The lake had always felt a bit uncanny, a man‑made mirror dropped into the middle of our quiet village. That day, the water was unusually clear, and the clusters on the bottom looked disturbingly deliberate, as if some hidden life was unfolding just out of reach. I imagined rare amphibians, invasive species, even some unknown organism no one had documented yet. The stillness of the shore only made the mystery heavier.
Kneeling closer, I finally spotted a faint logo beneath the silt and nearly laughed out loud. They were golf balls—dozens of them—resting in gentle hollows carved by time and current. What I’d turned into a nature thriller was just a collection of bad swings from the golf course next door.
The revelation felt oddly comforting: sometimes the world isn’t hiding monsters or miracles. Sometimes it’s only reminding us how easily our minds fill the gaps.