The smell of smoked cigarettes. Ashtrays full of butts.
That smell always appeared whenever I made a mistake. It felt like a sign from the past that I had made the wrong choice.
It showed up again in the hospital room where I was waiting for surgery. It had been easy to schedule the procedure the day before. I arrived at the clinic straight from the train. They checked me in and led me to a small room. I had to wait for about an hour. I was exhausted from all the recent trips and failures. So lying half-dressed in bed, staring at the ceiling, felt like a relief. I dozed off.
The smell came suddenly, drifting down from the ceiling. It got stronger and more nauseating. I moved just to make sure I wasn’t dreaming — and that I was still in the hospital.
The smell filled the whole room. I glanced at my sneakers on the floor and my clothes in the closet — a powerful urge to run away took over me. In my mind, I imagined myself running through unfamiliar streets all the way to the airport. I sat up in bed, but I didn’t go through with it.
When the doctor turned the valve and the anesthesia started flowing into my vein, I smelled the smoke one last time — now in the operating room.
The surgery didn’t go well. I spent months dealing with the consequences.