The fluorescent hum of the utility room is punctuated only by the slow, steady drip from the faucet. It hits the basin with a predictable plink, echoing off the wet soap scum that coats the porcelain. In the corner, a haphazard stack of return labels has gathered, their cardboard backing softened and yellowed by moisture. Most of the labels are printed with the date 1999, a detail that feels utterly out of place among the current mess. The sink basin itself is choked with crumpled paper and small, discarded items—receipts, bits of yellowed adhesive strip, and general detritus. A faint, metallic scent of old copper rises from the pooling water, suggesting a routine that has been running far longer than the current tenants. The drip continues, marking time against the silent, accumulating pile of forgotten returns.
drip · tender
