I went into the garage in the evening and found these eggs on the floor.

They weren’t the remains of some horror-movie infestation, but the delicate, abandoned shells of lizard eggs—most likely from tiny geckos that had already slipped away into the walls and corners of the house. The firm, oval shells and the clean, intentional-looking cracks were classic signs of a successful hatching, not decay or damage. What first felt ominous slowly turned into something strangely beautiful: a secret life unfolding right beside the lawn tools and storage boxes.

Instead of imagining threats, I started picturing fragile hatchlings breaking free in the quiet of the night, disappearing before anyone ever knew they were there. The garage hadn’t been invaded; it had been chosen as a safe nursery. That unsettling discovery became an unexpected reminder that even the most ordinary spaces can be hiding small, extraordinary stories—ones you only notice when you finally stop and look down.