The white plastic rectangle of the light switch cover sat flush against the eggshell-blue wall, held in place by two tiny screws that Hannah had turned herself only moments before. It was the final touch, the literal closing of the circuit on a renovation that had turned her hair gray and her bank account thin.
But when she popped the cover off to adjust a slightly crooked toggle, a small, silent cascade of white powder spilled out from the electrical box, coating her knuckles and the sleeve of her sweater. It was a tiny, sealed museum of the drywall crew that had been there . They had sanded the joints, created a cloud of fine particulate matter that could penetrate a sealed Ziploc bag, and then moved on to the next job, leaving this miniature tomb of dust behind a piece of plastic they knew someone else would eventually install.
The Geography of Indifference
Because a plumber thinks in pipes, he sees the floor as a secondary geography that belongs to someone else. This is the fundamental law of the modern job site: every trade leaves a mess sized exactly to its own indifference. It isn’t that these men and women are inherently messy; it’s that their definition of “clean” is surgically localized.
The electrician
