Devil In A Tight Dress

OBJECTIVE III- BYOO
LEXRUL — SATIVRAN CITY, LOWER SPRAWL
ABANDONED BIOTECH WARD, SECTOR 12
LEXRUL — SATIVRAN CITY, LOWER SPRAWL
ABANDONED BIOTECH WARD, SECTOR 12
The pod hovered behind her like a second shadow.
Suspended by whispering repulsors, it followed Parvati down the corridor like a casket mid-procession. Inside, the dancer floated in delicate stillness, arms adrift, mouth slightly parted, lost in some narcotic sleep. No cords, no instruments. Not yet. She was pure. Unspoiled. And yet the ward reacted to her all the same.
The lights above flickered as she passed beneath them, not in failure, but in interest. As though the structure itself was tasting her, molecule by molecule. The conduits above the walls throbbed softly. Pressure vents exhaled in short, wet sighs. Every panel, every pipe, every shadow seemed to lean inward.
The place was not alive.
But it remembered being touched.
Parvati moved without hesitation, her heels tapping out a steady rhythm against the floor, boots against bone, echoing off walls too warped to be called straight anymore. The scent of antiseptic clashed with something older. Metallic. Sweet. Rancid beneath its polish.
Ahead, The Red Wire led with the grace of a corpse mid-dance. Her robes dragged behind her like molt, stitched from oxidized gauze and surgical mesh. The rot of synthflesh mingled with the raw gleam of metal in her joints, and her voice, when it came, spilled through the corridor like blood through a cracked seal.
"Mmm... she floats, doesn't she? Pretty little wombfruit…" Her words unfurled with a breathy, necrotic cadence. "Unpierced. Unbled. Not long now…"
Parvati said nothing.
"Do you hear it?" Val whispered, tilting her head toward the walls as they passed. "The old breath? Still in the pipes. They sang once, in pulses and pumps… but now they hunger. Oooohhh, yes. They do not forget what passed through them."
The dancer's pod chimed. A quiet tone, yet it seemed to carry, for a moment, the lights dimmed in response. The sound passed like a ripple through the air.
"She brings it with her," Val cooed, circling one of the bulkheads with a fingertip. "The quickening. You've brought me such promise, mmm. Like laying a lamb on a black mirror."
They entered the sanctum.
A chamber wide and circular, where light ceased to behave. It slanted strangely- bent toward the center, where a single altar waited. Surgical arms loomed overhead like eviscerated angels, their tips twitching as if tasting the air. The walls pulsed, barely perceptible, as if the room had taken a breath and hadn't exhaled yet.
Val stopped just shy of the slab and turned slowly, reverent.
"This is the cradle," she murmured, voice like oil slicking down a drain. "This is where bones weave and wires nest. She will be stripped. Emptied. Risen."
Behind Parvati, the dancer drifted, eyes closed.
"She will not scream," Val said, smiling with cracked lips and teeth like tiny knives. "They never scream at first. The pain is too holy."
Still, Parvati did not flinch.
Let the dead croon. Let the walls sweat.
She had come to see a god work.