The tools of the Housekeeping Department are packed onto rolling carts, rags and towels, buckets and gloves, offensive smelling chemicals and sponges, disinfectants and paper products and yellow, plastic signs announcing slippery floors.
Meanwhile, at the nurse’s station hang an assortment of clipboards, charts and schedules pinned to the wall and taped to the counter. Telephones with an array of flashing buttons, pens, pencils and markers jammed into stained coffee cups, with lame slogans printed on them. There is a half-eaten sandwich on the counter and an empty swivel chair. Important reminders festooned about on brightly colored Post-it notes. One wall-clock silently runs its thin, red second hand around and can be seen through the invisible cloud of chaos that hangs in the air.
Along the polished
hallway are the distant voices coming from unseen rooms. There are abandoned wheelchairs and the sound
of important buzzers that seem to go unanswered. There is a blend of hope and despair wafting
through and an occasional ding from the arriving elevator, yet no one steps
out. But that’s good, because the slippery
floor sign is still hanging from the housekeeping cart.


