Occasionally, late at night,
I took a break from my vigil at the hospital
by sitting in an area across from the nurses station.
I watched medical people go in and out of the elevator.
I drank my tea from a large paper cup that I placed
on an end table next to my chair.
As I got out of my chair to leave,
I knocked over the tea, which spilled
on the carpet.
The nurse, a dead ringer for Nurse Ratched from
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, gasped and
frowned.
“You should have had a lid on it,” she said.
She was right.
“I’m so sorry.” I said. “I can clean it up.”
“Just leave it.”
So I did.
The next morning I checked on my mishap’s status.
The area was no longer wet, but a stain remained.
Tea is stubborn.
Every day, I checked. The stain remained.
Three days later, my loved one passed away.
It gives me comfort to know that my tea stain
still has a presence on the 4th floor carpet
near the elevators, across from the nurse’s station.
Life goes on, but the tea stain remains.