In a dimly lit sterile modern hospital room with cold clinical lighting and medical equipment, a heartbreaking and profound scene. A completely normal human man in his early 30s sits beside the hospital bed, gently holding the biomechanical appendage of a large grotesque yet sacred biomechanical womb-creature lying on the bed. His expression is a complex mix of deep awe, love, guilt and quiet horror — his full attention is completely locked onto the semi-humanoid face-like structure of the biomechanical womb, he doesn't even notice his wife leaving.The biomechanical womb is a disturbing fusion of wet organic flesh, pulsing veins, metallic tubes and biomechanical structures, with a large translucent abdominal sac that glows with soft sacred bioluminescence. Inside the transparent womb clearly visible is a beautiful winged post-human embryo — an angelic yet alien being with delicate biomechanical wings, already far superior and evolved beyond current humanity.In the background near the doorway, a completely normal human woman (his wife), mid-30s, is leaving the room in tears, turning back one last time with a devastating expression of heartbreak, betrayal, grief and painful realization that she has been replaced. She is no longer needed.Strong emotional contrast between the cold clinical hospital environment and the warm divine glow coming from the biomechanical womb. Cinematic composition, dramatic volumetric lighting, rule of thirds, deep emotional storytelling, tragic atmosphere, masterpiece, hyper-detailed textures, in the distinctive style of H.R. Giger and Zdzisław Beksiński, psychological body horror and emotional distortion of Francis Bacon, surreal sacredness of Wayne Barlowe, in the distinctive style of AITB_FLUX_scorn <lora:AITB_FLUX_scorn:1.0>Text on the wall: "Only fertile creatures allowed. Women shouldn't disturb the act of creation."