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The second he saw the officers, he froze — eyes wide, mouth slightly open, still clutching the bag of hair like it was the most normal thing in the world. One of the officers stepped forward, asking calmly, “Sir, can you explain what this is?”

My husband blinked, looked at me, then back at the cops. He said, “Oh… that’s for my art project.”

Art project? The officer raised an eyebrow. “You collect women’s hair?”

He nodded, suddenly animated. “Yes! I’m working on a mixed-media installation that explores human identity through personal artifacts. Hair is deeply personal, you know? Each lock tells a story.”

The room went silent.

I looked at the labeled bags again. “12in, red.” “Gray – coarse.” “Blonde – silky.” All ziplocked and tucked away like forensic evidence.

The police asked a few more questions, searched the rest of the house, and found even more bags hidden in a drawer labeled “Phase II.” There were sketches. Notes. Even a mannequin covered entirely in hair.

No crimes had been committed. No one was missing. But that didn’t make it less horrifying.

I couldn’t sleep that night. I lay awake wondering how I never noticed. Who collects hair? Who sleeps on it?

Needless to say, we’re no longer together.

And I never look at pillows the same way again.

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