When I was small, the idea of something hiding under my bed could transform the most ordinary night into a stage for unease. It wasn’t so much the darkness itself that unsettled me; it was the ambiguous spaces darkness created. The hollow gap between the wooden frame and the floor seemed to hold more than forgotten socks or the occasional toy.
It became a pocket of possibility — a shadowed corner where my imagination was free to sculpt things I could never name. The creaks of the old floorboards spoke in slow, groaning syllables, as though the house itself shifted in restless sleep. A gust of wind rattled the loose edges of the window frame, sending the curtains twitching like startled birds.
All those tiny noises stitched themselves into a pattern that whispered one undeniable message to my child’s mind: you are not alone. Adults, of course, waved those fears away. They explained the mechanics of settling wood, the draft that made doors tremble in their frames, the way shadows lengthened when the nightlight glowed at just the right angle.
Their words were calm, confident, and entirely unsuited to the enormity of what I felt. For them, the unknown could be reasoned with. For me, it only deepened.
As the years went on, I tried to clothe that fear in practicality. The space under my bed stopped being a den of nameless menace and became a storage spot instead. Boxes slid neatly into its depths.
A pair of shoes lived there, aligned with the wall so they wouldn’t trip me in the morning. Dust gathered in lazy drifts, sometimes chased out by the vacuum’s hose. With each small act of organization, I pretended to shrink the shadows’ power.
But fear is stubborn. Once it has built a home, it lingers, waiting for the right hour to return. The Night Everything Shifted
It was an ordinary evening, the kind you barely remember until something extraordinary reshapes it in hindsight.
I had gone about my routine — finishing up some work, rinsing dishes in the sink, brushing my teeth to the rhythm of a tired song stuck in my head. By the time I climbed into bed, rain was peppering the street outside, soft and persistent. The sound, steady as it was, lulled me toward the edge of sleep.
I had just clicked off the lamp when I heard it: a faint rustling beneath the mattress. It was not the confident groan of old wood or the casual tick of a pipe. This sound was subtler, more deliberate, like fabric shifting against fabric or the brushing of a hand across carpet.
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