The day my life went completely sideways started like any other Tuesday. I was eating cereal straight from the box while standing over the sink – a breakfast technique I’d perfected during my three years of living alone – when something crashed through my apartment ceiling with the force of a meteorite made entirely of bad decisions.
Through the dust and debris, I saw what looked like a giant purple octopus wearing a Hawaiian shirt and cargo shorts. It had seventeen eyes, all of which were looking in different directions, and what I could only describe as a mustache made of tentacles.
“Greetings, Earth creature!” it announced, pulling itself up to its full height of about eight feet. “I am Blorg’nax the Moderately Impressive, and I have traveled seventeen million light-years to… oh, is that Cap’n Crunch?”
I stood there, frozen, a handful of cereal halfway to my mouth. “Um… yes?”
“Excellent! I haven’t had a proper breakfast in three solar rotations.” Without waiting for an invitation, Blorg’nax slithered over to my kitchen counter and began eating directly from the box with four of his tentacles. “Say, you wouldn’t happen to have a spare room, would you? The Galactic Housing Authority has been absolutely dreadful lately.”
And that’s how I ended up with an alien roommate who would make even the worst Craigslist horror story look like a fairy tale.
“I can’t have a roommate,” I said, finally finding my voice. “This is a one-bedroom apartment. Plus, you just destroyed my ceiling.”
Blorg’nax waved a dismissive tentacle, sending Cap’n Crunch flying across the kitchen. “Details, details. I’ll fix your primitive ceiling covering later. As for the bedroom situation, I don’t sleep. I photosynthesize. Just stick me near a window and I’m good.”
“But—”
“Excellent! It’s settled then. I’ll just need you to fill out some paperwork for the Intergalactic Refugee Relocation Program. Standard stuff – proof of address, blood type, willingness to be probed, favorite episode of Friends…”
“Wait, what was that middle part?”
“Blood type?”
“After that.”
“Favorite episode of Friends? Mine’s ‘The One Where Ross Gets Probed.’ Classic Earth television.”
I decided to let that one slide. “Look, Mr… Blorg’nax, was it? I appreciate that you need a place to stay, but I really can’t—”
“Please,” he interrupted, and suddenly all seventeen of his eyes were glistening with what looked like tears. “My home planet was destroyed by the Zorgothian Empire. They turned it into a parking lot for their space mall. Have you ever seen a planet turned into a parking lot? They painted lines on the continents!”
Against every instinct screaming in my head, I felt a pang of sympathy. I’d been homeless once, couch-surfing for months after college. I knew what it was like to need help.
“Fine,” I sighed. “But just for a few days while you figure things out. And you’re paying half the rent.”
“Rent?” Blorg’nax’s tentacle mustache twitched. “What’s rent?”
That should have been my first red flag. Well, technically the ceiling destruction was the first red flag, but who’s counting?
The first week was actually not terrible. Blorg’nax kept to himself mostly, spending hours by the window photosynthesizing and binge-watching every sitcom ever made. He had an uncanny ability to quote Seinfeld at inappropriate times and had developed an obsession with Earth’s concept of “personal space,” which he interpreted as needing to be within three inches of me at all times.
“Hey, Chad,” he said one morning, sliding up behind me as I brushed my teeth. (He’d decided my name was Chad despite my repeated corrections that it was actually Mike.) “What’s the deal with toothpaste? You put cleaning paste in your food hole? On my planet, we just shed our teeth monthly and grow new ones.”
“That’s disgusting,” I said through a mouthful of foam.
“You’re rubbing plant secretions on your mouth bones, and I’m disgusting?”
He had a point.
The real problems started when Blorg’nax decided he needed a job. “I can’t keep mooching off you forever, Chad,” he announced one day. “I need to contribute to society. Pull my weight. Pay the rent, as you keep mentioning every six hours.”
“It’s been three weeks and you haven’t paid a cent,” I reminded him.
“Time is a construct,” he said, waving a tentacle dismissively. “Besides, I’ve been contributing in other ways. Who rearranged all your furniture at 3 AM to improve the feng shui?”
“That was you? I thought I was having a stroke!”
“You’re welcome. Now, I’ve been applying to jobs online. Did you know most Earth employers discriminate against beings with more than four limbs? It’s tentaclism, I tell you!”
Despite his complaints, Blorg’nax managed to land a job at the local DMV. I should have known this was a terrible idea. An alien with seventeen eyes working at the DMV was like giving a pyromaniac a job at a fireworks factory.
His first day was a disaster. I know this because I received no fewer than forty-seven phone calls from his supervisor, a woman named Deborah who sounded like she was one bad day away from a complete nervous breakdown.
“Your… roommate,” she said, her voice shaking, “just issued a driver’s license to a golden retriever.”
“He what?”
“He said, and I quote, ‘On my planet, all beings are equal. Who are we to deny this noble creature the freedom of the open road?'”
“I’ll talk to him,” I promised.
“He also reorganized our entire filing system based on what he calls ‘psychic vibrations.’ We can’t find anything. Mrs. Henderson has been waiting for her license renewal for six hours because he insists her paperwork is filed under ‘Q’ for ‘Quirky aura.'”
When Blorg’nax came home that evening, he was in surprisingly good spirits. “Chad! Great news! I’ve been promoted!”
“Promoted? Deborah said you caused chaos!”
“Exactly! Apparently, I processed more applications than any other employee. Sure, most of them were for household pets and what you humans call ‘inanimate objects,’ but productivity is productivity!”
“You gave a driver’s license to a dog!”
“Have you seen how some humans drive? Mr. Whiskers couldn’t possibly be worse. Plus, he passed the vision test with flying colors. Good peripheral vision on that one.”
I rubbed my temples, feeling a migraine coming on. “Blorg’nax, you can’t just—”
“Oh, before I forget,” he interrupted, pulling out a stack of papers from his cargo shorts (how did he fit anything in those with tentacles instead of hands?). “I brought home some work. I’m starting a side business doing license photos. Did you know humans pay extra for good lighting? On my planet, everyone is naturally bioluminescent. Much more practical.”
“That’s actually not a terrible idea,” I admitted.
“I knew you’d come around! I’ve already scheduled seventeen appointments for tomorrow. I’m using the living room as a studio. You don’t mind, do you?”
“I absolutely do mind!”
“Perfect! Oh, and I invited my friend Zyx’theta over for dinner. She’s from the Andromeda galaxy. Lost her planet to a hostile takeover by a corporation that wanted to mine it for its core. Now she sells insurance. You’ll love her – she only has six eyes and hardly ever secretes acid when nervous.”
“Acid?!”
“Hardly ever, Chad. Don’t be xenophobic.”
That night, I met Zyx’theta, who was actually quite pleasant despite occasionally melting small portions of my furniture when she laughed too hard. She looked like a giant praying mantis wearing a pantsuit and had a laugh like a rusty gate trying to sing opera.
“So, Mike—” she began.
“Finally! Someone got my name right!”
“—Blorg’nax tells me you’re in accounting?”
“Marketing, actually.”
“Close enough. All Earth jobs look the same to me. You sit in boxes staring at light screens all day. On my planet, we had real jobs. Like Supreme Overlord of the Acid Mines or Professional Screamer.”
“Professional Screamer?”
“Oh yes, very important job. Someone had to test the emergency broadcast system. My cousin Qix’norp was the best in the business. Could shatter crystal from three galaxies away. But then the planet exploded, so… career change.”
Dinner was an adventure. Blorg’nax had attempted to cook, which resulted in something that looked like spaghetti but moved like it was trying to escape the plate. Zyx’theta politely pushed it around with her mandibles while I ordered pizza.
“Earth food is so strange,” she observed, picking up a slice of pepperoni. “You put circles of meat on bread covered in fermented milk. On my planet, we just ate our enemies.”
“That’s… dark,” I said.
“Not really. They were made of cotton candy. Delicious and ethically questionable!”
As the evening wore on, I found myself actually enjoying their company. Sure, Blorg’nax had no concept of personal boundaries and Zyx’theta occasionally leaked acid, but they were genuinely funny and surprisingly insightful about Earth culture.
“Your planet’s obsession with celebrities is fascinating,” Blorg’nax said, tentacles gesticulating wildly. “On my planet, we worshipped the Great Cosmic Snail. At least it occasionally did something useful, like leaving trails of stellar dust.”
“The Kardashians have done… things,” I offered weakly.
“Name one contribution to society,” Zyx’theta challenged.
I thought for a moment. “They’ve… influenced fashion?”
Both aliens burst into laughter. Well, Blorg’nax laughed. Zyx’theta made a sound like a blender full of harmonicas.
“Fashion!” Blorg’nax wheezed. “You humans cover your flesh in plant fibers and dead animal skin and call it culture!”
“Says the octopus wearing cargo shorts,” I shot back.
“These are temperature-regulating bio-shorts from the finest laboratories of Proxima Centauri! They cost more than your apartment!”
“Then maybe you could sell them and PAY SOME RENT!”
An awkward silence fell over the room. Zyx’theta’s acid secretion increased notably.
“About that,” Blorg’nax said, suddenly finding the ceiling very interesting (or what was left of it after his entrance). “I may have a small problem with Earth currency.”
“What kind of problem?”
“I don’t understand it. At all. You trade paper for goods and services? On my planet, we used a complex bartering system based on interpretive dance. Much more civilized.”
“So when you said you’d pay rent…”
“I prepared seventeen dances! Very moving pieces about the struggles of displacement and the search for belonging. Would you like to see them?”
“NO!”
Zyx’theta interjected, “I could help with the rent situation. I’ve been doing quite well selling insurance to other refugees. Did you know most humans don’t have asteroid collision coverage? In this galaxy? Madness!”
And that’s how I ended up with two alien roommates.
Zyx’theta moved in the next day, bringing with her fourteen suitcases of what she claimed were “essential items.” These included a machine that screamed at 3 AM (“It’s my alarm clock!”), a pet that looked like a tumbleweed made of eyes (“His name is Gerald!”), and a collection of what she insisted were “priceless art pieces” but looked suspiciously like random objects she’d found in dumpsters.
“This is temporary,” I kept telling myself as I watched her set up a shrine to the Acid Gods in what used to be my coat closet. “Just temporary.”
The apartment was getting crowded. Blorg’nax had claimed the living room window for his photosynthesis sessions, which wouldn’t have been a problem except he insisted on doing it naked.
“It’s natural!” he protested when Mrs. Henderson from 4B complained. “How else am I supposed to absorb the full spectrum of your yellow sun?”
“Clothes are transparent to sunlight!” I argued.
“Not these cargo shorts. They’re designed to protect against gamma radiation, cosmic rays, and the judgmental stares of lesser beings.”
“Then wear different shorts!”
“And give up my pocket dimension storage? I think not, Chad.”
The DMV job lasted exactly one week before Blorg’nax was politely asked to never return. Apparently, issuing commercial driver’s licenses to a fleet of roombas was the final straw. His photography business, however, was booming. Word had spread through the alien refugee community that he could make anyone look good in their ID photos, even species that existed partially in other dimensions.
Our apartment had become a revolving door of the galaxy’s weirdest beings. There was Qrok’tar the Unnecessarily Loud, whose species communicated entirely in screams. Flibbert McGillicuddy (who had legally changed his name to try to fit in on Earth) looked like a beach ball covered in hair and spoke only in rhyming couplets. And then there was Susan, who appeared completely human except for the fact that she was actually three small aliens in a trenchcoat.
“We are definitely just one normal human,” Susan would say in perfect unison whenever anyone questioned her. “We enjoy human activities like paying taxes and feeling emotions.”
The breaking point came about a month after Zyx’theta moved in. I came home from work to find my apartment had been transformed into what looked like the universe’s most chaotic flea market. Aliens of every conceivable shape and size were milling about, examining objects laid out on tables made from my furniture.
“What is happening?!” I shouted over the din.
Blorg’nax materialized beside me (he’d learned a neat teleportation trick that he absolutely abused). “Chad! Perfect timing! Welcome to the First Annual Intergalactic Refugee Swap Meet and Cultural Exchange!”
“The what now?”
“It was Zyx’theta’s idea. Brilliant, really. Everyone brings items from their home planets to trade. Building community, celebrating diversity, making a little profit on the side…”
“IN MY APARTMENT?!”
“Well, the community center wanted a deposit. Do you have any idea how much they charge? It’s highway robbery! On my planet, community spaces were free for all beings to—”
“GET. OUT. EVERYONE GET OUT!”
The room fell silent. Every eye, eyestalk, and sensory organ turned to stare at me.
“Chad,” Blorg’nax said quietly, “you’re embarrassing me in front of the hive mind collective from Betelgeuse.”
“I don’t care! This is my home, not a community center! I’ve been patient. I’ve been understanding. I’ve put up with the acid damage, the 3 AM dance recitals, the fact that my shower is now a portal to the Dimension of Infinite Wetness because someone—” I glared at Zyx’theta, “—needed a direct connection to their home world’s bathing rituals. But this is too much!”
Slowly, grudgingly, the aliens began filing out. Some grumbled in languages that sounded like garbage disposals trying to sing. Others left trails of glowing slime that I knew I’d be cleaning up for weeks. Susan got stuck in the doorway and had to partially disassemble to squeeze through.
When they were all gone, only Blorg’nax and Zyx’theta remained. We stood in the wreckage of what used to be my living room in awkward silence.
“I suppose you want us to leave too,” Zyx’theta said quietly, her acid secretions tinged with what I’d learned was sadness.
Looking at them – these ridiculous, impossible, absolutely infuriating beings – I felt my anger deflating. Yes, they’d turned my life upside down. Yes, they’d destroyed my apartment and my sanity. But they’d also brought something I hadn’t realized I’d been missing: chaos, laughter, and a perspective that made my human problems seem delightfully small.
“No,” I sighed. “You can stay. But we need ground rules. Real ones this time. Written down. In multiple languages. Possibly notarized by someone who exists in this dimension.”
“Really?” Blorg’nax’s seventeen eyes lit up like a Christmas tree having a religious experience.
“Really. But you’re both getting jobs. Real jobs. That pay real money. That goes toward real rent.”
“Deal!” Zyx’theta exclaimed, then paused. “What’s money again?”
“Oh, for the love of…”
Over the next few weeks, we established what I called “The Cohabitation Constitution of Apartment 517.” It included such groundbreaking rules as:
- No portal creation without written permission
- Photosynthesis must be conducted while wearing at least minimal clothing
- All acid secretions must be immediately cleaned up by the secretor
- No inviting hive minds over without 48 hours notice
- The refrigerator is not a storage unit for interdimensional entities
- Screaming is limited to daylight hours except in case of actual emergency
- “Cultural differences” is not an excuse for reorganizing someone else’s belongings
- Pay. The. Damn. Rent.
To my surprise, they actually tried to follow the rules. Blorg’nax got a job at a local comic book store, where his extensive knowledge of “Earth’s prophetic illustrated texts” made him surprisingly popular with customers. Zyx’theta found work as a night security guard, where her ability to see in multiple spectrums and occasionally terrify would-be thieves with acid spit made her employee of the month three times running.
Life settled into a bizarre but manageable rhythm. Sure, I had to explain to dates why there was a purple octopus watching TV in my living room, and yes, the neighbors still gave me strange looks, but I was actually… happy?
“Chad,” Blorg’nax said one evening as we sat watching Jeopardy! (he was uncommonly good at it, claiming many of the answers were “common knowledge in the Gamma Quadrant”), “I’ve been thinking.”
“That’s dangerous.”
“No, seriously. Why do you put up with us? We’ve destroyed your home, disrupted your life, and I still don’t really understand rent despite Zyx’theta’s PowerPoint presentation.”
I thought about it for a moment. “Honestly? I don’t know. Maybe because before you crashed through my ceiling, I was just… existing. Going to work, coming home, eating cereal over the sink, repeat. It was safe, but it was boring.”
“And now?”
“Now I live with an alien who thinks wearing clothes during photosynthesis is oppression and another who keeps a screaming alarm clock. My life is insane.”
“But?”
“But it’s never boring. Plus, you make a mean margarita.”
“Secret ingredient is neutron star dust,” he said proudly. “Don’t tell the FDA.”
Zyx’theta emerged from her room wearing what she called “casual Friday attire,” which looked like a disco ball had mated with a cactus. “Are we having a feelings moment? I love feelings moments! On my planet, we celebrated emotions by group screaming!”
“Please don’t,” I begged.
“Too late!” She let out a shriek that set off three car alarms and probably registered on seismographs somewhere.
“THAT’S IT! EVERYONE OUT!” Mrs. Henderson’s voice echoed through the walls. “I’VE HAD ENOUGH OF YOU FREAKS!”
We fell silent, looking at each other with concern. Mrs. Henderson was the building manager’s mother. If she complained enough…
“We should probably apologize,” I said.
“I’ll make her a peace offering,” Blorg’nax suggested. “On my planet, we gave enemies fermented bog slime as a sign of respect.”
“Maybe just a fruit basket,” I suggested.
“Boring, but fine.”
We trooped down to 4B, where Mrs. Henderson answered the door wearing curlers and a scowl that could strip paint.
“Mrs. Henderson,” I began, “we’re really sorry about the noise—”
“Sorry? SORRY?! You’ve been harboring aliens! Probably illegal aliens! I’m calling ICE!”
“Immigration and Customs Enforcement doesn’t handle extraterrestrials,” Zyx’theta said helpfully. “You’d want to call MIB, but they were defunded in 2019.”
“I don’t care who I call! You’re all getting evicted!”
“Now, now,” Blorg’nax said, producing a business card from thin air (or possibly his pocket dimension shorts). “Before you do anything hasty, might I interest you in a professional photo session? I understand you have a grandson graduating soon. Wouldn’t you like a nice portrait for the announcement?”
Mrs. Henderson’s scowl wavered slightly. “Well…”
“I’ll throw in family photos. My seventeenth eye captures souls beautifully. Metaphorically speaking, of course. Soul-stealing is illegal in this solar system.”
An hour later, we’d not only avoided eviction but had also somehow committed to photographing Mrs. Henderson’s entire extended family reunion.
“How do you do that?” I asked Blorg’nax as we walked back upstairs.
“Do what?”
“Turn every disaster into a business opportunity.”
“Oh, that’s easy. On my planet, we had a saying: ‘When life gives you acid rain, sell umbrellas.’ Of course, our umbrellas were made of lead and weighed seventeen pounds, but the principle stands.”
The photo shoot with the Henderson family was an adventure in itself. Trying to arrange forty-seven humans of varying ages and temperaments while Blorg’nax shouted things like “Feel the cosmic energy!” and “Channel your inner stardust!” was like herding cats. Hyperactive cats. On caffeine.
“You in the back!” Blorg’nax called to Mrs. Henderson’s teenage grandson. “Less slouching, more existing with purpose!”
“This is stupid,” the kid muttered.
“Stupid? STUPID?! Young human, I have traveled across seventeen million light-years, witnessed the birth and death of stars, seen civilizations rise and fall like cosmic heartbeats, and you dare call the preservation of this moment in time stupid?”
The kid straightened up immediately.
“He’s good,” Zyx’theta whispered to me. “Very dramatic. On my planet, he’d make an excellent Overlord of Guilt-Tripping.”
The photos turned out surprisingly well. Blorg’nax had a real eye (all seventeen of them) for composition, and his ability to see in multiple spectrums meant he could adjust lighting in ways human photographers couldn’t even imagine. The Hendersons were so impressed they insisted on paying extra and recommending him to all their friends.
“We’re rich!” Blorg’nax exclaimed, looking at the check. “We can afford rent for…” He paused, doing calculations on his tentacles. “Three whole days!”
“It’s a start,” I said.
Word of Blorg’nax’s photography skills spread quickly through both the human and alien communities. Soon, our apartment was once again a hub of activity, but this time it was organized, scheduled, and – most importantly – profitable.
“I need headshots,” said a being that looked like a crystalline chandelier with anxiety issues. “I’m auditioning for a reality show. ‘The Real Housewives of Alpha Centauri.'”
“I can work with this,” Blorg’nax said, circling the client. “We’ll emphasize your natural luminescence, play down the anxiety crystals. Have you considered a softer spectrum? Perhaps some blues to offset the nervous yellows?”
Meanwhile, Zyx’theta’s insurance business was thriving. Turns out, aliens living on Earth had a lot of very specific insurance needs that human companies couldn’t even comprehend.
“You want coverage for what?” I overheard her saying on the phone one day.
“Spontaneous dimensional shifting. It’s a real problem for my species. One minute you’re grocery shopping, the next you’re in a parallel universe where bananas are the dominant life form. Very disorienting. And expensive – do you know what interdimensional roaming charges cost?”
She covered the phone and whispered to me, “I’m creating a whole new insurance category. I’ll be rich! Rich enough to buy my own planet! Well, a small moon. Maybe an asteroid. Depends on the market.”
Life continued in this vein for several months. Our apartment became known in certain circles as “Little Galaxy,” a safe haven for displaced aliens trying to make it on Earth. We had regular visitors, occasional drama (like the time two species who’d been at war for millennia ended up in our living room at the same time), and a surprisingly functional household.
Then came the day that changed everything.
I was at work, suffering through another meeting about synergy and thinking about how Blorg’nax’s interpretation of corporate buzzwords would probably make more sense, when my phone exploded with texts.
Zyx’theta: “CODE PURPLE! CODE PURPLE!”
Blorg’nax: “Chad, remember how I said my past wouldn’t follow me to Earth?”
Zyx’theta: “I lied. It followed. It’s here. IT HAS LAWYERS.”
Blorg’nax: “Well…”
I excused myself from the meeting and called home. Blorg’nax answered on the seventeenth ring.
“Chad! Buddy! Light of my photosynthesis! How do you feel about relocating?”
“What happened?”
“Funny story. Remember how I said my planet was turned into a parking lot?”
“Yes…”
“Well, it turns out I may have been slightly responsible for that.”
“WHAT?!”
“Only partially! Like, 23% responsible. 30% tops. Okay, the Galactic Court says 87%, but they’re notorious for inflating numbers.”
“Blorg’nax, what did you do?”
There was a long pause. In the background, I could hear Zyx’theta arguing with someone in a language that sounded like a cat fight in a blender.
“I may have… accidentally… sold my planet to the Zorgothian Empire.”
“How do you accidentally sell a planet?!”
“I was trying to sell them exclusive rights to my interpretive dance catalog! There was a translation error! Instead of ‘performance rights throughout the galaxy,’ the contract said ‘planet rights, throughout.’ It’s an easy mistake in Zorgothian. Very context-dependent language.”
“So you’re telling me you’re not a refugee, you’re a… what, a planetary real estate mogul?”
“Former mogul. Very former. Look, the point is, there are some very angry Blorg’naxians here with legal documents and what appears to be a small army.”
I rushed home to find our street cordoned off by what looked like police, if police drove hovering vehicles and had badges that existed in seven dimensions simultaneously. Our apartment building was surrounded by aliens of every description, most of them holding signs with messages like “BLORG’NAX = PLANET TRAITOR” and “HONK IF YOU LOST YOUR HOME WORLD TO CONTRACTUAL NEGLIGENCE.”
“This is bad,” I muttered.
“Mike!” A familiar voice called out. I turned to see Deborah from the DMV pushing through the crowd. “What is going on? First he ruins my filing system, now this?”
“It’s a long story,” I said, trying to edge past her toward the building.
“I’ve got time. My car got towed because apparently the meter maid he licensed last week was actually a sentient parking meter, and it’s been impounding vehicles out of spite.”
I finally made it to our apartment to find Blorg’nax hiding under a blanket fort while Zyx’theta stood guard with what looked like a Super Soaker filled with acid.
“Nobody’s dissolving anyone on my watch!” she declared. “I’ve got insurance forms to file! Do you know how much paperwork a dissolved client creates?”
The lead prosecutor, a severe-looking being that resembled a filing cabinet with tentacles, cleared what I assumed was its throat. “Blorg’nax the Moderately Impressive, you are hereby summoned to appear before the Galactic Court to answer for your crimes against the Blorg’naxian people.”
“Can’t we settle this out of court?” Blorg’nax pleaded from his fort. “I’ll do community service! Interpretive dance lessons for underprivileged younglings!”
“Your dance is what got us into this mess!” shouted someone from the crowd.
“It was avant-garde! You just didn’t understand my artistic vision!”
The situation was spiraling out of control. Police sirens (Earth ones this time) were approaching, the crowd was getting angrier, and Mrs. Henderson was on her balcony with a baseball bat shouting about property values.
“EVERYONE STOP!” I shouted, surprising myself with the volume.
The crowd fell silent.
“Look,” I continued, my heart pounding. “I don’t know much about intergalactic law or planetary real estate or interpretive dance contracts. But I do know Blorg’nax. Yes, he’s irritating. Yes, he can’t figure out rent. Yes, he once tried to pay for pizza with a poem. But he’s not malicious. He’s just… catastrophically stupid sometimes.”
“Hey!” Blorg’nax protested.
“Shut up, I’m defending you. The point is, destroying his life won’t bring your planet back. But maybe, if we work together, we can find a solution that helps everyone.”
The filing cabinet prosecutor rustled its papers skeptically. “What kind of solution?”
I thought frantically. “What if… what if Blorg’nax used his business to help relocated Blorg’naxians? Free photos for immigration documents, job hunting, family reunions? And Zyx’theta could offer discounted insurance rates for refugees from your planet?”
“That’s… actually not terrible,” the prosecutor admitted.
“Plus,” I added, warming to the idea, “Blorg’nax could document your stories. Photos, videos, testimonials. Make sure the galaxy never forgets what happened to your world. Turn his mistake into something meaningful.”
The crowd murmured, considering. Even the angriest protesters looked thoughtful.
“I could do that,” Blorg’nax said, emerging from his fort. “I could be the official chronicler of the Blorg’naxian diaspora. I’ve gotten very good at capturing the essence of displacement and hope in a single frame. Ask the Hendersons!”
“It’s true!” Mrs. Henderson called from her balcony. “He made my nephew look employable! That’s basically a miracle!”
After hours of negotiation, mediated by Zyx’theta (who turned out to have a law degree from an online university in the Horsehead Nebula), we reached an agreement. Blorg’nax would provide free services to his displaced people for the next five Earth years, document their stories, and pay reparations from his photography profits. In exchange, they wouldn’t pursue criminal charges or, more importantly, dissolve him into his component molecules.
“See?” I said as the crowd dispersed. “That wasn’t so bad.”
“Chad,” Blorg’nax said, all seventeen eyes glistening with emotion, “you saved my life. How can I ever repay you?”
“You can start by paying rent on time.”
“Now you’re just being unreasonable.”
Life returned to its version of normal, though now with the added responsibility of Blorg’nax’s community service. Our apartment became even more of a hub for the alien community, but now it had purpose beyond chaos.
I watched Blorg’nax photograph an elderly Blorg’naxian couple, capturing not just their images but their stories of loss and resilience. He was different when he worked – focused, empathetic, artistic in a way that transcended species.
“You know,” Zyx’theta said, joining me in observation, “for someone who accidentally sold his planet, he’s not doing too badly.”
“We’re all doing better than when we started,” I said. “Even me.”
“Especially you. When we met, you were so… human. Now look at you – mediating intergalactic disputes, living with aliens, eating food that occasionally tries to escape. You’ve grown.”
She was right. My life had become unrecognizable from a year ago, and I wouldn’t change it for anything.
“Hey,” I said, “want to help me with something?”
“Does it involve insurance fraud?”
“No.”
“Then I’m interested.”
That evening, we held the first official “Little Galaxy Community Dinner.” Aliens from across the building and beyond gathered in our apartment (which had been expanded through some creative dimensional folding courtesy of a physicist from Dimension 7B). Everyone brought food from their home worlds, or at least Earth approximations.
“This is nice,” Blorg’nax said, surveying the scene. “Like the swap meet, but with less capitalism and more carbohydrates.”
“And no one’s trying to dissolve you,” Zyx’theta added.
“That’s always a plus.”
I stood up, tapping a spoon against my glass (which contained something Blorg’nax assured me was “mostly” safe for human consumption).
“I wanted to say something,” I began, feeling suddenly self-conscious with dozens of eyes, eyestalks, and sensory organs focused on me. “A year ago, if someone had told me I’d be standing in my apartment – which now exists in seven dimensions – hosting a dinner party for aliens, I’d have called them crazy. But here we are, and I realize something: home isn’t about where you’re from. It’s about where you choose to belong.”
“That’s beautiful, Chad,” Blorg’nax said. “Did you steal that from a human greeting card?”
“Shut up, I’m being profound. The point is, you’ve all lost your homes, but you’ve found each other. And me, I guess. We’re like a really weird, dysfunctional family that spans multiple star systems and occasionally violates the laws of physics.”
“To family!” someone shouted, raising their glass.
“To family!” the room echoed, and we drank. (I immediately regretted it – the drink tasted like someone had dissolved a battery in grape juice.)
As the evening progressed, I found myself genuinely enjoying the chaos. Flibbert McGillicuddy performed his rhyming couplets to thunderous applause. Susan did a surprisingly graceful dance that only occasionally revealed the three aliens inside the trenchcoat. Even Mrs. Henderson had shown up, bringing her famous casserole and flirting outrageously with a distinguished-looking alien who resembled a chrome-plated Abraham Lincoln.
“This is all your fault,” Zyx’theta said to me, but she was smiling. “You gave us a chance when nobody else would.”
“Actually, it’s Blorg’nax’s fault for crashing through my ceiling.”
“Best mistake I ever made,” Blorg’nax said, wrapping several tentacles around us in what I’d learned was a hug. “Though not as big as the planet thing. That was a whopper.”
“Are you ever going to let that go?” I asked.
“Never. It’s my thing now. Blorg’nax: the alien who accidentally sold his planet but makes excellent margaritas and captures souls with his seventeenth eye.”
“Metaphorically,” Zyx’theta and I said in unison.
“Right, metaphorically. Don’t want another lawsuit.”
As the party wound down and aliens began departing to their various apartments, dimensions, and states of being, I helped clean up (which was considerably easier with tentacles and acid that could dissolve stubborn stains).
“Hey, Chad?” Blorg’nax said as we worked.
“Yeah?”
“Thanks. For everything. For taking us in, for defending me, for putting up with… well, everything.”
“You’re welcome, buddy.”
“I mean it. On my planet, we had a saying: ‘The gravitational pull of kindness can redirect the trajectory of a life.’ It sounds better in my language, but the point is, you changed our orbits.”
“Now who’s stealing from greeting cards?”
We laughed, and for a moment, standing in my destroyed but somehow perfect apartment with my alien roommates, everything felt exactly as it should be.
Of course, that’s when the next disaster struck.
“Guys,” Zyx’theta said, looking at her phone with concern. “I just got an alert from my insurance network. There’s a massive asteroid heading toward Earth.”
“How massive?” I asked.
“Extinction-level massive.”
“Well,” Blorg’nax said, rolling up his metaphorical sleeves, “good thing we know so many aliens with advanced technology and a vested interest in keeping their new home intact.”
“Are you suggesting what I think you’re suggesting?” I asked.
“Chad, my friend, we’re going to save the world. But first, let me grab my camera. This is going to make an excellent photo essay.”
And that’s how my alien roommates and I ended up coordinating Earth’s first intergalactic defense network. But that’s a story for another time. Right now, I need to figure out how to explain to my insurance company why my apartment exists in multiple dimensions.
“Hey,” Zyx’theta called out, “does renter’s insurance cover acts of alien heroism?”
“Only if you pay the rent!” I called back.
Some things, no matter how much the universe changes, never change.
The End
(Epilogue: Blorg’nax eventually figured out the concept of money but still insisted on supplementing rent payments with interpretive dance. Zyx’theta’s insurance company went public on three different galactic stock exchanges. Susan was eventually revealed to be four aliens in a trenchcoat – the fourth one was very small and operated the feet. Mrs. Henderson married the chrome-plated Abraham Lincoln alien and moved to his timeshare on Jupiter’s third moon. And me? I’m still living in apartment 517, still mediating alien disputes, and still finding cosmic joy in the beautiful chaos of it all. Also, I finally fixed the ceiling. It only took fourteen months and technology from seven different star systems.)