//A few lil headcanons for my post-RE6 AU for Piers under the cut
-Piers barely survived the underwater lab exploding. Ironically, the one thing that saved him was the thing that he assumed would kill him– the C-virus, reacting to the perceived threat and encasing him in a chrysalid, which eventually broke free of the rubble and floated to the surface, where it dissolved over the course of a few days, leaving him adrift at sea. He was found four days after the explosion by a night watchman on a Japanese cargo ship, who alerted the rest of the crew. They hauled him aboard, and one of them recognized the tatters of his clothing as military. Once the ship made port in the US, they arranged for him to be transported to the nearest military base for treatment.
-The BSAA was waiting at the military base to intercept Piers as soon as he arrived. He was brought immediately into their custody and transported to their medical facility instead, where he remained in isolation for the better part of three years, and spent the first month of said isolation in restraints, unable to even sit up in bed and being tube-fed as he was in and out of surgery.
-The BSAA took samples of Piers’s blood, tissue, and bodily fluids for research. They’re stored in a highly secured freezer and labeled with a sample number– C11171987– rather than a name or any additional information.
-As experimental treatment after experimental treatment failed to eliminate the C-virus from Piers’s system, the BSAA eventually classed him a failed experiment, and began to give him regular doses of Anti-C, expecting that it would kill him as it had others infected with the C-virus. However, it failed to do that, instead proving to be the first thing that actually slowed the virus’s spread enough that the sniper could begin to recover from his injuries.
-Piers’s right arm was amputated so that he wouldn’t pose a threat to the BSAA medical staff treating him. They didn’t discover until months later that he was still capable of generating an electrical charge without it, although the effort involved proved to be a massive energy drain and quite painful for Piers.
-Piers’s vision in his right eye is severely impaired. Some days he can make out shapes, colors, and shadows, some days only light and dark, and some days nothing at all.
-The right side of Piers’s face, neck, torso, and his right shoulder are all heavily scarred. He received several skin grafts to cover the area on his torso where the C-virus left his ribcage exposed, and has no sensation in that area. He does have sensation in his face, neck, and shoulder, however.
-As Piers regained strength and began healing, he became what the medical staff called “difficult”-- he asked constantly for information on what they were treating him with, what it would do to him, when he would be permitted to leave, and where Chris Redfield was and if the other could come see him. He eventually attempted to break out of the isolation chamber on his own– however, the attempt failed.
-Realizing that it seemed that they wouldn’t be able to conveniently cover up Piers Nivans’s death, the BSAA shifted their tactics around the third year of his captivity. They fitted him with a prosthetic arm to replace the one they had amputated, specifically designed to allow him to handle sniper rifles and other firearms. They built a small, private shooting range and began to allow him to go outside and practice shooting with his non-dominant eye and hand there, where he wouldn’t be seen. Eventually, they announced that he would be returning to active duty as a solo operative and began sending him off on dangerous missions, hoping that one day he simply wouldn’t return.