July 18, 2025 · The
Frozen Lotus Temple, Mount Song (Songshan), Henan Province, China ·
18:30 CST
The
pneumatic seal of the subterranean laboratory door hissed, releasing a soft
exhalation of pressurised air into the quiet corridor.
Alen
stepped out of the shadows.
He exuded
the specific, sleek sophistication of a man who has spent long enough in the
dark to have made it elegant. The platinum-gold hair was slicked back in a
sharp, structured pompadour undercut — the permanent Progenitor pigmentation,
the biological fact he could not alter, catching the recessed corridor light.
Signature black wraparound sunglasses concealed his gaze.
Dark
navy-blue dress shirt, lean and highly conditioned, the top buttons casually
undone to reveal a hint of scarred chest and black vein mapping at the sternum.
Sleeves rolled past the forearms. Over this, a slim-fit charcoal-gray
three-button vest, left open to accommodate the brown leather double-shoulder
holster rig that crossed his broad chest — securing two matte-black suppressed
semi-automatics, one holstered with spare magazine pouches, the other held
loosely in his right hand. Secondary drop-leg holster at the right thigh. Slim
straight-leg dark gray suit trousers, thin black leather belt, polished black
oxford shoes. The ultimate embodiment of the business assassin — elegant,
silent, and terrifyingly competent.
The most
striking detail was exposed by the rolled-up left sleeve. From the shoulder
down, his arm was a marvel of biomechanical engineering — matte-black titanium
and carbon-weave, subtle gold inlays tracing the segmented joints in the Kijuju
sun-symbol pattern. It mimicked the organic, streamlined flow of human
musculature and operated in total silence except for the faintest predatory
whir of its micro-hydraulics.
He paused
in the corridor and looked through the glass partition into the secondary
rec-room. Donna Beneviento sat on a woven rug, playing quietly with Ruby and a
set of porcelain dolls — her dark curly hair in its loose asymmetrical updo,
the black medical patch at her eye, entirely focused on the child beside her
with the specific, unhurried attention of a woman who has learned to be fully
present. Freya slept in her oversized bed. Kaiser tore into raw meat on his
iron perch, one golden eye tracking the corridor.
Family
safe. Perimeter secure.
He scanned
the adjacent medical bay. Rebecca's lab was empty.
"Looking
for me?"
Rebecca
emerged from the corridor leading to the main living quarters, wiping her hands
on a sterile towel. She stopped. Her eyes moved over his attire with the
specific, rapid assessment of a medic who has also been a wife for four years
and who can read his operational register from thirty feet.
"Well,"
Rebecca said, a mixture of amusement and mild trepidation settling in her
expression. "You look like the twin brother of Albert Wesker right now.
You're in full operative mode. Good thing, too — you have guests."
Alen
smoothly holstered the pistol in his right hand, the click soft and final.
"Who came at this hour?"
"Come
see for yourself," she said, gesturing down the hall.
He followed
her into the grand living room. Ancient Shaolin architecture and modern
comfort, illuminated by the warm flickering glow of a central hearth.
Three women
stood around the low wooden table.
As Alen
stepped onto the hardwood floor, the room's atmosphere plummeted. Jill
Valentine, Claire Redfield, and Moira Burton froze. The blood left their faces.
For a split second none of them were in a sanctuary in China — they were back
in the Spencer Mansion, Rockfort Island, the bridge of a sinking tanker.
Jill's hand
twitched toward her hip where her sidearm would normally be.
"Jesus
Christ, Alen," Jill breathed, the adrenaline spiking in her voice.
"What the hell happened to you? The last time I saw you was five years
ago. Now you look exactly like him. That aggressive Wesker gene pool doesn't
play around."
Moira
Burton — early thirties, signature edge fully intact — stared with her jaw
slightly open. "Holy hell. Claire, is this the guy? The literal son of
Albert Wesker and the Overseer?" A breathless, slightly manic laugh.
"You told me about him, but Jesus Christ, this man looks like the Grim
Reaper in a tailored suit. Though—" she paused, entirely unrepentant,
"—not gonna lie, he's kind of terrifyingly attractive."
Claire shot
her a warning look before turning back. She forced her shoulders to relax.
"Alen. You really aged into the look. Thank God Chris isn't here. He'd
have a full breakdown."
Alen moved
with a smooth, unhurried stride. He reached up and slowly removed the
wraparound sunglasses, sliding them into his vest pocket.
Without the
dark lenses, the illusion fractured. The eyes looking back at them were
vibrant, profound ocean blue — round and human and carrying a specific tired
weight that had nothing of Albert Wesker's burning contempt in it. Stoic,
calculating, serious. The ego entirely absent.
"Why
are the three of you here at this hour?" he asked. Deep, resonant
baritone. Surgically precise.
"You
already know what's coming," Jill said, forcing herself to maintain eye
contact. "Project Elpis. Chris and his Hound Wolf Squad are already
mobilising the perimeter."
Claire
unzipped her tactical bag and produced a thick classified dossier. She walked
over and held it out. Alen accepted it with his titanium left hand, the metal
fingers gripping the manila folder with calibrated precision. He opened it. His
blue eyes swept the documents at the specific, rapid processing speed that
never failed to unsettle the people watching it.
"Chris
sent this for you," Claire said. "It contains recovered data on
Alyssa Ashcroft and the other survivors of the 1998 Raccoon City outbreak.
Alyssa had been investigating Umbrella's remnants for decades. She was zeroing
in on the Wrenwood Hotel case before she went dark."
"Alyssa
took the Daylight vaccine," Alen said, his voice flat. "A permanent,
hereditary cure to the t-Virus. They didn't just kill her. They harvested her.
They want Grace because her blood is the genetic key to stabilising the Elpis
pathogen."
He closed
the file.
Jill
studied the smooth articulation of the prosthetic as he set the file on the
table. "Top-tier replacement. How have you been holding up? Five years is
a long time."
Alen placed
his right hand over the left side of his chest — the specific gesture Rebecca
had learned to read as the one honest tell in his otherwise impenetrable
physical register. "Manageable. A combination of strict observation, good
medicine, and the particular care of the people who refuse to let me be
otherwise."
"The
A-Virus aftershocks did catastrophic structural damage to my cardiovascular
system," he continued, his tone completely detached from his own
mortality. "Rebecca performed the integration of a Cardiac Implantable
Electronic Device — a modified pacemaker and defibrillator. It regulates my
enhanced biology. The aftershocks are managed. I remain under
observation."
"That's
Rebecca," Claire said quietly, glancing at her.
"So.
What are you going to do?" Jill asked. "Chris goes in loud."
Alen's gaze
turned to the middle distance, mapping the continent behind his eyes.
"Chris operates as a hammer. I operate as a scalpel. This is a deep-rooted
conspiracy involving FBI, CIA, and rogue corporate elements. If Chris assaults
the hotel directly, they burn the evidence. I trace the supply chain, map the
architects, and infiltrate from the shadows before the Bureau deploys Grace
Ashcroft into the dark blind. You handle what you can see. I handle the rot
beneath it."
Moira
stepped forward, expression tightening. "Before you go playing Jason
Bourne — there's something else. About Natalia."
Alen turned
his gaze to her. He didn't blink. He simply looked, with the specific quality
of attention that stripped away pretence without effort or intention. Moira
felt her spine straighten involuntarily.
"She's
an adult now. Twenty-six. She moved to Canada for university — virology, of all
things. And recently she's become obsessed with Franz Kafka. She started
cutting and styling her hair exactly like Alex's. The way she walks. The way
she looks at people." Moira rubbed her arms. "It isn't Natalia
anymore. It's her."
The room
temperature dropped two degrees.
Alen's face
remained perfectly still. The duty-bound protector stepped back. Something
older and colder came forward in its place.
"If
Alex Wesker has truly returned and taken that girl's body," he said, his
voice dropping to a frictionless whisper, "she will die in her sleep. I
have no regrets regarding my mother. The Overseer is not a person I grieve.
Tell your father that even he cannot stop me. If she is a threat, she will be
erased."
"Barry
loves her," Moira said. "He'll try to protect her."
"Maintain
observation," Alen said. "When the time comes, I will handle
it."
He turned
and walked away. Smooth and unhurried, head fractionally tilted, scanning the
periphery without turning his neck. The phantom, melting back into the
corridor.
The three
women stood in the silence he left behind.
Jill let
out a long, heavy breath. "He is the mirror of Wesker. But the main factor
is missing — no arrogance, no narcissism, no sadistic glee. Just cold,
calculated stoicism. Commanding in a way that sends the chill straight down
rather than outward."
Rebecca set
down the empty cups, her scientific mind doing what it always did with him —
analysing. "He has two modes. Husband mode, where he is surprisingly
gentle. And full operative mode, where even I cannot speak over him. Albert's
dominant physical architecture. But mentally — Alex's recessive traits. The
deep, quiet analysis. The absence of ego. The blue eyes. Alex lost the physical
gene war. She won the psychological one. He listens, calculates, then
acts."
"If
you remove the god complex, the narcissism, and the megalomania from Albert
Wesker," Claire said, "you get Alen. Cold. Clinical. Serious. And
definitely taller."
Moira
leaned against the wall with the unrepentant smirk fully deployed. "Yeah,
well. PTSD or not — that deep voice, the whole 'I'll handle it' energy, the
coat? I am completely into that and I refuse to apologise."
"Moira!"
Claire stared at her. "When I first told you about him — the biological
son of the woman who tortured you on Sein Island — you wanted to see him in
person to judge him. And now you like him?"
"Yes,"
Moira said simply. "People contain multitudes."
Jill shook
her head, a reluctant smile crossing her face. "You really are exactly
like Barry."
Rebecca
looked down the dark corridor where he had vanished, already knowing he was
mapping insertion routes. "Yes," she said, with the fond, exhausted
certainty of a woman who has made her complete peace with who she married.
"She is."
