The first bump didn’t scare me. The pattern did. By the second night, the itching mapped itself across my skin—quiet, persistent signals that something in the room wasn’t right, even though nothing in my routine had changed.
Old apartments carry invisible histories. Bed bugs, mites, fleas, mold, chemical residue—things you don’t see but your body does. The clusters appeared where my skin touched the mattress, and lying awake, I wondered what else was sharing the space with me.
I started paying attention. I checked seams and corners, washed everything, scrubbed myself clean, as if trying to separate my body from the room. The irritation slowly faded, but the awareness didn’t.
Skin reacts for a reason. When discomfort appears in patterns, it’s often information, not coincidence—a warning that a place may be more alive than it looks.