It was evening. I came home tired and lay down on my bed.

I stayed there, half crouched, half trembling, trying to make sense of what I was looking at. The bed slats were dotted with dozens of dark, oval bodies and brittle shells, like a miniature graveyard. Every new detail I noticed made my skin crawl a little more. I snapped photo after photo, then sat on the floor scrolling through pest forums, medical pages, even horror stories, desperately trying to match what I’d seen with something familiar.

The more I searched, the more frightening the possibilities became—bed bugs, larvae, parasites. My imagination did the rest. Finally, after sending the pictures to friends and a pest control expert, the answer came back: carpet beetles and their shed skins, quietly accumulating under my mattress for who knows how long. It wasn’t dangerous, just disgusting. But that night, even after cleaning everything, lying back down felt different. I understood, suddenly, how close the unseen always is.