This morning, I went outside to water the flowers, expecting the same peaceful routine I follow every day. The sun had only just climbed above the rooftops, and the air was still cool. I bent down with the watering can, enjoying the scent of damp soil and fresh blooms, when a sharp metallic odor hit me. It sliced through the sweetness of the garden like a warning. My chest tightened, and for a moment I froze, confused by the smell that seemed out of place among the roses and petunias.
Then I saw it.
Something red and slimy writhed between the petals. It looked like flesh turned inside out, glistening wetly in the morning light. The sight sent a jolt of fear through me. For a second, I truly thought it was alive, some creature gasping in the soil. The stench grew stronger, thick and nauseating, filling my nose with the heavy scent of decay. I crouched closer, holding my breath, unsure whether I should poke it or run inside.
My hands shook as I pulled out my phone and snapped a photo. I needed to know what I was looking at. The thing had four long, finger-like arms spreading outward, each covered in a dark slime. It looked alien, obscene, and wrong.
A quick search brought an answer that was almost as unsettling as the sight itself. Anthurus archeri, better known as the “devil’s fingers” fungus. Native to Australia and Tasmania, it has slowly spread across Europe and North America, appearing in forests, fields, and occasionally, like today, in the quiet corners of people’s gardens.