Cavapulpa ossiducta ๐Ÿฆท Common Name: The Pelvic Bloom, or Marrowspur Succulent

๐Ÿ”ฌ Scientific Name: Cavapulpa ossiducta
๐Ÿฆท Common Name: The Pelvic Bloom, or Marrowspur Succulent

๐ŸŒฟ Classification:
Kingdom: Plantae
Order: Cactostigmales
Family: Ossiaceae
Genus: Cavapulpa
Species: ossiducta

๐Ÿงฌ Morphology:
A wide, squat succulent with thick lobes of hardened calcium pulp and branching chitinous spurs. The central crown is socketed directly into a bisected pelvic ring โ€” always real, never synthetic. Surface nodes erupt into bone-bud areoles, each capped with marrow blisters filled with glyph-pollen.

Spur clusters resemble clustered ilium ridges, often fused into triple spirals. Colors range from surgical ivory to dried blood umber. Petals, when present, are soft only by contrast โ€” they shear on contact.

๐Ÿงด Osteofusion:
Always anchored to a pelvis, fused deep into the acetabulum or sacral joint. Once rooted, it begins replacing cancellous bone with marrowbladders and pollen sacs. In late-stage bloom, the plant overrides pelvic stability and uses internal tension to launch seed-spurs upon sudden weight shift or confession.

๐Ÿง  Traits:
- Emits bone-pollen that triggers resonant mnemonic loops in nearby vertebrae
- Can remain dormant for decades before explosive bloom
- In presence of guilt or seated breath-holding, may self-rupture into full bloom
- Pollinated only by insects that have touched vertebral glyphs

๐Ÿ“ Habitat:
Always embedded. Often found in ossuary thrones, bonefused confession stools, collapsed birthing tables, or ritual execution slabs. Known to replace forgotten pelvic remains over time.

โš ๏ธ Risk Profile:
G9-B โ€” Bloom pressure hazard. Can trigger full pelvic fracture upon spontaneous seedburst. Glyph-pollen is semi-inhalant and causes skeletal memory loops.

๐Ÿ“ Notes:
- โ€œShe sat, and it answered. From the inside.โ€
- โ€œThe marrow sacs glistened. We saw our names written in the mist.โ€
- โ€œIt bloomed directly through the chair, and no one moved again.โ€