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    Cute Invaders Apr 2026

    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.

    “Okay,” she whispered. “Okay.” It’s been three years since the Cute Invasion. Humanity still exists, but it’s different now. We work less. We sleep more. We spend afternoons lying in parks, watching Puffballs bounce like happy, weightless clouds. Cities have been reclaimed by moss and flowers, because no one has the heart to mow a lawn where a Puffball might be napping. Cute Invaders

    Every Puffball was engineered to trigger a specific, unstoppable chain reaction in the human brain. Their body proportions—oversized heads, tiny limbs, round torsos—mimicked human infants to a devastating degree. Their scent was a complex pheromonal cocktail of fresh bread, lavender, and the specific static-electricity smell of a beloved old blanket. Their vocalizations were subsonic frequencies calibrated to lower blood pressure and release oxytocin. She picked it up, tucked it inside her

    It was a Tuesday, 7:14 AM, in the sleepy suburb of Maple Grove. Mrs. Albright, who was watering her petunias, assumed the small, gelatinous plop on her lawn was a fallen plum from the neighbor’s tree. But it wasn’t purple. It was the color of a sunrise—peach and pink, with two enormous, liquid-black eyes that took up 80% of its body. Humanity still exists, but it’s different now

    It’s a small, soft, ridiculous thing that looks at you with eyes like galaxies and says, without words: