When I opened the door, I thought I was staring at death. A reddish mass lay in the middle of the porch, motionless, silent, wrong. My heart pounded as I stood there, unable to step closer, unable to look away. Every instinct screamed at me to turn back, but curiosity dragged me forw… Continues…
When I finally understood what I was seeing, the fear didn’t vanish; it changed. It wasn’t a sleeping animal at all, but a discarded piece of fox skin and fur, likely dropped by a coyote in the night. The realization brought a strange mix of relief and sadness. Nature had left a quiet reminder on my doorstep: life and death pass close to us, even when we’re safely locked inside, pretending the wild is far away.
When I finally understood what I was seeing, the fear didn’t vanish; it changed. It wasn’t a sleeping animal at all, but a discarded piece of fox skin and fur, likely dropped by a coyote in the night. The realization brought a strange mix of relief and sadness. Nature had left a quiet reminder on my doorstep: life and death pass close to us, even when we’re safely locked inside, pretending the wild is far away.