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Alien Invasion

Page 54

by Flame Tree Studio


  Sita’s face fell. “Come on, not even ‘You mean they haven’t already?’ It’s the low-hanging fruit.”

  Paresh drew her close. “A lawyer might be our only way to understand this deal. I should treat them with respect. For now.”

  According to the contract, the next step in the process was to begin removing redundancies. Paresh had authorized the Blarbsnarb to make changes as they saw fit, evaluating his body for its capabilities in relation to human function versus its utility after the blob took possession. Even having read the fine print, he was unclear on his status after the process was complete. The word ‘annihilated’ appeared nowhere, which was promising.

  “You’ve read me better stories in bed,” said Sita. “But I love the main character in this one. I was very invested in his fate.”

  “Sorry for the spoilers,” said Paresh.

  “Seriously!” said Sita. “Now I’m going to be sitting here waiting to see how the Blarbsnarb eliminate redundancies.”

  Paresh’s appendix burst and he screamed.

  As she drove him to the hospital, she shook her head and repeated, “I’m not saying anything ever again. I’m not saying anything ever again.”

  The operation went smoothly, and Sita sat by his bed and held his hand. Her hand was the first thing he felt as he regained the ability to feel. He squeezed it.

  “I forgot I still had that thing,” he said weakly.

  “Not anymore you don’t,” she said.

  “They could have given me some sort of warning.”

  “They’re not legally required to,” she said. “California is an at-will state.”

  “That leaves the rest of my body in a very precarious position.”

  The blob appeared at the foot of the bed. Sita yanked Paresh’s hand in surprise, Paresh yelped in pain, and the blob yodeled in glee. Or distress. “We are pleased to see that the termination of your appendix has been successful. We do wish it the best and thank it for its many years of service.”

  “The appendix doesn’t do anything,” said Sita, taking Paresh’s hand again.

  “We thank it for its many years of service,” the blob repeated.

  “That really hurt,” said Paresh. “I would appreciate a heads up next time.” He scanned the blob, not seeing any clear distinction between head and body. But if they knew what an appendix was, they knew what a head was.

  “We apologize for the inconvenience. Per your request, I am informing you that we have identified a redundancy in your mitochondria. You will not require them.”

  “My midicholorians?”

  “Mitochondria,” said Sita. “How could you forget the powerhouses of the cell? They make all the energy in your body.” She slapped his head lightly. “Paresh, I have a poster of one in my classroom.”

  He looked away and smiled to himself. He remembered almost nothing of what Sita’s classroom looked like because whenever he visited, he was so focused on how in her element she was when teaching. Poised and animated, she spoke about topics he knew nothing about with such passion that he wished he’d had her in high school instead of Mrs. Klages.

  “Right,” said Paresh. “How could I forget? Those things. Sounds like I need them, though.”

  The blob shook its head, which allowed Paresh to see the subtle distinction. “The Blarbsnarb equivalent are twenty times more efficient and powerful. They will now be replaced.”

  Paresh, who was still groggy to this point, jerked fully awake. “How now is now?”

  “It is done,” noted the blob with triumph. Or disinterest. It was so hard to tell with it.

  Paresh tried to sit up, raise his head. Sita had said he had trillions of cells in his body. He must have had trillions of midichlo– mitochondria. And now they were gone, and he had alien substitutes in his body. Did that make him a hybrid? Was he even human anymore? He felt human. Sita stared at him like he might not be.

  She turned to the blob. “Will there be any side effects? What if his body rejects the alien organelles?”

  The blob scoffed, an expression represented by a shift in the density of blob in its upper half. “His body was deemed suitable for this procedure before it was conducted. He will experience no complications beyond enhanced productivity.”

  Paresh found it much easier to sit up now. His head felt clearer. He heard a faint hum emanating from his body, like white noise from his laptop.

  “I appreciate these enhancements, but I don’t know if I’m comfortable living the rest of my life with alien…stuff.” Having an alien inside his body was one thing, but if his body was also part-alien, that was weird (his bar for weird had also risen recently).

  “Per the contract, corporeal incorporation requires modification of the asset.”

  “His asset is just fine,” said Sita.

  “I don’t like this,” said Paresh. “It’s creepy.”

  The blob hummed with excitement or disapproval. “By expressing concern regarding the original arrangement, you have authorized the alternative arrangement specified in Section XII, Clause 23.”

  Sita squeezed Paresh’s hand. “What did he just authorize?”

  The blob remained silent for a few seconds, as if the answer should have been obvious. “He will go into you.” The sandpapery voice made the statement sound more ominous.

  “Into me?” repeated Sita. “There’s no room in here for him. Do you understand how humans work?”

  “We have conducted an extensive study of human body-self conformational metaphysics, and we believe that one body can contain two selves, as outlined in the terms of the contract.”

  Paresh didn’t know how he’d leapt past weird and into bizarre without even trying. Did the Blarbsnarb allow for takebacksies? He would ask for a second ruling, but he suspected that Carey in Contracts was not well versed in clauses this esoteric.

  Sita, however, was a teacher, and she spoke with confidence about subjects she knew much about and even greater confidence about subjects she knew nothing about. “The original agreement was made between the Blarbsnarb and Paresh. As I am not a signatory on the contract, you have no authority to modify my body.”

  Paresh didn’t know the word ‘signatory’ could sound so sexy.

  The blob replied with exasperation, its rough voice somehow becoming high-pitched. “Section XII, Clause 23 clearly states that for the purposes of this arrangement the undersigned and spouse of undersigned, if one exists, are equal by law, dependent on tax filing status.”

  Paresh groaned. “We file…jointly.”

  Sita bit her lip. “I know the accountant said there were some minor disadvantages, but I don’t think she meant this.”

  Then she held up a finger, smiling brightly. “I contest that Paresh’s statement constituted an expression of concern.” She punctuated this assertion with a triumphant, emphatic nod.

  The blob sighed, or possibly farted. Paresh sniffed the air but still couldn’t tell. Before he could ask for clarification, the blob spoke. “I must consult with the Board on this matter. You will hear from us shortly.” The blob disappeared.

  “If this works,” said Paresh, “all it means is that I get to live with that thing inside me.”

  “Maybe if we confuse them enough, they’ll leave us alone,” said Sita.

  * * *

  On the drive home, Paresh spotted his least favorite kids at the bus stop and asked Sita to stop. They climbed out of the copper 1991 Sentra to sneers of “Hey, it’s Apu and Mrs. Apu!” Paresh was disappointed they didn’t know that Apu’s wife was named Manjula.

  “It’s Jimbo!” bellowed Paresh, throwing his hands in the air. He jabbed a finger at each boy as he continued, “And Preston! And Clifford!”

  The kids stopped their hollering, confused. Their apparent leader sputtered, “Whatever, man, my name –”

  Paresh had alien midichlorians a
nd no more fear. “The other day I met an alien blob I respect more than you because it respects me more than you do. And so I saved the world. All of it. Even you.”

  Sita looked at him like she didn’t care whether he was human, that was the hottest he had been in all their years of marriage. She pulled him in for a deep, passionate kiss. Out of the corner of his eye, Paresh thought he saw her give the boys the finger. They weren’t her students, but they did just get schooled.

  Paresh and Sita returned to the car, leaving the boys standing with expressions almost as indecipherable as the blob’s.

  As they drove off, Paresh rolled down the window and yelled with a fist in the air, “And it said my complexion was optimal! Optimal!”

  * * *

  Sita experimented with barbecue chicken pasta for dinner, combining barbecue sauce and marinara sauce in what Paresh thought were haphazard amounts.

  They ate in relative silence. This concoction tasted better than that mustard pizza from a couple nights ago – from the night his troubles began. What had possessed him to agree to this arrangement (ha, possessed)? Maybe he could blame it on the pizza.

  Paresh tried to pick apart the mélange of flavors in his mouth. He didn’t think a slight tinge of barbecue would be so pleasant in tomato sauce. He slurped up some of the remaining sauce in his plate.

  “That was really good!” he said.

  “So what the hell are we going to do?” she said.

  “If they buy your legal argument, then at least I get to stay in my body. Maybe there’s a loophole to get out of the thing entirely.”

  “We read through the whole contract. I didn’t see anything.”

  Paresh shook his fork at her. Unfortunately, the fork still had sauce on it. Fortunately, the sauce didn’t reach her. “We’re not lawyers or aliens. We wouldn’t.”

  Sita stood up and began clearing the table. “There is also the issue of money.” She reached for Paresh’s plate.

  Paresh grabbed her wrist. “We don’t need the money. We never had it anyway. I’d rather be myself than myself plus an alien plus money.” He let her go.

  Sita took his plate. “You’d rather be yourself plus money.”

  He looked her right in the eyes. “I’d rather be myself plus you.”

  * * *

  That night while Paresh was being himself plus Sita, the blob appeared by the bed. Sita screamed – a different sort of scream than she’d been making a few seconds ago – and toppled off Paresh. Paresh let loose a stream of creative expletives.

  Out of breath, Paresh said, “Has anyone told you guys you have the worst timing imaginable?”

  The blob gazed upon their naked bodies and appeared to blush, a subtle red shimmer that coursed over its body for a second. “I apologize for interrupting your mating ritual. The Board has reviewed the statement and determined it to be legally binding. The alternative arrangement has been authorized.”

  Sita pulled the comforter over her. “So he’ll go inside me?” She looked at Paresh, scanned down, and chuckled at her choice of words.

  “His being will be temporarily relocated into your body until it can find a suitable home,” said the blob, apparently still unclear on how humans worked. Sita had said there was no room for him, and he believed the woman with the graduate degree. For an intelligent alien species, they did not seem to have done all the necessary research.

  “What if he says no?” asked Sita. She pulled Paresh close to her, away from the blob. “What if he backs out of the contract?”

  The blob looked puzzled. “Why would he refuse to proceed with what has been agreed upon? We are offering appropriate compensation for the body.”

  Paresh put up a hand. “Your compensation is more than appropriate. Hell, it’s inappropriate. But I’ve changed my mind. I like my body. I want to stay in it. Only me.”

  “And I love him, but I’d prefer he stay in his own body. I’m equal by law, right? Spouse of undersigned? What if I say no too?”

  The blob’s horns glowed. “This is highly unusual.”

  “You’re highly unusual,” muttered Sita.

  Paresh knew Carey in Contracts had dealt with people like him before, assholes who reneged at the last minute. It happened. It was business. These aliens must have encountered it. “If there’s an early cancellation fee or something, I’ll pay it.” He suspected it would be more than the $300 he paid for cancelling his cable deal, but they would find a way to make it work.

  The blob hopped onto the bed. Paresh was relieved to see it didn’t leave a trail of goo behind it; in fact, it left no residue at all. Yet he cringed to see its blobby blobness on his sheets. The blob spoke, its scratchy, sandpapery voice familiar to the both of them by now: “Declining to complete the transaction at this stage is equivalent to refusal before agreement and carries the same consequences.”

  Sita and Paresh looked at each other, silently having an entire conversation about the fact that they were going to be responsible for the destruction of Earth, well, mostly Paresh was, it’s not like Sita hadn’t told him to read before signing, can we not bring that up right now, but it’s true, and also I love you.

  Paresh took Sita’s hand. Ignoring the fact that he was completely naked, he mustered up all the dignity and gravity he had, sat straight up and said, “I’ll do it.” Sita squeezed his hand and sat straight up with him. “We’ll do it. For Earth.”

  “For Earth,” repeated Sita, who could not ignore the fact that they were completely naked and burst out laughing and fell over. The blob surveyed them with bewilderment, waves undulating back and forth across what Paresh took to be its facial region.

  It jumped up and down on the bed. “The completion of transaction will commence immediately.”

  Sita stopped laughing. “You’re going to take him now?”

  Paresh’s heart broke to hear the fear in his wife’s voice. He would be leaving her and joining her in the same instant.

  He turned to face his wife. “Before it happens, I want you to hear it from me one last time: I love you.”

  Sita kissed him. “I love you, too.”

  “When they tied our clothes together at the wedding, that was supposed to be a symbolic union, right?”

  “I knew I should have been paying more attention to the Sanskrit.”

  Paresh admired her smile with his own eyes while he still could. “Also, in case you can hear my thoughts when I’m in there, I didn’t really like that turkey chili pizza.”

  “I knew it!” She kissed him again. “But I’m still going to make it for us to eat. It’s delicious. And it’s my body I’ll be putting it into, even if you’re in there too.”

  “It’ll be one hundred percent yours except for whatever metaphysical confor-whatsit things happen with me.”

  Sita turned to the blob. “Will I be able to hear his thoughts? Will he be able to control me? He’d better not be able to control me. I read that clause again and that is not in there.”

  A tiny wormhole opened up and spat out a spiral-bound stack of papers thicker than any database user manual Paresh had ever seen. It plopped onto the bed in front of the blob. “The Blarbsnarb have helpfully provided this list of Frequently Asked Questions.” When Sita reached for it, the blob hopped on top of it. “It is to be read after the completion of the transaction, which must commence before close of business.”

  Sita drew her hand away, slowly curling four of her fingers back.

  “Wait!” said Paresh. “I don’t want to be possessed with my pants off.” He reached around for his clothes and hastily dressed. Sita took the opportunity to do the same. The process was made somewhat more difficult by the blob, who continued to jump up and down on the bed, making Sita’s bra fall off onto the floor.

  “Thank you for your patience,” said Sita after they were both clothed. She turned to Paresh. “You ready?”


  “No,” he said.

  “Neither am I,” she said. “Let’s do this.” She reached for his hand, and the blob honked like an angry goose.

  “Please refrain from all physical contact during the transaction,” it said. Sita reluctantly kept her hand at her side.

  Paresh closed his eyes.

  He peeked a tiny bit out of one eye in time to see the blob disintegrate and congeal into a ball of light that had to be visible outside, even through the curtains. Before he had time to wonder what the neighbors thought, the light shot toward his barely open eye, and then it was in him, going everywhere inside him, even places he didn’t know he had, and he wanted to scream but he no longer had control of his mouth, and for one terrible second – or was it an hour – the only thought in his head was it didn’t say it would hurt.

  And then he felt himself move to the right a couple feet. A warm, welcoming body. The strange sensation of having a part-alien body was gone, replaced by the strange sensation of having an all-woman body. He felt top-heavy.

  “You in there?” said Sita.

  “Yes,” said the Paresh inside her and the Paresh outside her.

  “The transaction is complete,” the blob said in Paresh’s voice, a vast improvement from its own. Was that how Paresh sounded? He had been told he had the faintest traces of an accent, but he’d never heard it until now. Inside Sita’s head, Paresh sounded the way he was used to sounding.

  “Good,” said Sita. Not wanting to look at the alien wearing her husband’s body, she got up and went to the bathroom, looking instead at her husband wearing her body. “You said you wanted to be yourself plus me,” she said into the mirror. “Looks like it’s going to be the other way around.”

  Paresh looked at himself. Herself? Themself? They shared a body but not a mind, as far he could tell before reading the FAQ. He had no motor control of Sita’s body, and he knew she wouldn’t relinquish it. He would never ask her to. Since the moment he signed the contract, he had resigned himself to this fate, riding along with either an alien or his wife. He preferred the alternative arrangement. Sita had always been his better half, and now they were a better whole.

 

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