
When the plaster finally gave way, the room seemed to breathe. The hole in the wall opened like a wound, and behind it writhed a living mass. Layer upon layer of paper-like honeycomb clung to the studs, pulsing with movement. Hundreds of wasps turned toward the light at once, their bodies vibrating, wings ready. In that moment, the couple understood: this wasn’t just a nest, it was a hidden city.
They slowly backed away and slammed the door, hands shaking as they called pest control. Specialists arrived in full protective suits, needing hours to neutralize the colony. Only then did the couple grasp how narrowly they’d escaped disaster. One thin wall had separated their sleeping heads from thousands of venomous insects. Now, every faint noise in the house makes them listen twice—because sometimes, the real danger isn’t outside. It’s already inside, quietly growing in the dark.