For major spoilers, Eric O'Grady/Ant-Man III is dispatched to the THUNDERBOLTS, to get ordered around by Norman Osborn. After all the drama and debate over Mutant Zero, it turns out she is Typhoid Mary. Power and combat wise, it makes sense I suppose, although there leaves more to be explained. While she always was presumed to be a mutant, one wonders why she cannot remain in one area for very long; perhaps due to her sanity? She always had about 3-4 personalities; Mary, who is gentle and passive, Typhoid, who wants to sleep with you before ninja-killing you, Bloody Mary who is a complete man-hating telekenetic psycho, and Walker, who is somewhat balanced. She has used swords and knives, but never guns too often and she never seemed capable of TK super speed. Although considering that most of the Shadow Initiative are former criminals, like Bengal or Constrictor, Typhoid Mary does fit in with that crowd. She makes more sense than Copycat or Jean Grey in this situation, and she has appeared on plenty of comic book covers (like DAREDEVIL, MARVEL COMICS PRESENTS and even some Spidey comics, where her Bloody Mary persona debuted), but when it was revealed, my reaction was , "OH? Oh. Alright." At the very least, she's higher up the rung than Copycat.
The real meat of the issue is Hank Pym seemingly having dinner with the deceased Janet Van Dyne and hashing out some of his unresolved feelings towards her; it turns out this is of course Jocasta using a hologram. Coming off of SI: REQUIEM, it still remains very clear that Pym is working through mourning issues. From having Jan's robot double (basically) act as her and even answer for her from beyond the grave to wearing Jan's costume, Pym clearly is going through grieving ways in interesting and sometimes borderline obsessive ways. Seeing that as a step on a path, I can accept him becoming "He-Wasp" on that level. I expect there to be some sort of tension between him and Jocasta and honestly don't mind it too much. We accepted 30 years of Wanda and Vision crushing because Vision had Wonder Man's brain patterns. Then Wonder Man kept coming back from the dead and all that. Reversing the genders a bit works for me, and if Ultron ever returns, must irritate him. Jocasta was supposed to be HIS bride, and she's having "feelings" with the creator he hates? Coming off being pummeled by Phyla, that'll sure get Ultron's rivets in a twist.
Gauntlet also becomes the seniority officer at Camp Hammond, which isn't good because he is the sort of guy who shove protesters to the side in a feat of democracy and then order a death hunt on Hardball, who is now a full on HYDRA commander. While the Shadow team isn't officially out to kill him, I am certain if it happened, Gauntlet would be awarding medals, not criticizing. Slott perhaps struggled with the idea that while those in the military are taught to kill, they aren't taught that killing is always the first option and one is NEVER to feel ANY pangs of remourse or mercy for any enemy, and if one does, drill sarge calls you a weak, worthless coward. I am curious if Gage will be able to handle that sort of balance better off solo. This is honestly a camp that needs Justice now more than ever to balance out Gauntlet's disposition, although I am curious if that would happen.
I also was glad that not everyone was gung-ho with 3-D Man killing Crusader at the end of the last issue. While Delroy of course was justified in over-reacting, and some bloodlust in war happens, it also makes sense that at least SOME of the heroes who had gotten close to Crusader and saw his genuine heroism would feel that Delroy had overstepped a bit. The Skrull Kill Krew of course disagrees and 3-D seems to go off to join them. They certainly will need new members after all but Ryder are dead.
The issue ends on a cliffhanger with the revelation that "Skrullowjacket", much like Harry Osborn, set some plans in motion for revenge in case of his untimely death, which means reactivating the cyborg clone of Thor, which was torn into bits by Hercules (or Storm, depending on what you read last). While part of me would rather Clor face off against the genuine article, that would mean JMS having Thor actually DO something, and that clearly is not a part of his agenda at any point. Better off that Clor stays with A:TI. The challenge will be doing the "rampaging living weapon created by the Initiative starts to pick it apart" in a way that doesn't repeat the themes of KILLED IN ACTION.
The highlight of the issue was clearly the human drama between Pym and "Jan" that merely does more to convince me that Pym is in good hands with Slott and that MIGHTY AVENGERS is going to be something mighty special, pun intended. As for this issue, it is a good ending for the SI affair as well as for Slott as monthly co-writer (although Gage claims he will be working from plots discussed with Slott for a bit). Gage's last solo issue was quite good and I have no doubt that A:TI will remain of consistent quality without Slott at the helm. A better, more important installment then a few of the Invasion tie-in's before it, this arc of A:TI wraps up about as well as one could expect. I will miss Caselli on art, even if he struggled with a monthly schedule (without lead in time, he usually couldn't handle more than 2 issues before delay), though. Hopefully Gage will have enough time to iron out his own flair for the book; there still is a place for the Initiative, even if it was compromised by Skrulls. There are a lot of states in the union that need response teams.