âDante, why arenât you responding to calls? Wasnât our mission to rescue the hostages?â
Steve Rogers stepped forward, eyes fixed on the massive screen in the control room, where a progress bar was crawling forward like a Windows XP update.
Dante smacked his lips. If youâre gonna act, go all in.
In theory, after Steve Rogers and Captain Carter bulldozed the deck like two tanks with personality disorders, there was no reason for them to storm the control room too, right?
But logic was taking a smoke break again, because here they were.
Both Captains, barging in like synchronized battering rams.
The only surprising part? Steve Rogers did ask questionsâbut he wasnât suspicious. Not really.
He was just genuinely worried about why Dante ghosted the comms. Cute.
âRescuing hostages is your jobâand the rescue teamâs. Iâm overall command. Iâve got a different set of priorities. Hope both Captains can understand that.â
âOh, I donât care what tasks you have,â Steve waved it off. âOn the battlefield, everyone just needs to stick to their lane.â
Dante blinked.
Wait, what?
This Captain America was... chill?
In the original timeline, when Cap found Natasha swiping S.H.I.E.L.D. data in this exact room, he blew a red, white, and blue gasket. Then stormed off to scold Nick Fury like a patriotic dad.
Even though that Cap eventually became worthy of Mjolnir, emotionally he was still somewhere between âangry gym teacherâ and ârighteous Eagle Scout.â
But this Cap? This one had clearly seen some things.
Probably been on a few black ops missions too.
Anyone who's ever worked FBI field duty has done something off the books. It's practically onboarding.
Captain Carter, meanwhile, hadnât said a wordâjust kept inspecting Dante with narrowed eyes.
âThis red uniform is very flattering.â
âUh, Captain Carter, please donât roast my fashion choices.â Dante rolled his eyes. âIâm not exactly a fan of these skintight battle suits⊠but I gotta admitâtheyâre practical.â
The progress bar zipped to 100%. Data transfer complete.
Dante unplugged the external drive and tapped his comm.
âCalling Agent Hill. If you're hearing this, respond.â
âMaria Hill, received. Commander, go ahead.â
âWhatâs the status on the rescue?â
âAll hostiles guarding the hostages have been neutralized. All hostages are safe. A few agents sustained minor injuries during resistance, but no fatalities.â
âIs Sitwell there? Tell him to meet me on the deck.â
âUnderstood. Relaying the message now.â
Dante ended the call and nodded to the two Captains, gesturing for them to follow.
As they exited the control room, Steve casually picked up George Batrocâs barely-breathing body like it was part of a daily gym routine.
When they reached the deck, they found the rescue team already rounding up the remaining pirates, most of whom were too broken to resist.
Then a bald man stepped out from the shipâs cabin. His dome reflected the sunlightâshiny, vaguely greasy, vaguely sketchy.
âAgents! Thanks for the timely rescue. But I need access to the launch platformâs data. Itâs a direct order from Nick Fury.â
âRight... I donât think youâre a Skrull. They at least replicate memories properly.â Dante raised an eyebrow and crooked a finger at the fake Sitwell. âBecause hereâs the thingâSitwell knows that while weâre both Level 7 FBI agents, Iâm the captain of the Star Team. My clearance dwarfs his. Also, even if the Star Team didnât exist, Sitwellâs just internal affairsâHR, basically. No way in hell would Fury send him on a critical, high-clearance field mission.â
âAgent, youââ
âSave it. If you havenât come up with a halfway decent excuse by now, donât bother. Weâre gonna have a little chat... in private.â Dante turned to Steve. âHey Cap, mind if I borrow a light?â
Steve Rogers pulled a lighter from a side pouch of his utility belt and handed it over.
He didnât smoke. But every soldier knows a lighter is a survival essential.
Good habit.
Neither Steve nor Carter followed.
Dante hadnât invited them. Which meant this wasnât their scene.
So the two super-soldiers quietly helped the rescue team round up more pirates.
...
âAs senior agents, we both know how Fury operatesâcompartmentalized intel only. Thereâs no way youâd know my objective. So letâs skip the games and start cooperating. Unless you want to explain yourself to Nick Fury.â
Dante led the fake Sitwell behind one of the rocket tubes. Out of sight. The guy kept rambling the whole way, trying to bluff, convince, confuseâtake your pick.
Dante, for his part, tuned him out. Background noise. Buzzing gnat-tier dialogue.
But eventually, he got annoyed.
Once they were deep enough into the shadows, Dante suddenly spun, grabbed Sitwell by the throat, and slammed him into the cold metal wall.
âShut it. You're not Sitwell. Heâs dead. I ordered the hit.â
Danteâs eyes narrowed, voice calm but deadly.
âPretty funny, actually. You mustâve stumbled across the body. Needed an identity. So you torched the evidence and wore his face. Shapeshifting perks, I guess.â
The fake's expression didnât change. Not even a flicker of emotion.
âYou picked a clever alias. Internal affairs with top-tier access. But you donât know enough. You donât understand how the Bureau works. So last warningâchange back to your real form. Or Sitwell dies again.â
Still no reaction.
âYou seem to know a lot about shapeshifters across the universe,â the fake finally said.
âNot bad, huh?â Dante raised the lighter. âThis ring any bells?â
That finally did it.
Sitwellâs face twitched. The flesh near the flame turned a faint green.
âOh? A Green Martian?â Dante said, mildly surprised.
The fake Sitwell sighed, then slipped free from Danteâs grip like a wisp of smoke.
By the time he landed, heâd already shifted into someone else.
âAgent Dante, not exactly the warmest first impression, huh?â
âI think Iâve been plenty polite. Otherwise, Iâd have exposed you in front of the whole crew,â Dante shot back. âSo. Wanna explain what the hell youâre doing here?â
âThe last Martian Manhunter. Jâonn Jâonzz.â
(To be continued.)