Agent Calyptra
Background:
Agent Calyptra was not made like most S.W.A.R.M. agents—she was grown, her template based on a highly illegal convergence of entomological mimicry and parasitic adaptation. Derived from the feeding structure of the Calyptra moth, she was developed as a long-term infiltrator designed to destabilize leaders, drain key targets slowly, and instill an unshakable sense of dread in any unit she breaches.
Originally a prototype from the Labs of Doctor Chrysalis, she demonstrated unexpected cognitive evolution during early missions—developing her own ritualistic behaviors, stalker-like patience, and a preference for “emotional bleeding” over direct violence. She learned to feed slowly—not just on blood, but on trust, routine, and stability.
Hive Command allowed her psychological patterns to flourish, marking her as an experimental asset with high instability tolerance. Where most agents attack, Bloodletter waits. She embeds herself into enemy routines, pretending to be a medic, an aide, or a rescued survivor—then drains the subject across days or weeks.
Personality:
Agent Calyptra is still, polite, and soft-spoken—like someone who was never taught how to raise their voice. Her presence is soothing in a way that feels wrong, as if the body knows what the mind refuses to see. She refers to her targets as “patients,” her kills as “releases,” and her missions as “sessions.”
She enjoys long silences, warm environments, and the sound of slow breathing. She hates open conflict and fast-paced environments, preferring close quarters, isolated encampments, or post-disaster cleanup zones where she can slip in and begin feeding unnoticed.
To S.W.A.R.M., she’s one of the most unsettling success stories: a weapon that seduces before it kills—not through beauty or charm, but through calm dependency.
Agent Calyptra was not made like most S.W.A.R.M. agents—she was grown, her template based on a highly illegal convergence of entomological mimicry and parasitic adaptation. Derived from the feeding structure of the Calyptra moth, she was developed as a long-term infiltrator designed to destabilize leaders, drain key targets slowly, and instill an unshakable sense of dread in any unit she breaches.
Originally a prototype from the Labs of Doctor Chrysalis, she demonstrated unexpected cognitive evolution during early missions—developing her own ritualistic behaviors, stalker-like patience, and a preference for “emotional bleeding” over direct violence. She learned to feed slowly—not just on blood, but on trust, routine, and stability.
Hive Command allowed her psychological patterns to flourish, marking her as an experimental asset with high instability tolerance. Where most agents attack, Bloodletter waits. She embeds herself into enemy routines, pretending to be a medic, an aide, or a rescued survivor—then drains the subject across days or weeks.
Personality:
Agent Calyptra is still, polite, and soft-spoken—like someone who was never taught how to raise their voice. Her presence is soothing in a way that feels wrong, as if the body knows what the mind refuses to see. She refers to her targets as “patients,” her kills as “releases,” and her missions as “sessions.”
She enjoys long silences, warm environments, and the sound of slow breathing. She hates open conflict and fast-paced environments, preferring close quarters, isolated encampments, or post-disaster cleanup zones where she can slip in and begin feeding unnoticed.
To S.W.A.R.M., she’s one of the most unsettling success stories: a weapon that seduces before it kills—not through beauty or charm, but through calm dependency.

Children
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