Hoax

In the hoax tent across from me sat Dr. Patel
I think.
Hard to tell
with that mask,
but her eyes were familiar, from other days when
we wore no masks
and huddled together for rounds
and codes
and could read each others’ lips, not eyes
teeming with terror.
Like now.
When we each caught the other glancing,
Hey, I know you.
Will we die?
We both watched the bunny-suited man eagerly spraying
each empty chair with bleach,
not bothering to wipe,
so when that old woman stumbled backwards to sit,
then slowly got up when called,
the seat of her jeans had turned white.
And we both instinctively looked at our own pants,
now also white.
Didn’t we feel that wetness?
No.
We were only thinking of breathing.
The day before
and the day before that,
in the hoax hospital,
when I had felt a vague prickle in my throat,
I thought of allergies, shrugged and
continued caring for hoax patients
with blue lips and bounding chests like seesaws
and eyes full of terror not yet appreciated,
unable to think of breathing.
I can smell the bleach.
That’s good, right?
Nervous, muffled laugh conversation
awaiting the hoax swab and its hoax results
which will mean weeks of only this –
breathe
breathe
breathe
but at least I can think it.
Do it.
And so not die.
Now we laugh again, passing in the hallways,
Crinkled eyes above hoax
masks
masks
masks
We were kidding all along.
Able to breathe.
Only a hoax.
But I have not ever seen Dr. Patel again.
profound; thank you for putting into words how I feel about the ‘hoax’