Invasive

Qitzo drifted into the depot and took form at the counter. “I need to order an asteroid,” they said.

Xarm, the attendant phased a hospitable color. “Are you looking for any special materials or are you more interested in spectacle?”

Qitzo sighed. “I need something cataclysmic.”

Xarm phased a murky red. “That’s a serious order.”

“I’ve got a pest problem on one of my planets,” Qitzo explained. “Humans.”

Another customer who had been drifting nearby took form with interest. “I thought humans were decorative?” they said.

Xarm gestured uncertainty with three appendages. “They always transform the landscape in interesting ways, but they’re definitely considered invasive.”
“Really?”

The clerk swelled authoritatively, “A buddy of mine got humans in a system. One planet went from 4 million unique species to a hundred in less than six alignments.”

“That must be an exaggeration,” the passerby exclaimed.

Qitzo gestured a negative. “The atmosphere’s already degrading. I know an asteroid won’t help with that, but at least I can do a reset. No more life forms for me. Just cool rocks.

“Even that might not be safe,” Xarm cautioned.

“What do you mean?”

They laid a consoling appendage on Qitzo’s carapace. “Humans love cool rocks.”

* * *

Story by Gregory M. Fox

Trunk

“Can you take a look at something for me?” Maple asked.

Fir creaked out a flat response. “Do I have to?”

“Please?” Maple asked. “I think I’ve got something on my trunk.”

A sigh of falling needles. “Like what?” Fir asked.

Maple rustled their branches impatiently. “I don’t know; that’s why I want you to look at it.”

“Fine,” the evergreen said..

Maple leaned with the wind, branches parting to give a clear view. Fir leaned as well, bending closer to inspect the trunk.

They spotted the source of Maple’s concern immediately. The growth, or whatever it was, was impossible to miss. Broad, blunt branches ringed Maple’s trunk, there was a lot of discoloration, and several vines hung down from their lower branches. Then Fir spotted the infestation. They were used to this sort of vermin of course; but it was extremely unusual to see so many climbing in the branches of a tree all at once. The squat, hairy little things were all over Maple’s branches, letting out shrill squeals as they scurried about. Fir straightened up with a shudder of revulsion.

“Well?” Maple asked.

“Yeah, you might want to get that checked out.”

“What . . . what is it?”

Humans.”

* * *

Story by Gregory M. Fox
Photo by Aditi Gautam on Unsplash