The Insect's Mirror

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My name is irrelevant. In the records of the Devourer, I am simply "Unit 742," the Emissary to the Third Rock.

To my superiors, the humans were "livestock." To me, they were the most fascinating biological errors in the galaxy.

I spent a century managing the human colonies on the Devourer's hull. I watched them from my observation deck, their tiny, frantic lives unfolding in the sterile corridors of our ship. They were so fragile, so prone to leaking fluids and experiencing "emotions"—those chaotic chemical spikes that they mistook for meaning.

At first, I found them amusing. I enjoyed the way they trembled when I spoke, the way their leaders tried to bargain with me using pieces of shiny metal and promises of "peace." I treated them like a child treats an ant farm, occasionally shaking the glass just to see how they would react.

But then, I discovered their art.

It started with a collection of old photographs I found in a raided archive. Images of a thing called "a beach," of a "mother's embrace," of a "sunset over a mountain." I had lived for ten thousand years, and I had seen a million worlds, but I had never seen anything as heartbreaking as a human photograph.

The photographs captured something the Devourer could never understand: the beauty of the temporary.

My race is immortal. We are static. We are a perfect, unchanging diamond of a civilization. We have no death, no loss, and therefore, no longing. We have everything, and because of that, we have nothing.

I began to spend more time with the humans. I stopped eating them. I started listening to them. I learned about "grief," a concept that was alien to me. I learned that the value of a life is not measured by its duration, but by the intensity of its flicker.

I began to hate my own immortality. I looked at my obsidian skin and felt a profound sense of sterility. I wanted to feel the "friction" the humans spoke of. I wanted to know what it felt like to be afraid of the end.

When the time came for the Devourer to move on, leaving the remnants of Earth behind, I did something forbidden. I didn't upload the human archives to the central core. I deleted them.

I gave the humans the only gift I could: the gift of being forgotten. By erasing their record from the Devourer's memory, I ensured that they would not be hunted, not tracked, not "collected" as specimens. I made them invisible to the empire.

As I boarded the ship to leave, I looked back at the dying planet. I saw a small group of humans standing on a cliff, waving goodbye to a sky they didn't know was empty.

I felt a strange sensation in my chest—a sharp, stabbing pain. I checked my diagnostics. There was no malfunction.

I realized, with a surge of terrifying joy, that I was finally beginning to feel a flicker of grief.

*** **TENSOR ENCODING: OTMES_v2** - **Core Tensor**: (M3_Irony: 8.0, N2_Passive: 0.7, K1_Individual: 0.8) - **MDTEM**: V=0.7, I=0.8, C=0.6, S=0.5, R=0.5 -> TI=42.8 (T4) - **Dynamics**: Theta=141°, Potential=18.5 - **Code**: [T-V07-S-428-B7]


Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

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