By the time we had exhausted every possible explanation for what we were seeing in the bathroom, the situation had already grown far beyond the actual size of the problem. It started as something small and almost forgettable—a dark, irregular patch forming near the corner of the tiles where the wall met the floor. At first glance, it didn’t demand attention. It could have been mistaken for a shadow, a stain, or just part of the aging texture of a damp room. But once you notice something like that in a space you use every day, it stops being background detail and becomes the center of your attention whether you want it to or not.
My girlfriend was the first to really react to it, standing slightly frozen in the doorway, her eyes fixed on it as if staring long enough might reveal its origin. She asked if I had seen it before, and the tone of her voice immediately told me she was already uncomfortable.
And while that narrative eventually collapsed once we learned the truth, the process revealed something important about perception itself. Fear doesn’t always require real danger to feel justified while it is happening; it only requires uncertainty. In the end, what remained wasn’t fear of slime mold or even discomfort about the bathroom, but a quieter awareness of how fragile certainty can be when the mind is left alone with unanswered questions.