The corridor they led him through did not look like a place ant for suffering.
That, more than anything else, unsettled him.
The walls were clean. The lighting was even and soft, tuned to reduce shadow rather than banish it. The floor absorbed sound instead of amplifying it, turning footfalls into a dull hush. Everything about the space suggested intention. Efficiency. Design born not from cruelty, but from practice.
Aerenyx walked between two attendants who did not speak. They did not need to. He had already agreed to this, and they knew it.
The door ahead opened with a soundless slide.
Inside, the temperature dropped by several degrees.
The first room held containnt.
Not cells. Not cages. Containnt.
Clear panels divided the space into different sections, each one reinforced with tal fras sunk deep into the floor and ceiling to make sure that nothing was going to get out that wasn’t supposed to get out.
Inside each one of the sections were bodies. So of them appeared to be human, while others were no longer entirely recognizable. Restraints crisscrossed torsos and limbs with careful symtry, making sure that the subject was restrained but that the scientists still had access to what they needed. Tubes fed into veins, lines of viscous fluid drained out into sealed containers beneath the platforms, it was everything that you expected to see in a mad scientist’s lab.
And yet, here it was... out in the open for anyone to see.
Aerenyx’s eyes narrowed as he continued to study the things inside the containnts.
So of the subjects were still.
So were not.
A woman convulsed weakly in the nearest enclosure, her spine bowing as sothing beneath her skin shifted in uneven waves. Her mouth opened and closed in silent rhythm, jaw clicking as if trying to rember how speech worked.
Aerenyx’s gaze lingered for only a mont.
Not out of discomfort.
Out of recognition.
This was not punishnt. It was iteration.
"Early-stage conversion," one of the technicians said calmly, noticing his attention. "Viral load inconsistent. Neural rejection present."
"And you keep her alive," Aerenyx said, not as a question.
"For now."
The technician gestured, and the panel dimd slightly. "We track response windows. So of them stabilize."
"Most don’t," Aerenyx replied.
"No," the technician agreed. "But we learn from all of them."
They moved on.
The next chamber held sothing worse.
These subjects were upright, suspended by reinforced harnesses. Their bodies bore the signs of repeated trauma—not chaotic injury, but controlled intervention. Incisions sealed and reopened. Limbs reinforced with tallic lattice beneath skin that struggled to regenerate correctly.
One of them turned its head as Aerenyx passed.
Its eyes tracked him.
Recognition flickered there. Not intelligence. Not quite. But awareness.
The creature made a sound that might once have been a word.
Aerenyx did not stop.
"You’re harvesting them," he said.
"Yes," the technician replied. "Biomass, neural tissue, reactive fluids. Everything that shows promise."
"And when they fail?"
The man gestured toward a sealed chute at the far end of the chamber. "Reclamation."
Aerenyx nodded once.
This was not torture. It was logistics.
The next room was colder.
Here, the tables were tal. The restraints heavier. The subjects were no longer moving.
So had been human.
So had not.
Their bodies were opened with surgical precision, layers separated and cataloged. Organs were removed and placed into suspended fields that slowed decay. Fluids were siphoned into labeled containers. Bones were asured, tagged, and either stored or crushed depending on structural usefulness.
Aerenyx paused beside one table.
This one had been female. Young. The faint outline of tattoos still visible along one arm. Her chest cavity had been opened cleanly, ribs retracted with care. Her heart had been removed and replaced with a chanical substitute that now pulsed faintly, feeding data into a console.
"She lasted longer than expected," a voice said.
Aerenyx turned.
A man in a lab coat stood a few paces away, hands clasped behind his back. His expression was calm, professional, and faintly proud.
"Resistance levels were high," the man continued. "We’re still refining the sequence. So tissue rejects integration imdiately. Others..." He shrugged. "Adapt."
Aerenyx studied the body again.
"This is not adaptation," he said.
The man smiled slightly. "It is progress."
They moved on.
The next chamber humd with low energy. Tanks lined the walls, filled with opaque fluid. Inside them floated partial forms—limbs, torsos, half-ford structures suspended in gel. So twitched. So did not.
The air slled faintly tallic, tinged with antiseptic and sothing else Aerenyx recognized from battlefields long past.
Decay pretending to be evolution.
"You’re building sothing," Aerenyx said.
"Yes."
"What?"
The man hesitated. Just a fraction of a second.
"Resilience," he said finally. "To the zombie mutations."
Aerenyx considered that.
"No," he corrected. "You’re building compliance."
The man did not deny it.
They reached the final chamber.
This one was quieter.
Inside were observation stations and control consoles, arranged around a central platform that remained conspicuously empty. Restraints lay open. Monitors glowed softly, awaiting data.
"This is where we test compatibility," the man said. "We don’t force survival here. We observe it."
Aerenyx felt the air change.
Here, beneath the sterile lights and the careful asurents, sothing old and patient stirred. Not a presence—an intention. The kind that did not need to announce itself.
"How many have passed this stage?" he asked.
The man hesitated again.
"Very few."
Aerenyx nodded.
"And how many have gone on to matter?"
The man did not answer.
That was answer enough.
Aerenyx turned away from the platform and looked back toward the corridor they had co from. Sowhere beyond these walls, beyond the layered security and controlled narratives, Sera was breathing. Existing. Waiting.
Not because she was weak.
Because she was precise.
"You don’t understand what you’re doing," he said calmly.
The man smiled, mistaking the tone for admiration. "On the contrary. We’re very close."
Aerenyx inclined his head.
"Yes," he agreed. "You are."
He turned and followed the technician out of the room.
Behind them, the lights dimd.
The machinery resud its steady rhythm.
And sowhere beneath it all, sothing ancient and patient continued to adapt—not to survive, but to perfect itself.
This was not research.
This was refinent.
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