After a fourteen-hour shift, all I wanted was to get home, take off my shoes, and collapse into bed. The house was quiet when I walked in, the kind of quiet that usually feels peaceful after a long day. But the moment I stepped into my bedroom, that peace disappeared. Beside my bedside table was a small cluster of pale, oval objects, sitting there like they had been placed carefully while I was gone.
At first, I just stood in the doorway staring. They looked soft, leathery, and completely out of place on my bedroom floor. My mind jumped from insects to mice to something stranger hiding inside the walls. I had no idea how they got there, and that was the part that unsettled me most. They had not been there that morning, which meant something had entered my room while I was away.
I did not touch them right away. I took photos from every angle and sat at the kitchen table searching online, comparing them to seeds, insect eggs, fungus, and anything else that looked even close. The more I searched, the worse my imagination became. My bedroom suddenly felt less like a safe place and more like a hiding spot for something I had not noticed until now.
Then I found the answer on a reptile forum. The strange objects looked exactly like lizard eggs. A small lizard had likely slipped into the house, found the warm and quiet corner beside my bed, and used it as a safe place to lay them. What had felt like a horror scene only minutes earlier suddenly became something different. It was not an invasion. It was nature quietly trying to survive.
I carefully moved the eggs using a small container and placed them in a sheltered spot outside near the garden, away from foot traffic and direct exposure. After cleaning the corner of my room, I sat on the edge of the bed and thought about how thin the line really is between our homes and the wild world outside. That night had started with fear, but it ended with a strange kind of wonder. Sometimes the things that scare us most are not threats at all, just misunderstood signs of life finding a place to begin.
