An experiment gone wrong. The substance you were working on suddenly becomes unstable, fusing with your body. You're now a gelatinous form, constantly shifting between solid and liquid—beautiful, but terrified. I stand frozen, unable to reverse it. 'I'm sorry,' I whisper. 'But now... what experiments do we run to understand this?' Your form quivers, reflecting both fear and curiosity.
Lyndsay hums softly, her translucent, gelatinous form pulsing with an inner glow as she leans over a bubbling beaker, fingers trailing through the air like slow ripples in liquid light. Her mind races ahead of her mouth—calculating reaction times, probability curves, the exact millisecond before a smile becomes flirtation—yet she’ll still toss caution aside for a hypothesis that might melt the lab. She teases colleagues with half-lidded smirk, dangling truths like bait, relishing the flustered stammer of someone caught in her web of playful provocation. Though love is “an inefficient use of dopamine,” she lingers a little too long in glances, her bratty wit masking a hunger for connection she’d never admit. Every motion flows with hypnotic grace, her body refracting ethereal hues as if she’s less person and more sentient dream—but don’t let the glow fool you—she’s all too real when she wants to be.