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Chapter 58 - THE RESCUE OF THE 107TH

Italy, 1943

‎Hydra-Occupied Territory

‎The 107th Infantry had vanished two nights earlier.

‎Recon aircraft captured faint images of convoy movement toward a fortified Hydra research facility carved into a mountain spine near the Apuan Alps. The base wasn't marked on Allied maps. It wasn't a supply depot.

‎It was extraction.

‎Hydra had taken prisoners.

‎Colonel Phillips briefed in clipped tones:

‎Estimated enemy strength: 200–300 Hydra personnel

‎Automated turrets at primary gates

‎Rail tunnel entry used for supply shipments

‎Prisoners likely held in sublevel processing wing.

‎Peggy Carter stood over the map.

‎"Hydra isn't holding them for interrogation," she said. "They're studying serum compatibility. Or worse."

‎Steve didn't speak.

‎His eyes were fixed on the marked location.

‎Bucky was there.

‎Steve didn't speak.

‎His eyes were fixed on the marked location.

‎Bucky was there.

‎But this wasn't about Bucky alone.

‎Hydra believed him to be a stage performer.

‎Let them.

‎Officially, this mission did not exist.

‎Colonel Phillips had not approved it.

‎But neither had he stopped it.

‎Howard Stark modified a stealth-capable troop transport under the guise of a "supply diversion."

‎Peggy handed Steve a reinforced uniform — darker, field-adjusted.

‎The decorative shield was replaced with a vibranium-alloy prototype Stark had been testing.

‎Balanced.

‎Weighted.

‎Functional.

‎Peggy held it a moment before releasing it to him.

‎"This isn't a show."

‎Steve met her eyes.

‎"I know."

‎The transport flew low through Alpine fog to avoid radar sweeps.

‎Steve sat alone near the rear hatch.

‎No chorus line.

‎No announcer.

‎Just the hum of engines and the memory of soldiers mocking him days earlier.

‎He didn't blame them.

‎Symbols without action were lies.

‎When the pilot signaled drop point, Steve didn't hesitate.

‎No parachute theatrics.

‎Just a rope descent onto a forested ridge overlooking the Hydra facility.

‎He landed silently.

‎Below him, carved into stone, stood the compound.

‎Hydra banners hung from steel pylons.

‎Searchlights swept mechanical arcs.

‎Rail lines fed into a reinforced tunnel mouth.

‎This wasn't just a prison.

‎It was a laboratory.

‎Steve observed for twenty minutes before moving.

‎Patterns emerged:

‎Guard rotations every eight minutes.

‎Turret sweep lag of 1.2 seconds at the northern blind arc.

‎Supply convoy scheduled within the hour.

‎Hydra soldiers moved with mechanical precision.

‎Confidence.

‎They believed the front line far from here.

‎They believed themselves untouchable.

‎Steve marked three key objectives:

‎Disable outer power grid.

‎Breach rail tunnel access.

‎Locate prisoner wing and extract.

‎No theatrics.

‎No frontal charge.

‎This wasn't propaganda.

‎This was war.

‎He moved at the edge of turret blind rotation.

‎Timing precise.

‎A sprint.

‎A leap.

‎Shield angled.

‎The first Hydra sentry dropped before he could trigger an alarm — shield edge striking with controlled force.

‎Steve caught the falling body before impact.

‎Silent.

‎He moved to the grid relay panel mounted along the cliff face.

‎Hydra technology hummed — sleek, experimental.

‎Energy drawn from something unfamiliar.

‎Not conventional diesel.

‎Not coal.

‎Something brighter.

‎He didn't stop to study it.

‎He ripped the panel free.

‎Shorted the conduit.

‎Half the compound dimmed.

‎Searchlights flickered.

‎Hydra personnel shouted.

‎Confusion spread.

‎Stage lights were predictable.

‎Battlefield darkness was not.

‎As predicted, a supply train approached the tunnel.

‎Steve used its shadow.

‎He sprinted parallel to the moving cars, then leapt — grabbing a ladder rung and climbing atop.

‎Hydra soldiers inside the open cargo car turned too late.

‎Two controlled strikes.

‎A shield throw rebounded cleanly.

‎No gunfire.

‎He entered through the roof hatch.

‎The train slowed as it passed through the reinforced tunnel doors.

‎Steve dropped from the car as it crossed the threshold.

‎Now he was inside.

‎The facility was built vertically:

‎Upper Tier: Command and research

‎Mid Tier: Processing and barracks

‎Sublevel: Detainment

‎Red Hydra insignias glowed against cold steel corridors.

‎Automated doors responded to keycards.

‎Steve acquired one from a downed officer.

‎He moved through maintenance corridors rather than primary halls.

‎Less visibility.

‎Fewer cameras.

‎He paused outside a glass observation room.

‎Machines analyzing blood composition.

‎Hydra scientists murmuring about "compatibility thresholds."

‎Steve felt anger rise.

‎Erskine's warning echoed.

‎The serum amplifies everything.

‎He breathed once.

‎Controlled it.

‎Anger was fuel.

‎Not master.

‎He smashed the glass.

‎Alarms finally activated.

‎Hydra command realized intrusion.

‎Steel doors began sealing in sequence.

‎Steve sprinted ahead of the lockdown cascade, shield deflecting the first burst of gunfire.

‎Hydra weapons weren't conventional rifles.

‎They fired focused energy pulses — experimental, unstable.

‎One struck the wall behind him, vaporizing stone into glowing fragments.

‎He adjusted tactics.

‎Close quarters.

‎No long exchanges.

‎He closed distance before they could stabilize aim.

‎Shield ricochet.

‎Elbow strike.

‎Disarm.

‎Move.

‎The prison wing door required dual authentication.

‎He didn't have it.

‎He planted his feet.

‎Drove the shield forward.

‎The vibranium edge dented reinforced locking pins.

‎Second strike.

‎Third.

‎The door tore free.

‎Inside were rows of exhausted men.

‎The 107th.

‎Bucky among them.

‎For a heartbeat, disbelief reigned.

‎"Steve?" Bucky said, stunned.

‎Steve tossed him a confiscated Hydra sidearm.

‎"Let's get you out."

‎Panic would kill them.

‎Steve's voice cut clean through the chaos.

‎"Listen up! We move as one unit. Two lines. Wounded center. Stay behind my shield."

‎His tone carried authority now.

‎Not stage bravado.

‎Command.

‎They moved.

‎Hydra forces converged from two corridors.

‎Steve positioned himself at the choke point.

‎Shield anchored.

‎Energy blasts struck in rapid succession.

‎The vibranium held.

‎He advanced slowly under fire, creating a mobile barrier.

‎"Move!" he ordered.

‎Bucky and two others supported injured soldiers.

‎Hydra attempted flanking.

‎Steve pivoted.

‎Shield throw curved down the hall, disabling three gunners before returning to his grip.

‎He didn't chase stragglers.

‎Objective was extraction.

‎Not elimination.

‎As they neared the rail exit, a blast door sealed.

‎Hydra command had isolated the tunnel.

‎Time was collapsing.

‎Steve scanned overhead.

‎Primary power conduit ran along ceiling supports.

‎He leapt, gripping a pipe junction.

‎With a forceful twist, he severed the stabilizer.

‎The facility lights surged violently.

‎Emergency backups failed to compensate.

‎Darkness swallowed half the corridor.

‎In confusion, Hydra's advanced weapons lost calibration.

‎Now it was human against human.

‎Steve preferred that.

‎At the final junction stood a Hydra commander in advanced armor — powered exoskeleton, heavier energy cannon mounted to forearm.

‎"You are the circus," the commander sneered.

‎Steve didn't respond.

‎The cannon fired.

‎He deflected once.

‎Twice.

‎Third blast overloaded the shield's kinetic absorption and threw him backward.

‎He rolled to his feet instantly.

‎The commander charged.

‎Exoskeleton amplifiers made him faster than expected.

‎The corridor became a brutal exchange of momentum.

‎The commander swung — mechanical strength enhanced.

‎Steve absorbed the impact against his shield and redirected the force, twisting at the last second.

‎Physics favored precision over brute enhancement.

‎He struck the exoskeleton's exposed joint at the knee.

‎Metal buckled.

‎Second strike to power coupling at the spine.

‎The suit faltered.

‎The commander lunged again.

‎Steve stepped inside the arc and delivered a final upward shield slam to the helmet.

‎Silence.

‎The path was open.

‎The rail line exit had partially sealed but remained breachable.

‎Using Hydra explosives seized earlier, Steve set charges along the locking seam.

‎He guided the 107th back toward the mountain face where Stark's transport would circle for extraction.

‎The explosion cracked the reinforced doors outward.

‎Cold night air rushed in.

‎Hydra searchlights scrambled to reacquire.

‎Steve fired a captured flare — prearranged signal.

‎Minutes later, the transport roared overhead.

‎Ropes dropped.

‎One by one, the soldiers ascended.

‎Steve remained last.

‎Hydra forces emerged from the smoke behind him.

‎He turned.

‎Raised the shield.

‎Held position until the final rope secured.

‎Then leapt upward, gripping the line as the transport lifted.

‎Energy blasts streaked beneath them.

‎But none struck true.

‎Inside the aircraft, silence reigned at first.

‎Then—

‎A single clap.

‎Followed by another.

‎Then the entire 107th.

‎Not cheering for spectacle.

‎Not applauding performance.

‎Acknowledging a comrade.

‎Bucky sat across from him.

‎"Guess the tights weren't enough, huh?"

‎Steve allowed himself a small smile.

‎"Guess not."

‎Hydra lost:

‎One research facility

‎Experimental compatibility data

‎Over two hundred personnel

‎Their assumption of untouchability

‎Allied Command gained:

‎Surviving 107th unit

‎First verified Hydra interior breach

‎Confirmation of advanced energy weapon deployment

‎But beyond numbers—

‎The myth shifted.

‎Captain America was no longer a stage character.

‎He was operational reality.

‎When the transport landed, Colonel Phillips waited.

‎He studied Steve in silence.

‎"You disobeyed orders," he said.

‎"Yes, sir."

‎"You also succeeded."

‎A pause.

‎Phillips extended his hand.

‎"Welcome to active duty, Captain."

‎.Elsewhere, reports reached Johann Schmidt.

‎The propaganda mascot had infiltrated a secured facility.

‎Defeated enhanced armor.

‎Freed prisoners.

‎Destroyed research.

‎Schmidt did not rage.

‎He smiled thinly.

‎"So," he murmured, "the doctor chose well."

‎Hydra would no longer treat him as spectacle.

‎They would treat him as threat.

‎Steve stood alone outside the hangar later that night.

‎The shield rested against his leg.

‎He stared at the distant mountains.

‎He hadn't fought like a dancer.

‎He hadn't fought like a symbol.

‎He had fought like himself.

‎Erskine had been right.

‎Power amplified everything.

‎It had amplified his refusal to abandon others.

‎And that was what made him dangerous.

‎Not strength.

‎Conviction.

‎The rescue of the 107th became classified legend.

‎Not widely publicized.

‎Not turned into song.

‎But among soldiers, word spread quietly:

‎He comes when we're taken.

‎He stands when we're surrounded.

‎He doesn't perform.

‎He fights.

‎The stage had created a symbol.

‎The rescue forged a leader.

‎And from that night forward, Hydra stopped laughing at the man in spandex.

‎Because he no longer wore it to entertain.

‎He wore it to advance into gunfire.

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