My husband and I booked a room during our vacation, expecting nothing more than a simple, relaxing stay. The hotel itself looked fine from the outside—clean lines, modern glass windows, a quiet lobby that smelled faintly of citrus and fresh linen. It was the kind of place you choose because it seems “safe,” predictable, and forgettable in the best possible way.
That illusion lasted less than an hour.
We arrived in the late afternoon. The sun was already slipping behind the buildings, stretching long shadows across the hallway as we made our way to our room. I remember thinking how tired I felt, how good it would be to drop our bags, kick off our shoes, and just exist for a while without thinking.
We unlocked the door, stepped inside, and the room greeted us with polite neutrality: beige walls, neatly made bed, curtains slightly open, letting in a thin strip of golden light. Everything looked normal. Almost too normal.
That’s why I noticed it immediately.
By the doorframe, just at eye level, there was something attached to the wall.
At first, my brain refused to process it properly. It looked like a lump of dried mud, shaped into a strange vertical column. Not random, though—there was intention in its form. It was narrow at the base and slightly wider at the top, almost like a miniature rocket or missile frozen mid-launch. The surface was uneven, textured, with small ridges and cracks running along it.
I froze.
My husband dropped the bags and walked past me without noticing it at first. Then he turned, followed my gaze, and frowned.
“What is that?” he asked.
I didn’t answer immediately. I was too busy trying to convince myself it was harmless. A bit of dirt. Old construction residue. Something the cleaners missed. Hotels are full of weird little imperfections if you look closely enough.
But this didn’t feel like that.
This felt… placed.
I stepped closer. Slowly. Carefully.
The object was firmly attached to the wall, as if it had grown there or been deliberately glued. It wasn’t flat like dried plaster. It had dimension, depth, almost a sculpted quality. I leaned in, studying it, trying to find a logical explanation that would calm the uneasy feeling rising in my chest.
“That’s disgusting,” my husband said behind me. “Probably some kind of insect nest.”
That word—nest—made my stomach tighten.
I didn’t want to believe that. But now that he said it, I couldn’t unthink it.
We stood there for a while, both of us staring at it like it might suddenly reveal its purpose if we looked long enough. The silence in the room shifted. It didn’t feel like the calm of a vacation anymore. It felt like the pause before something unpleasant is discovered.
I reached for my phone and took a picture. My hands were steadier than I expected, but inside, I felt unsettled.
Then I did what everyone does in moments of uncertainty: I searched.
At first, nothing matched. I tried phrases like “mud column wall hotel,” “strange cocoon structure indoors,” “dried nest on hotel wall.” The results were useless, full of unrelated images and vague explanations.
My husband started joking to lighten the mood.
“Maybe it’s modern art,” he said. “You know, hotel aesthetic. Minimalist horror.”
I gave him a look, but I admit, I laughed nervously. It helped a little. For a few seconds, it became just an odd object again instead of something unknown and possibly alive.
But the feeling didn’t fully leave.
We decided to inspect the rest of the room. That’s when things got worse—not dramatically, but subtly. The kind of “worse” you only notice once your attention has been sharpened by fear.
There were tiny similar marks in other corners. Smaller ones. Almost like early versions of the same structure. Some were barely visible unless you were looking for them.
That’s when I said it out loud: “We should call reception.”
My husband hesitated. “It might be nothing.”
But even he didn’t sound convinced anymore.
Before calling, we stood there again, just watching it. I don’t know why. Maybe because part of us wanted it to stay still, to remain explainable. Unknown things feel heavier when you acknowledge them.
Finally, I called the front desk.
A cheerful voice answered. I explained the situation carefully, trying not to sound dramatic. I described the object on the wall, its shape, its texture, the fact that it seemed attached rather than accidental.
There was a pause on the other end.
Then: “Oh… yes. We understand.”

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