Thorne frowned. This mission, classified as project "Submarines and Succubi," was meant to test an experimental sensory-deprivation sonar designed for silent navigation. But the crew was changing. First, it was the technicians humming old songs. Now, it was this.
"Report, Lieutenant Chen," Thorne murmured, his voice tight.
"All systems nominal, Commander," Chen replied, not turning from her console. Her voice seemed… different. Softer. Almost dreamy. "It’s… so peaceful down here. Like a dream." File: Submarines_and_succubi.7z ...
"They know we're here, Elias," a voice whispered directly into his mind—a voice that felt warm and terrifyingly inviting. "Join us."
Rostova spun around, her eyes glowing faintly in the dim light. "They are beautiful, aren't they, Commander? The ones outside." Thorne frowned
He moved toward the engine room. The air grew thicker, heavier with that impossible scent. Inside, the lights were dimmed to a soft crimson. He found Chief Engineer Rostova staring into a flickering console. "Chief," Thorne said.
Thorne walked over. He expected the pitch-black of the abyss. Instead, he saw luminescent, humanoid shapes—creatures of ethereal, shimmering beauty, dancing just outside the hull, their forms shifting like mist. They weren't just swimming; they were beckoning . First, it was the technicians humming old songs
The ocean floor was silent, save for the rhythmic, unsettling hum of the USS Nocturne , a modified experimental submarine traversing the deepest trenches of the Atlantic. Commander Elias Thorne checked the sonar again. Nothing. But the atmosphere inside the sub was thick, smelling faintly of ozone and crushed lavender, a scent that defied the sterile, metallic smell of the ship.