
“The phosphorescence that emerged from the well could not help producing a strange feeling, a feeling of doom. It was more than their consciousness could conceive; That color no longer just glistened, but gushed from the wellhead. When this invisible flood of unrecognizable colors leaves the well’s mouth, it seems to flow directly to the sky.” This is the description of Colors out of space, a kind of monster from the Cthulhu Mythos in the book named The Call of Cthulhu.

It is a sentient being, but it appears to be a pure color. It is not a gas, and it has no materialized substance at all; As it moves, it looks as if a shimmering, amorphous piece of color is floating around, shimmering in its pale shadow. It emits colors unlike any in the known spectrum; This particular color can flow on the ground and fly in the air like a living thing. When it feeds, the skin and face of its prey glow with the color of starlight.
Although the color out of space is invisible, it can still be perceived as it passes through the human body. It felt like touching sticky, noxious steam; On the geiger counter, it is a unique phenomenon of radiation explosion. It appears to be a bright glow when monitored with a light intensifier developed in the 1990s. But the infrared monitor doesn’t work on it.
The color out of space comes from the deep space of the universe, where there are completely different laws of nature. A mature star color produces the germ, which is a three-inch sphere that looks hollow; Germs begin to develop when placed in nutrient-rich soil or in shallow puddles. After a few days, the outer shell of the germ dissolves and a new creature, called a larva, appears.
These jelly like larvae can grow very large. As it begins to seep into the ecosystem, local plants begin to grow pathologically. The fruit will taste bitter, and insects and animals will give birth to deformed offspring. At night, all the plants glow with starlight, the vegetation twists and tangles, shakes like a strong wind, and even humans glow like ghosts. After a few months, the larva transforms into the starlight of its infancy.

The young star will leave its nest, forage nearby, and begin to expend life in the areas it affected as a larva. When it has absorbed enough energy, it will leave the planet, go into space, and eventually mature. In the process, if the area is teeming with life, the star can drain about five acres of life. If it’s a wilderness or a prairie, starlight can drain ten to twenty acres of life. Once the soil has been sucked dry, it will be abandoned and no plant can continue to grow.
Bright light can inhibit the activity of star colors. During the day, it stays in dark, cool hiding places, preferably under some kind of water: ponds, Wells, lakes, reservoirs and even the ocean are ideal locations.

