[This is going to continue to go varying shades of well until Wesker asks Birkin about something that he hasn't remembered himself.
It's something that should have an obvious answer - what happened to cause the mutation on the train - and when Birkin avoids the question the first time it sets off something sudden and unpleasant in his head. Birkin is a blunt, generally cavalier person, at least with Wesker, and he's also the sort to get angry when he's slighted; Wesker would think being forced into resorting to a mutation and killed would make him upset as opposed to evasive.
So he shifts tracks, asks what sort of virus caused it, and the result is a non-answer. When Wesker tries to lead him and asks if it was the G-virus, Birkin agrees, and that's when Wesker pulls his gun on him.]
no subject
It's something that should have an obvious answer - what happened to cause the mutation on the train - and when Birkin avoids the question the first time it sets off something sudden and unpleasant in his head. Birkin is a blunt, generally cavalier person, at least with Wesker, and he's also the sort to get angry when he's slighted; Wesker would think being forced into resorting to a mutation and killed would make him upset as opposed to evasive.
So he shifts tracks, asks what sort of virus caused it, and the result is a non-answer. When Wesker tries to lead him and asks if it was the G-virus, Birkin agrees, and that's when Wesker pulls his gun on him.]