Alien Visitor makes best man's speech at Greg & Melissa's wedding

The Decision of Graeme the Caseworker

It began, as all such bureaucratic horrors do, with an email. Graeme, caseworker of indeterminate origin, had requested vitally important information. The sort of request that must be answered precisely, lest one be forever lost in the System. I compiled my response, fingers trembling, and moved to click Reply - but the button leapt aside like a startled flea. I chased it. It skittered, it dodged, it hid in the margins of the screen, only to reappear somewhere else.


By the time I finally trapped it—after an absurd duel of endurance - I was exhausted. My message sent, the information submitted. A moment of relief. But then, the text on the screen flickered, warped, and changed before my eyes. The words I had typed were erased, replaced with their complete opposite. I wrote I have never lived at this address, but now it read: I have always lived here. I typed The amount is unreasonable, and the response became This applicant has no concept of money. I scrambled to correct it, but the backspace key had turned into a smooth, featureless surface, as if it had never existed at all.


From somewhere beyond my monitor, I heard a chuckle - low, reptilian, wet. Graeme. His elongated head shimmered for a moment, his features shifting in and out of human form, a scaly mirage in an office chair. His forked tongue flickered between his teeth as he watched me struggle. I tried again, but each time I pressed send, my answer unravelled into a writhing mass of letters that twisted into snakes and slithered off the screen. They coiled into Graeme’s desk drawer. He reached in, plucked one out, bit off its head, and chewed thoughtfully.


"Delicious," he mused, licking a speck of bureaucratic ink from his lip.

Weeks passed in a blur of automated rejections and impossible demands. Then, at last, a parcel arrived - lodged into the bars of the rusted gate outside my house. A parcel No. A box of keys. No note, no instructions. Just cold, clinking metal.


I tried the first key. It dissolved into mist. The second, a tiny brass thing, hissed and sprouted feathers before twisting into a crow, which flapped away into the bare tree behind me. The third key - perhaps this one—no, it screamed as I inserted it into the lock, then vanished in a burst of static. One by one, each key betrayed me, transforming and escaping into the wind, the trees, the sky.

Defeated, I sank to my knees. And then -without warning- the ground yawned beneath me. The pavement cracked like the spine of an ancient book, and I fell. Fell through the stone, through time, through space, through an endless corridor of filing cabinets that whispered we regret to inform you as I tumbled past.


When I landed, I was sitting in a chair. A hard, blank chair in a hard, blank office. Across from me, at a blank desk, Graeme sat, smoothing the folds of his regulation grey tie. His eyes gleamed, black and lidless.


“I have made my decision,” he said.


The room stretched. The desk melted. The walls inhaled.


“I have decided,” he continued, with the smug authority of a man who enjoys his work, “that you are a rabbit.”


I opened my mouth to protest, but only a soft, strangled squeak emerged. My hands—no, my paws—trembled on the table. My ears twitched. My nose quivered.


Graeme smiled.


My world shrank to the size of a cage.




READ ON TO FIND OUT WHAT HAPPENED NEXT…

Visitor 064 - c1960s

Cxuxsa -Bivalvian


"Ladies, Gentlemen, and Esteemed Lifeforms of the Program,


It is an honour—nay, an anomalous privilege - to stand before you today as both a best man and the most intelligent descendant of a crustacean this galaxy has ever seen. I know you’re all wondering, “How does a humanoid alien descended from shellfish even get invited to a wedding, let alone the job of best man?” And to that, I say: when you’ve shared 1960s top-secret programs and late-night chess games with this groom, you earn that right - eyeballs and all.


Now, let’s talk about the groom. Many of you know Greg as a brilliant man with an uncanny ability to recall every line of Star Trek while simultaneously solving Fermat’s last theorem on cocktail napkins. What you might not know is that Greg is also the only human brave—or crazy—enough to teach me, a semi-aquatic alien with lobster DNA, how to waltz. It did not end well for his shoes.


We first met during Operation Cosmic Clam Bake. Greg was tasked with analysing my interstellar propulsion system, while I was attempting to understand why humans insist on wearing neckties when they lack mandibles to protect. Let me tell you, we bonded faster than two subatomic particles in a hyper-quantum collider. He didn’t just see me as a shellfish-descendant alien; he saw me as a friend. And for that, Greg, I will forever cherish you - though not in a way that would make your lovely bride jealous.


Ah, the bride - Melissa. Melissa, you’re radiant, stylish, and more dazzling than the bioluminescence of my great aunt Velma during a full Europa moon. Greg is truly lucky to have you, though I must admit, when I heard Greg was marrying someone trendy, I thought for sure she’d have gills. But alas, you’re human through and through - a testament to his excellent taste in Earth-bound partners.


Now, I must address the elephant - or should I say squid - in the room. Many of you here are involved in top-secret programs, so discretion is of utmost importance. Let us not whisper about the groom’s role in decoding faster-than-light travel or my unfortunate incident with the coffee machine that resulted in the Pentagon banning cephalopods from kitchen areas. We are here to celebrate love, not classified files.


So, here’s to Greg and Melissa: may your lives together be filled with happiness, laughter, and the occasional interstellar jaunt - preferably aboard a ship with decent shellfish accommodations. Greg, you’ve taught me that love is the greatest adventure of all - even better than defeating a rogue AI with nothing but a can opener and a toaster. Melissa, thank you for making Greg the happiest human on Earth - and possibly in the known universe."


Raise your glasses (or tentacles, as applicable), and let’s toast to a love so strong it transcends galaxies. To Greg and Melissa!







The Decision

The Bureaucratic

Abyss of Susan

The Decision

Visitor 064 - c1960s

Cxuxsa -Bivalvian


"Ladies, Gentlemen, and Esteemed Lifeforms of the Program,


It is an honour—nay, an anomalous privilege - to stand before you today as both a best man and the most intelligent descendant of a crustacean this galaxy has ever seen. I know you’re all wondering, “How does a humanoid alien descended from shellfish even get invited to a wedding, let alone the job of best man?” And to that, I say: when you’ve shared 1960s top-secret programs and late-night chess games with this groom, you earn that right - eyeballs and all.


Now, let’s talk about the groom. Many of you know Greg as a brilliant man with an uncanny ability to recall every line of Star Trek while simultaneously solving Fermat’s last theorem on cocktail napkins. What you might not know is that Greg is also the only human brave—or crazy—enough to teach me, a semi-aquatic alien with lobster DNA, how to waltz. It did not end well for his shoes.


We first met during Operation Cosmic Clam Bake. Greg was tasked with analysing my interstellar propulsion system, while I was attempting to understand why humans insist on wearing neckties when they lack mandibles to protect. Let me tell you, we bonded faster than two subatomic particles in a hyper-quantum collider. He didn’t just see me as a shellfish-descendant alien; he saw me as a friend. And for that, Greg, I will forever cherish you - though not in a way that would make your lovely bride jealous.


Ah, the bride - Melissa. Melissa, you’re radiant, stylish, and more dazzling than the bioluminescence of my great aunt Velma during a full Europa moon. Greg is truly lucky to have you, though I must admit, when I heard Greg was marrying someone trendy, I thought for sure she’d have gills. But alas, you’re human through and through - a testament to his excellent taste in Earth-bound partners.


Now, I must address the elephant - or should I say squid - in the room. Many of you here are involved in top-secret programs, so discretion is of utmost importance. Let us not whisper about the groom’s role in decoding faster-than-light travel or my unfortunate incident with the coffee machine that resulted in the Pentagon banning cephalopods from kitchen areas. We are here to celebrate love, not classified files.


So, here’s to Greg and Melissa: may your lives together be filled with happiness, laughter, and the occasional interstellar jaunt - preferably aboard a ship with decent shellfish accommodations. Greg, you’ve taught me that love is the greatest adventure of all - even better than defeating a rogue AI with nothing but a can opener and a toaster. Melissa, thank you for making Greg the happiest human on Earth - and possibly in the known universe."


Raise your glasses (or tentacles, as applicable), and let’s toast to a love so strong it transcends galaxies. To Greg and Melissa!

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