I was away from home for 10 days on vacation.

By the time I finally forced myself to get closer, my heart was pounding harder than it had the entire trip. I crouched down, grabbed a tissue like it was a shield, and gently tugged at the edge of the yellow mass. It didn’t move like something alive. It crumbled, sagged, and broke apart in my hand with a soft, sickening give.

That was the moment the truth clicked into place. It wasn’t a nest, or a hive, or anything remotely mysterious. It was a decayed piece of foam insulation that had been slowly absorbing moisture for years, rotting in silence behind the wall until it finally pushed its way out. All that fear, all that spiraling imagination, over a forgotten scrap of building material. I went to bed that night feeling foolish—but also oddly relieved, reminded how easily an ordinary flaw can masquerade as something terrifying.

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