We sat, assessing one another and picking at our plates of food, more for something to do with our hands, as opposed to nothing at all. In those moments I could just read in his body language the fact that he had put two and two together and remembered why I looked so familiar. He had been responsible for training my sister when she failed on missions, whereas I had never had to face the wrath of the Winter Soldier and his handlers. For a year or so after we escaped, my sister and I saw his face in every passing stranger, terrified Hydra was coming back to reclaim us.

Because to Hydra we weren't members of a team, as they had initially led my sister and I to believe. We were there property, attack dogs trained to be set loose every once in a while. Caged, every other time. I let my fork clatter to the table before folding my fingers underneath my chin to support my head as I stared at the man across from me.

Barnes followed suit, pushing his plate away and leaning back in his chair. His ice blue eyes flashed to mine before he took a sharp breath in and out and then spoke for the first time since he'd walked through my door just under an hour ago.

"So, were you sent here to bring me in? Wanda doesn't seem to think so but I've known Hydra for a few more decades than she has, so I'm more wary." Simple and to the point. Disciplined even, to any onlookers there might have been. But, as a fellow survivor of Hydra saw all his tells, the brightness of his eyes, the clenched teeth and slightly hunched shoulders. I wouldn't be surprised to learn that he wasn't fully seated either, prepared to spring up at any moment, despite his look of nonchalance.

"You should trust Wanda more. No, soldat, I didn't come to bring you in. You know," I said, chuckling drily, "I thought this conversation was going to happen years ago but in reverse. Did no one from Hydra come looking for us? Before they went under? Or were Nadia and I just new playthings for you and yours?" I asked, ice coating my harsh tone.

Bucky flinched at my use of Russian and again at the name of my sister. So he did remember us. Somehow, that didn't make me feel any better about his presence here.

"Our superiors were… rather distracted by certain developments and felt that you all would return to your homes. I guess their arrogance finally got the better of them in that regard. And then, with the new threat of Thor, Steve and Tony and the convergence of the Avengers on the world scale, they more than likely shoved your files deep down. Though I'd imagine your recent resurfacing has been noted by rogue Hydra factions that are still operating around the globe."

A solid enough explanation for why no one had come for Nadia and I. Another thing I had to thank the Avengers for, I supposed. "So, what happens now? Wanda has seen all she needed to see to support me. Where will the others fall in line?"

He shifted uncomfortably in his seat, leaning forward so his elbows rested on the table. "Steve believes Wanda and is willing to work with you. Same goes for Natasha and Clint and the Maximoffs. Tony… well, he may get over this sooner than he did before but I wouldn't count on it. We still haven't figured our shit out, though I was the one who killed his parents in person. But I didn't do it in my right mind. That's the difference between the two of us I suppose."

I laughed, darkly at first before it rapidly became hysterical, but I managed to keep a handle on the powers inside of me. "You really think I was in my right mind Barnes? After years of the torture and abuse I suffered at the hands of my parents to then be rescued and groomed by an evil organization when I was barely twelve? Not even close. But by the time I realized what Hydra really was, it was too late. They weren't letting us go, not without exacting a terrible price."

Barnes sighed and looked back at me, eyes softening almost imperceptibly. "You did come here willingly. And you show no ill intent, despite your obvious penchant for self-destructive tendencies." I couldn't exactly disagree. "I think you'll find that you'll fit right in with this merry little band of superpowered misfits. We're all a little broken here."

Nodding, I pushed back my chair and stood up, grabbing my plate to dump its contents into the trash can when Barnes spoke again. "You're not on lockdown anymore. I would advise against leaving the Tower, but this is your home now. Not a prison. And we'd like for you to treat it that way. Just… maybe avoid tony for a little while."

Yeah, easy enough when you live a few doors away from the guy. But, Barnes did have a point. He stood and moved to the door and wished me a goodnight before slipping through the door without a backward glance.

I tossed and turned that night, but not due to overwhelming nightmares, which was a welcome change of pace. No, my skin itched and my brain raced, looking for something to hold on to, looking for any sort of distraction. My body begged me to take action, to do something. After days of being laid up, even just a simple jog sounded like it would hit the spot for my restless limbs.

I gave in at around two in the morning, throwing on my leggings, slick work out short and tennis shoes before pulling my hair back. Then I was out the door and down to the rec level of the Tower, which was like a carnival for enhanced people.

For the first hour, I thought I was alone as I ran a few miles, lifted so small-ish weights and completed over a hundred sit-ups, which isn't a lot, but it wasn't half bad for a warm up. It wasn't until I was shadow boxing that I realized I wasn't alone. I felt a rapturous presence behind me and to the left. So I spun quickly and jabbed at the face of the intruder, only to punch… two feet?

"Hey, don't you know it's rude to touch someone else's feet without consent. Could sue you for harassing me, you know."

Parker. Spidey, it seemed, had decided to literally hang out behind me, upside down, suspended from the ceiling. "What do you want Buggy?" I asked, as if nothing had transpired between us over the past few, very eventful dates.

"Sometimes I just hang around here at night. Calms me down, plus the ceilings are high enough that I can practice some more… out of the box acrobatics without embarrassing myself and ending up on the front page of the Daily Bugle again. You know how they are." I did actually. Their constant tirade against Spider-Man was one of the few things that actually made me laugh out loud.

But I totally understood the need for peace and quiet and to kind of get rid of the riff raff. So I smiled brightly and asked Buggy if he could show me how exactly he managed to get that tensile strength in the material he used for his webs.

To say Peter was like a toddler around science would be an understatement. But it made us both happy. So we went, the past firmly behind us.