Diana nodded, grateful for that clarification. “Then they shall be left alone as they like, but I shall still make the offer.” And that was the important part, to Diana. She would offer her assistance in whatever way might help, and no one had to take it. She had decided upon arriving here that simply because she could assert her rule as law here did not mean that she should. These people were not her purview, nor her responsibility, any of them, and so sticking her nose in where it wasn’t wanted would be unwise. And very rude, on top of that.
“It has not fully been easy for me to adjust to, and I imagine things are much more stressful for humans.” Diana had the advantage of knowing that regardless of the situation, she could likely outlast it if nothing else, but some of the humans were not so fortunate. Before learning that this was something of a pocket dimension and that things were safe in their respective lives, there would be panic, and Diana could understand that. She’d had her own, but Tony Stark had been wise enough to know what to tell her to calm that panic. And well he should; he’d been here nearly a year, by his estimation.
She nodded again at Natasha’s further advice, and over the next few days, she would do just that. Explore a little more, show a few people around, find other areas of the hotel to explore and new things to learn or try. For now, though, she was still quite new, and the idea of relaxing into a cage was alien to her. As alien as Kal was to the humans of Earth, perhaps, but Diana would adjust, as Natasha herself had said. Presumably Natasha had gone through this same thing, and that gave Diana some comfort as well.
Diana heard the warning, and understood it. More importantly than that, she gave it weight. Generally, Diana was not threatened by humans, nor anything to do with them. She was vulnerable to gunfire, if she could be caught, but her armor and bracelets were bulletproof and she was very fast. She had been grazed a few times, and was not fond of it, but she had never suffered a near-fatal injury. Still, she was fairly sure that should Natasha want to injure her, she could. And she admired her all the more for it, considering that she was presumably a human amongst literal Gods.
“He spoke very highly of you when I mentioned the patrol to him,” she said, and Thor had. So Diana saw no reason to lie about it, as if Diana was capable of telling a lie to begin with. It had taken her literal decades to learn any kind of subtlety, and it had begun with Steve Trevor, the spy. Diana had not been familiar with the concept of spies until she had met Steve Trevor, and thinking about the day she’d chastised him for lying to his superiors still made her giggle occasionally. “I am pleased he has such a family to lean upon in times of trouble.”