steady myself. Whenever the tension got unbearable in a film, sheโd grab the remote control and fast-forward. โThere,โ sheโd say. โNo point jangling our nerves when the endingโs inevitable. What will be will be.โ That is true of the movies, but less true in real life. In real life, the actions you take can change the results, from sad to happy, from disappointing to satisfactory, from wrong to right.
Granโs trick serves me well. I fast-forward and pick up my mental replay at just the right spot. My trembling immediately subsides. I was still in the suite but not in the bedroom. I was by the front door. I rushed back into the bedroom, grabbed the phone receiver for the second time, and called down to Reception. This time, I demanded to speak with Mr. Snow. When I heard his voice on the line saying, โHello? What is it?โ I made sure to be very clear.
โThis is Molly. Mr. Black is dead. I amย in his room. Please call emergency services immediately.โ
Approximately thirteen minutes later, Mr. Snow entered the room with a small army of medical personnel and police officers filing in behind him. He led me away, guiding me by the elbow like a small child.
And now, here I sit in his office just off the main lobby in a firm and squeaky maroon leather high-backed chair. Mr. Snow left some time agoโ perhaps an hour, maybe more? He told me to stay put until he returned. I have a lovely cup of tea in one hand and a shortbread biscuit in the other. I canโt remember who brought them to me. I take the cup to my lipsโitโs warm but not scalding, an ideal temperature. My hands are still trembling slightly. Who made me such a perfect cup of tea? Was it Mr. Snow? Or someone else in the kitchen? Perhaps Juan Manuel? Maybe it was Rodney at the bar, a lovely thoughtโRodney brewing me a perfect cup of tea.
As I gaze down at the teacupโa proper porcelain one, decorated with pink roses and green thornsโI suddenly miss my gran. Terribly.
I put the shortbread biscuit to my lips. It crunches nicely between my teeth. The texture is crisp, the flavor delicate and buttery. Overall, it is a delightful biscuit. It tastes sweet, oh so very sweet.