That morning, something was already wrong. The wall was moving. Not shaking, not cracking—moving, as if something alive
was trapped inside it, pushing, twitching, trying to break through. My mind whispered “snake,” my body screamed “run.” But I couldn’t. I watched, breathless,
as the creature’s tail jerked helplessly, wedged in the crac… Continues…
I forced myself closer, every step a battle between terror and a strange, guilty curiosity. The shape became clearer,
the movements more desperate. It wasn’t sliding like a snake; it was flailing, clawing, stuck. Then I saw it properly: smooth body,
tiny legs, glossy skin. A skink. Not a monster,
not a nightmare—just a small, living creature trapped in my wall, slowly exhausting itself.
Something inside me shifted. Fear melted into pity, then responsibility. My hands were shaking as I gently freed it from the crack
, half expecting it to bite, half sure I would drop it and make everything worse. Instead, the skink paused for a heartbeat, then darted away, disappearing as if it
had never existed. Later, when I learned they’re harmless and shy, I realized the horror I’d felt said more about my own fears than about it. And oddly, helping it left me calmer than I’d been in a long time.