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CHAPTER FORTY-SIX: The Unholy Metamorphosis Is A Lasting Change

  The Pit – Two Weeks Later

  Time

  has stopped meaning anything. Lucille no longer knows what day

  it is. She only knows the rhythm: questions, pain, silence, questions

  again. Sleep comes in jagged pieces, stolen between sessions, never

  deep enough to dream. Hunger is a constant ache. Thirst a distant,

  burning memory. The room never changes. The light never feels warmer.

  The walls never stop smelling of old fear.

  The

  interrogation is already in progress when awareness fully settles

  back into her body.

  “257,”

  the voice says.

  It

  is the same voice. It is always the same voice. Flattened,

  mechanical, precise, utterly devoid of emotion. If there is a man

  behind it, Lucille cannot hear him anymore. Only the machine.

  She

  lifts her head with effort. Her neck trembles. Her wrists burn where

  the restraints have rubbed skin raw over days of struggling that

  never went anywhere.

  “State

  the purpose of your existence.”

  Her

  breath catches.

  She

  knows this one. She knows all of them now. She has learned the

  pattern, learned how the answers shift, learned that truth is not

  fixed here, it is rewritten at their convenience.

  “To

  serve the Order,” she says hoarsely. “To complete assigned

  objectives.”

  Behind

  her, the Horkosian shifts, calm, deliberate. Metal clinks softly.

  Then the fresh agony detonates: a sickening wrench, the unmistakable

  tear of flesh and nail bed as he rips the nail from her right index

  finger with pliers. White fire races up her arm. Her scream rips free

  before she can choke it down, raw and animal, bouncing off the walls.

  Her body convulses, cuffs clattering as she thrashes uselessly

  against the unyielding restraints.

  Four

  other fingers on that hand are already stripped to bleeding quicks;

  this is merely the latest in the sequence. Her hands feel ruined, too

  light, too wrong, like appendages that have been rewritten into

  something alien.

  Pain

  blooms outward, white-hot, blinding, intimate. Her shoulders shake as

  she gasps for air that refuses to come fast enough. Vision tunnels;

  black spots swarm at the edges.

  The

  presence behind her remains immovable. Strong. Methodical. No anger,

  only procedure.

  Lucille

  snarls through clenched teeth, the sound scraped raw from her chest.

  Tears cut tracks down her face, unbidden, humiliating, but she

  refuses to let her head fall.

  “Incorrect,”

  the voice says calmly. “Repeat after correction.”

  Her

  breathing comes in broken shudders. Every nerve in her body screams.

  Her hands feel wrong, too light, too distant, like parts of her no

  longer belong to her.

  “State

  the purpose of your existence,” the voice repeats. “To obey,”

  it continues. “To endure. To be shaped.”

  Lucille

  squeezes her eyes shut.

  Her

  jaw quivers. She tastes blood. For a moment, a terrifying, fragile

  moment, she feels herself slipping, the edges of her thoughts

  blurring, the room tilting.

  She

  forces herself back.

  “To

  obey,” she repeats, voice cracking. “To endure. To be shaped.”

  “Correct,”

  the voice says.

  Cain

  makes a sound then.

  It

  is small. Involuntary. A sharp intake of breath that cuts through the

  room like a blade.

  “Stop,”

  he rasps. “Take me instead. Ask me. Ask me anything.”

  He

  tries to lean forward despite the restraints, despite the hands

  already moving to restrain him. His eyes are wild, hollowed out by

  exhaustion and rage and fear. He looks at Lucille, not at them.

  “Lucy—”

  A

  blow silences him.

  His

  head snaps to the side. He collapses back against the floor with a

  choked sound, breath knocked clean out of him. When he sucks air back

  in, it comes ragged, uneven.

  Lucille’s

  vision clears just enough for her to see it.

  Her

  heart lurches.

  “No,”

  she snarls, voice broken and feral. “Don’t touch him.”

  The

  Horkosians do not react.

  They

  never do.

  “231

  will remain silent,” the voice says. “Interruption is

  noncompliance.”

  Cain

  coughs, trying to speak anyway, but a hand presses him back down. His

  eyes never leave Lucille’s face. There is apology there. Guilt.

  Helpless fury.

  Lucille

  stares back at him, chest heaving.

  She

  wants to tell him to stop. Wants to tell him she can take it. Wants

  to tell him he has to survive this, no matter what they do to her.

  The

  questions continue.

  They

  pull at her memories, twisting them, telling her she remembers wrong.

  That events happened differently. That people she trusted betrayed

  her first. That she was abandoned because she deserved it. They ask

  her name again. They tell her it is wrong. They ask Cain the same

  questions, watching her reaction as much as his answers.

  Lucille

  learns quickly that pain is not the worst part. The worst part is

  doubt. The worst part is the quiet moments afterward, when the room

  hums softly and her thoughts won’t stay still. When she has to

  cling to the sound of Cain breathing beside her to remind herself

  that something real still exists.

  That

  he still exists. And even then, shaking, broken, exhausted

  beyond measure, Lucille refuses to let go of one truth they cannot

  rewrite. They can hurt her. They can strip her down to numbers and

  scars and trembling breath. But they cannot make her stop fighting.

  The

  voice, always that same flattened, mechanical timbre through the

  changer, resumes without pause. “State your designation.”

  Lucille’s

  lips move, but no sound comes at first. Her tongue is swollen, raw

  from earlier sessions where they pried her mouth open to “correct”

  her answers with metal tools.

  “Lucille,”

  she rasps finally.

  “Incorrect.

  Designation 257. Repeat.”

  She

  stares at the shadowed ceiling. Doesn’t repeat.

  A

  sigh, not human, just air pushed through the modulator, then

  movement. Boots on concrete. The cart rattles closer. Metal clinks.

  Something cold and sharp presses against the pad of her left thumb.

  She

  doesn’t flinch this time. She’s past flinching.

  The

  pliers close. Twist. Yank.

  The

  nail peels away in a slow, wet strip. Fresh blood wells instantly,

  hot and bright. Pain detonates in white arcs up her arm. She bites

  down on her own tongue to keep from screaming, tastes copper.

  Cain

  makes another sound, low, broken. His face is gaunt, one eye swollen

  half-shut from earlier blows. “Leave her,” he croaks. “She’s

  told you everything.”

  The

  voice ignores him.

  “231,”

  it says instead. “State your designation.”

  “Fuck

  you,” he spits.

  A

  different Horkosian steps forward, silent, faceless behind the mask,

  and drives a fist into Cain’s ribs. There’s a wet crack. Cain

  folds around the blow, gasping, but his eyes stay locked on Lucille.

  They

  move to him next. Pliers again. This time a tooth. Upper incisor. The

  Horkosian grips Cain’s jaw, forces it open. Metal scrapes enamel. A

  sharp jerk. The tooth comes free with root intact, blood flooding

  Cain’s mouth. He chokes, spits red onto the floor. He screams, a

  gut wrenching sound, and yanks on his cuffed wrists.

  Lucille’s

  vision narrows to pinpricks. Rage coils in her empty stomach like a

  living thing.

  They

  pause then. One of them, the one who never speaks, produces a small

  tin can. Opens it with deliberate slowness. The smell hits first:

  cold, congealed slop, gray and unnameable, faintly metallic. Food.

  Reward.

  He

  holds the can toward Lucille. Teases it close to her lips.

  “Compliance earns sustenance,” the voice intones from across the

  room. “Open.”

  Her

  jaws part on instinct, not for the food. For him. She lunges. Teeth

  sink into gloved flesh just below the knuckle. Deep. Through padding,

  through skin, through muscle. The Horkosian jerks back with a muffled

  grunt of shock and pain. Lucille doesn’t release. Her jaw locks

  like a trap. She tastes leather, salt, copper. Then bone.

  He

  yanks harder. She clamps down harder.

  A

  wet snap.
The finger comes away at the second joint, severed

  clean. Blood sprays across her chin, her chest. The Horkosian

  staggers, clutching the ruined hand. For a heartbeat the room is

  still.

  Then

  he roars, human sound finally breaking through the mask, and shoves

  the bleeding stump back into her mouth. Trying to retrieve what’s

  lost. Lucille bites again. Harder. Teeth grind through exposed bone.

  She swallows reflexively, the chunk sliding down her

  throat in a hot, slick rush. Bile rises but she forces it back.

  He

  wrenches his hand free at last. The glove hangs in tatters, shredded.

  Blood coats his fingers, four now, and drips in thick ropes to the

  floor. Her spit mixes with it, pink and foaming.

  Another

  Horkosian lunges. This one bigger. He grabs her by the hair, slams

  her head back against the floor. Stars burst behind her eyes. She

  kicks out with bound ankles, weak, but aimed. Her heel connects with

  his knee. Something pops. He staggers.

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  She

  twists, snarls through bloodied teeth. Hands cuffed behind her, she

  can’t strike, but she thrashes anyway, wild, feral, every ounce of

  remaining strength poured into defiance. Her shoulders strain against

  the chains. Ankles batter against shins, against thighs. One connects

  solidly with a groin; the Horkosian doubles over with a choked curse.

  Cain

  is shouting now, hoarse, wordless fury, straining forward until his

  own restraints cut into wrists already raw to bone.

  The

  speaking one steps in. “Enough.”

  A

  baton cracks across Lucille’s temple. Not hard enough to knock her

  out. Just enough to daze. The room tilts. She sags, breath coming in

  wet gasps.

  They

  drag the injured one back. The finger is gone, swallowed, digested

  already in the furnace of her starving gut. No retrieval possible.

  The

  voice returns, calm as ever. “Fascinating,” it says. “The

  monster stirs.”

  Lucille

  lifts her head slowly. Blood drips from her chin. She smiles, small,

  red, unbroken.

  They

  can break bones. They can rip out more nails, more teeth. They can

  starve her until her mind frays to threads. But they cannot make her

  stop.

  The

  Scar of Valroth Kyr on Lucille’s left forearm ignites, not with

  heat, not with the familiar sear of torn flesh, but with something

  deeper, colder, more alive. It pulses in time with her heartbeat,

  slow and deliberate, as though the God of Sacrifice has finally

  leaned close enough to breathe against her skin. For the first time

  in two weeks of this endless dark, the mark does not feel like a

  curse. It feels like approval. Like recognition. Like the first

  honest thing in this room.

  Lucille’s

  lips peel back from bloodied gums. She forces the words out between

  teeth still flecked with glove-leather and bone-shards.

  “I’ll

  eat every last one of you,” she rasps, voice cracked but steady.

  “Before I ever swallow your fucking slop.”

  Silence

  for half a breath.

  Then

  the speaking Horkosian tilts his masked head. The voice modulator

  hums once, almost amused.

  “A

  challenge,” he says. Flat. Mechanical. “Accepted.”

  They

  move as one.

  Two

  of them seize Cain first, because they know exactly where the deepest

  wound lies. They wrench his arms higher behind his back until the

  shoulders pop audibly. He snarls, twists, drives his forehead into

  the nearest mask with a wet crack of cartilage against plasteel.

  Blood sprays from his brow, but the Horkosian only grunts and slams a

  stun baton into the small of Cain’s back. Electricity arcs

  blue-white. Cain’s body locks, every muscle seizing at once; he

  drops to his knees, choking on a scream that never quite escapes.

  Lucille

  lunges, bound wrists, bound ankles, starving limbs that should not

  still obey, but instinct overrides reason. She snaps her teeth at the

  arm pinning her shoulder. Misses by a hair. The Horkosian answers

  with a baton to her ribs. Once. Twice. Something cracks inside her

  chest, rib, maybe, and air leaves her in a wet wheeze. She sags, but

  her eyes never leave Cain.

  He’s

  already fighting again. Head snapping back into a nose. Knee driving

  upward into a groin. Weak blows, trembling, but vicious. Nails gone

  from both hands, teeth missing two from the top row, skin stretched

  tight over ribs that show like ladder rungs. He is as ruined as she

  is, yet when their eyes meet across the blood-smeared floor, there is

  no surrender in him. Only mirror-rage. If she fights, he fights.

  They

  force them both down. Faces to concrete. Chests heaving. Boots plant

  between shoulder blades. The stun batons come again, short,

  controlled bursts that make muscles dance and nerves howl. Fingers

  next. One Horkosian kneels on Lucille’s right forearm, grips her

  pinky, bends it backward until the joint gives with a dull pop. She

  bites through her own lip to keep silent. He does the ring finger

  next. Snap. The pain is bright, surgical. Her hand flops useless,

  fingers splayed at wrong angles.

  Across

  from her, they do the same to Cain. He curses them in every language

  he still remembers. They break his index finger last, slow, letting

  him feel the grind of bone against bone before it gives.

  The

  speaking one has not moved from the cart.

  He

  stands in the dim red light of the single overhead bulb, calm as

  liturgy. Two syringes rest on the metal tray before him. He draws

  from one vial, clear, viscous, then another, milky, faintly

  opalescent, into each barrel. No explanation. No gloating. Just

  procedure. The plungers rise and fall with mechanical patience.

  “Fight

  all you wish,” the voice says, soft enough that it carries over the

  ragged breathing, the drip of blood, the low electric hum of the

  batons still crackling in idle hands. “There is no escape. There is

  no reprieve. There is only this room, these walls, and us. In this

  domain we are the arbiters. We are the measure. We decide when breath

  continues and when it ceases. You are nothing here but meat that

  still twitches. And meat can be made to understand.”

  He

  lifts the syringes, one in each gloved hand.

  The

  others haul Lucille and Cain upright by the hair, enough to force

  their heads back, throats exposed, eyes open. Lucille’s vision

  swims; the scar on her arm throbs harder now, almost eager. She

  tastes iron and bile and the ghost of that severed finger sliding

  down her throat earlier. Beside her, Cain’s chest rises and falls

  in shallow, furious bursts. Blood mats his hair to his forehead. His

  broken fingers curl instinctively toward fists he can no longer make.

  The

  speaking Horkosian steps closer. He holds the syringes out like

  offerings.

  He

  drives the first syringe into the side of Cain’s neck, precise,

  clinical, just below the angle of the jaw. The plunger depresses in

  one smooth motion. Cain’s eyes widen; a hiss escapes between

  clenched teeth as the cold rush floods his veins. He jerks once,

  hard, trying to twist away, but the hands pinning his shoulders might

  as well be iron clamps.

  Lucille

  snarls, lunges forward on broken fingers and shattered ribs. Too

  slow. The second needle finds her own neck, same spot, same merciless

  speed. Liquid fire threads into her carotid. She feels it spread

  instantly: bright, electric, wrong. Her pulse hammers against the

  intrusion like it wants to eject it, but the drug is already sinking

  its claws in.

  They

  release the restraints just enough.

  Both

  cadets hit the floor on their backs, hard enough that breath explodes

  from their lungs in twin, ragged bursts. Concrete bites into their

  shoulder blades already raw. Above them, the single bulb flickers

  once, indifferent.

  One

  Horkosian begins dismantling the cart with quiet efficiency, tools

  clinking back into their slots, syringes discarded into a biohazard

  bin that seals with a pneumatic sigh. Another moves to the heavy

  door, keycard flashing green in the dim. The speaking one lingers a

  moment longer, mask tilted down at them like a judge delivering

  sentence.

  “Enjoy

  your night,” the modulated voice says. No mockery. No warmth. Only

  fact.

  The

  door groans open.

  A

  gloved hand closes around Cain’s cuffed ankles. He thrashes

  immediately, wild, desperate, heels scraping furrows in the

  blood-smeared floor. “No! NO! LUCY!” His voice cracks into a roar

  that echoes off the walls, raw and animal. Muscles cord in his

  starved frame as he twists, kicks, tries to roll. Useless. The

  Horkosian drags him backward like a sack of meat. Cain’s shoulders

  bounce over the threshold; his head snaps against the jamb once,

  twice. Blood smears a fresh trail behind him.

  “Lucille!”

  The scream tears out of him one last time, fading, frantic, as the

  door swings shut.

  Metal

  seals with a final, heavy clunk. Locks engage. Silence rushes in to

  fill the void.

  Lucille

  surges upward on instinct, knees first, then trying for feet. Her

  body betrays her. Legs fold like wet paper. She collapses forward,

  face nearly smashing into the stone floor. She forces herself to her

  knees anyway, chest heaving, staring at the sealed door as though she

  can burn through it with her gaze.

  They

  are gone. Cain is gone. The cart is gone. The light above flickers

  once more, then dies.

  Total

  darkness swallows the room.

  Pain

  blooms everywhere at once, ribs grinding with every breath, fingers

  throbbing in sick rhythm, the fresh puncture wounds at her neck

  pulsing like second heartbeats. But beneath it all, something else

  rises. Slow at first. Insidious.

  The

  drugs uncoil.

  It

  starts in the scar on her left arm: Valroth Kyr’s mark flares

  bright behind her closed eyelids, not pain now, but heat, invitation,

  a low hungry thrum that spreads upward like roots seeking light.

  Colors bleed into the black behind her eyes, impossible violets,

  arterial reds, greens so vivid they hurt. The darkness isn’t empty

  anymore. It breathes.

  Her

  heartbeat stutters, then races. Too fast. Too loud. It drowns out the

  drip of water somewhere distant, drowns out her own ragged breathing.

  The floor beneath her ripples, concrete softening, warming, alive.

  She jerks her head back as though burned. Fingers, mutilated, bent at

  wrong angles, curl inward on reflex. Blood drips from them in slow,

  fat drops that hit the floor and spread like ink in water.

  Shapes

  begin to form in the nothing.

  Faces.

  Not quite human. Not quite anything she has ever seen. Eyes without

  pupils, mouths stretched too wide. They watch her. They know her.

  They are waiting.

  Lucille’s

  breath hitches. “No,” she whispers. “Not now. Not like this.”

  But

  the scar pulses harder, approval, encouragement, hunger. Valroth Kyr

  is close. Closer than He has ever been. The God of Sacrifice does not

  speak in words. He speaks in sensation: the sweet copper taste still

  lingering on her tongue from the finger she tore away and swallowed,

  the electric promise that more can be taken, more can be given, more

  can be consumed.

  She

  laughs once, short, broken, jagged. The sound echoes wrong in the

  dark, multiplying, overlapping. Her own voice and not her voice.

  Cain

  is gone. She is alone. And the night is only beginning.

  The

  walls breathe with her. The floor pulses beneath her knees like a

  living heart. Somewhere far away, or perhaps very close, a scream

  rises. It might be Cain’s. It might be hers. It might be neither.

  Lucille

  rocks forward onto her forehead, head to concrete, teeth bared in the

  black.

  She

  will not break. Not yet. But the drug is patient. And the god is

  watching.

  The

  darkness twists. Lucille presses her forehead harder against the

  concrete, cold, unyielding, but it yields anyway. The floor softens

  beneath her, liquefies into something warm and viscous, sucking at

  her knees like quicksand laced with rot. Her breath comes in shallow,

  frantic pulls; the air thickens, tastes of sulfur and charred meat.

  The drugs surge deeper, uncoiling through veins like serpents seeking

  the marrow of her bones.

  Shapes

  coalesce from the black, first as whispers, then as forms. Anguished

  souls, their faces elongated in perpetual screams, mouths gaping wide

  enough to swallow light. They circle her, translucent at first, then

  solidifying into jagged edges of bone and sinew. Demons next:

  hunched, horned things with skin like cracked leather, eyes glowing

  ember-red. They laugh, a wet, gurgling chorus that echoes from walls

  that no longer exist. The sound scrapes inside her skull, mocking her

  name, her pain, her futile snarls.

  “You

  are nothing,” one hisses, its breath hot against her ear, fetid

  with decay. Claws rake her shoulders, not deep enough to draw blood,

  but enough to burn like acid trails. Another grabs her broken

  fingers, twists them further, laughing as she gasps. They pull at her

  ankles, her hair, dragging her downward. The floor cracks open

  beneath her, revealing pits that yawn like open wounds, flames

  licking upward from abyssal depths, screams rising from below like

  steam from boiling flesh. Hands, too many hands, clutch at her,

  yanking her into the maw. Hell unfurls around her: rivers of molten

  blood, skies of writhing thorns, the endless wail of the damned.

  She

  thrashes, screams wordless defiance, but the creatures only multiply,

  their laughter swelling into a cacophony that drowns her. They claw

  deeper now, tearing at her soul if not her skin, whispering doubts:

  Cain is dead. You failed him. You deserve this. The scar on her arm

  pulses in rhythm with the inferno below, urging her to let go, to

  fall.

  In

  desperation, Lucille lifts her head, gasping, wild-eyed.

  The

  room vanishes.


  She

  kneels in muck now, thick and black, sucking at her legs like hungry

  mouths. The full moon hangs above, bloated and blistering, its light

  a sickly silver that casts long shadows across a barren plain. No

  walls. No chains. Only the endless night and the wind that carries

  the scent of ash and sacrifice.

  Valroth

  Kyr hovers before her.

  Wings

  of pure darkness unfurl from His form, tendrils of void that absorb

  the moonlight rather than reflect it. His body is draped in robes of

  tattered obsidian, frayed at the edges as though worn by centuries of

  offerings. A hood shrouds His face in impenetrable shadow; no eyes

  gleam, no mouth moves. He is silence incarnate, yet His presence

  presses against her mind like a blade to the throat.

  He

  gestures, slow, deliberate. A hand extends, gloved in night itself,

  fingers curled in offering. But He does not touch. He never touches.

  The invitation hangs in the air: surrender, accept, become.

  Before

  her in the muck, half-buried like a relic from some forgotten war,

  lies the helmet. Dark metal, forged in angles that defy mortal craft.

  The visor curves into a single, wicked unihorn, sharp enough to

  pierce souls. The muzzle below juts with faux teeth, jagged,

  flesh-tearing barbs that promise agony to any who dare approach. Its

  comb rises like a crest of spines, and she remembers: her blood,

  spilled willingly once, turning that comb crimson, a banner of her

  own making.

  The

  voice comes then, not from Him, but from everywhere. Echoing in the

  wind, in the muck, in her very soul. Deep, resonant, inexorable.

  Burn

  in the fires.


  So

  that you may be born anew.

  So

  that you may don the helm of a god.

  The

  words coil inside her, twisting with the drug's fire, amplifying the

  scar's thrum until it vibrates through her bones. Desperation surges,

  Cain's screams still ring in her ears, the demons' laughter fading

  but not gone. She reaches forward, broken fingers sinking into the

  muck, grasping the helmet's cold weight. It hums against her palms,

  alive with promise.

  She

  slides it over her head.

  The

  fit is perfect, too perfect. Metal molds to her skull like a second

  skin, the visor sealing her vision into slits of crimson-tinted

  night. The long comb unfurls then, wrapping around her shoulders, her

  torso, like a robe woven from blood itself. It clings, warm and wet,

  dripping in slow rivulets down her arms, her chest, pooling in the

  muck at her knees. The scent of iron fills her nostrils; the weight

  presses her deeper into the mud, but it does not crush. It empowers.

  Valroth

  Kyr's gesture lingers. The moon swells larger, blistering brighter.

  The pits recede. The souls quiet. The demons bow. But the night

  stretches on, and the god waits for her to prove herself worthy.

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