At first, I thought my skin was crawling. Something thin and dark slid down my shoulder, and then—it moved again. My heart stopped. Under the hot water, I froze, watching it twitch on the tiles. Every instinct screamed at me not to touch it. Parasite, worm, nightmare—my mind spiraled as I stared, terrified that something living had somehow found its way onto my body without me noticing.
I couldn’t shake the feeling that something was horribly wrong. The “thing” on the bathroom floor looked like a fragment of a nightmare: long, curved, segmented, still twitching as water from the shower trickled past. I kept my distance, too scared to get closer, yet too fascinated to look away. My brain ran through every horror scenario I’d ever heard—skin parasites, strange worms, invasive bugs hiding in drains. The more I stared at it, the more convinced I became that I was looking at something dangerous, and my imagination only made the situation feel worse.
Eventually, curiosity beat fear. I grabbed my phone, zoomed in, and started comparing photos online. The more images I checked, the more the panic slowly faded into embarrassment. The shape, the joints, the curve—it all matched. It wasn’t a parasite at all, but almost certainly a detached leg from a large beetle, probably carried in on clothes, a towel, or through an open window without anyone noticing. Relief washed over me almost as quickly as the fear had arrived.
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