I thought it was dead.
Curled in the dust under my son’s bed, it looked like some kind of shriveled animal, a tiny armadillo or a mutant insect with a long, menacing spike. I froze, terrified he’d been hiding something alive – or worse, something dead. For thirty agonizing minutes I examined it, my mind racing,..
I couldn’t shake the feeling that I was holding something wrong, something that didn’t belong in an ordinary bedroom. It was too intricate to be trash, too eerie to be a toy, and that long pointed “stinger” made my skin crawl. I even wondered if my son had dragged in some unknown creature, and whether I should call pest control, a vet, or someone who knew about… well, whatever this was.
After scrolling through forums and image searches, I finally found it: a dried chrysalis of a large hawk (sphinx) moth. That terrifying spike was just the protective case for the moth’s future proboscis, the long tongue it would use to drink nectar. In an instant, the horror melted into awe. What I’d feared was something sinister turned out to be the empty shell of transformation, quietly forgotten beneath a child’s bed.