"We should keep looking," Natasha said, smoothing over the tension. "There has to be more than this."
"Oh, now this is my specialty," Tony grinned. "Treasure hunt mode activated."
Six drone cannons detached from his back and began sweeping the bunker with red scanning beams. Inside his helt, real-ti data stread across his display.
A few minutes later, Tony smirked.
"Found it. And it's right inside this sad little office."
He strode to a filing cabinet and yanked it aside, revealing a hidden door fitted with a surprisingly modern keypad.
His helt retracted.
"Seriously? A keypad? No retinal scan? No biotric encryption? What is this, 1985?"
Nanotech flowed from his fingertips into the lock.
Click.
The door opened smoothly as the nanotal retracted.
"And that," Tony said, striking a theatrical pose, "is how it's done."
Steve entered first.
Inside, the room looked like a technological graveyard—towering reel-to-reel tape drives, ancient storage modules, even older-than-floppy magnetic systems. Dust coated everything.
"Wow," Tony muttered. "Did we ti-travel? This stuff belongs in a museum. No offense, Cap."
Steve ignored him. His attention was fixed on three bulky CRT monitors in the center of the room. A dusty keyboard sat beneath them.
Suddenly, a square cara rose from the central console.
Machines whirred to life.
"You've got to be kidding ," Tony said. "These antiques still work?"
Text appeared on the screen. A flat, synthetic voice followed.
"Initialize system?"
The voice was monotone—pure, primitive synthesis.
"This is like JARVIS's prehistoric ancestor," Tony quipped.
"Sir," JARVIS replied calmly, "while I am an artificial intelligence, I do not believe that device surpasses . Also, I have no ancestors."
"Yes, yes. taphor."
Natasha stepped forward and typed YES.
The screens flickered.
A face ford—green lines arranged into a crude, pixelated human visage.
"Steven Grant Rogers. Born 1918…"
The cara turned toward Tony.
Silence.
No data.
Tony raised an eyebrow. His records had been sealed by Fury—classified beyond even Pierce's reach.
"Glitch?" he muttered.
"Who are you?" Steve asked firmly.
The digital face shifted.
"Captain. You may not recognize . I am no longer the man you imprisoned in 1945. But I am still myself."
An image appeared on a neighboring screen—a gaunt man with glasses and a massive forehead.
"You know this guy?" Tony asked.
Steve stared in disbelief.
"Arnim Zola. HYDRA scientist. Worked for the Red Skull. He died decades ago."
"No, Captain," the voice corrected. "Swiss, not German. In 1972 I was diagnosed with terminal cancer. My body could not be saved—but my mind could. My consciousness was preserved across two hundred thousand feet of data storage. You are standing inside my brain."
Natasha spoke quietly. "After the war, S.H.I.E.L.D. initiated Operation Paperclip. They recruited forr Nazi scientists deed strategically valuable."
"HYDRA was destroyed," Steve insisted.
"Cut off one head," Karl said calmly from the back of the room, stepping forward, "two more grow back."
He folded his arms.
"Paperclip brought HYDRA into S.H.I.E.L.D. They didn't infiltrate later—they were invited. S.H.I.E.L.D. isn't compromised. It's been infested from the beginning."
"Correct," Zola confird. "HYDRA has flourished within S.H.I.E.L.D.'s shadow."
Steve's jaw tightened.
"Prove it."
"Accessing archives."
The screens filled with archival footage—HYDRA symbols, covert etings, manipulated crises.
"HYDRA's founding principle," Zola narrated, "was that humanity could not be trusted with freedom. Yet we learned that freedom cannot be taken—it must be surrendered."
Images shifted: World War II battles. Steve leading troops.
"War taught us that fear compels surrender."
The footage transitioned to post-war treaties, the founding of S.H.I.E.L.D.
"They believed they were creating guardians of peace. Instead, they nurtured us. Within S.H.I.E.L.D., a new HYDRA was born."
The green digital face flickered steadily.
"And now," Zola concluded, "we are everywhere."
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