I woke up feeling something crawling across my back, and the sensation vanished so quickly that for a second I wondered if I had imagined it. There wasn’t any pain, no bite marks, nothing obvious—just that horrible instinctive feeling that something had been on me while I slept. The kind of feeling that instantly floods your body with panic before your brain can catch up.
I threw the blankets aside and started searching the bed.
At first, everything looked normal. Pillows. Sheets. Mattress corners. But then my eyes locked onto something near the edge of the blanket, and my stomach immediately dropped.
It looked wrong.
Dry. Twisted. Thin and fibrous, almost organic but not fully recognizable. For one terrible moment, my brain started racing through every nightmare possibility imaginable. Some kind of parasite. A dead insect. Something that had fallen from the ceiling. Or worse—something that had come from me.
I just stood there staring at it while my skin crawled.
Soon my family gathered around the bed, everyone equally disturbed. Nobody wanted to touch the thing. We all kept leaning closer, then backing away again like it might suddenly move. Every theory made the situation feel more unsettling. Someone thought it looked like part of a bug shell. Someone else insisted it resembled dried skin or some kind of cocoon.
The longer we looked at it, the more horrifying it became simply because none of us could identify it.
And once fear settles into a room, logic starts disappearing fast.
I couldn’t stop imagining that whatever it was had spent the entire night inches away from my face. Every tiny itch suddenly felt suspicious. Every movement of the bedsheets made my heart race again.
Eventually, we took photos and started searching online, zooming in obsessively and comparing images with bugs, parasites, and every disgusting possibility the internet could offer.
Then came the answer.
And honestly, it was almost embarrassing.
The terrifying mystery object was nothing more than a dried piece of cooked meat—probably chicken—that somehow ended up tangled in the sheets after a late-night snack.
That was it.
No parasite. No creature hiding in the mattress. No horror movie infestation waiting beneath the bed.
Just an old scrap of food that, in the wrong lighting and the right state of panic, transformed into something our brains turned monstrous.
The relief hit instantly, but strangely, the uneasiness lingered. Because the worst part was never really the object itself.
It was the uncertainty.
That awful period of not knowing what you’re looking at, while your imagination quietly builds monsters faster than reality ever could. And honestly, that feeling might stay with me a lot longer than the dried chicken ever will.