So our scene open Wanda walking with Simon/Wonder Man, having a deep heart to heart about their relationship status. Unfortunately, Simon has not seen the rushes of the cover art and so has no idea what the rest of us already see coming - Wanda feels like she needs to move forward into something new. Because, you know, super-hero dating only works if you are constantly dumping old partners and exploring new territory with somebody different.
Of course the somebody different in this case is Jericho/Brother Voodoo, who Wanda later points out has been denying his journey of physical exploration and if offering to help with that. Interestingly the kiss on the cover puts Jericho in the more dominant position [Wanda swooning in his arms and his face forefronted] while in the book the art puts Wanda in the more 'dominant' role.
Johnny has decided that part of his Good Samaratin-ing will be buying and restoring Avengers Mansion, which of course endears him even further to Rogue [see comments above about super-hero dating] and gives Janet a chance to make a quip about it shortly after. We also get to see Jarvis - the real one, not the computer voice from the movies.
Speaking of Rogue, she takes some time to put in a good word for the Shocker at his sentencing, regarding his role in Secret Empire/Darkzone affair. Seems like Shockie might be the latest in a long line of villains turned heroes in order to provide edgy, cynical character types to rub the heroes the wrong way while doing good.
Which of course brings us to Quicksilver.
Pietro is off soul searching. We get his thoughts of contrition via his letter to Emily, who reads it on waking at the Inhuman Hospital [who knew?]. Wanda, incidentally, is mystically keeping an eye on him before she gives Jericho a tongue lashing of a completely different kind to the one she treated her brother to.
Cap turns up and ask Rogue to be an Avenger again - she declines and says they will be more like freelance Avengers because she doesn't like rules and structure.
Which is pretty obvious, because while she was at the courthouse talking up Shocker she apparently completely forgot to tell anyone in authority that it was Jericho and Wanda who let Juggernaut loose on the city while they were trying to fix the Mansion with magic they'd never tried before.
Look, its a solid transition issue but the whole thing with QS still rankles me - even the blurb on the intro page only mentions that QS got Synapse hurt, completely overlooking the fact that she got hurt by the Juggernaut who was secure in custody and was released by Wanda and Jericho messing around with magic. Jim Zub seems to have decided to just gloss over that rather glaring fact. His call, but foor me just paints the team as your typical 21'st century irresponsible super-hero team who say they are around to do good but seem to be long on intentions and short of forethought and responsibility.
Rogue says they will do things their own way. Their own way seems to have little to do with owning their mistakes and respecting the rule of law that everyone without superpowers has to follow and stops general anarchy. I get it - traditionally in most comic books [and especially ones with mutants] the "government" or figures of legitimate legal authority are borderline villains who are there to be at best an obstacle and at worse a clandestine group with a secret agenda to turn super-beings into slave labor.
In this world heroes are rarely called to account for their bungles, and if they are it is inevitably due to or exploited by some scheme like the one mentioned above, which when revealed is seen as a reason to totally exonerate heroes of any guilt over their genuine mistakes.
Sadly this stance is use to completely white-wash the actual dumb things that the heroes do, like releasing powerful super villains by accident.