I didn't mean to create a frog cult.
I named the first one Cletus, after a guy my dad used to buy pills from. It felt right. Greasy name. Like something that would survive the apocalypse by crawling into the crawlspace and licking the mold off the copper pipes.
Cletus stared at me through the glass like he knew I was broken. Like he approved.
Dumpy tree frog. Litoria caerulea, if you’re trying to impress a vet tech. People call them “Dumpy” like that’s an insult. Like their weight’s a problem. These frogs don’t give a shit. They sag and spread and cling to your window like a melted scoop of pistachio ice cream with eyes.
You ever see something that ugly and just… feel better?
Cuban tree frogs are already here. They came first. They get into your toilets and eat the local ones and probably your happiness too. Nobody invited them, but they’re winning.
I thought — if Florida’s going to be swallowed whole, maybe it should be by something with a face like Cletus.
I didn’t plan to breed them. One day I had a frog. A week later I had two. Then twenty. Then the bathroom sounded like an alien sex swamp. If the neighbors heard the noises, they never knocked. Florida people know when to look away. I was one croak away from an eviction.
The tadpoles lived in takeout containers. The feeders took over the cereal shelf. One morning I woke up with a frog on my eyelid like a warning label that grew legs. That’s when I realized I wasn’t collecting them. They were multiplying through me. Like I was just the host.
Florida’s already invasive. Hell even the weather's invasive. The snowbirds are invasive. Half the plants are colonial holdovers. Every lizard looks like it escaped from a reptile expo and developed a nicotine addiction. like evolution just gave up halfway through. People come here to rot in peace. It’s like the whole state is a hospice for ecosystems.
So I thought:
If the apocalypse is already happening, why not curate it? if it’s already broken, why not break it on purpose? Why not fill the cracks with something soft?
⸻
Release Site One was behind a Wawa. I brought a five-gallon bucket full of juvenile frogs. Didn’t bring a speech. Just tilted the bucket and let them go. I picked a spot near a drainage canal where the ground squished like it was chewing and the water smelled like rusted teeth.
The frogs didn’t rush out like a prison break. They just sat there. One blinked. One climbed onto the lip of the bucket and looked back at me like Are you sure?
Of course I wasn’t sure. But I needed to believe in something. So I said, “Go make Florida tolerable.”
⸻
I didn’t expect anyone to notice. I thought they’d vanish into the mold like everything else. But then I saw one at a CVS, stuck to the Redbox machine like it was picking a movie. One sat in a broken birdbath behind a Walgreens like it was baptizing mosquitoes. I saw one perched on a shopping cart half-sunk in a canal riding the rusted skeleton of corporate afterbirth.
And I started thinking… maybe they’re working.
I started releasing more.
Parking lots. Hotel fountains. Golf course ponds. Behind dentist offices, under dumpsters, beside roadkill. Any place that felt forgotten or doomed. Church, but for frogs.
I didn’t leave notes. I didn’t ask permission. Just showed up, let go, moved on. Just tipped the buckets and watched them crawl out like tiny monks on a pilgrimage.
They spread. Then people started noticing.
I’d see them at night — one plastered to a bus stop ad for lip filler, another watching traffic from the shadow of a Waffle House sign. They weren’t hiding anymore. They were present. Like mold with intent.
I kept breeding. More than I could handle. Egg clutches stacking up in the fridge next to old yogurt and nicotine patches. Feeder insects escaping into the vents. tadpoles living in a mason jar on the toilet tank. The bathroom floor squished. I stopped fighting it. I stopped going to work. Didn’t have time. Didn’t care.
They needed me. I told myself this was fine. Necessary. Holy, even.
But something shifted. The new batch… they weren’t like the old ones.
One frog with too many toes. Another with a second, sealed mouth under its chin. One blinked sideways and then didn’t stop blinking — like it was trying to remember something it hadn’t lived. One croaked, and I swear the window shook.
The water smelled different. Thicker. Like mildew and static electricity. I checked the pH, the ammonia — normal. But something was off. I started wearing gloves, but my skin still itched.
I started waking up congested, coughing out something translucent and green. I blamed it on the mold. But it wasn’t mold. Mold doesn’t hum.
I wore gloves. Then I wore a mask. Then I stopped caring.
One morning I woke up coughing and pulled a clump of green film out of my throat.
I didn’t go to the hospital. I didn’t want it on record.
One night I stood in front of the mirror and saw it. The skin behind my ears — softening. Greening. Like steamed spinach clinging to bone. My pupils were wrong. Wider. Like they’d been soaking in something warm.
My body didn’t hurt. That’s what scared me.
Change should feel like violence. This felt like surrender.
It started with the throat.
Not pain. Not swelling. Just… pressure. A fullness. Like a balloon inflating behind my Adam’s apple. I’d be walking through the cereal aisle, and without meaning to, I’d let out this sound — low, wet, guttural.
A croak.
But not ugly. Not human, either.
It vibrated. Something in the store lights flickered. I looked around, ready to apologize, but no one was staring.
Not exactly.
A woman near the yogurt section turned. She blinked like she’d just come out of a dream. Smiled at me. Not the polite kind. The hungry kind.
I croaked again. She dropped her basket.
⸻
It kept happening.
I’d find myself alone in parks after dark, crouched near retention ponds, croaking into the still air. Not calling for help. Just… calling. And they came.
Women. Dozens. Some in heels, some barefoot. Some in sundresses, others in work scrubs. Drawn like moths to humidity. They’d walk slow, eyes wide, limbs loose.
One knelt on the grass, palms flat to the mud. Another crouched beside her, knees splayed, mouth slack. All of them watching me. Silent.
Their pupils shimmered. Swirled.
No one spoke.
⸻
There was something in me now. Something broadcasting.
The pheromones? Maybe. The croaking? Sure. But it was more than that. It was the way I smelled like algae and knew the names of every wet ditch in the county. It was the way I glowed under gas station lights.
It was power. And I didn’t need to understand it to use it.
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Something about this one grabbed me. So fun, but so friggin weird!
I've spent a good deal of time in Florida and lived through a bottom feeder invasion in the marina I was in. ..Then lived through the overwhelming gecko population on big island as well.... this story hit the spot where those two incidents collide in my brain.
The imagery was so well captured with language I found myself mentally applauding frequently. Thanks for the fun read.
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Wow! I can see why you deserve to be the winner of this contest. Congratulations. I loved your tone and voice in this piece. I was utterly immersed in the story and your descriptions. So many incredibly unique descriptions. "I was one croak away from an eviction." Just wonderful.
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I love this story!
It might take place in Florida, but it's the second plague of Egypt.)
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This was fabulous. Start to finish. All those women wanting to kiss a frog. I absolutely loved it, loved your writing style. Fresh, evocative, edgy. Top notch!!
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loved it. so very descriptive.
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A great mixture of funny and eerie! Congrats on the win :)
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Congrats! Unique, unexpected, imaginative, subtle humor, and captivating. I was hooked and had to keep reading!
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I will never look at frogs the same way again.
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Wild! I've always been fascinated by frogs. When I was a kid, I frequently brought home bullfrogs, tree frogs and toads, Of course, my mother got angry every time I took one into the house . I lost my allowance a couple of times for doing so. Once, during a hellish heat wave in Corpus Christi, a blue norther suddely brought a downpour of blissful rain. As I was watching the rainfall on our backyard, I saw about fifty toads hopping up and down in joy. In fact, there might have been as much as a hundred toads doing what looked like jumping jack calisthentics. My brother and sisters, and even mom, burst into laughter,
Congrats on your win. It's a great story.
Gary Grissom
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The first story I read on here, took a LEAP of faith and it did not disappoint! Congratulations, well deserved win and love the descriptions.
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Congrats
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This story was inspiring. I think I'm going to breed a few frogs.
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I never would have anticipated the twist. This kind of thinking is out of the box!
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Creepy. I loved it. Nice work.
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Your descriptions are so vivid and bizarre, yet perfectly convey the image while setting the tone. This is great writing and a great story. Congrats on the win. It was well deserved.
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Super weird and so well written. I love the lines about Florida, like "Then the bathroom sounded like an alien sex swamp. If the neighbors heard the noises, they never knocked. Florida people know when to look away." Congrats on the win and well deserved!
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How delightfully horrific.
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What a funny but creepy story! As a long-time Florida resident, I'm all too familiar with tree frogs and all the other amphibians that crawl around as if they own the place. Cuban tree frogs are the worst. They're fat, ugly, squishy, and will clutch onto anything, including human heads and skin. Disgusting, nasty croakers!
Congrats on the win, Kane!
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