I didn’t think twice when I walked into that public restroom—just another quick stop, just another ordinary moment. But something felt off the second I reached for the paper. It wasn’t the place, or the silence, or even the flickering light above me. It was the roll itself. At first glance, it looked normal… until I noticed the faint red streaks circling through the layers, like something had been pressed into it over and over again.
I leaned closer, trying to figure out what I was actually looking at. It didn’t look like a spill. It wasn’t random. The marks followed a pattern—subtle, repeated, almost deliberate. That’s when my stomach dropped. Because suddenly, it didn’t feel like an accident anymore. It felt like a warning. Like something had been left behind for someone else to find… or worse, to use without thinking.
I stepped back immediately, my mind racing through every possibility. Was it contamination? A prank? Something far more intentional? The longer I stood there, the more unsettling it became. Every instinct told me not to touch anything. Not the roll, not the dispenser, not even the stall door. It was one of those moments where your gut speaks louder than logic—and ignoring it doesn’t feel like an option.
What bothered me most wasn’t just what I saw—it was the thought of how many people wouldn’t notice. How easy it would be to overlook something like that in a rush, to assume everything is fine because it looks normal from a distance. That’s how things slip by. That’s how situations turn from harmless to dangerous in seconds.
I walked out without using anything, and I didn’t look back. Some things don’t need confirmation—they just need distance. And if you ever find yourself in that same situation, trust that feeling. Because sometimes, the smallest detail is the one trying hardest to tell you something isn’t right.