My whole body locked up when I saw it.
A pale, twisted shape lurking beneath the bed, just close enough to recognize as something wrong, but too far to safely ignore. My son stared with me, just as afraid, just as unsure. Every second stretched, every possibility got worse. We braced ourselves for something rotten, something crawling, something unexplainab… Continues…
For a moment, that dusty floorboard became a stage for every fear I’d ever quietly carried. The mind doesn’t wait for facts; it rushes to fill the darkness with whatever will keep you on edge. When the broom finally scraped the object into the light and revealed nothing more than a neglected pistachio shell, the tension snapped so fast it turned into helpless laughter. All that dread, undone by a snack.
Yet the lesson stayed. That shell became a tiny monument to how quickly imagination can turn the ordinary into something monstrous. In the half-light, with just enough mystery, even a piece of trash can feel like a threat. I still glance under the bed now and then, not because I truly expect to find something awful, but because I remember how real that fear felt—born not from what was there, but from what I believed might be.