In the yard, I found a slimy, reddish creature that gave off a terrible stench — I was horrified when I realized what it was

That morning began like so many others — quiet, uneventful, routine. The sun had barely risen, casting a pale golden light across the garden, and the air still carried the coolness of night. I stepped outside with the intention of doing something simple, even mundane: watering the flowers, checking for any mess caused by the neighborhood cats who loved tipping over trash bins and digging in the dirt. It was a task I did every morning without much thought.

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But that day, something felt different. I didn’t know why, at first. The sky was clear, birds chirped in the distance, and everything seemed ordinary — until I reached the front gate.

As soon as I opened it, I was assaulted by a stench so powerful, so vile, that it stopped me dead in my tracks. It didn’t just stink — it invaded my senses. It was the thick, putrid smell of decay, sharp and sour like rotting meat left out in the sun for days. My chest constricted, my breath caught in my throat, and a bitter, metallic taste crept into my mouth as if the air itself had turned toxic.

Instinctively, I took a step back. My eyes scanned the yard, looking for the source. That’s when I noticed something unusual near the flower bed — a flicker of movement, slight but unmistakable. At first, I thought maybe it was just a clump of wet leaves shifting in the breeze. But as I approached, it became clear: it wasn’t leaves. And it wasn’t normal.

Lying on the damp soil, half-buried among the flowers, was something that looked like it didn’t belong to this world. It was slimy and glistening, deep red in color with strange patterns on its surface. It looked as though it had been turned inside out — like muscle and flesh without skin. Its form was unnatural, almost organic, yet alien. I couldn’t tell if it was alive or dead. It twitched ever so slightly, and that small movement made my stomach turn.

My mind raced with questions:
What is that? Is it an animal? A mutated insect? A parasite? Or something worse? Something unnatural?

For a wild moment, I genuinely thought I might be looking at the remains of something extraterrestrial. It looked like nothing I’d ever seen — and the smell was unlike anything I could compare it to. Even roadkill didn’t stink like that.

My pulse quickened. I could hear my own heartbeat thudding in my ears. I fumbled for my phone, turned on the camera with shaky fingers, and snapped a photo while trying not to breathe too deeply. Then, desperate for answers, I opened my browser and typed in the only thing that came to mind:
“Red slimy thing, smells like rot.”

I didn’t expect useful results. I half-hoped it would turn out to be some rare kind of mushroom or maybe even a prank. But what I found shocked me more than I was prepared for.

The top article read:
“Anthurus archeri — Alien Fungus Disguised as Devil’s Fingers.”

Curious and terrified, I clicked the link and began to read.

As it turns out, what I had found wasn’t an alien or the remains of some cursed creature — it was a fungus. A real, biological organism known commonly as “Devil’s Fingers.” Native to Australia and Tasmania, it had somehow made its way across the globe, showing up in gardens, forests, even backyards like mine.

It begins its life as an egg-shaped pod buried just beneath the surface. Then, as it matures, it erupts — quite literally — in a gruesome bloom of red, finger-like projections. These “fingers” are soft, fleshy, and coated in a thick, dark slime that emits the unmistakable stench of decaying flesh. It mimics the smell of death in order to attract flies, which then land on the fungus, pick up its spores, and unknowingly carry them elsewhere.

I was both horrified and fascinated. Nature, in its endless creativity, had designed something so grotesque, so nightmarish, that even seeing it once was enough to haunt my thoughts. No wonder people reported it to the police or thought it was alien remains. If I hadn’t Googled it myself, I might’ve done the same.

I closed my phone and looked back at the thing. It was still there, nestled between the flower stems, pulsing slightly, as if aware of my presence. A cold shiver ran down my spine. Whatever it was doing, I didn’t want to interrupt it.

From that day on, I changed my habits. I still watered the rest of the garden, still stepped outside every morning — but I avoided that corner completely. I no longer walked near the flower bed. I let the soil dry out. I let the weeds grow tall. That space no longer felt like mine.

I started thinking of it as cursed ground — not because it was evil, but because it reminded me that nature can be as terrifying as it is beautiful. We spend so much time fearing monsters in movies, aliens from other worlds, or creatures born from imagination — yet here, beneath our feet, grows something far stranger. Something real. Something ancient.

Now, whenever someone talks about aliens, I think of that morning.
Not because I believe in visitors from space, but because I’ve seen what this planet is capable of.

And some things…
Some things are better left untouched.

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