ABANDONED MOTHER-BY:DARK BOX





A lonely, socially awkward young man named Allen lives with his elderly mother. He is constantly angry, frustrated, and verbally abusive toward her. He screams at her, blames her for his miserable life, and treats her like a burden. The mother is terrified of him but has nowhere else to go.
One night, a massive UFO appears over the city. People begin getting abducted in beams of light. The son sees this on TV and gets excited: finally, a way out of his pathetic life. He drags his mother outside, screaming that the aliens can take her instead of him (he believes they only want one person per household or something similar).
He forces her into the abduction beam while he stays safely on the ground, waving goodbye with a huge smile. The mother, clutching her little suitcase, is lifted into the sky, crying and reaching for him. He thinks he’s free at last.
Time passes. The son gets married, has children, and appears to live a normal happy life. Years later he dies (of old age or illness), and his now-adult children visit his grave. The tombstone reads something sweet like “To the faraway you, hope you are happy forever.”
Then the final twist panels hit:
- Text appears: “ABANDONED MOTHER, SHE HAD NO CHOICE BUT TO LEAVE THE EARTH.”
- We see the mother’s face in absolute horror as she realizes she’s been taken by aliens.
- Cut to the present: the “UFO” is still hovering. Inside, the mother (who has not aged a day because of alien time dilation or preservation) is forced to eternally wave and smile from a window while the aliens use her as a living propaganda display to lure more victims, showing humans a “happy reunited family.”
- The final shot is the UFO slowly descending again… now coming for the grandchildren.
The real horror is that the abusive son thought he got his happy ending and died peacefully, while his innocent mother has been trapped in immortal torment for decades, still trying to “come home,” and the cycle is about to repeat with the next generation.
It’s a brutal story about filial ingratitude, cosmic justice that never actually arrives, and the terrifying idea that some people escape all punishment in life… but someone else pays for it forever.