Ada Wong: Covert Queen ANIMATION
The Red Thread
Ada Wong learned early that the deadliest hands were often the cleanest. They did not tremble. They did not leave fingerprints. They guided events with the lightest pressure, like a silk thread drawn through a blade’s eye. When the call came, it came that way—soft, precise, irresistible.
“Miss Wong,” said the voice in her ear, a contralto disguised as a whisper. “You’re late.”
Ada glanced at her watch as she descended the rusted staircase into the municipal waterworks. “I’m exactly on time,” she replied. “You’re early.”
A chuckle followed, musical and wrong. “That confidence will keep you alive.”
“Confidence hasn’t failed me yet.”
“Nor has it saved you.”
The line went dead.
She reached the bottom. The air was wet with iron and algae, the sort of smell that clung to the back of the throat and refused to be swallowed. A single bulb flickered above a concrete hallway that stretched like a scar. Ada adjusted her red dress, a color chosen not for stealth but for courage, and stepped forward.
The unseen ally had been careful, as always. A fragment of intel here, a whispered warning there. Never a name. Never a face. Only outcomes: doors opened, enemies displaced, traps revealed a second before they closed. Ada had told herself she used the ally. Tonight, the thought felt thin.
A scrape echoed from ahead. Something dragged itself across cement.
“Easy,” Ada murmured, her hand finding the grip of her pistol. “You can come out.”
The creature complied.
It rose on a jointed spine like a question mark, its skin translucent, veins lit from within as if by distant fires. Its mouth opened sideways, a seam tearing to reveal a ring of teeth that clacked with an insect’s impatience. The thing’s eyes—too many, clustered like berries—focused on her.
Ada exhaled, slow and steady. “That’s new.”
She fired twice. The bullets punched through the creature’s chest, but it did not fall. It advanced, limbs unfolding like origami undone.
“Left,” said the voice, suddenly back. Calm. Close.
Ada dove as a talon sliced the air where her neck had been. She rolled, came up firing, and emptied the magazine into the thing’s head. It convulsed, then collapsed in a puddle that steamed faintly.
Ada reloaded. “You could have mentioned the sideways mouth.”
“Where’s the fun in that?”
“Fun?” She wiped a smear of viscous black from her cheek. “You have an odd sense of humor.”
“I have a purpose,” the voice replied. “And you’re part of it.”
She moved on. The hallway branched into a chamber where pipes crisscrossed the ceiling like ribs. A console hummed softly. On its screen pulsed a map of the city, lines glowing red and blue.
Ada approached, curiosity sharp as hunger. “What am I looking at?”
“Consequences.”
The word hung there. Ada studied the map. Red nodes blossomed in clusters—outbreaks, quarantines, the familiar choreography of disaster. Blue lines threaded between them, precise, surgical.
“You’re predicting,” Ada said. “Or orchestrating.”
“Is there a difference?”
Ada smiled, despite herself. “Depends who’s holding the baton.”
The console beeped. A door slid open behind her with a hydraulic sigh. Beyond it lay darkness and the sound of breathing—slow, cavernous.
“Go,” said the voice.
Ada hesitated. “You’re pushing me.”
“I’m inviting you.”
The darkness breathed again. Ada went.
The room beyond was a cathedral of decay. Water dripped from a ceiling lost in shadow. In the center, a mass of flesh and bone had been grafted into a grotesque throne, cables piercing it like crown jewels. It stirred as Ada entered, a titanic shape unfolding, eyes opening one by one like stars waking.
The thing spoke.
“Who sends you?” it asked, its voice a chorus of wet echoes.
Ada raised her gun. “Someone with good taste in mystery.”
It laughed, a sound like stones grinding underwater. “You smell of strings.”
Ada’s smile faltered. “I prefer silk.”
The creature surged forward. Ada fired, leaped, danced the edge of its reach. She used the room—pipes, shadows, angles. Each move felt anticipated, as if the floor itself whispered instructions to her feet.
“Now,” said the voice.
Ada slid beneath a swinging limb and planted a charge at the base of the throne. She rolled clear as it detonated, the exp …(more at https://www.deviantart.com/jadegretzai). For more supergirl, chun li, batgirl, tifa, lara croft, wonder woman, rogue and much more, please visit my page at www.deviantart.com/jadegretzai - Thanks for your support :)
















