The Devil’s Fingers in My Garden
This morning, when I went out to water the flowers, the air struck me first — a sharp, metallic odor that didn’t belong. My chest tightened as I scanned the flowerbed.
Something red and slick twisted among the petals — like a piece of flesh turned inside out.
The stench was overpowering, thick and sour, with the unmistakable tang of decay. Heart pounding, I reached for my phone and snapped a photo, desperate to identify what I was seeing. It looked alive, alien, and deeply wrong.
A quick search revealed the culprit: Anthurus archeri, more commonly known as the devil’s fingers fungus. Native to Australia and New Zealand, it has quietly spread to gardens and forests around the world, shocking anyone who happens upon it.
It begins innocently enough — a pale, egg-shaped sac hidden beneath the soil. Then, almost violently, it bursts open, unfurling bright crimson arms that ooze a black, viscous slime.
That slime, I learned, isn’t random horror. It mimics the smell of rotting meat, luring in flies that believe they’ve found a feast. As the insects feed, they collect spores and carry them elsewhere, unknowingly serving as couriers for the fungus’s dark design.
Standing over it, I couldn’t help feeling a strange awe mixed with disgust. Photos online confirmed I wasn’t alone — others had mistaken it for a mangled animal, an alien growth, or something supernatural clawing its way from the earth.
The flowers I’d tended all summer now shared space with a creature of rot — a reminder that nature isn’t always gentle or pretty. Sometimes, it wears the mask of death to ensure its own survival.
Now, I avoid that corner of the yard. Whatever force animates those red, grasping arms, I’ve decided to let it be.
The devil’s fingers can keep that patch of soil. Some parts of nature are better admired — and feared — from a distance.