There is a giant water tank in the medical department.
One side of the tank is made from transparent tempered glass. Researchers stand outside the tank, while Lamia looks at them anxiously from within.
Start the pressurization. Let's begin with 100 times the atmospheric pressure, approximately the pressure at a depth of around 1 km in the ocean.
The water pressure suddenly increases.
Lamia feels like something has grasped her heart and is crushing it. A huge force is pressing her chest.
Her eyes bulge out as a sharp pain hits her nerves as if millions of steel needles are piercing through her skull. She opens her mouth to scream for help, only to swallow more cold sea water.
Your body does not need oxygen now. Forget about your human habits. Adapt to the environment.
After a long time, Lamia's body has finally adapted to the hypergravity effect caused by the intense water pressure and settled down.
How do you feel now?
Be-better.
I will increase the pressure then.
Eeek—please wait a second!
One week later.
How's the pressurization going?
400 times the atmospheric pressure—equivalent to the pressure at a depth of around 4 km in the ocean.
And her condition?
All readings normal and stable. It took some time, but she is already used to this new body.
Good. She's going to be useful.