Cute Invaders -

They had found Earth. And they had not invaded it. They had healed it.

Love me. And in return, I will teach you how to be happy again.

The Puffballs had fled their own dying galaxy—a place of cold, hard logic, where their creators had evolved without the capacity for joy, for play, for the simple warmth of a shared glance. The Puffballs were designed as a final, desperate gift: biological happiness bombs, seeded across the cosmos in search of a species that still remembered how to love. Cute Invaders

Dr. Vasquez turned off her screen, climbed out of the bunker, and found a single Puffball waiting for her on the ice. It was shivering. She picked it up, tucked it inside her coat, and felt—for the first time in twenty years—something loosen in her chest.

And just like that, the invasion began. By Thursday, the news was calling them Puffballs . Biologists had a more clinical name— Amorphus cutiens —but no one used it. The creatures were landing in droves, descending from what looked like shimmering, rainbow-colored dandelion seeds. They had no apparent weapons. No lasers. No death rays. No terrifying mecha-suits. They had found Earth

The creature—barely the size of a tangerine—let out a noise that was not a roar, not a hiss, but a squeak . It was the sound a new sneaker makes on a gym floor, mixed with a kitten’s yawn. Then it wobbled forward on stubby, non-terrestrial legs, fell over, and looked up at her with an expression of utter, heart-melting confusion.

Perhaps the only purpose of the invasion was this: to remind us that some things are worth surrendering to. That resistance is not always strength. That the most powerful force in the universe is not a bomb or a virus or a black hole. Love me

They weren’t conquerors. They were refugees .

You didn’t fight a Puffball. You adopted it.

Factories shut down not because of strikes, but because workers kept bringing their Puffballs to the assembly line, and productivity ground to a halt as people stopped to watch the creatures chase laser pointers across conveyor belts. Governments convened emergency sessions, but the representatives couldn’t focus—their own Puffballs were sleeping on the tables, curled into perfect, breathing spheres.

“Oh, you poor thing,” she whispered, picking it up.