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The room fell into a tense, suffocating silence.

Tony’s face hardened. "So Hydra never really died. It just evolved. New tricks, sa rot."

Bucky’s fists clenched. "They always had a plan. I just never thought... it ran this deep."

Steve stood quietly near the terminal, his jaw tight, eyes locked on the flickering screen. The ssage had ended, but its weight lingered.

Tony stepped forward and began typing, rerouting the system’s access. "That broadcast wasn’t live—it was automated. Proximity-triggered, probably. But I’m seeing a residual ping... yeah, it bounced through one of our old satellites. One of mine. Hijacked."

Steve glanced at him. "Can you trace it?"

Tony nodded without looking up. "I already am. Give a few minutes."

Bucky paced behind them, silent. The hum of the lab’s backup systems filled the space between their breaths.

"They’re not just building more soldiers," Tony muttered. "They’re evolving. Now they want to attach themselves to the Ten Rings. That’s not about control anymore. That’s about legacy. Immortality."

Steve’s voice was low, steel-hard. "Then we stop them. All of it."

Tony’s hands paused, then resud. "Got sothing. One location bounced back—Eastern Siberia. Deep underground. Old tech, but still online. Shielded. Looks like the birthplace of the original Winter Program."

Bucky’s expression turned to stone. He walked over to a bench, reached beneath it, and retrieved a compact rifle. He checked the chamber without a word.

Steve looked at him. "You sure?"

"I was made there," Bucky said quietly. "If there’s anything left... I’ll help end it."

Tony pulled back from the console and cracked his neck. "Then that’s our next stop. The lab’s cold—but the trail isn’t. And Hydra just lit the damn fuse."

Steve nodded. "Let’s finish what they started."

****

The hangar doors groaned open above them as the cold wind of the outside tundra swept in, carrying flakes of snow and the promise of war.

Tony pulled his coat tighter over his arc reactor as he walked beside Steve and Bucky, boots crunching against the frozen ground. Stark’s jet, parked a few clicks out, blinked with navigation lights in the distance.

As they climbed the snow-dusted slope toward the exit, Bucky finally spoke again.

"I don’t rember what they did to ... but I know how it felt," he said quietly. "Like I was buried alive, and soone else was piloting my body."

Steve didn’t say anything at first. Just kept walking.

Then: "We’re gonna dig them up, Buck. All of them. And make sure they never bury anyone else again."

Tony grunted. "And I’m going to make sure they regret ever touching my parents."

They reached the landing pad where the jet waited, engines humming in the cold. Tony gave a short nod and boarded first, Steve and Bucky right behind him.

The jet lifted off monts later, cutting through the grey Siberian sky, heading straight for the coordinates pulled from the Hydra broadcast.

—anwhile, back at the UNITY tower—

Dave stood at one of the observation decks, watching the flight data scroll across the screen.

"Shuri," he asked without looking away, "where are those three headed now?"

"Tony said they found another old Winter facility. Siberia," she replied, tapping on a console.

Dave gave a quiet nod, not saying anything else. He turned and walked off, already distracted by the next thing on his list.

—SIBERIA—

The jet cut through the icy clouds, a sleek black silhouette against the frozen wilderness below. Inside, the mood was quiet. Focused.

Tony sat at the controls, eyes scanning the display. "We’re coming up on the site. There’s a crater—deep and iced over. Heat signature’s faint but consistent. It’s there."

Steve nodded, his eyes on the window. "Doesn’t look like much from above."

"It never does," Bucky muttered, strapping on a sidearm. "These places are built to be invisible."

They touched down on a narrow ridge, the landing gear crunching into snow and rock. Wind howled across the expanse, but the silence underneath was heavier.

The three of them moved fast, dressed for cold but geared for a fight. Tony pulled up the map projection on his gauntlet, motioning toward a barely visible outcrop of stone.

"There. That’s the access point. Shuri’s scan picked up structural inconsistencies underneath."

Steve stepped forward first, brushing snow from the stone wall—revealing a cold steel door, rusted but still sealed shut. No markings. Just a recessed scanner slot.

Tony hooked into it with a short cable from his wrist, the screen lighting up with lines of code. "Encrypted. Old, but clever."

"How long?" Bucky asked, scanning the treeline out of habit.

"Two minutes, tops."

True to his word, the lock clicked open monts later. The door hissed as it pushed inward, revealing a narrow tal tunnel lit by flickering wall strips.

Steve stepped in without hesitation. "Let’s get this done."

They descended quietly, boots echoing against cold steel. The lower they went, the cleaner the walls beca. Less rust. More tech. More recent maintenance.

At the bottom, the corridor widened—lined with old containnt pods. Empty. Shattered glass. Stains on the floor.

Bucky stopped. "I’ve been here before."

Tony gave him a glance. "Any chance you rember what was stored?"

"People," Bucky said flatly. "Like . So lasted longer. Most didn’t."

Steve didn’t flinch. He just kept walking.

They reached a central chamber—dimly lit, with flickering monitors and rows of server towers still humming.

Tony moved straight to the nearest terminal, plugging in. "They wiped most of it... but not all."

Steve looked around at the space—cold, sterile, haunted. "This place was never about training soldiers. It was about control."

"Then let’s burn it all," Tony said.

Steve nodded. "Gladly."

A low rumble echoed as Steve raised his hand. Lava-like cracks lit up across his arm, the power of the Inferno Titan surging through him. With a sharp exhale, he slamd his hand into the tal floor.

A wave of molten heat burst outward.

Steel groaned. The walls shimred and began to lt, the entire structure trembling as fire crawled through its veins. Data cores ignited. Glass cracked and shattered. The once-silent chamber beca an inferno of purging flas.

Tony stepped back, shielding his face from the rising heat. "You’ve really embraced the whole fire god thing, huh?"

Bucky, standing at the edge of the destruction, watched the flas consu what remained of his past. No words—just a quiet, steady breath.

When it was done, the lab was nothing but slag and ash.

The three n turned and walked back through the collapsing tunnel, steam hissing at their heels.

Outside, the wind hit hard—freezing and real. Cleansing.

Bucky looked up at the sky, then back at the smoldering crater behind them. "One less ghost."

Steve clapped a hand on his shoulder. "And if there are more..."

Tony finished for him, "We’ll find them."

*******

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