Alien Temptation -free Version- -oiwa Kuna- | CERTIFIED | EDITION |
By week two, Haruo has recruited eleven people from his building. He does not threaten or bribe them. He simply radiates a quiet, contagious relief. Others come to him asking, “How are you so calm?” And he tells them the truth: “I gave away the part that was suffering.”
It does not come with a crash of lightning or the screech of metal hulls. That is the first lie humanity tells itself—that temptation from beyond the stars will announce itself as invasion.
Because a species that trades its restlessness for comfort does not need to be conquered. It only needs to be offered a free trial. Alien Temptation -Free Version- -Oiwa Kuna-
The temptation presents itself as a thought that is not his own, yet wears his inner voice like a stolen coat: “You could stop being afraid. You could stop being hungry. You could stop being forgotten. Just accept the small change.”
On a Tuesday evening, in a cramped apartment on the 14th floor of a concrete block, a man named Haruo receives the signal. He is not chosen for his virtue or his strength. He is chosen for his loneliness—a clean, simple vector. By week two, Haruo has recruited eleven people
They line up for the frequency. They call it “the download.” The aliens have not fired a single weapon. They have not landed a single ship. They have simply offered a painkiller for the existential migraine of being human—and humanity, as always, has chosen the needle over the question.
By Oiwa Kuna
By day four, the first request arrives: “Speak this phrase to your neighbor.” The phrase is nonsense—a string of vowels that makes his tongue twist. But when he says it, the neighbor’s eyes go distant for three seconds. Then the neighbor smiles. Not at Haruo. At something just over his shoulder.
Haruo accepts. Not because he is weak, but because the offer is true: for three days, he feels a peace he has never known. His debts do not vanish, but his anxiety does. His isolation remains, but his craving for connection evaporates. He is a satisfied ghost inside a human shell. Others come to him asking, “How are you so calm
The final image: Haruo stands on his balcony, looking up at a starless sky. The signal hums gently, like a lullaby. He is not a prisoner. He is not a monster. He is a man who finally feels full —and that is precisely what makes him dangerous.