You humans have long wondered if there is intelligent life elsewhere in the universe, and I find that funny, because there is another intelligent lifeform living alongside you, right here on Earth. I belong to that group. The Nameless Ones. We look exactly like homo sapiens, but we're something else altogether. We've only been around for the past hundred thousand years or so, and we're just trying to survive. Homo sapiens is a violent species, and this doesn't make life easy for us.
Who is this, you may ask? Call me Sam. No last names, at least not for now, possibly not ever. A big and tall, dark-skinned gentleman who appears to be of African descent, and hovers between late twenties and early thirties in terms of age. Quiet, polite and efficient, that's how past classmates and coworkers would describe me. I live in the City of Ottawa, Ontario. I am college educated, fluent in multiple languages, and work in the tech sector. Chances are you've seen plenty of my kind and never known it. Speciation is a hell of a thing, and those without great adaptability and survivability tend to vanish really fast.
The ancestor of modern humans was an ape-like creature called Lucy, whose remains were found in Ethiopia a long time ago. Lucy belonged to the genus of Australopithecus, and much has been said and written about her, and her links to modern humans. The ancestor of my species was the Gigantopithecus, the gigantic, ape-like creature that lived in the forests of Asia and the African subcontinent about a hundred thousand years ago. Primatologists believe that the Gigantopithecus went extinct a hundred thousand years ago but they didn't die, silly human, they evolved into us. My species. A race in direct competition with yours.
The race of Gigantopithecus grew smaller, and leaner, lost a lot of fur and muscle mass, and gained the ability to shape-shift at will. Evolution and the game of survival demanded that we change, and we did as we must. Nowadays, we're everywhere. If you see a tall, fairly large, socially awkward yet highly intelligent person, odds are that he or she might be a Gigantopithecus in disguise. In the olden days, modern humans eradicated those of my species who lacked the metamorphic abilities which enabled us to hide in plain sight. You humans wiped out the cavemen, and various other human-like breeds, until only modern humans remained...or so you thought.
"We are among you, humans," says I, Sam the weirdo. Of course, reading this, you sit there at your computer, probably sipping coffee and thinking to yourself that I'm just another wacko on the Internet. Maybe you're reading this on your phone and giggling while on the bus, or the train. Yes, I am absolutely and positively frigging nuts. You go right on thinking that. The way I figure it, it actually works to my advantage. As a member of a species that's in direct competition with you, having you underestimate me enables me to surprise you once in a while, and gain the upper hand. You can't prepare for the enemy you don't even believe exists.
I've made a study of my kind, and this is something which the others consider to be dangerous because of our need for secrecy. I'm different from the others in that I seek knowledge, rather than mere survival. I guess I've been around you human monkeys for too damn long. I want to travel and explore. I want to know things. I want to spread knowledge. I believe in enlightenment. I abhor ignorance. If this makes me an anomaly among my own species, then so be it...
I was born in the Caribbean, and my family moved to the Capital of Canada when I was but a wee one. In my time, I've traveled to places like Mexico, Brazil, Nigeria, Egypt and Australia. I want to visit as many countries as I can. I am fascinated by exotic languages and exotic foods, and I love to encounter other cultures. The majority of my species have a special hatred of humans which I do not share. I have an almost anthropological curiosity about you people. Oh, I know how destructive you are, and continue to be, but I believe there's more to you than that. Perhaps I am wrong. Time will tell...
The Sacred Archives of my people are restricted, and one of my thirty-odd years lacks access to them. I believe that there was a time when our two races coexisted. When I read the ancient religious texts such as the Bible and the Koran, and even the Torah, there is mention of beings that were like humans, but larger and greater, and they lived among men in ancient times. I think that there was a time when my kind, the descendants of Gigantopithecus lived openly among ancient Homo Sapiens, and that there was peaceful relations, perhaps even trade and intermarrying among our two species.
I am a voice in the wilderness among my people, and even my older brother Arthur chastises me for voicing such theories in discussion forums among our people. What am I to do? I feel alone in this world. On the one hand, I am a proud son of the Nameless Ones, we who will inherit the planet Earth after ridding it of Homo Sapiens. On the other hand, I am a seeker of knowledge, and one who believes in different peoples putting aside their differences to work for the common good.
I am a fan of Star Wars, and Star Trek, and I support the politics of racial diversity and LGBT rights and inclusion. I believe in liberalism. I believe in progress. Of course, these are human principles, and ill suited for one of my kind. Still, I'd like to believe that there could be an interspecies alliance of sorts between us. Of course, this is mere speculation, since I know a lot about human xenophobia. It is everywhere I look, in fact.
If human history has taught me anything it's that the species is inherently violent, and intolerant. In the Middle East, the Arabs and the Jews are pitted against each other, even though they have much in common in terms of culture, religion and shared heritage. Hell, a lot of them resemble each other like cousins if not brothers and sisters. In Africa, there's no love lost between the Somalis and the Ethiopians, who continue to fight the same battles fought by their fathers and grandfathers, even though none of them remember who started the conflict in the first place.
In Asia, the Japanese and the Chinese are not at war for the moment, though there's no love lost between them. India and Pakistan are like the big brother and the little brother fighting over the inheritance left by a dead father. In Europe, xenophobes stir anti-minority hatred against the Blacks, the Arabs and the Asians living in their midst. They don't like the fact that immigrants hailing from places colonized by Europeans in ages past are now moving into Europe itself. Even among subcultures that are used to being mistreated, there's conflict. Among LGBT people, it's considered okay to bash bisexuals and transgender people, with bisexual men bearing the brunt of the erasure and abuse. There's no escaping the hatred that mankind has for its own kind.
There are seven billion human beings on the planet, and an untold number of us, the sons and daughters of the Gigantopithecus bloodline, hiding in plain sight amongst you. We are grocery store clerks, janitors, security guards, police officers, schoolteachers, computer geeks, porn stars, professional athletes, healthcare workers, entertainers, tradesmen, and yes, even homeless people. We're here, and we've always been here. Waiting for the right time to get rid of homo sapiens and take over the planet Earth.
"Sam, get your head out of the clouds," says a feminine voice, and I turn to look at my co-worker Salma "Sally" Chaouni. The short, curvy, bronze-skinned and dark-haired young Moroccan woman has been working at the tech company for a couple of years, and we've developed a good rapport. Sally is one of my favorite human beings. She's obnoxious, and likes to snore and sometimes fart at her desk when she thinks management is not around. I find her utterly fascinating.
"Sal, you know me, pondering the mysteries of the universe," I reply, as I click out of the personal document I'd been typing, instead of being a good little programmer for a certain Canadian tech company. Sally sits at the edge of my desk, and I inhale her scent. Sharp senses of smell, taste and hearing are part of the package for us descendants of Gigantopithecus, but when it comes to visual accuracy, we're on the same level as you modern humans. Mother nature's way of equalizing things, I guess...