I gently shook his shoulder.
He moved slowly, blinking in the darkness, disoriented.
“I need you to tell me what this is,” I said softly, holding the object up to the dim light from my phone.
He narrowed his eyes for a moment to look at him.
And then his face changed — not out of fear, not out of confusion, but out of immediate recognition.
“Oh,” he said, as if I had just shown him something completely ordinary. “It’s from my toy box. It’s a part from a robot I was building.”
A pause.
“He must have fallen under the bed.”
And there you have it, the tension has dissipated.
The mysterious object that had seemed so strange to me, so out of place in the darkness, suddenly regained its true identity: a forgotten fragment of childish imagination, stripped of its meaning solely because I had found it out of context.
I stayed there a moment longer, now holding it loosely, almost amused to see how quickly fear transforms into something futile once the explanation is given.
Because in the end, it never posed a threat.
This has never been a mystery.