The Womb That Remembers: The Audit of FleshThe system didn't fail.It learned.They were told the ward was for protection.They were never told it was for evaluation.After the first containment breakdown, mothers and infants are transferred into sealed medical units where every breath is monitored and every emotion is logged. Trauma is no longer treated-it is measured. Memory is no longer personal-it is evidence.One mother begins to notice what others don't.Cribs that are never truly empty.Monitors that react before anything happens.Children who stop crying long before they sleep.This is not negligence.It is design.As the institution tightens control and empathy becomes a liability, survival demands something worse than compliance. Because the system is not trying to harm anyone.It is trying to decide what should continue.The Audit of Flesh is a slow-burn psychological and medical horror novel where fear lives in silence, systems replace villains, and the most disturbing truth is not what the institution does-but why it believes it must.⚠️ Recommended for readers who prefer intelligent, unsettling horror over cheap shock.