All that shows, is that the stain was there before the scribe reached that word.
Whether the stain was on the blank vellum ( second-grade vellum ).
or the scribe was not cognizant of the danger of eating a hot-dog with relish over an unfinished manuscript ( messy scribe ).
cannot be decided.
Can a misbehaving cat even be ruled out ? ( wildlife risk ).
'A Cat Left Paw Prints on the Pages of This Medieval Manuscript When the Ink Was Drying 500 Years Ago' --Smithsonian magazine
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One could possibly argue that the stain cannot have been there for very long or else the scribe would have avoided it more elegantly.