The internet delivers an answer: deer skin, dragged by a coyote
When the identification finally came, it was both a relief and a new source of discomfort. The object was not supernatural, not a fungus, and not a deliberate act by a human. It was, as the account describes it, "brutally ordinary": a piece of deer skin and meat, carried to the porch by a hungry coyote during the night.

Coyotes are increasingly documented in suburban and even urban environments across North America, where they adapt readily to human-altered landscapes. They are opportunistic feeders, known to scavenge and transport food — including large animal remains — over considerable distances in search of a safe place to eat.
The porch, quiet and sheltered, apparently fit that description. The animal had passed within feet of the front door, gone about its business, and left before dawn — entirely undetected until the homeowner stepped outside.
When the mystery clears, a different kind of unease sets in
The resolution of the mystery did not fully dissolve the discomfort. As the homeowner noted, "the horror no longer lay in the mystery, but in realizing how close that wild struggle had come to my front door." Knowing the cause made the event more concrete — and in some ways, harder to dismiss.

The incident reframes what it means to feel secure at home. A locked door and a porch light offer no barrier to wildlife operating on its own schedule. The coyote did not distinguish between the woods and a residential doorstep — both were simply part of its territory and its nightly route.
For homeowners in areas where coyote activity has been reported, wildlife removal services and home security assessments have become increasingly relevant considerations. Securing garbage, removing outdoor food sources, and installing motion-activated lighting are among the measures commonly recommended by wildlife management authorities to reduce such encounters.

