Francesca Shaw cut in. “Isabel, I’m going to tell it to you like it is, because everyone
here is wasting your time being polite. You can’t
afford to fall in love with Simon. Let me break it down for you. Let’s be generous and assume
that Simon is making a measly eight hundred thousand a year. After taxes and CPF,* his take-home is only about half a million. Where are you going to live on that kind of money? Think about it—you have to factor a million dollars per bedroom, and
you need at least three bedrooms, so you are talking three mil for an apartment in
Bukit Timah. That’s a hundred and fifty thousand a year in mortgage and property taxes.
Then say you have two kids, and you want to send them to proper schools. At thirty
thousand a year each for school fees that’s sixty thousand, plus twenty thousand a
year each on tutors. That’s one hundred thousand a year on schooling alone. Servants
and nannies—two Indonesian or Sri Lankan maids will cost you another thirty thousand,
unless you want one of them to be a Swedish or French au pair, then you’re talking
eighty thousand a year spent on the help. Now, what are we going to do about your
own upkeep? At the very least, you’ll need ten new outfits per season, so you won’t
be ashamed to be seen in public. Thank God Singapore only has two seasons—hot and
hotter—so let’s just say, to be practical, you’ll only spend four thousand per look.
That’s eighty thousand a year for wardrobe. I’ll throw in another twenty thousand
for one good handbag and a few pairs of new shoes every season. And then there is
your basic maintenance—hair, facials, mani, pedi, brazilian wax, eyebrow wax, massage,
chiro, acupuncture, Pilates, yoga, core fusion, personal trainer. That’s another forty thousand a year. We’ve already
spent four hundred and seventy thousand of Simon’s salary, which leaves just thirty
thousand for everything else. How are you going to put food on the table and clothe
your babies with that? How will you ever get away to an Aman resort twice a year?
And we haven’t even taken into account your membership dues at Churchill Club and
Pulau Club! Don’t you see? It’s impossible for you to marry Simon. We wouldn’t worry if you had your own money, but you know
your situation. The clock is ticking on your pretty face. It’s time to cut your losses
and let Lauren introduce you to one of those eligible Beijing billionaires before
it’s too late.”Isabel was reduced to a puddle of tears.
Rachel couldn’t believe what she had just heard—this crowd made Upper East Side girls
look like Mennonites. She tried to shift her attention back to the food. The second
course had just been served—a surprisingly tasty langoustine and calamansi lime geleé
terrine. Unfortunately, the girls on her right seemed to be loudly fixating on some
couple named Alistair and Kitty.
“Aiyah, I don’t understand what he sees in her,” Chloé Ho lamented. “With the fake
accent and fake breasts and fake everything.”
“I know exactly
what he sees in her. He sees those fake breasts, and that’s all he needs to see!”
Parker cackled.“Serena Oh told me that she ran into them at Lung King Heen last week, and Kitty was
in Gucci, head to toe. Gucci purse, Gucci halter top, Gucci satin mini-shorts, and
Gucci python boots,” Chloé said. “She kept her Gucci sunglasses on all through dinner,
and apparently even made out with him at the table with her sunglasses on.”
“Alamaaaaak
, how tacky can you get!” Wandi hissed, patting her diamond-and-aquamarine tiara.Parker suddenly addressed Rachel from across the table. “Wait a minute, have you
met them yet?”“Who?” Rachel asked, since she was trying to tune the girls out rather than listen
in on their salacious gossip.
“Alistair and Kitty!”
“Sorry, I wasn’t really following … who are they?”
Francesca glanced at Rachel and said, “Parker, don’t waste your time—it’s obvious
Rachel doesn’t know anybody.”
Rachel didn’t understand why Francesca was being so icy toward her. She decided to
ignore the comment and took a sip of her Pinot Gris.
“So Rachel, tell us how you met Nicholas Young,” Lauren asked loudly.
“Well, it’s not a very exciting story. We both teach at NYU, and we were set up by
a colleague of mine,” Rachel answered, noticing that all eyes at the table were fixed
on her.
“Oh, who is the colleague? A Singaporean?” Lauren asked.
“No, she’s Chinese American, Sylvia Wong-Swartz.”
“How did she know Nicholas?” Parker asked.
“Um, they met on some committee.”
“So she didn’t know him very well?” Parker continued.
“No, I don’t think so,” Rachel replied, wondering what these girls were getting at.
“Why the interest in Sylvia?”