Last night, I froze in the doorway of my own garage.
Something was clinging to the wall, watching me. Black spikes. Yellow body. Completely still.
My brain screamed: mutant spider, tropical killer, alien insect.
I inched closer, half expecting it to leap at my face.
Up close, it looked even less real: a bright yellow shell dotted with perfect black spots, six long, menacing spines jutting out like armor.
It didn’t flinch, didn’t twitch, just clung there as if it owned the wall.
I snapped a photo and fired it off to friends, collecting a flurry of panicked guesses and horror-movie theories.
Later, after scrolling through images online with my heart still racing, I finally found it: Gasteracantha, the spiny orb-weaver.
Not an alien, not venomous doom, just a bizarre little architect that spins beautiful webs and mostly ignores humans.
The fear drained away, replaced by something unexpected: awe. That night, I left it where it was.
The garage felt different—still mine, but shared now with a tiny, harmless monster that turned out to be a wonder.
