I froze when I saw it on his bedroom floor.
Dark. Misshapen. Covered in tiny bead-like bumps, like something about to burst.
For a moment, I was convinced it was alive. My son insisted he had never seen it before. My mind immediately raced through every terrifying scenario a parent can imagine—bugs, eggs, something dangerous that could spread unnoticed—until I finally leaned in closer, trying to understand what I was actually dealing with.
The more I looked at it, the stranger and more unsettling it seemed. Its shape wasn’t normal, and those tiny bumps on the surface made it look even more suspicious. My heart was pounding, because every small detail pushed me to think it was something more serious than it might actually be. In those tense seconds, every possibility felt frightening, and every unanswered question only added to my anxiety.
In the end, it turned out not to be anything alien, parasitic, or from a horror movie—but that didn’t make it entirely comforting either. What I had found was animal droppings filled with undigested seeds, most likely from a dog or a fox that had been eating berries. The fruit had broken down during digestion, but the seeds had passed through intact, creating that strange, rough texture that had disturbed me so much at first.
The relief of knowing it wasn’t something that could hatch or spread was immediate—but it was quickly replaced by another concern: how did it end up inside my son’s room in the first place? That question was hard to ignore. Maybe someone stepped on it outside and unknowingly tracked it inside. Maybe a pet brought it in, thinking it was something to play with. Or maybe there’s a part of the story my son still isn’t ready to tell—and that uncertainty, more than what I actually found on the floor, is what continues to bother me the most.