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Before he became Absolute Satrap of Earth and Imperial Coffee-Lord in Service to the NurâFaxian Imperium, Lloyd Layton was a mediocre, eternally embittered employee of StarBurst coffee shops, seemingly doomed to a life of anonymity.
Perhaps, if the NurâFaxians hadnât stumbled on the Pioneer space vessel and had not discovered absolute proof of the existence of another sentient (though extremely backward) species, he would have remained so. It is entirely possible (the last free savants of mankind speculated, as they shared a spit-roasted rat in their underground bunkers) that Lloyd would have lived alone, unloved and without a retinue of slaves in his command, without even a single piece of property in his name. In fact (and to this they all agreed) Lloyd would have died in the manner that he had lived, his last words a bitter soliloquy, addressed to his herd of cats milling around his bed, his final wisdom lost to their animalistic brains.
But, as history would have it, Lloyd had to be the only employee chosen to service the NurâFaxians on behalf of the StarBurst Corporation to greet and provide caffeinated beverages to the representatives of mankindâs soon-to-be overlords. He had been hand-picked by a special UN committee, chosen for his average intelligence, his lack of enthusiasm but above all, his ability to make a decent venti cup of Caramel Frapuccino Latte with mocha sprinkles.
This had taken place in the impossibly short span of 8 hours, during which SETI received a mathematical acknowledgement from the NurâFaxians, which roughly translated to âHELLO THERE, MIND IF WE COME OVER?â which was followed by a primitive white-noise radio response that the future lords of the Earth took as a yes.
The NurâFaxian delegates had materialized in the middle of Times Square 3 hours later, causing some considerable havoc. Lloyd of course missed this history-altering news-flash, by virtue of having slept in. He was awakened three hours later by his manager, who was screaming at him that he was needed on duty right now and was to haul his sorry behind over the counter to serve the NurâFaxian delegation.
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| Lloyd Layton. |
The NurâFaxians had been drawn to the minimalistic design of the hundred-foot-high StarBurst ad set in the middle of Times Square and had immediately requested for coffee-based beverages.
And so, Lloyd Layton was provided a fully armed escort and was led into an APC vehicle, where he was hailed by a four-star general who called him âSirâ (even though a 6-year-old knew better than to call Lloyd that) and briefed him extensively on the nature of his mission. Lloyd only picked at his nose and nodded through the briefing, his sleep-addled brain struggling to make sense out of the situation.
The armored convoy drove through eight evacuated city blocks at top speed, reaching Lloydâs place of work in less than ten minutes. Secret Service Agents had arranged to remove all employees and StarBurst customers from the premises almost an hour ago, to secure the area for the arrival of the President of the United States himself, on his way from the capital just for this occasion. Lloyd discovered (to his amazement) that his counter had been cleaned for him almost to a mirror-shine and that his coffee, whip cream and syrup supply had been re-stocked completely.
âJust make the coffees son and try your best to stay quiet.â the four-star general told Lloyd, before clapping him once on the shoulder and assuming his appointed position inside an M104 Wolverine tank, inconspicuously parked just down the street.
In the time it took the NurâFaxian delegation to complete their window-shopping spree before finally reaching the StarBurst shop, Lloyd had helped himself to the freshest bagel on display and stuffed his pockets with tip money, grinning his best grin to the Secret Service Agent that looked down on him, his scowl unwavering. Lloyd was halfway through updating his FaceSpace status, when the door chimed its grating happy chime and the NurâFaxian delegation hovered inside the shop toward Lloyd, their giraffe-like necks craning around, examining every nook and cranny of this brave new franchise.
Lloyd mustered his happiest little grin under the circumstances and muttered in his least-terrified tone of voice:
âHi, my name is Lloyd and welcome to Starburst. Can I take your order?â
âYes, Lloyd-of-StarBurst. We would like to try a coffee-based beverage.â Said the NurâFaxian delegate in a perfect reproduction of the Queenâs English.
âIs there anything you would like in particular?â Lloyd asked, his eyes transfixed on the shimmering gasses that were released from the slits on the NurâFaxian delegateâs neck andthe tiny pair of seemingly non-functional limbs that extended from beneath his chin and rubbed it in a thoughtful manner.
âWe saw the effigy to your Venti-Caramel-Frapuccino-with-mocha-sprinkles. We would wish to try that.â
Had the NurâFaxian delegates chosen Lloyd to make them some other beverage from StarBurstâs extensive menu, perhaps a Cappuccino Affogato, a Café Bombon or even an Espressino, then perhaps the Earth would have been spared their iron fist and millions would not have been forced to toil under the rule of Lloyd Layton. However, this would require one to extend his suspension of disbelief to the point where heâd be convinced there was some sort of justice in the Universe.
Instead, they ordered for half a dozen of the stuff and watched with awe as Lloyd poured the half-congealed, crystallized, caffeinated goo into the transparent plastic cups, topped them with majestic whipped-cream domes, adorned those domes with caramel trails on which he sprinkled mocha with the same reverence that a Renaissance painter would reproduce the Madonnaâs grieving countenance.
The aliens studied the strange beverages with fascination, running the tips of their long, multi-jointed fingers across the condensation of the cup. They struggled with the bendy, primitive tube contraptions that stuck out of the cream-summits and slipped their long, forked tongues through the plastic rings in the tops of the cups, tentatively tasting the sweetness sprinkled on top of them. After a few minutes of stuggling with these contraptions and some gentle goading by Lloyd, the NurâFaxians finally managed to take their first few sips of Earth coffee.
The change wrought upon the delegates by the caffeine was sudden and very, very drastic. On the first gulp, the half-dozen alien delegateâs necks snapped up tightly with a whoosh!
On the second gulp, their skins turned the color of fish-bellies reflecting the sunlight.
On the third gulp, just as the Secret Service agent was about to dial NASA, the Pentagon and his family just so he could say his final goodbyes, the NurâFaxian delegates grinned a lizard-like grin, all teeth and gums.
The head of the delegation (a NurâFaxian with a significantly longer and ribbed neck) asked Lloyd, who had crawled behind the counter:
âWhat a marvelous substance! Such a miraculous concoction! Tell me, Lloyd-of-StarBust-Coffee, have you more of it?â
âYeah, man.â Lloyd muttered, rising up from the counter, transfixed by two-dozen pairs of eyes. âI got tons here.â
âThen bring us more of this Venti-Caramel-Frapuccino-with-mocha-sprinkles!â
âAye!â the delegates said, rapping their fingers on the table in anticipation. Lloyd, spurred on by their enthusiasm (his own tempered by the terror growing in his gut) produced more of the gooey caffeinated goodness they asked for and brought it over.
âTell us, Lloyd-of-StarBurst-Coffee, do you make this beverage yourself?â
âNo, I just work here. But Iâve been doing this for a while, so Iâve gotten good at it, I guess.â
âHow long have you been studying and preparing this magnificent concoction, Lloyd-of-StarBurst-Coffe?â
âI donât know, about two years, I guess.â
The delegates turned to each other and began conversing in the raspy tones of their mother-tongue, translating the Earthly span of seven hundred and thirty days into NurâFaxian rils, shuuls and sbubs. After a long and heated debate, the alien delegates finally turned to Lloyd and said:
âThat is a very short time for a man to master the ways of drink.â
âGuess Iâm just that good at it, then.â Lloyd lied. His served beverage was mostly created by a machine, packaged and frozen and stored in the shopâs tanks weeks in advance by underpaid Argentinian workers. All he really did was simply add some extra whip-cream and about a teaspoon of extra caramel sauce to drown out the taste of their spit in the brew. The NurâFaxias were thankfully unaware of that.
âWe would be interested in introducing this elixir to our homeworld and our Colonies, Lloyd-of-StarBurst-Coffee. In fact, we would be willing to provide the man who would give up its secrets with an emperorâs ransom.â
âThat so?â Lloyd said and his eyes gleamed with a malice that he hadnât experienced since the first time heâd dropped a toad down Amy Donovanâs blouse back in third grade. The Secret Service agent looked over, his hand reaching for his gun. âLike, what would you do, for the coffee?â
âWhat would you ask of us, Lloyd-Of-StarBurst-Coffee?â asked the NurâFaxian delegate, immobilizing the Secret Service agent in an invisible force field with a flick of his wrist.
âWell, um, a better counter, for starters?â Lloyd hazarded.
âYou will have a hundred thousand slaves to brew your elixir in your stead, conditioned to prepare it according to your specifications.â
âWell if Iâve got like, a hundred thousand slaves, I guess thatâd mean I would have everybody who worked for StarBurst Coffee in my command.â
âThen that is what you shall have.â The NurâFaxian head delegate said, flashing his grin at Lloyd, who pressed his advantage.
âIn that case, Iâd need a nice place to live. Like, a mansion or like maybe a private island, to watch over the, um, brewing operations?â
âYou will be provided with an anti-grav palace, staffed with the finest pleasure-slaves in our Empire. DâRuuk, show Beverage-Lord Lloyd what heâll be getting.â
One of the delegates (his neck adorned with a series of platinum rings) produced a three-dimensional image of a multi-breasted, scantily-clad NurâFaxian beauty. Her charms were, however, lost to Lloydâs mammalian brain.
âUm, Iâd rather have some human women, you know?â
âWho would you prefer? A starlet of Earth? A swimsuit model? A perfect organic automaton, painstakingly recreated in the semblance of the limbless Venus-of-Milo? Our study of your planetâs informational super-highway has given us great knowledge of your species' tastes.â
âNah, Iâd rather have Becky Whiteâ Lloyd said, the name of his high school cheerleader ex leaving his lips before he had time to even think it. With a scan of his mind and a clap of the NurâFaxian delegationâs hands, Becky materialized beside him, dressed in the two-sizes-too-small outfit of her glory days, twelve years older and thirty pounds heavier.
âLloyd? Lloyd Layton? What the hell are you doing here? And who are you with? Oh my God, are those the aliens from-â Becky began but was suddenly silenced with a telepathic command.
âWould you have anything more, Lloyd of the Laytons?â
âDo I?â Lloyd said, running behind the counter and going through his duffel bag, where he kept his little diary of people he wanted killed, stuff he wanted done and things he desired but never had enough money for. In it were the names of school bullies (now grown drunkards or eternally grieving family men), degrees, awards and nominations for things he had never gotten around to doing (but considered himself worthy of anyway) and rows upon rows of material goods that he secretly knew he would never find any use for (yet had desperately needed).
âThey are all yoursâ the NurâFaxians said, producing those things before Lloyd, placing them on his feet. Lloydâs knees went weak at the sight of them and he stuttered, as he brought more Frapuccinos over in exchange:
âYou got yourselves a deal.â
The NurâFaxians nodded in assent, conversed in their mother-tongue a little bit longer and then said:
âYou understand, of course, that we will require vast amounts of this beverage. The NurâFaxian Empire spans nearly two galaxies and we number in the quintillions. We will require Earth to produce vast amounts of the coffee to sate our appetites.â
âUmâ Lloyd managed, his mind struggling with the vastness of consumer demand laid on his feet. âI donât know if we could manage that, man, I mean we only make this in Brazil or Argentina or someplace, weâd need like, two planetsâ worth of the stuff to even begin to cover all this need for coffee.â
âWorry not your exalted head, Lloyd of the Laytons. My colleagues have drawn a simple, yet efficient plan: we will turn your planet into a vast coffee plantation, after draining the oceans and ridding it of any unnecessary fauna and flora. Two percent of the Earthâs surface will be left untouched, to cover for the habitation needs of your subjects.â
Lloyd thought it over, but for the life of him (even as he looked into the wide, terrified eyes of Becky and ignored the muffled pleas of his enemies), found that he could not honestly care for the blight that he was about to bring upon his own species. Suddenly, it hit him:
âYeah, but where will I live? Iâm gonna need some space, man.â
âYour planet has a sizeable moon. We will adjust it according to your specifications. We trust this is alright with you?â
Lloyd thought of the magnificent view from his domed moon-palace, the sight of Earth ruined, broken and conditioned to fulfill his every command and reached out to shake the hands of his benefactors. Their long fingers had locked around his palm, squeezing it gently yet firmly, when the President of the United States came through the door with his personal security detail. He stopped the sight of Lloyd, the alien delegates and the mound of crumbling gadgets that was massed in the back of the store. Finally, he managed a high-pitched, hysterical:
âJust what the hellâs going on here, gentlemen?â
â¦before he and his detail were turned into miles of red, glistening ribbons with a snap of the delegatesâ fingers.
The takeover of Earth was over in a matter of minutes. The NurâFaxian battle-fleet materialized in LaGrange space, bombarded Earthâs major population centers, neutralized mankindâs nuclear capability and had teleported ground troops to pick off two-thirds of the population by 2 PM, Greenwich Mean Time.
Terraforming of the Earthâs Moon was completed within two days, while the draining of the oceans and the re-location of the remaining third of mankind was completed by the end of July, in time for Independence Day.
And Lloyd Layton, who found himself reclining on his baby-sealskin couch from his vantage point on the Sea of Tranquility, looking down at the planet-wide coffee crops, manned by the last surviving members of his species, did not for one moment stop to consider the magnitude of his treason toward his kind and his planet.
He sipped instead at his Venti Frapuchino, ran his fingers through Becky Whiteâs hair (who had grown silent and much more cooperative since her regulation lobotomy) and thought how he had finally come out on top, the way he had always thought he deserved.



