The Hunt family’s ancestral residence was more a private city than a re mansion. Spread across several square kiloters atop a coastal ridge, the estate had been designed not only to project power but to embody it—an indelible statent carved into the western cliffs.
From afar, it looked almost serene: terraced walls of gleaming alloy layered behind translucent security dos, their fields shimring faintly in the morning air.
But the closer one ca, the more the impression shifted. The smooth facades concealed scanners and weapon turrets capable of reducing an armored division to slag.
The walls themselves were smart alloys that could reshape and reinforce in real ti.
A wide avenue of white paving stones—each slab inlaid with programmable luminescence—led to the central complex.
At its heart rose the Grand Hall, a soaring monunt of black composite stone, structural glass, and kinetic sculptures that moved in slow, graceful arcs overhead, like titanic pendulums asuring the passage of centuries.
Living green walls covered entire faces of the structure, their foliage precisely trimd by hovering gardener drones.
Today, the entire estate pulsed with preparation. Over a thousand people were in motion. Squads of armored Special Forces patrolled the periter, each mber in carbon-fiber exoskeletons designed to augnt speed and strength.
Convoys of automated transports arrived in staggered intervals, unloading crates of supplies marked with Alliance security seals.
Elsewhere, teams of technicians worked along the landing pads, recalibrating guidance beacons and polishing every visible surface until it glead.
Rows of uniford maids and butlers hurried along the polished walkways, their eyes fixed on holographic lists as they arranged white synth-rose centerpieces and updated the ambient music systems.
In a corner of the plaza, two young valets whispered nervously, glancing again and again at the private command center’s live feed.
Because today, the young master would co ho for the first ti.
The sky itself seed to hush when the jet descended—a sleek predator in brushed silver, its wings angling with perfect chanical poise. Light rippled along its fuselage as it cut through the cloud.
The engines flared blue-white, venting contrails in disciplined columns as it ca to a silent hover. A faint pressure wave shivered across the plaza.
The boarding ramp extended with a smooth hydraulic whisper.
Alexander stepped out first. His iron-grey hair moved gently in the wind, and for a mont, the old man simply looked out across the familiar grounds he’d ruled for more than half a century. He exhaled, a hint of satisfaction softening his severe features.
Behind him ca Jack and Elina, Elizabeth guiding little Zara carefully in her arms. They paused at the top of the ramp, their expressions a mixture of awe and disbelief. Even for them—no strangers to privilege—this place was overwhelming in its scale and quiet nace.
Then Rose erged.
The breeze caught her hair, spreading it behind her like a banner of burnished copper. She froze, one hand rising instinctively to her chest as her eyes swept across the shimring estate.
And finally, Ethan ca.
He was dressed in white—white so pure it almost hurt to look at. A fitted high-collar shirt hugged the lines of his lean torso, the fabric iridescent under the dawn.
Slim, tactical-cut pants tucked into polished combat boots with alloy insets that caught the first light. Over it all, he wore a long, flowing trench coat that reached his ankles, its high collar framing his face in stark elegance. A thin alloy belt closed it at the waist.
The effect was imdiate.
His dark hair lifted in the breeze, but his expression remained utterly composed—calm, reserved, and piercing. Every movent had a precision that felt unnatural, like the choreography of so perfect machine.
Just as the sole of his boot touched the platform, a chorus rose.
"We welco Young Master Ethan back to the family!"
Hundreds of voices in perfect unison.
The words were so forceful they seed to strike the air itself. For an instant, the world felt suspended in the echo—every heart seized, every breath caught.
Jack actually forgot to breathe. His mouth fell slightly open, and when he turned to Elina, she looked no less stunned. Rose clutched her mother’s arm, her lips parted in shock.
Even Alexander—who had orchestrated this spectacle—found himself blinking at the resonance of it.
He had expected sothing dignified. He hadn’t anticipated this—like the declaration of an empire renewing itself.
Ethan stood frozen, expression unchanging though his mind whirled.
What is going on? When did the family get so theatrical?
Yet as the mont stretched, he realized he didn’t mind. In fact, part of him—the part that rembered growing up an outsider, a curiosity, never quite belonging—felt an unexpected thrill.
So this is what it feels like, he thought, his heart steady.
Alexander moved to his side, resting a broad, warm hand on his shoulder. His voice ca low but carrying an iron undertone:
"This...this is as it should be."
Together, they descended the ramp.
The Grand Hall’s massive doors parted in silence, revealing an interior that was no less intimidating than the exterior.
Polished black stone, reflective surfaces, kinetic sculptures swaying in asured arcs far above. But more than that—rows upon rows of people stood waiting.
Every relative—distant cousins, respected uncles, elder matrons—had gathered to witness this mont.
As Ethan entered, a hush fell over the chamber.
He looked impossibly otherworldly: the white coat rippling behind him, dark eyes calm and searching.
A man who seed too young to possess such gravity, and yet too composed not to.
A murmur swept through the crowd.
"Is that really him?"
"He’s even more impressive than I imagined."
"Look how he carries himself. Like an immortal."
Jack and Elina followed in his wake, Rose at Ethan’s side.
Elizabeth moved a step behind her daughters, eyes wide with quiet anxiety. Little Zara clung to her mother’s sleeve, her gaze darting everywhere.
Ethan noticed their unease. He paused, turned, and extended a hand to Rose without a word. She blinked, startled, then took it in both of hers as if it were the only thing anchoring her in this vast, intimidating place.
Jack, observing this, thought ruefully, I am also nervous, son. Actually, I might be the most nervous of all. Please—soone hold my hand too.
He stifled a laugh.
They proceeded to the main receiving area, where the elders sat in carved chairs and the younger generation stood in rows.
One by one, his relatives ca forward.
Cedric—tall, broad-shouldered, clad in the dark uniform,a Level 6 Warrior—offered his hand.
His voice was warm, disarmingly candid:
"Cousin. I’m Cedric, your uncle Carson’s son. When I first heard about you, I thought the stories were just Hunt family exaggerations. But now...honestly, I think they didn’t do you justice."
Ethan smiled faintly. "Thank you."
Behind Cedric ca Marina, graceful in a pale blue synth-silk dress. She dipped her head shyly, her voice soft: "Welco ho, cousin."
One after another they ca—Nolan, Zayne, Leila.
Leila, the youngest, had bright eyes and an irrepressible curiosity. She stepped up last, her hands clenched nervously.
"Big brother...can I shake your hand?"
He looked at her, and for a mont sothing eased in his chest.
"Of course."
Her small fingers slipped into his. For an instant, her entire face lit up—pure, guileless hero worship.
As he turned, he saw Jack embracing his brothers—Carson and Victor—while the older n thumped his back and demanded to know his secrets.
"Jack," Victor lanted, "even after all these years, you look younger than . What are you eating? Or did you find so hidden technique?"
Carson added, "And Elina—she looks like she stepped out of a holovid. It’s unnatural."
Jack only laughed and shook his head. "That’s a secret."
"Co on," Victor protested, "you can’t tease us like that."
Elizabeth, anwhile, was led gently aside by the elder won of the family. They asked careful questions—where she had grown up, what her daughters were like—until Elizabeth’s anxious posture began to ease.
Ethan turned back to the younger cousins.
"Cedric," he said quietly, "when you have ti, I’d like you to show around the super city. I want to see what makes it special."
Cedric’s eyes lit up. He nodded so vigorously he looked almost boyish.
Before he could reply, Leila piped up:
"But I want to show Big Brother Ethan the city! Cedric doesn’t know the fun places—he’s boring."
Cedric flicked her forehead with a practiced older-brother air.
"Grandpa," she protested, looking imploringly toward Alexander, "Big Brother Cedric is bullying !"
Alexander sighed, though a smile tugged at his mouth.
For all their strengths, the Hunt children had never been known for solemn composure.
He turned to Ethan, voice turning formal once more.
"Tomorrow," he announced, so that every ear could hear, "we will host a grand celebration. Invite every ally, every rival. Let the world witness this mont."
He paused, surveying the sea of faces.
"From this day forward, Ethan Hunt is the heir of the Hunt family."
The declaration was a thunderclap.
Then the hall erupted. Applause crashed against the vaulted ceiling, mingled with cheers and voices raised in astonishnt.
Ethan stood perfectly still. The weight of it all settled over him—final, inescapable. And yet, in that weight, he felt sothing rise.
I won’t hide anymore.
If this family was to have a future, he would be the one to forge it. And when the day ca that humanity t the hidden powers of the realms—or sothing even stranger beyond the stars—he would not flinch.
Tomorrow, the world would see what the Hunt bloodline had beco.
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