Properly known as a Bipalium and commonly known as a hammerhead worm, this lovely creature was about 3" long. These are predators and ooze about with their heads lifted slightly above the ground as they hunt tiny arthropods.
No idea of the species (or the family, for that matter) and no time to go down the identification rabbit hole. I was drawn to it by the unusual form.
On Frazers Hill I stayed at a place where the owner felt it appropriate to put out a powerful moth light at night to entertain his guests. Idiotically, he left it on all night, and in the morning the ground was littered with dead and dying moths. This is one of the giant Atlas moths that came to the light.