The White House basent was silent, not empty, just silent.
Silent in the way places beco when everyone inside knows history is turning against them.
Roosevelt did not convene the full cabinet, not the joint chiefs, not the governors, not even the War Departnt. Only six n were summoned.
Six n he believed he could still trust, six n who watched him roll in, flanked by two Marines, his face gray with exhaustion, eyes bloodshot, jaw clenched with sothing more than pain.
Not a president.
A man crushed under the awareness that his country was bleeding out faster than he could lie to it.
He waited until the Marines sealed the door, and did not speak until the last lock slid into place. His voice was hoarse, but steady.
"Gentlen," he said, "we are no longer planning for victory."
No one breathed, and yet Roosevelt still continued.
"We are planning for survival."
He took out a folder, it was thick, heavy, and worn. He placed it in the center of the table like an altar offering.
"Effective tonight," he said quietly, "we begin preparing a fortress-state."
The n exchanged looks, but Roosevelt didn’t give them ti to protest.
"New England, the Mid-Atlantic corridor, up to the Adirondacks. We will consolidate everything of material and strategic value that we can into that zone. Pull federal assets inward, and begin rerouting food, fuel, and ammunition north."
A general cleared his throat.
"Sir... that ans abandoning the Midwest."
Roosevelt’s stare cut him off.
"The Midwest is already gone," he said. "They just haven’t admitted it."
Another advisor whispered, "Sir... pulling back ans..."
"...it ans the end of the United States," Roosevelt snapped. "Yes. I know."
He leaned forward.
"But it buys ti. Ti to rearm. Ti to stabilize the currency. Ti to regroup. Ti to preserve the idea of federal authority before the whole thing dissolves into warlordism."
He slamd his fist on the table.
"Ti to prevent a second revolt."
Silence.
One of the younger advisors, face pale, finally asked:
"Where do we put the capital?"
Roosevelt didn’t hesitate.
"Albany."
There were audible gasps.
"Washington won’t hold," Roosevelt said matter-of-factly. "It won’t survive the next wave of civil unrest. The Army will stay just long enough to evacuate essential agencies. After that, the streets belong to whoever has more bullets."
Another general spoke, voice trembling. "Sir... this is partition."
"No," Roosevelt said sharply. "This is triage."
His eyes were iron.
"If we try to cling to the whole carcass, we lose everything. If we cut away the infected limb, the body might survive."
The n looked shaken, not because they were afraid, but because they understood, because it was logical, because it was horrifyingly logical, and Roosevelt continued.
"We need conscription in the remaining states. We need to nationalize energy production. We need martial law, without calling it martial law. We need to control information flow in the Northeast corridor."
A pause.
"And we need to ensure no governor outside the corridor has the ans to defy us."
One of the generals shifted uncomfortably.
"Sir... you’re talking about suppressing entire states."
Roosevelt’s expression didn’t waver.
"Better to suppress them now," he said coldly, "than fight them later."
Another advisor finally broke.
"Mr. President... even if we build this ’fortress rump state,’ what do we do when Germany pushes into Canada? Or the Atlantic? Or..."
Roosevelt’s gaze turned distant, haunted. Almost... hollow.
"They won’t... Germany has already accomplished it’s war aims. The world just hasn’t realized it yet. This was never about forcing concessions, or compliance. It was about destroying the very idea of a United States of Arica.... And that mad Prince has done it...." he whispered.
The room went still.
Because for the first ti... they saw him accept the possibility he couldn’t say aloud:
No army in this hemisphere could stop Germany now. They had lost, and the enemy was unwilling to accept a surrender.
The oldest general leaned forward, voice cracking.
"If that is true, then what is the point of all of this?"
Roosevelt didn’t answer imdiately.
His breath rattled. His hands shook, not with fear, but with the weight of understanding sothing deeply personal:
He would not live to see the completion of this plan.
Finally, he spoke.
"The enemy has won, for now... But so long as I still breathe. So long as there is soone to continue the Arican dream, even if it must survive in a rump state, there will be a future where the United States and all of its glory will rise again. We are no longer fighting for the survival of a nation, but to preserve the fla that lights the torch of another generation to resurrect it after we are all in the dirt.... And that, is all we can do now."
The room froze.
Everyone understood what he wasn’t saying:
My body is failing. My ti is limited. I will not survive the winter. But the nation... It must endure, even if only as an enclave.
Nobody dared to speak.
Roosevelt pushed the folder toward them. Inside were maps, tilines, evacuation routes, food reserves, and contingencies for collapse.
Plans he had clearly begun drafting in haste ,as most of it was scribbled across scrap parchnt. He t each of their eyes in turn.
"Gentlen," he said softly, "we are no longer custodians of a nation."
He inhaled.
"We are custodians of its last breath."
---
On the other side of the Atlantic. In the serene and eternal fortress that was the Alps. Bruno sat in the darkness of his study.
A single candle burned, the wire humd faintly on the desk.
He listened to the whispers leaking through the Arican line, not clearly, not cleanly, but enough. Enough to hear the fear, and enough to hear the frantic scraping of a dying state trying to build a tomb for itself.
He swirled his port, smiled faintly.
"Ah... at last," he murmured.
"The birth cries of the Rump Republic."
He raised his glass slightly, in a gesture of mock respect.
"To Roosevelt," he whispered. "A man who finally began to understand the ga... just as his ti ran out."
He drank.
Extinguished the candle.
And in the suffocating darkness of the Reich Chancellery, the fate of Arica continued unfolding exactly as he had foreseen.
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