Cleaning the bathroom is usually a predictable job: dust along the baseboards, wipe down the tile, and move on. But during one ordinary afternoon, a small flash of bright green in the corner of the room turned a routine chore into a mystery.
The object was tucked where the tile met the wall, small enough to miss at first glance but vivid enough to stand out against the neutral floor. It was not a wrapper, a bead, or a piece of plastic. Up close, it had ridges and segments, almost like tiny armor.
That was the part that made it unsettling. In a clean indoor space, anything unfamiliar and biological-looking can immediately raise questions. Was it part of an insect? Had something crawled in from outside? Was there a hidden pest issue somewhere in the house?
The Search for an Answer
Rather than touch it directly, the object was carefully picked up with a tissue and placed in a small jar. Under brighter light, its details became clearer. It had a structured shape and repeating ridges, but it did not look like the usual household pests people recognize quickly, such as spiders, ants, or beetles.