It’s her job to clean up after Things Go Wrong. The mattress where he soundly slept, twisted up in the blue and grey sheets, the lace-ends frayed and tied together. Holes by the toes that defied any needle and thread rest his red shoes, scrunched between the fabric , searching for air, screaming redder and redder for relief from the static stench. The red does fade, but newer drops of a deeper shade reside. Where did he go? He needs these shoes, she thinks as she sweeps Where did they put him after Things Went Wrong.