At first glance, they just looked like tiny reddish-brown grains. Smooth. Shiny. Almost like wet rice or seeds. I brushed them onto my hand, thinking maybe theyโ€™d fallen from a snack bag or gotten tracked in from outside. But the more I looked at them, the more uneasy I felt. They werenโ€™t food. They werenโ€™t seeds. And the fact that they were in my bed โ€” on my sheets, near my pillow โ€” made something cold settle in my stomach.

I picked one up. It was firm, almost shell-like. When I rolled it between my fingers, it didnโ€™t crumble. It didnโ€™t break. Thatโ€™s when a horrible thought hit me: What if they werenโ€™t objects at all? What if they wereโ€ฆ signs of something alive? My mind ran through every nightmare possibility โ€” insects, parasites, nest debris. My whole body tensed.

I took a photo and searched for โ€œtiny reddish pellets in bed.โ€ The results loaded โ€” and my heart dropped. Over and over, one answer appeared: insect droppings. More specificallyโ€ฆ cockroach droppings. Several sites described them exactly: oval, dark, smooth, slightly shiny, and sometimes clustered where the roaches sleep or crawl at night. The worst part? People said the bed โ€” warm, soft, quiet โ€” can sometimes attract them.

The more photos I compared, the harder it became to breathe. They matched perfectly.

I checked under my bed. Behind it. Inside the corners. And there it was: a small, dark smear along the baseboard. Another pellet. And another. Suddenly, everything clicked โ€” the late-night scratching I dismissed, the odd smell last week, the tiny rust-colored specks I thought were dirt.

Those werenโ€™t seeds.
They werenโ€™t crumbs.
They were signs something had been sharing my bed with me.

I stripped the sheets, threw everything into hot water, and called pest control immediately. Because once you find droppingsโ€ฆ youโ€™re already late.


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