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My brothers Keeper, an SI as the twin brother of Stalin (Reworked)

So emotional New
Few people could make my father smile, except for my cousin Kato. I remember the day she married Yakov, it was the only time in my life I saw father openly weep.

Excerpt from Svetlana Stalina's interview with the BBC in 1997, at her Dacha in Gori, Georgian SSR.


March 5, 1921
Great Port of Saint Petersburg
Petrograd, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic


Mikhail Nikolaevich Tukhachevsky stood at the edge of the port, boots crunching softly against the frozen slush, and looked across the ice toward Kronstadt. The fortress lay low and squat on the horizon, its silhouettes half-swallowed by mist and snow, like an unfinished sketch. He had arrived in Petrograd only that morning, summoned abruptly and placed in command of the newly reconstituted Seventh Army. The city smelled of coal smoke, rotting ice, and fear—an atmosphere he knew well and, in some perverse way, found clarifying.

Beside him stood Mikheil Jugashvili.

This, then, was the man.

Tukhachevsky had expected someone larger—someone who filled space, who radiated menace by posture alone. Instead he saw a compact Georgian, narrow-shouldered, slightly hunched against the cold, with an eyepatch cutting starkly across his face. The missing eye lent him asymmetry, not grandeur. He looked less like a conqueror than a peasant who had wandered too close to history and refused to leave.

Tukhachevsky felt an immediate, sharp disappointment.

Jugashvili broke the silence first.

"How soon will you begin the assault?" he asked, tone casual, as if inquiring about the weather.

Tukhachevsky did not look at him at once. He kept his gaze fixed on the ice, on the white expanse that would soon be churned into a massacre.

"Perhaps in a few days," he said. "I want artillery positioned properly. Reconnaissance. Psychological pressure. The fortress must feel itself tightening before the first shell lands."

Jugashvili nodded, hands tucked into his coat. "What's the plan so far?" he asked. "You've got one, right?"

Tukhachevsky finally turned to him. He studied the man the way he studied maps—looking for weaknesses, for lines of force. "I do," he said. "Trotsky spoke of you. He says you and your brother have a talent for… improvisation. He also says you are recklessly brave."

A corner of Jugashvili's mouth twitched upward. "Let me guess," Tukhachevsky continued. "You want to lead part of the assault."

Jugashvili chuckled—not nervously, not apologetically, but with the careless amusement of someone already resigned to the outcome. "Damn right," he said. "Grief does strange things to a man."

"Grief?" Tukhachevsky asked, mildly curious.

Jugashvili glanced back toward the city, toward Petrograd's jagged skyline. "You heard what happened in this city," he said. "The massacres. Especially September '18. After Lenin was shot."

Tukhachevsky shook his head. "I've been on campaign almost continuously since the war started," he replied. "Kazan, the Volga, the Urals. Whites, Greens, bandits, deserters. When you're ordering people to their deaths every day, it all starts to blur. Then again, someone like you must understand that too right?"

Jugashvili nodded, as if that made perfect sense. "My wife was shot that day," he said. "An SR. The bullet was meant for me. It missed."

He said it plainly, without emphasis.

"What followed," Jugashvili continued, "was efficient. I had the assassin's family brought in. I killed them in front of him. Then I emptied Kresty Prison. Everyone—men, women, children. I didn't just order it. I participated. I find it keeps morale… honest."

He turned slightly, just enough that Tukhachevsky could see the single eye studying him.

"You saw the Winter Palace on your way here, didn't you?" Jugashvili added. "That red on the steps isn't paint."

There was no boast in his voice. No tremor. No defensiveness.

Tukhachevsky felt a brief, involuntary chill—not from the cold, but from the precision of it. Then, unexpectedly, he laughed. A short, sharp sound that vanished almost as soon as it appeared.

"You know," Tukhachevsky said, "I was disappointed when I first saw you. I expected a monster—something theatrical. Something crude."

Jugashvili raised an eyebrow.

"But now," Tukhachevsky went on, "I understand why this city still functions. Most Chekists I've met hide behind abstractions—the revolution, the bourgeoisie, historical necessity. You don't bother. You kill for personal reasons and simply note when they coincide with Party needs."

Jugashvili shrugged. "Alignment is everything."

"Indeed," Tukhachevsky said.

They stood in silence for a moment, the wind cutting across the ice.

"I'll allow you to lead the assault," Tukhachevsky said at last. "Your Cheka units will participate as well."

Jugashvili nodded, unsurprised. "Fine by me," he said.

"You will take heavy losses," Tukhachevsky added, almost kindly.

"Everyone does," Jugashvili replied.

"I assume," Tukhachevsky continued, "you'll want to comment on my plan."

Jugashvili smiled again—small, sharp, unreadable. "If you want," he said.

Tukhachevsky finally fully turned to look at him, already rearranging formations in his mind, already seeing the ice shatter under artillery fire. For the first time since arriving, he felt a flicker of anticipation. "So then, Hero of Petrograd, enlighten me."

"You'll need this."

Jugashvili's voice cut through the wind. Tukhachevsky turned and saw him extend a folded sheet of paper, held between two fingers as casually as a cigarette.

He took it, unfolding it against the cold. The paper revealed a carefully drawn map—dense with markings, annotations in a tight, angular hand, arrows and shaded zones layered over the familiar outline of Kotlin Island.

"A map," Tukhachevsky said. "Kronstadt, I assume."

"Correct." Jugashvili nodded. "A handful of Bolsheviks managed to escape the island. We also captured several sailors attempting to blend into the city. They were… cooperative." A pause. "Eventually."

Tukhachevsky scanned the map more closely. Ammunition depots. Barracks. Supply stores. Infirmaries. Artillery emplacements. Even sleeping quarters were marked.

"I recommend immediate bombardment," Jugashvili continued, unprompted. "Do we have aircraft? Heavy artillery?"

"Sixty-four planes," Tukhachevsky replied. "Sergeev himself is overseeing the air operations."

Jugashvili whistled, impressed. "That serious, huh?" He let out a short laugh. "Good. Have copies made. Give them to the pilots. Bomb these locations first." He tapped the map with a gloved finger. "Hit the barracks, the supply depots. Keep them awake. Keep them hungry. The ice has them trapped—those battleships can't maneuver. If you hit the right spots, you might even sink a few."

Tukhachevsky folded the map slowly, carefully. For a moment, he felt… off-balance.

"This is unexpected," he said.

Jugashvili glanced at him. "What is?"

"I expected something cruder," Tukhachevsky admitted. "More reckless. Trotsky told me about your plan during Yudenich's assault—about you and Stalin. I imagined you'd suggest provoking the sailors into charging across the ice, then shelling it beneath them. Or leading a frontal rush yourself. This," he gestured to the map, "is methodical."

Jugashvili shrugged. "I adapt."

"So it seems." Tukhachevsky nodded, genuinely impressed despite himself.

"How many men do you plan to use?" Jugashvili asked.

"Fifteen thousand," Tukhachevsky replied. "Split into northern and southern groups."

Jugashvili didn't hesitate. "You'll get massacred."

Tukhachevsky raised an eyebrow.

"You need multiple axes of attack," Jugashvili continued calmly. "Overwhelming force. Two-to-one at minimum, preferably three-to-one. There are ten thousand people on the island now. If the civilians join in, make that twelve. Soften them longer. And—" he tilted his head slightly, "—do you have chemical weapons?"

Tukhachevsky paused. "Chloropicrin. Leftover stock."

"What does it do?"

"Makes men cough, vomit, cry. Disorients."

Jugashvili nodded approvingly. "Good. Use it on the infirmaries and barracks. Let them choke in their sleep."

For the first time, Tukhachevsky felt something like hesitation—not moral revulsion, but intellectual friction. He had ordered massacres before. He had accepted losses without blinking. But this was… intimate.

"What a waste," he said suddenly.

Jugashvili frowned. "Sorry?"

"You," Tukhachevsky said, pointing at him. "If I'd had someone like you under my command earlier—if you'd been there instead of Budyonny—perhaps Warsaw would have fallen. Perhaps we'd already be marching west. If you'd been in the army instead of the Cheka, maybe your wife would still be alive."

The air between them hardened instantly.

Jugashvili's remaining eye darkened, murderous for a fraction of a second—then cooled.

"Tukhachevsky," he said quietly. "Has anyone ever told you that you don't know when to shut up?"

"I didn't mean to offend," Tukhachevsky replied evenly. "I was praising you. Your talents are wasted in the Cheka."

Jugashvili stared at him. "Do you think anyone else would have saved Petrograd the way my brother and I did?"

Tukhachevsky considered it. He exhaled, then chuckled softly.
"No," he admitted. "I misspoke."

"I'll overlook it," Jugashvili said. "But tread carefully when you speak of my family."

"As you say. Again—no offense intended."

Jugashvili nodded once. "Now. As I was saying. Two thrusts won't be enough. Add a third from the east. Spread their defenses thin. After bombardment, they'll break quickly. Of course, you'll need a fourth assault as well."

"A fourth? From where?" Tukhachevsky asked.

Jugashvili smiled faintly. "From the west. That's the one I'll lead."

Tukhachevsky frowned. "The ice is thinner there. I won't waste men."

"You won't," Jugashvili agreed. "Give me a thousand. We strike at night, after the main assaults begin. Surprise them. Force them to redeploy. You'll win."

Tukhachevsky weighed it—timelines, reserves, losses. The plan began to cohere.

"Very well," he said at last. "You can lead your mad little assault."

"How soon can bombardment begin?"

"I can put everything in order today, it can start tomorrow."

"And the assault?"

"I can delay a week, no more."

"Enough time," Jugashvili said. "To put my affairs in order."

"You sound ready to die."

"I'll be disappointed if I survive."

"That would be a waste."

"Perhaps," Jugashvili replied. "But if I do die, maybe I'll see my wife again." A brief, humorless chuckle. "Though I doubt God would let me."

He turned and walked back toward the city.

Tukhachevsky watched him go, feeling an unexpected flicker of pity. He thought of his own wife, Maria Ignatyeva. Of the blood on the train floor.

"Foolish woman," he muttered to himself—then sighed, shaking his head, already turning back toward the coming battle.

March 10, 1921
The former American embassy, now the headquarters of the ARA
Petrograd, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic


I sat across from Elsa, sipping my tea and poking at what passed for lunch. We hadn't said much since one of the staffers brought the food in. There wasn't much to say—she'd already briefed me on aid distribution. The numbers were acceptable. Food was arriving. Starvation was low. My Cheka boys, for once, were behaving themselves. Minimal extortion. Minimal theft. A small miracle.

The silence, however, was unbearable. It didn't help that the windows rattled every few minutes from the artillery barrage. Each distant boom felt like punctuation, as if the city itself was editing our conversation.

"If you want," I said lightly, "I can close the window. If the noise is bothering you."

"Don't bother," she replied, not looking at me. Her jaw was tight. Her scowl had become a permanent fixture.

I nodded, took another sip.
"Is this about the factory workers I shot?"

Silence. Her expression hardened further.

"I did try to negotiate," I continued conversationally. "Like you suggested. I met with them. I handed out winter gear. Increased fuel where I could."

"And then you machine-gunned them down the next day," she said flatly.

"Only after the strikes spread," I replied. "Let this be a lesson: give an inch, they take a mile."

She stared at me like I'd just tracked mud across a cathedral floor.
"They were freezing," she said. "They wanted clothes. Heat."

"Fuel that doesn't exist," I replied. "Clothes that are scarce."

"And whose fault is that?"

"Our enemies', obviously," I said, waving a hand. "The Whites. Reactionaries. They're the ones who dragged this country into war. Frankly, people should be grateful we feed them at all."

Her fingers tightened around her teacup.
"You threatened to murder the sailors from Kronstadt," she said. "Didn't you fight alongside them? Weren't they your comrades?"

"They're traitors now," I shrugged. "If I don't deal with them, someone else will. And probably with less finesse. Lenin won't live forever. If I'm seen as soft when he dies, I'll be purged. Me. My mother. My children. So yes—it's a calculated affair. Kill men I once fought with, or let my hesitation get my family killed."

She didn't respond. Just watched me with an expression that hovered between pity, disgust, and something close to fear.

"If you don't want to eat with me anymore," I added, "we can keep this professional. You send an intermediary. I won't be offended." I paused, then sighed. "Though it would be a shame. You're the only woman in this city—aside from Reed's wife—who isn't either terrified of me, related to me, or contractually obligated to nod at everything I say."

She took a slow sip of her tea.
"You are a monster," she said calmly. "But the fact that you listened to me—even briefly—means you aren't entirely unreasonable."

"I'm glad you have faith in me," I smiled.

"Faith would be overstating it."

"Fair." I shrugged. "In any case, this is probably the last time we'll eat together."

Her eyes lifted. "Why?"

"You mentioned Kronstadt." I gestured toward the window as another distant explosion rolled through the air. "That bombardment? My idea. Chemical weapons too. Incendiaries. Tukhachevsky approved it. I'll be leading part of the assault."

She stiffened.

"I'll probably die," I continued pleasantly. "It's March. The ice is thinning. The sailors will fight to the last. Either I take a bullet, or I drown. Moscow wants this finished."

"You sound like you want to die," she said quietly.

"I do," I replied. "Ever since Maria." I exhaled. "Life feels… empty. Walking streets we walked together. Sleeping in our room. Listening to Caruso." My voice faltered. I stopped, frowned, and lightly slapped my cheek. "Pathetic."

She looked at me, something soft flickering beneath her revulsion.
"You sound like you lost your soul when you lost her."

"I probably did," I shrugged. "I wasn't always this cruel. I was getting there—but she was the one who noticed. She told me I was becoming a monster. I sometimes wonder if it was better she died when she did—so she wouldn't have to see what I became."

"Or maybe you should have died," Elsa said, then gasped softly, as if she hadn't meant to say it.

I laughed.
"No, you're right. I should have. Fate's a capricious bitch."

I stood, straightened my coat.

"That's why I like you," I added. "You speak your mind. Just like her. And I hate you for it. And myself. I'm starting to feel things I shouldn't." I shook my head. "It pisses me off honestly, it makes me think I'm betraying her."

I went to the door and opened it, then paused and looked back at her.

"But if I survive," I said lightly, "I wouldn't mind lunch sometime. No war. No logistics. Just Caruso." I felt so much shame saying it, yet I felt relief.

She opened her mouth.

"Don't bother," I smiled. "We both know I'm probably going to die."

I stepped into the hall.

"Take care of yourself Miss Elsa."

March 11, 1921
Fittinghoff house

Petrograd, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic

I stood at the door of the building, I had my uniform on, rifle strapped at my back, pistol strapped at my side. Around me were guards, a mix of Cheka and red army men. And in front of me at the entrance was my family. My mom keke, my nephew Yakov; my children, my pride and joy Iosif, Kato, Besarion, Aleksander, Aleksandra; my sister in law Nadezhda, and her baby, my nephew Vasily.

The assault was to begin tonight, the sun was already setting and I would head to the port soon. Most likely to my certain death. Yet I felt no fear, no apprehension, I felt peaceful. Soon this would end, this life would be over and I would finally die and reunite with her. I'd even taken confession from a priest and taken communion earlier this morning, mostly to calm my mother's nerves but also in a vain hope that perhaps I'd be reunited in heaven with her. But I wasn't naive, where I was going, she wouldn't be there. But even that was better, at least then I'd finally pay for all the terrible things I'd done. Someone like me didn't deserve to have a loving family, a warm bed to sleep in, a high position.

I walked up to my mom, hugging her tightly. "I love you mom." I said in Georgian. "You're the best mom anyone could ask for, never tell yourself you failed me or Joe."

She uttered the lords prayer in Georgian, making the sign of the cross on me. "You should have gone to America, or become a priest. Or gone to America and been a priest there."

"You and I both know I'm in too deep." I replied calmly.

"Its never too late," She said, "In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of his grace."

"Ephesians." I said, "Looks like seminary paid off after all." I smiled as I shrugged. She sobbed a little, I just hugged her, patting her back and holding her. Once she finally calmed I let her go. "I promise I'll come back." I said, kissing her forehead. Another lie, one of many I'd told her in this life, but better a sweet lie than the truth.

I went to Yakov next, hugging him tightly, still speaking in Georgian. "No matter what happens, you're my son in everything but blood, always, I raised you, I helped change your diapers, I clothed and fed you. If anything happens, you're the man of the house, you take care of them all, Iosif, Kato, Besarion, Aleksander, Aleksandra."

"Dad, what are you saying, you'll be fine." I grit my teeth as Yakov said that, taking a breath and hugging him even tighter.

"Your real father, Stalin," I replied. "He's a harsh man. But he cares in his own way, he isn't one for affection like I am though. He prefers actions, not words. Just remember that, and take care of Kato specially, you know she cares a lot about you."

I pulled away, ruffling his hair and smiling, even at 14 he looked so much like his father at his age, only his eyes were kind, his mothers eyes, Kato's.

Next was Iosif, my firstborn, my brother's namesake, my pride and joy. "I love you so much." I said as I hugged him, "Make sure you help Yakov out and help take care of your siblings if anything happens."

"Are you going to fight again?"

"I am little comrade."

"Can I come with you?" His eyes seemed so innocent when he asked me, only 11 years old, soon to be 12, yet he was the most daring of my kids, even bolder than Yakov. I hugged him tighter, recalling the time a few months ago I taught him to shoot my pistol my having him shoot at old bottles, his face lighting up as he hit his first bottle. For a moment I wondered if he would become a monster like I was, perhaps, but I had contingencies, I had a letter in my desk, for if I died with instructions for Joe on how to raise my kids, and I specifically told him to never let any of my kids into the Cheka, only the army or party if they wanted. Joe was a son of a bitch, but even he would hopefully listen to me when it came to that, he owed me that much.

"No," I said, forcing the word out and holding the tears in place through sheer spite. "Where I'm going, children can't go. But I trust you'll take care of Yakov and the others if anything happens to me."

I smiled, ruffled his hair like this was any other afternoon, like I wasn't mentally drafting my own obituary.

Once I let him go, my oldest daughter stepped forward—Kato. My little insurance policy. She would turn eleven in a few weeks, and she looked too much like her namesake. Stalin's dead wife. My former sister-in-law. A walking reminder of ghosts that still ruled this family.

I knelt and wrapped her in a tight embrace.

"I love you so much, my little princess," I said in Georgian.

"W-where are you g-g-going?" she asked, her Georgian breaking and stuttering the way it always did. It still killed me that there was nothing I could do about it. Speech therapists probably existed somewhere. Paris, maybe. Certainly not here.

"I'm going to fight some bad people," I said gently.

"Is th-th-that why there's pl-pl-planes in the sk-sky?"

I glanced up. Bombers were returning from Kronstadt, looping back around for another run. Of all my children, she noticed them first. Always had. She had wooden plane figurines, crude sketches, books scavenged from anywhere we could find them. When she talked about planes, the stutter vanished, like fear itself fled her vocabulary.

"Could I r-ride one?" she asked, eyes bright. "I've only r-r-read about them."

"One day," I said, ruffling her hair. "I promise."

I lingered longer than I should have, imagining futures that would never exist—her walking down the aisle beside Yakov, Stalin weeping as his dead wife seemed to return from the grave, smiling in the same wedding dress his wife wore. A perfect political fantasy. I would have been untouchable. I could have survived anything if I had gotten that far, if I had the will to live.

Instead, I hugged her tightly one last time and let her go.

Aleksander was next. Eight years old. Nine in June. He already had a book tucked under his arm.

"Is that a history book?" I asked, crouching and ruffling his hair.

"It is!" he said eagerly. "It's about the Cossacks. Uncle Stalin gave it to me. Remember?"

"I remember," I said. "Didn't you want another book for your birthday?"

He nodded furiously. "One about Peter the Great. Uncle Stalin said he'd find one in Moscow."

I smiled. Of all people, Joe playing the doting uncle. My manipulations had worked. My family would be safe. That was all that mattered.

"When I come back," I lied smoothly, "we'll go to the library together. I'll get you every book you want."

"Thank you!" He hugged me hard.

I hugged him back harder, biting down on the truth.

Then came Besarion. Five years old. Quiet. Always quiet now. Of all my children, Maria's death had hollowed him out the most. He rarely spoke anymore, except when praying with Mama. I knelt and wrapped him in my arms, feeling how small he was, how fragile.

No words. Just a hug.

Aleksandra came next, barely old enough to understand anything. More Nadezhda's daughter than Maria's. She clung to me, warm and trusting. I held her too, wishing fiercely that she would forget my face.

When it was over, I straightened and looked at them all.

"I love you," I said in Georgian. "I'll be back soon."

Another lie.

I turned to my men, switching to Russian. "Let's go."

We boarded the truck waiting at the curb. The engine roared to life, and we pulled away—toward the harbor, toward the ice, toward the battle. Back to unleashing horror upon innocents fighting for what thought was right.
 
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Side story 2: A letter from the depths New
A letter from a German soldier on the Eastern front sent to his mother

------

Dear Mother,

I am writing this letter on the 7th of November, 1941. I do not know when—or if—it will ever reach you. Given how matters stand and how each day seems worse than the last, it is entirely possible that I am already dead by the time you read these words. If so, then take this letter as a kind of last will and testament. And if by some miracle I am still alive, then keep it anyway. I do not believe I will ever come out of Russia whole again, in body or in spirit.

I am sending this letter home with a man from my battalion who was badly wounded and is being evacuated. If I attempted to send it through the usual channels, the censors would seize it at once, and I would likely be shot for defeatism before nightfall.

Our unit is currently in a town that was once called Hostomel, less than thirty kilometers from Kiev. We began the operation to capture that cursed city back in October. Since then, they have rotated us in and out—into the city, then back out, and then in again—each time deeper into that hell.

Of my original company, only ten of us are still alive.

My best friend Wilhelm died yesterday. A partisan shot him while he was relieving himself behind a ruined building. He didn't even have time to cry out.

What we are doing here is not war as I once understood it. It is slaughter. They drive us forward into death, and for what? Living space? What meaning does living space have when everyone sent to claim it ends up dead or broken beyond repair? Sometimes I think that the moment I crossed the border into this land, I died and descended straight into hell.

The Russians use gas constantly—mustard, chlorine, things I cannot even name. Gas masks are now mandatory at the front at all times: while marching, while fighting, even while sleeping. Even the horses wear them. Our faces burn and itch constantly from the rubber and the chemicals trapped inside. But I have seen what happens to those who remove their masks. Men coughing up their lungs, crying tears of blood, clawing at their own throats as they suffocate. Even in the rear, we must keep the masks close at hand. You never know when aircraft will appear overhead or when an artillery barrage will suddenly roll in.

And yet, that is not the worst of it.

The Russians themselves are fanatics. They fight to the last breath—men, women, young, old. Every inch of Kiev is a battlefield. Every building, every floor, every room, every cupboard. I have fought in buildings where even individual rooms on the same floor were contested separately.

Inside these buildings, rifles are useless. We fight with submachine guns, pistols, clubs, knives. Once, I saw a middle-aged woman wearing what looked like medieval armor—old steel plates—wielding a mace in one hand and a pistol in the other as she charged a stairwell.

The sewers, however, are something else entirely. They are the closest thing to hell that I believe exists on this earth. Total darkness. The Soviets flood the tunnels with carbon monoxide, rendering our lanterns and firearms useless and forcing us to use flashlights and fight hand to hand. I cannot count how many times I have nearly died there. One slip and you fall into the water, your gas mask floods, and you have seconds to rip it off, clear it, and put it back on—while the air itself is poisonous. If it happens during a fight, there is no choice. You die.

Worse still is when a weapon strikes a wall, sparks fly, and the gas ignites. I have not seen it myself, but I have heard the screams from nearby tunnels when it happens.

Sleep, when it comes, offers no rest. At the front there are constant rocket barrages, dogfights overhead, aerial bombardments, and artillery duels. Even here in the rear, the partisans hunt us relentlessly. They fire into our camps at night, strike us with grenades or rockets, and vanish. Our dreams are filled with screams and explosions, the noises of the waking world bleeding into what should be our refuge.

Some say being in the rear is safer. I believe it is worse. At least at the front the enemy wears a uniform. Here, everyone wants to kill you.

When we enter a town, we find only old men and women. Their faces are filled with hatred. They attack us without hesitation—burning themselves and their homes to deny us shelter, blowing themselves up with grenades when we come close, poisoning food and wells, or charging at us with ancient pistols and rifles. The young, the middle-aged, the children—they have all either been evacuated or melted into the forests as partisans.

The cities we capture are nothing but burnt husks—isolated camps in a sea of enemies. Even inside our own camps, the underground is never safe. Partisans slip in through tunnels and sewers, killing men in their sleep.

The most dangerous of them are the Komsomol and Communist Party members. They lead the resistance. Boys and girls as young as ten or eleven carry rifles. Their leaders are barely sixteen. Parents march and fight alongside their children. There are no innocents left in this war. Their innocence died the moment we burned their villages.

God forgive me, Mother—I have killed men, women, children, even infants.

We call them subhuman. The SS says it most loudly, but the truth is that the SS men are often more savage than the Russians themselves. And yet, I understand now why the Russians hate them so. They execute every SS man they capture. We see it constantly on patrol: mutilated corpses, limbs arranged into mock skulls, messages written nearby—"Give us your SS men, your Party members, your officers, and you can still live."

Wilhelm and I spoke of it once, quietly. I have thought about it more times than I can admit. I know such thoughts make me a traitor. I know I would be shot if anyone heard me say them. But what is the point of loyalty when death waits for us every hour? Better to risk being called a coward and live than to die for nothing.

I do not know what to do anymore. I do not know if I will see tomorrow.

Mother, if you receive this letter, know that I love you. I am sorry for every cruel or foolish thing I ever said. Tell Father that I love him. Tell Grandmother and Grandfather as well. Tell my brothers that I love them beyond words—and tell them never to join the army. Lie to them. Break their legs if you must. Do whatever is necessary to keep them from this place. I have already lost my soul here. They must live in my place.

Tell my cousins and friends the same. No one should ever come to Russia.

And tell Ava that I am sorry. Tell her that I love her, and that she must move on. Even if I return, I would only hurt her. A man who survives this is no longer fit to be loved.

As for what little money and possessions I left at home, divide them among my brothers as you see fit. Even if I return, a living ghost has no need for such things. Here, sleep, food, and water are worth more than all the marks I ever saved.

With all my love,

Your son,
Friedrich
 
So Kyiv has become Stalingrad, possibly meaning that Germans didn't advance as far. Also leaves Russia itself untouched which reduces the amount of post war rebuilding and aids Russification if the brothers still try that this timeline.
 
Side Story 3: Joseph Stalin thought New
Excerpt from the Wikipedia page on Stalinism

-------

Stalinism, or Joseph Stalin Thought, is the term conventionally used by historians to describe the ideological, political, and institutional system that took shape during the period in which Joseph Stalin served as General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Emerging in the 1920s and consolidating fully in the following decade, Stalinism represented not a rupture with Leninism, but a highly adaptive development of it—one shaped by civil war, international isolation, internal dissent, and the practical demands of governing a vast, devastated state.



Although Stalin himself avoided formally endorsing the label "Marxism–Leninism–Stalinism," he permitted—and in certain contexts quietly encouraged others to employ it. Most notably, this formulation was promoted by his younger brother, Mikheil Jugashvili, who played a central but long-obscured role in the articulation and institutionalization of Stalinist doctrine. Following Lenin's death, Stalin emerged as a principal contributor to theoretical debates within the Communist Party, particularly through the development of a body of ideas that later came to be known as Strategic Socialism. This concept was inseparable from the factional struggles of the period, above all the confrontation with Leon Trotsky and his supporters.



Stalin's engagement with these ideas began earlier than is often assumed. By mid-1921, in the immediate aftermath of the Kronstadt rebellion, he was already producing internal policy memoranda addressing the contradictions of War Communism, the fragility of Soviet power, and the dangers of premature revolutionary adventurism. These texts, circulated privately among members of the Central Committee and submitted to Lenin for comment, laid the groundwork for what would later be codified as Stalinist theory. Stalin continued to refine these arguments in the years following Lenin's death, presenting them as pragmatic extensions of Leninism rather than ideological innovations.



The discovery of Mikheil Jugashvili's personal diaries in 2018, however, fundamentally altered the historiography of Stalinism. These documents revealed that Strategic Socialism was not the product of Stalin's isolated reflection, but a joint intellectual project developed over several years through sustained collaboration between the brothers. The diaries describe intense private debates, protracted study sessions, and frequent—often explosive—arguments in which theoretical positions were tested, discarded, and reformulated. Stalin provided political discipline, institutional legitimacy, and an acute sense of factional timing; Mikheil supplied many of the initial conceptual frameworks, drawing on his experiences in security administration, urban governance, and foreign engagement. What later emerged as "Stalinism" was, in this sense, the outcome of a fraternal synthesis forged under conditions of constant crisis.



At its core, Stalinist doctrine held that socialism could be constructed within Russia alone, even in the absence of immediate worldwide revolution. However, its ultimate victory—and full realization—could not be guaranteed so long as capitalist states continued to exist. Socialism, therefore, had to be built in stages, its final consummation delayed until external threats were neutralized. This position departed sharply from Trotsky's theory of permanent revolution, which envisioned uninterrupted revolutionary expansion and rejected prolonged coexistence with capitalist powers.



Stalin nonetheless retained the Leninist conviction that world revolution remained historically necessary. The Soviet Union, in his view, could not survive indefinitely as an isolated socialist island. Yet he also argued that the revolutionary state must remain strong, centralized, and coercive until international capitalism had been decisively defeated. Although orthodox Marxism predicted the eventual "withering away" of the state, Stalin contended that such an outcome was contingent on global conditions and could not precede the submission of rival systems.



From this analysis followed a distinctive foreign policy orientation. As long as the USSR was encircled by capitalist powers, Stalin argued, revolutionary expansion through direct military invasion—as attempted unsuccessfully in Poland—was strategically reckless. Instead, Soviet influence should be extended incrementally through the creation of "fraternal socialist states". These regimes would be brought to power via Soviet support for local communist parties, whether through elections, military coups, civil wars, or prolonged insurgencies. Direct Soviet intervention was to be undertaken only when victory was virtually assured.



Stalin further maintained that this expansion should proceed sequentially, beginning with states on the Soviet periphery—Finland, Estonia, Latvia, and similar borderlands—before advancing outward in a cascading fashion. Western analysts later characterized this approach as "domino theory", a term that would be adopted—ironically—by American military planners during the Cold War to describe communist expansion.



Perhaps the most distinctive feature of Stalinist foreign policy, however, was its unapologetic embrace of Realpolitik. Anticipating that capitalist powers would inevitably seek to contain and even roll back Soviet influence, Stalin advocated tactical alignments—both overt and covert—with non-communist states and political movements in order to fracture the capitalist world from within. The most infamous application of this logic occurred in late Weimar Germany, where the Communist Party, following Moscow's line, undermined the Social Democratic Party and thereby contributed to the collapse of the republican center, facilitating the rise of National Socialism. While later denounced as catastrophic, such maneuvers reflected the Stalinist belief that short-term instability among rival powers could yield long-term strategic advantage.



Domestically, Stalinism initially endorsed the continuation of the New Economic Policy. Stalin argued that the Soviet Union needed to catch up to and surpass capitalist economies before attempting a full transition to socialism. Unlike Nikolai Bukharin's defense of the NEP as a semi-permanent framework, however, Stalin envisioned it as a temporary instrument subordinate to state priorities. He combined the preservation of market mechanisms with mass collectivization of agriculture, an overwhelming emphasis on heavy industry, and the construction of an economy optimized for war.



Under Stalinism, the so-called NEPmen were not abolished, but they were transformed into regulated auxiliaries of the state. Their businesses—shops, workshops, freight enterprises, and even factories—were allowed to continue operating, but only under strict registration, surveillance, and financial ceilings enforced by the NKVD. Excess profits were confiscated, party membership was denied, and sumptuary laws curtailed conspicuous wealth. As Stalin famously remarked, these actors were to "serve as the engine that powers our economy until we surpass the capitalist world."



Another striking dimension of Stalinism, however, was its overt militarism. Shaped by the memory of foreign interventions during the Civil War, Stalin became the regime's most forceful advocate for a permanently militarized state. He popularized the concept of a military–industrial complex, defined as the inseparable unity of a massive standing army and an industrial base capable of equipping it continuously. Universal conscription for women was introduced in 1930, exemptions for higher education were abolished (with exception for careers deemed "useful to Military research and development"), and the Komsomol was reorganized along paramilitary lines. In schools, traditional physical education was replaced with drilling, weapons training, and combat instruction.



The results were unambiguous. By the outbreak of the Second World War, the Soviet Union possessed the largest armed forces in the world and an industrial apparatus capable of sustaining them. On the eve of the German invasion, Mikheil Jugashvili reportedly told the Politburo, with characteristic brutality, "Just wait—we'll be slaughtering those German dogs by nightfall."
 
Aggressive Negotiations New
Let it be known, that the Soviet Union stands with the Arab people and will vote against Resolution 181. If this plan goes through, it guarantees nothing but decades of war and suffering for the Jewish and Palestinian people. We will not back a Jewish state in land that has been occupied by Arabs for thousands of years. If they wish to settle and live side by side among Arabs and under Arab rule we are not opposed. But outright invasion, colonization, occupation, and annexation of this land as the Americans did to the Native Americans is unacceptable.

Excerpt from Mikheil Jugashvili's speech at the United Nations shortly before the vote on Resolution 181



March 11, 1921
The Great Port of Saint Petersburg
Petrograd, Russian SFSR


The bombs were almost deafening from here. Artillery thundered in a steady rhythm, each concussion rattling the air and vibrating through my bones like a second heartbeat. Across the frozen expanse of the Gulf, Kotlin Island loomed in silhouette. Kronstadt burned—patches of orange fire crawling through the smoke, red light reflecting off the ice like spilled blood.

I stood beside Tukhachevsky at the edge of the port. He watched the bombardment with the same detached focus he brought to everything else, as if he were studying a painting rather than the systematic destruction of a fortress full of men.

"How soon do we begin the assault?" I asked, raising my voice over the distant explosions.

"At dawn," he replied calmly. "Enough light to see. Not enough for them to pick our men apart."

I nodded. "That makes sense."

He didn't look at me. "I've altered the plan."

"Is that right?" I asked, already bracing myself. Almost anything would be an improvement over my original idea of charging in from the west like a lunatic.

"I had men probe the ice on the western approach," he continued. "It's too thin. I lost ten just testing it. They fell through."

I exhaled slowly. "And here I thought you were suddenly concerned about my survival."

"It's not you," he said flatly. "I don't waste men on theatrics. We'll attack from the north, south, and east only. If you wish, you can lead the eastern assault from the port."

I raised an eyebrow. "You'd trust me with something that important? I assumed you'd want the glory."

"The bombardment has done its work," he said. "They'll break. A day, maybe two. This will be quick."

"You're confident."

"It's your plan," he said simply.

I glanced at him. A week ago, he'd looked at me like a curiosity—useful, but crude. Now there was something else there. Respect, perhaps. Or resignation.

"What changed?" I asked. "You seemed disappointed in me when we met."

"I told you already," he replied. "If I'd had someone like you earlier—if you'd been there instead of Budyonny—Warsaw might have fallen. Your talents are wasted in the Cheka. Call it professional respect."

I shrugged, faintly amused. Somewhere deep down, I was proud. A general's respect wasn't nothing. Then I looked at my gloved hand and imagined the blood soaking through it—men, women, children, all of them screaming in languages I pretended not to understand.

I clenched my fist and chuckled quietly. Some résumé.

My thoughts drifted—to Maria, to the children, to the road that had brought me here. I glanced behind me. Rows of Red Army soldiers stood waiting. Boys, really. Some barely older than Yakov. They looked at me with awe, fear, admiration. And I was about to lead them into a slaughter.

I thought of the sailors on Kronstadt—men I'd fought beside, bled beside, saved this city with. And now I was preparing to exterminate them. I could almost hear Maria's voice, sharp and gentle all at once. Don't be a monster.

I turned back to the island. Fires blossomed again as shells landed. Planes roared overhead, circling back for another run. Chemical agents, incendiaries—my ideas. My signature.

You did this, I imagined Maria saying.
You and no one else.

Not just Maria. Elsa too.

"Tukhachevsky," I said suddenly.

He finally looked at me. "What is it?"

"Is it possible to stop the bombardment?"

His expression darkened. "For what reason?"

"So I can go to the island one last time," I said. "I'll warn them. Tell them this is their final chance to surrender. If morale hasn't collapsed yet, it will. Maybe we get mass defections. Fewer defenders. Fewer dead boys on our side."

"And how do you propose to get there?" he asked.

"I'll walk," I said, shrugging. "Give me a torch, a whistle, and a white flag."

He stared at me.

"I'll cross the ice," I continued. "Tell them they have until sunrise. If they surrender, they live. If not, we kill them all. People are very cooperative when survival is an option."

"And if you die?" he snapped. "What then? Do you know what it would do to morale if they kill you?"

"You'd get a martyr," I replied evenly. "Your men would be rabid to finish the job. Think of it as a… morale buff."

"You're impossible," he muttered. After a pause, he sighed. "Fine. I'll get you your torch, your whistle, and your white flag. Don't blame me if you die."

"I'd be happy if I did."

He rolled his eyes. "What's the whistle for?"

"If the garrison collapses into infighting or mass surrender," I said, "I'll step back onto the ice and blow it. That's your signal to storm the island."

"And your terms?"

I didn't hesitate.

"All officers above captain die. Committee leaders die. SRs die. The rest live—on the condition they kill their former officers themselves. Those spared stay in the navy, transferred to the Black Sea Fleet. No demotion, but their careers stall. Anyone who doesn't want to fight or surrender can run for Finland—if they survive the ice. We will not shell anyone trying to flee for Finland, let them cower in exile, disgrace and exile is worse than a glorious death and martyrdom."

I looked at him. "Reasonable enough?"

He studied me for a long moment, then nodded slowly. "Reasonable. When can you go?"

"As soon as the bombardment halts."

"Do you want me to assign you a guard?" he asked.

I shook my head. "Someone like me doesn't deserve one."

He exhaled sharply. "Very well. Don't blame me if you die."

I almost smiled.

An hour later

I was surrounded by Red Army soldiers, their boots crunching softly against frozen ground, their breath fogging the air. They watched me with a mixture of awe, dread, and something close to superstition as an officer handed me a white flag and a torch. I took the flag in my left hand, the torch in my right. It felt ceremonial. Biblical, even. Like I was about to part the ice with my own blood.

Beyond the port, Kotlin Island burned. Fires still licked at the skyline, red and orange tongues clawing at the night, while thick smoke rolled lazily upward. The bombardment had stopped only minutes ago, and the sudden silence felt obscene—like the pause after a scream.

"Well," I said casually, pitching my voice just loud enough to carry. I knew the soldiers, the officers, and Tukachevsky himself could hear me. "I'll be on my way then."

A few men straightened instinctively, as if expecting a final command.

"If I don't come back by dawn," I continued, adjusting my gloves, "assault the damn place and kill everyone there. And not just the men—but the women, and the children too."

Several soldiers flinched. One visibly swallowed.

I snorted despite myself. Darkly funny, really. Imagine it—the last known words of the Butcher of Petrograd, the Red Robespierre himself, reduced to a cheeky Star Wars quote from Anakin Skywalker. If there was a hell, I was definitely getting style points deducted.

I turned before anyone could respond and walked toward the edge of the port, where crude wooden steps had been hammered into the ice. I descended them slowly, deliberately, like a man stepping onto a gallows. The ice groaned softly as my boots touched it.

I tested it with the pole of the white flag, tapping once, twice, then stepped forward.

The city behind me faded quickly. The island ahead loomed larger with every step.

I walked slowly, tapping the ice before each stride, torchlight flickering across frozen ridges and cracks that looked far too much like veins. My thoughts drifted, as they always did now, to Maria.

I remembered how we met—shortly after Joe met Kato. Fate, or whatever cruel god governed this mess, had a sense of symmetry. Maria had been vibrant from the start—sharp-tongued, warm, impossible to intimidate. She had talked shit like it was an art form and never once hesitated to tell me when I was crossing a line. She was one of the last people who ever restrained me.

And now she was gone.

"I should have listened to you," I muttered to the dark, my breath frosting in the air. "I should have taken you seriously. I shouldn't have been so damn flippant."

The torch crackled softly in my hand.

"Will you forgive me when I see you again?"

I stopped walking.

For a moment, there was only the wind and the distant crackle of fire.

I shook my head slowly. I already knew the answer. I had gone too far. I had become the thing she warned me about—the monster she feared I was becoming. And if I survived tonight, I knew with grim certainty that I would have to become something even worse.

I looked down at the ice. In my mind, it wasn't white anymore. It was red—a vast, frozen sea of blood stretching from the city to the island. It barely covered my boots now, but I knew what waited ahead. I would drown in it soon enough.

I don't know how long I walked before I glanced back and realized I was halfway between Petrograd and Kronstadt. The city was distant now. The island still far enough to feel unreal.

I tilted my head up.

The stars were breathtaking—thousands of them, sharp and cold, unobscured by smoke or electric light. I hadn't seen them like this in years. They reminded me of one of my first dates with Maria—a small restaurant in Tbilisi, cheap wine, too much laughter. I remembered walking her home afterward, the sky just like this, her arm tucked into mine.

I broke.

I sobbed quietly, shoulders shaking, torch bobbing wildly as tears froze on my cheeks. I was alone now. Truly alone. No men to command, no reputation to maintain. I could afford weakness here.

"I'm sorry," I whispered. "I'm so sorry, Maria. For everything."

I let it spill out for a few minutes, ugly and undignified, until the cold bit hard enough to remind me where I was.

Enough.

I wiped my face with my sleeve, straightened my back, and kept walking. There was still work to be done.

Eventually, the island rose up before me, solid and ugly. I found myself about a hundred yards from what looked like a lighthouse. I unfurled the white flag and waved it slowly, deliberately, advancing at a measured pace.

"Who are you? State your business!" a voice shouted from the darkness.

"I think you know who I am!" I called back, lifting the torch higher. "Look at the eyepatch!"

There was a pause.

"Stop!" another voice barked. "Stay where you are."

I complied. Five figures emerged, rifles raised, boots crunching toward me. When they were about twenty yards away, I saw it happen—the collective realization. They froze, as if a sudden chill had run down their spines.

"What the hell…" one of them muttered. "What are you doing here?"

"I'm here to deliver terms before the assault," I said calmly. "Bring me to your leader. Or shoot me here. If you do, the assault begins at dawn, and my men will kill all of you—men, women, children, babies, even your dogs."

They stared.

"Or," I continued, "you bring me to your leaders, and I can ensure the safety of everyone."

"Everyone?" one sailor asked hoarsely.

"Yes. Everyone can live—if you choose." I shrugged. "So tell me, from one former comrade in arms to another—will you take me to them? Or will you kill me and die when the assault comes? I don't mind dying. Ever since my wife was murdered, living has felt like an administrative error."

The rifles rose higher.

"I'm unarmed," I added mildly. "I'll drop the torch now and raise my hands."

I let the torch fall onto the ice and slowly lifted both arms.

And I waited.

Two of the men slowly stepped forward. One kicked the torch away from my feet, sending it skittering across the ice, its flame sputtering but refusing to die—stubborn little thing, much like me. The other began patting me down with unnecessary enthusiasm, hands rough, professional, and distinctly unimpressed.

"How cute," I said mildly. "You won't find anything. I came here to talk, not to shoot. Besides, I'm too old to be an action hero."

No one laughed. Rifles stayed trained on my chest, barrels steady, fingers white on the triggers. The man searching me said nothing, just continued his work while the others argued in sharp, urgent whispers a few steps away.

"If we kill him, we're dead."

"If we let him go, we're dead," another hissed.

"If we take him to Petrichenko…" the youngest one said, his voice cracking slightly. "Maybe."

That word—maybe—hung in the air like a prayer no one fully believed in.

After what felt like a full minute, the search stopped. The man stepped back and nodded once. "Come with us," he said. "We'll take you to him."

"No sudden movements," another added. "Walk slowly."

"As you say," I replied, already moving. "By the way, I've got a packet of cigarettes in my front pocket. You're welcome to them."

One of them immediately reached in and pulled out my Dukats, holding them like contraband.

"No need to share them with me," I continued pleasantly. "Consider it a gesture of goodwill. Who knows—it might be your last one, depending on what your leader decides."

That earned me a look somewhere between hatred and disbelief.

They led me off the ice and onto the island proper. Kronstadt looked like the aftermath of God losing his temper. Buildings were shattered or half-collapsed, walls blackened by fire, windows blown out and replaced by ragged cloth or nothing at all. Smoke still curled lazily into the night air, as if even the destruction was tired.

People emerged from ruins and makeshift shelters as we passed—sailors, workers, women clutching children, the wounded wrapped in filthy bandages already soaked red again. When they recognized me, I could feel it ripple through them: hatred first, then disbelief, then fear. A few spat on the ground. Others simply stared.

"We're taking him to Petrichenko!" my escort shouted. "He wants to talk! He's offering terms!"

That was all it took. The island erupted. Voices rose, curses, shouts, cries. By the time we reached the entrance to the fortress proper, a crowd had already gathered.

And there he was.

Stepan Petrichenko stood waiting, his arm bandaged, his posture rigid despite the pain. Around him were sailors and civilians alike—men, women, children, infants wrapped in blankets, even a couple of dogs nosing nervously at the snow. An entire world balanced on a knife's edge, staring at me.

"Comrade Petrichenko," I said, inclining my head. "Good to see you're in one piece."

"There's no need to be snide," he replied coldly.

"There isn't," I said. "But you know me. I cope poorly with stress." I glanced around, then back at him. "I'll get to the point. I'm here to deliver terms. Would you like to hear them?"

"We've made our position clear."

"And how," I bellowed suddenly—not in anger, but loud enough that everyone could hear—"do you plan to enforce that when you're surrounded, outnumbered, and outgunned?"

The crowd stirred.

"All those bombs," I continued, my voice carrying easily, "the poison gas, the incendiaries, the artillery—that wasn't random. Your barracks, infirmaries, ships, defenses? They were hit because I planned it. The Bolsheviks who left Kronstadt were very cooperative. They gave us everything."

Murmurs rippled outward.

"The only reason the bombardment stopped," I went on calmly, "is so I could walk across the ice myself and speak to you. I did that because you are my comrades in arms. Because I fought and bled with you. Because—stupid as it sounds—I still care about you."

I shrugged. "So here are your options. You can listen to what I have to offer. Or you can kill me right now. Either way, it makes no difference to me."

I smiled faintly. "The moment I die, at dawn, the bombing resumes. Then we storm the island. And everyone here dies—men, women, children, babies, even your fucking dogs."

Silence.

"So," I said softly, raising a finger, "will you listen?"

I paused, letting the cold bite at my face, letting Maria's voice echo somewhere deep inside me.

"I'll count to ten."

"One."

The word carried farther than I expected. Funny how silence amplifies things—like gunshots, or confessions.

The crowd rippled immediately. Not a roar, not yet. A nervous animal sound. Mothers clutched children tighter; one woman sank to her knees, whispering prayers like she was racing a clock only she could hear. Somewhere behind me someone hissed, "Is he serious?" Another voice answered, "He walked across the ice, didn't he?"

I smiled faintly. That usually did it.

"Two."

That's when the rifles came up.

Not all of them. Just enough to be concerning. A few sailors raised their weapons instinctively, fingers twitching like they'd been waiting for permission their entire lives. Others immediately stepped in front of the barrels, shoving them aside.

"Shoot him!" someone screamed, voice cracking.

"Let him talk!" another shouted back.

I made a mental note of how quickly comrades turn into obstacles. Very educational.

"Three."

"STOP!"

Petrichenko's voice cut through the chaos like a hammer on an anvil. He stepped forward, arm bandaged, face pale but rigid with authority. For a moment—just a moment—he looked like a man still pretending he was in control.

"Let him speak," he said, jaw tight.

I inclined my head slightly toward him. Polite. Respectful. Almost affectionate.

"Wise choice, old friend."

His eyes burned. "I'm not your friend."

"How tragic," I said, spreading my hands. "Truly. I thought shared bloodshed built character."

A few nervous laughs died in throats that couldn't quite commit to the sound.

"Now then," I continued, voice calm, conversational, like we were discussing ration cards instead of extinction. "Here are my terms. Listen carefully. I will not repeat myself."

I took a slow breath. Let them lean in.

"You may surrender right now. Immediately. Walk back across the ice with me. Anyone who does so will be spared—with exceptions."

I raised a finger.

"All officers of commander rank or above will die. Committee leaders die. Socialist Revolutionaries die. No appeals. No exceptions. We're very efficient these days."

A woman sobbed openly now. Somewhere behind Petrichenko, a man muttered a curse.

"The rest," I continued, "the rank and file—you—can live. On one condition."

I paused. Smiled again.

"You kill your former officers yourselves."

That did it.

The crowd reacted like I'd dropped a live shell between them. Shouts. Gasps. Someone retched. Someone else laughed hysterically and then immediately stopped when no one joined them.

"Those who survive," I went on, unfazed, "will remain in the Navy. You'll be transferred—Black Sea Fleet, Far East, Murmansk. No demotion. No tribunals. Your careers will stall, yes. A few years, perhaps. But you'll be alive. Which, I find, people tend to prefer."

I gestured casually toward the northwest, torchlight flickering over the ice.

"And for those who don't want to surrender, don't want to fight, don't want to kill, and don't particularly want to be killed by me or my men—Finland is that way."

Heads turned. Hope flickered dangerously.

"You'll have twenty-four hours. During that time, we will not shell the ice. No guarantees beyond that. I suggest torches. And walking quickly. Time, as they say, flies when you're being hunted."

I let the words hang. Let them stew. Let fear do the heavy lifting.

Then I shrugged, suddenly very tired.

"You may reject these terms. You may kill me. There would be a point to that—symbolism, martyrdom, morale. Very revolutionary. Or…"

I turned slowly, deliberately, toward the dark stretch of ice leading back to Petrograd.

"…you can follow me."

I took a step forward.

"I'll be walking back now," I said lightly. "Anyone who doesn't want to die—and qualifies under the categories I just mentioned—kindly come with me."

I paused, just long enough to twist the knife.

"Everyone else," I added, glancing back over my shoulder, "I wish you luck. You're going to need it. And I'll be requisitioning a new torch." I turned to one of the soldiers, grabbing a torch he held out of his hands and heading back towards the ice, I didn't bother looking back to see how many followed me, I tuned out the shouting, screaming, and arguing that emerged as I casually walked away. I sighed, and thought about Maria.

This song is Mika's mental state right now:
 
Last edited:
Omake: TNO 2 New
Excerpt from a 4chan thread:

Why is Beating the Far Eastern Soviet Republic so hard?

Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)03:57:30 No.730926108

I'm currently playing as Buryatia under Sablin and honestly I'm kind of at a loss at what to do. It's not even a year into this fucking run and the Far Eastern Soviets are already knocking on my door.

You all know the usual shit: event pops up offering "peaceful unification," I decline, then Jugashvili declares war on me like clockwork.

I've fucking tried everything, Fortifying beforehand, Spies, Defensive templates, Air denial.

The only way I can reliably win is by cheating and spamming equipment because his troops are literally endless.

I tag-switched mid-war and saw this asshole has armored divisions in Siberia, full plane stocks, air superiority, an economy that looks like a minor superpower.

Why the fuck is Jugashvili so OP?

----------------

Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:00:39 No.730926216

What the fuck do you expect? It's Stalin's brother.

--------------

Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:01:04 No.730926241

Isn't his great-great grandson the Supreme Leader now or some shit?

Genetic skill issue, face it, Jugashvili was just born better

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Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:02:49 No.730926309

Fucker literally got rich off Prohibition lmao.
That + American backing in the TNO timeline = infinite money glitch.

-------------

Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:05:04 No.730926404

> > 730926309
I know that part, but it's still fucking stupid. How the fuck do you get rich off bootlegging in the USSR, keep your money and not get shot.

And don't give me bullshit like "Stalin covered for him" because the lore literally says Stalin died in the civil war.

-----------

Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:08:57 No.730926512

> > 730926404

>implying the Bukharin didn't tolerate him
>implying anyone checked Cheka finances
>implying they'd execute the HERO OF THE REVOLUTION

lmao

------------

Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:11:33 No.730926633

You didn't read the lore events, did you?

Jugashvili didn't "own" the money.

He "managed logistics" for the Cheka.

Which in Soviet terms means:

> owned everything
>killed anyone who asked questions

----------------

Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:14:21 No.730926741

Also people forget the Far Eastern Soviets get the pacific Fleet remnants, US equipment decisions, Black market economy buffs, Reduced attrition, Cheka veteran templates

It's not a normal unifier state.

It's literally a crime syndicate with an air force.


-----------------

Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:17:09 No.730926832

> armored divisions in Siberia

NO SHIT
He ran bootlegging routes through Alaska and the Aleutians in the 20s. That's just with him being exiled to the far east in TNO. Bro was an even bigger menace in our timeline.

Are you forgetting how much money Americans were throwing at anyone who hated Germany and Japan?

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Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:19:55 No.730926901

Jugashvili is OP because the modders made him the embodiment of

> "What if the NKVD just became a criminal organization?"

-------------------

Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:22:40 No.730927012

Reminder that this is the same guy that

> walked alone across the ice at Kronstadt
>dared the sailors to kill him
>turned 360 degrees and walked back across the Ice like a chad

You're not fighting Sablin.
You're fighting a man who solved rebellions psychologically.


-----------------

Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:24:13 No.730927104

>Why is Jugashvili so OP?

Because he's not a warlord.
He's an endgame obstacle, the only way I've beaten him is by playing as Tukachevsky in the WRRF.

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Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:28:33 No.730927251

> > 730926404
>Implying Bukharin was a communist
>Implying they'd purge the HERO OF THE REVOLUTION
>Implying Jugashvili didn't have infinite aura from Petrograd + Kronstadt

kys

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Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:31:12 No.730927362

Honestly the only reliable strat is:

let him eat someone else

wait for US aid cooldown

hit during the succession events once he dies and Yakov is scrambling to consolidate power.

Otherwise enjoy getting steamrolled by a Georgian Tony Soprano with planes.

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Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:34:58 No.730927489

Sablin bros when they realize idealism doesn't stop tanks 😔

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Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:38:01 No.730927612

Jugashvili isn't OP.
You're just playing a man
who still believes in the revolution.

-------------------

Anonymous
01/16/26(Fri)04:40:44 No.730927701

> Far Eastern Soviet Republic

aka
The Pacific Cheka Retirement Plan
 
assault New
I was about five or six years old, I had just started what would be the equivalent of kindergarten. Even then, I remember seeing posters everywhere—of my father, of Lenin, of Marx. And my father standing among them. One day I asked my teacher, very simply, "Why is my father on all these posters?" I remember her freezing for a moment, as if she had seen a ghost. After a long pause she said only, "I cannot speak about that." She did not look at me again for the rest of the day. When I came home and asked my father about it, it was one of the few times in my life that I saw him laugh. Later, it was my uncle Mika who explained it to me. He said, "Yes, Sveta, your father is the Vozhd. He serves the people. And I protect him."

Excerpt from Svetlana Stalina's interview with the BBC, 1997, at her dacha in Gori, Georgian SSR.

March 12, 1921
The Great Port of Saint Petersburg
Petrograd, Russian SFSR


Mikhail Nikolayevich Tukhachevsky stood at the edge of the frozen port, boots planted wide, hands clasped behind his back. Around him the machinery of war waited: infantry huddled in long gray lines, artillery crews standing by their guns, Cheka detachments loitering with their usual predatory stillness. Even a handful of civilians had gathered at a distance, wrapped in coats, drawn by the promise of history unfolding before dawn.

He pulled out his watch and flipped the cover open.

3:47 a.m.

Almost morning.

Jugashvili was still not back.

Tukhachevsky exhaled slowly through his nose. He had watched the man step onto the ice shortly before midnight—white flag in one hand, torch in the other, moving with the casual indifference of someone crossing a street rather than walking into the jaws of a mutiny. Crossing the ice should have taken an hour. Two, at most. It had now been nearly four.

He ran through the possibilities with the same detached clarity he applied to battlefield problems.

The ice could have given way.
The sailors could have shot him on sight.
The civilians might have torn him apart.
Or—least likely of all—Jugashvili might have succeeded.

Tukhachevsky snorted quietly at the last thought.

"Someone like me doesn't deserve one," Jugashvili had said, when offered a guard.

The phrase lingered in his mind like an unresolved chord.

Part of him—an irritating, unprofessional part—felt pity for the man. He had seen the family earlier: the children, the old Georgian mother murmuring prayers, the way they clustered around Jugashvili as if he were a pillar holding up their world. Decent people. Normal people. All of them orbiting someone who seemed determined to die spectacularly.

And then there was Stalin.

Tukhachevsky's mouth tightened at the thought. Something about Stalin made his skin itch—a sense of weight without warmth, of patience sharpened into something predatory. How Jugashvili could be related to him, let alone loyal to him, was a mystery he had no interest in solving tonight.

The ice groaned faintly in the distance.

Behind him, boots crunched. Rifles were adjusted. Ammunition crates were shifted. The final assault assembled itself with mechanical precision. At dawn, regardless of whether Jugashvili lived or died, Kronstadt would burn.

A staff officer approached briskly—Kazachenko.

"Comrade Commander," he said, snapping a salute. "All units are ready. Artillery crews standing by. We await your order."

"Good," Tukhachevsky replied, eyes never leaving the dark mass of Kotlin Island. "We wait for dawn."

"Understood."

Kazachenko saluted again and withdrew.

Tukhachevsky reached into his coat, drew out a cigarette, and lit it. The flame flared briefly, then vanished into the wind. He inhaled and watched the smoke drift outward, merging with the haze above the island, where fires still burned from the bombardment. Smoke on smoke. War eating its own exhaust.

Then he heard it.

At first, it barely registered—a thin, reedy sound carried by the wind. He dismissed it as metal clatter or a careless signal from the port. But it came again. And again. Regular. Intentional.

A whistle.

His spine straightened.

He crushed the cigarette under his heel and stepped forward, eyes narrowing as he stared across the ice.

"No," he murmured. "That's not possible."

The sound came once more, clearer now.

"Binoculars!" he snapped.

A soldier scrambled to him, nearly tripping, and thrust the lenses into his hands. Tukhachevsky raised them, heart pounding despite himself, and scanned the ice.

At first, he saw only darkness.

Then—a light, not on the island but between the island and the city.

He adjusted the focus and there he was, Jugashvili, unmistakable even at a distance—torch held high, white flag trailing behind him like a relic from some older, more theatrical war. And behind him—

Tukhachevsky sucked in a breath.

Hundreds of figures. Men. Women. Children. A broken column spilling out across the ice, stumbling, clinging to one another, moving toward the city like refugees from a collapsing world.

He lowered the binoculars slowly.

For a long moment, he said nothing.

Then, very quietly, almost to himself, he asked:

"Is he real?"

Tukhachevsky snapped out of his stillness and turned sharply to his staff.

"Ladders," he barked. "Now. Get the ladders. Prepare to receive Comrade Jugashvili."

The name alone rippled through the men. Several stiffened; others exchanged quick glances. Orders were shouted, boots scraped against ice and stone, and within seconds soldiers were hauling ladders forward, dropping them onto the frozen edge of the port. A small crowd—soldiers, Chekists, a few civilians who had crept closer despite orders—pushed toward the waterline.

Across the ice, the column was coming into clearer view.

It was not a formation. It was a procession.

Men limping, women clutching children, old people supported by strangers. Bandages dark with blood. Coats burned through, faces blackened with soot. The bombardment had done exactly what Jugashvili said it would do. Tukhachevsky felt no satisfaction in that—only confirmation.

Less than five minutes later, the first of them reached the port. Soldiers leaned forward instinctively, rifles half-raised, before realizing there were no weapons among them. They had been disarmed before stepping onto the ice. Some collapsed the moment they touched solid ground.

Jugashvili was among the first to climb up, moving with the same infuriating calm as always, eyepatch stark against his soot-streaked face.

"Comrade," he said casually, stepping toward Tukhachevsky. "Looks like I'm still alive. What a disappointment, hm?"

Tukhachevsky stared at him for a moment, as if checking whether he was real.

"How is it on the island?" he asked.

"Awful," Jugashvili replied, shrugging. "Every building is either damaged or destroyed. I didn't see many people who weren't injured in some way. I gave them the terms we discussed, then I walked back."

He glanced over his shoulder at the refugees spilling onto the port.

"Process them. Civilians and rank and file—let them live. If you find officers or committee members, hand them to me. I'll deal with them personally."

There was no bravado in his voice. No performance. Just procedure.

Tukhachevsky nodded. By now, the man's willingness to carry out violence with his own hands no longer surprised him. If anything, it disturbed him less than it should have.

"What time is it?" Jugashvili asked.

Tukhachevsky checked his watch.

"4:38 a.m."

Jugashvili's eye flicked toward the horizon, where the faintest gray was beginning to creep into the sky.

"We should start the assault immediately," he said. "I saw sailors running for Finland. Hardliners are still inside. Petrichenko too, from what I could tell. If we move now, across the ice, we'll catch them disorganized."

The logic was sound. Irritatingly so.

Tukhachevsky was already calculating when Jugashvili cut in again.

"How soon can we start?"

He scanned the port, the prisoners, the units forming up.

"Ten minutes," he said. "Fifteen at most. Once the prisoners are moved."

"Good." Jugashvili nodded. "Hand me a rifle and a pistol. I'm going back across the ice."

Tukhachevsky turned sharply toward him.

"Again?" he asked, incredulous.

"Yes. Again." Jugashvili looked at him as if the answer were obvious. "What about it? I already failed to die once tonight. Maybe I'll do better this time."

Tukhachevsky opened his mouth to say something—anything. To call him a fool. To remind him of command responsibility, of optics, of morale.

Then he saw it again, unmistakable beneath the sarcasm: the grief. Raw, unresolved, and utterly sincere.

He closed his mouth, exhaled slowly, and shook his head.

"Do whatever you want," he said at last.

-------------------------------

March 12, 1921
The Great Port of Saint Petersburg
Petrograd, Russian SFSR


I looked around at the Red Army men assembled along the port—boys, really. Some barely old enough to shave, others already carrying the thousand-yard stare of veterans who had aged twenty years in three. Their breath fogged the air in pale clouds, rifles held tight, knuckles white. Above us, the sky was still dark, a deep, exhausted blue, though Tukhachevsky had informed me—very calmly, very professionally—that it was nearly five in the morning.

Dawn was coming.

And if God—or whoever else happened to be running this cosmic slaughterhouse—was merciful, I would finally die before the sun came up.

I found that thought oddly comforting.

Maybe heaven.
Probably hell.
Almost certainly hell.

No amount of last rites or whispered confessions was going to wash this much blood off my hands. I'd done the math. I'd run the numbers years ago. But at least death would be an ending. An exit. And somewhere deep inside me—buried under layers of cynicism, cruelty, and very deliberate monstrosity—there was still that stupid little ember of hope. The naïve, embarrassing hope that maybe, just maybe, I'd see Maria again.

I could almost hear her voice already, sharp and warm all at once, telling me I was an idiot for thinking it would be that simple.

I shifted my gaze back to the men, to Tukhachevsky standing rigid beside me, all aristocratic posture and modern warfare theory, pretending not to stare at me like I was some kind of half-mythical animal that had wandered out of a children's story and into real life. Beyond him were officers, commissars, party men—faces I recognized from endless meetings, smoky rooms, whispered arguments about ideology and grain quotas and how many bodies constituted an acceptable loss.

Most of them, I realized, would probably die at my brother's hands once I was gone.

Purges have a way of cleaning house like that.

For a fleeting moment, I wondered if my existence had made Joe even slightly less cruel. Less paranoid. Maybe I'd acted as some kind of lightning rod, drawing the worst impulses away from everyone else. Then I dismissed the thought. I wasn't that important. Stalin didn't soften—he merely waited.

Still, I tried not to think about it too much. Thinking had never done me much good.

I exhaled slowly and stepped forward, the ice groaning faintly beneath my boots as if the earth itself was tired of supporting any of us.

"Gentlemen," I said, my voice carrying more easily than I expected. Everyone went still. Even the wind seemed to pause, just to listen. "Let's finish this damn war."

A few heads turned. No one spoke.

"We've killed too many of our own," I continued, almost conversationally. "Too many comrades. Too many 'enemies' who just happened to be standing on the wrong side of an argument at the wrong time. All over petty squabbles, bruised egos, and theoretical disagreements no one will remember in ten years."

Someone swallowed hard. Another crossed himself when he thought no one was looking.

I pulled my pistol free, the metal cold and familiar in my hand. For a brief second, I considered turning it inward. That would be poetic. Efficient. But no—this wasn't about poetry. This was about theater.

I fired a single shot into the air. The crack echoed across the frozen port, sharp and final, like a punctuation mark at the end of a very long sentence.

Then I raised the whistle to my lips and blew.

The sound cut through the darkness—shrill, unmistakable.

"Charge!" I screamed, my voice breaking with something that might have been laughter or grief or both.

And then I ran.

Across the ice.
Toward the island.
Toward the end.

Behind me, boots thundered forward, men shouting, officers barking orders, history lurching violently into its next terrible chapter. Ahead of me was fire, smoke, blood—and, if I was very lucky, oblivion.

We ran across the ice.

Not marched. Not advanced. Ran—boots hammering, breath tearing out of chests, the ice screaming under our weight like it resented being part of history. Above us, planes roared low, their engines howling like impatient gods. Artillery shells sailed overhead from the shore and detonated across the island in dull orange blossoms. Each explosion briefly illuminated Kotlin like a dying city in a children's book—fires, smoke, silhouettes of men who would not live to see noon.

I glanced left. Then right.

The men were keeping up with me. Some were even overtaking me, faces twisted in effort, eyes fixed forward with that peculiar mix of terror and devotion soldiers get when they're convinced the universe has narrowed to one direction. I was already panting. My lungs burned. My legs felt heavier than they had any right to.

I'm getting old, I thought. Out of shape.
I really should establish a proper exercise routine—one that doesn't involve inspections, shouting, and executing people in public squares.

A man to my left vanished with a crack, the ice giving way beneath him. He screamed once before the water swallowed him. Another to my right took a bullet mid-stride, spun, and collapsed face-first, his rifle skittering ahead of him like it was trying to escape responsibility.

Why the fuck am I still alive?
Do I have plot armor? Is this some cosmic joke?

A round whizzed past my head. Another punched through a man's chest behind me. I felt nothing—no fear, no adrenaline spike—just irritation that my coat was getting sprayed with blood again.

"Charge!" I screamed, voice hoarse but practiced.
"Don't let up!"

Somewhere behind me, men echoed it. Somewhere ahead, sailors screamed back. The ice kept cracking, but it didn't break—not yet.

I slowed, stopping for a moment to catch my breath. Soldiers streamed past me, boots pounding, rifles raised, bayonets glinting faintly in the half-light. I watched them run ahead into gunfire like moths with better uniforms.

Then I started moving again.

The closer we got to the island, the worse it became. Machine guns opened up from the ruins—short, disciplined bursts, the Kronstadt boys still knowing their trade. Rifles cracked from behind shattered walls and collapsed barracks. Makeshift artillery barked back at us, crude but deadly.

Planes screamed overhead and dropped bombs, briefly silencing enemy positions in showers of rubble and fire. But the bombardment slowed as we closed the distance. Danger close. Friendly fire becoming unfriendly.

Which meant, regrettably, I had work to do.

I slowed to a walk.

Pulled out my pistol.

And began strolling forward as if this were a boulevard rather than a killing field.

Men hesitated when they saw me. Some flinched. Some straightened. A few looked relieved—like seeing the devil himself meant the rules were clear again. I fired once, clean and casual, into the back of a soldier who had turned around.

He fell.

No speech. No warning. Efficiency matters.

I kept walking.

Around me, the fight turned into a grind—step by step, body by body. Artillery from our side resumed in controlled bursts. Bombs fell farther inland. The island was being chewed apart methodically, like a problem someone had decided to solve with overwhelming force and a complete absence of mercy.

The remaining sailors fought hard. Fanatics. Desperate men. Former comrades.

They killed plenty of ours.

But momentum is a cruel thing once it gets going.

By the time the first rays of dawn crept over the horizon, pale and indifferent, men were already pouring onto the island proper. Wounded, bloodied, screaming, laughing, sobbing—alive.

I stood there for a moment, pistol hanging loose in my hand, watching the sun rise over a place that had just finished dying.

Still alive I thought. How inconvenient.

I reached the shore a few minutes after the men had stormed it.

The fighting had already moved inland, leaving behind what battles always leave behind when they get bored of killing—bodies that hadn't received the memo. Dead sailors lay scattered across the ice and rubble, limbs twisted at wrong angles, eyes glassy and unfocused. A few stragglers were still alive, though "alive" felt generous. They moaned softly, clutching at themselves, whispering names into the frozen air. Mothers. Fathers. Lovers. Gods. Sometimes just sounds, vowels dragged out like they were trying to remember what language was for.

I did the charitable thing.

I pulled out my pistol and walked from one to the next, placing a round into each temple with the same casual efficiency a man might use while checking items off a grocery list. No speeches. No hesitation. Pop. Step. Pop. Step. It felt procedural, almost relaxing. Like muscle memory finally getting to stretch its legs.

By what I guessed was the twentieth body—give or take, I'm bad with numbers when I'm emotionally detached—I paused and looked back toward the city.

Petrograd.

The city where I'd spent more than a decade of my life. Where I'd raised my children. Where Maria and I had built something resembling happiness.

"Monster," I could already hear Maria saying.

I glanced down and shot another dying sailor.

I moved to the next one. He was young. Too young. Maybe a few years older than Yakov. His face was pale, lips blue, eyes unfocused but still alive enough to track me as I approached. I raised my pistol.

And then her voice again.

"What's wrong with you, Mika?"

The park. The way she'd looked at me. Not angry—worse. Afraid. Like she was watching me drift somewhere she couldn't follow.

Something stirred in my chest. Guilt? Shame? Disgust? It was hard to tell. I wasn't practiced at identifying emotions anymore. Still, I hesitated.

The boy's mouth moved.

I knelt beside him, sighing. "You should thank my wife," I said quietly. "I think I'll let you live."

"Ma… ma…" he whispered.

"Are you injured?" I asked, genuinely curious.

That's when he lunged.

A knife came out of nowhere, fast and desperate. I reacted on instinct—caught his wrist, but not before the blade punched clean through my left hand. Pain flared white-hot. I headbutted him hard enough to feel cartilage crunch, shoved him back, drew my pistol, and emptied the magazine into his chest.

The sound echoed.

I sat back on my heels, breathing heavily, staring at the corpse I'd just turned into an anatomy lesson.

I sighed.

"This is what mercy gets me, Maria," I said to no one. "I'm sorry."

I looked down at my hand. The knife was still lodged there, ugly and rusted, caked with mud and blood. Pulling it out would hurt. Leaving it in would probably kill me slower. Infection. Gangrene. Embarrassing ways to die.

Gunfire was dignified. Infection was not.

I gritted my teeth and yanked the blade free. Pain exploded up my arm. I hissed, then tore a strip of cloth from the dead sailor's coat and did my best to clean the wound, wrapping it tight. It would hold—for now.

I made a mental note to see a doctor later. Flush it with alcohol. Disinfect it properly.

Dying in battle was acceptable.
Dying because I forgot basic hygiene? Absolutely not.

I stood, slid a fresh magazine into my pistol, and continued walking inland.

Kronstadt proper felt like stepping into the fifth circle of Hell—fire everywhere, shells screaming overhead, masonry collapsing, civilians and sailors shrieking inside the fortress as they tried, in vain, to hold us back. It was like watching men attempt to stop the sea with their bare hands. They were finished and they knew it. Outnumbered. Outgunned. Outmatched. What remained wasn't resistance so much as inertia—bodies moving after the will had already fled.

I didn't rush in. I stood back, watched. Occasionally I shot a man who refused to advance or tried to break away. Clean, efficient. Necessary. Part of me wanted to lead from the front, to be the first through the breach like some heroic illustration in a history book. Another part—the larger part—was simply tired.

I had been awake all night. My bones ached. My head throbbed. And above all, I knew this—every screaming civilian, every burning building, every shattered body inside that fortress—was there because of me. Whites were easy. You could tell yourself stories about class enemies and reactionaries. But these men? I had fought beside them. Bled with them. Drank with them. I had already killed too many of them, directly and indirectly. I was done participating. Watching would have to suffice.

By mid-morning, the fortress finally broke. The sound was animal—grunts, gunshots, screams echoing through corridors that had once housed pride and slogans. By sunset, resistance had collapsed entirely, save for the occasional shot echoing through the ruins like a dying reflex.

Which meant it was my turn.

There are always quotas in revolutions. If you don't fill them, someone else will—usually less carefully.

We gathered the surrendered sailors in the center of Kronstadt. Petrichenko among them. Around them stood the surviving civilians—women clutching children, old men leaning on sticks, faces gray with shock. The count came in quickly: just over fifteen hundred surrendered sailors, a little more than two thousand civilians. Scouts reported a handful fleeing across the ice toward Finland.

"Let them go," I said. "The ice or exile will finish the job."

No point wasting ammunition on ghosts.

I walked toward the sailors. Most were wounded—burns, shrapnel, broken limbs. They watched me with a familiar mixture: fear, hatred, disgust, resignation.

"I told you Finland was that way," I said, pointing northwest. "So tell me—why didn't you run?"

Silence.

"I understand," I continued. "You hate me. You want me dead. You think I'm a monster." I nodded to myself. "You're right. I am."

I paused, letting the words sink in.

"But if you truly believed I was a cold, heartless monster, you should have taken my offer when I gave it to you. I offered surrender. I offered exile. I offered life. And you refused."

I exhaled slowly.

"And now you will die."

I turned to the civilians.

"And you," I said, almost pleasantly, "congratulations. Today is your lucky day."

I bent down, picked up a brick from the ground, and tossed it lightly. It skidded to a stop in front of a young woman—mid-twenties maybe, arms wrapped in filthy bandages, holding herself together through sheer stubbornness.

"Pick it up," I said. "Beat a sailor to death with it."

A ripple of disbelief passed through the crowd.

"Each of you owes me the life of one sailor," I continued. "Refuse—"

I shot a sailor at random. He dropped without a sound.

"—and I shoot a civilian instead. Plenty of bricks. The artillery was very generous."

The woman stared at me, shaking. "You fucking monster," she hissed.

I raised my pistol.

"Do you have a son?"

She froze.

"A husband?" I asked. "A lover?"

She nodded, tears spilling.

"Did my men kill him today?" I asked softly. "Because I can send you to him right now."

She broke.

Before anyone could speak, I fired again—the woman collapsing like a sack of laundry. I looked at my watch.

"For every minute I don't see a sailor beaten to death," I said, "I kill another civilian."

Then it started.

Sobbing. Screaming. Sailors stepping forward voluntarily, kneeling, begging civilians to finish it quickly. Mothers shaking so hard they could barely lift the bricks. Children screaming until someone dragged them away. Even some of my Chekists looked sick—eyes fixed forward, jaws clenched, pretending not to see.

I selected a dozen sailors—the weakest, the most broken—and had them pulled aside.

"You live," I told them. "You'll tell everyone what you saw. You'll explain the price of betrayal."

The next hour erased whatever remained of Kronstadt's soul. By the end, faces were unrecognizable. Blood soaked into the stones like spilled wine. No civilian stood untouched by grief or hatred. Even my men avoided my eyes.

By nightfall, Kronstadt wasn't a fortress anymore. It was a cemetery.

"Have the civilians throw the bodies into the bay," I told one of my officers. "And get me a doctor."

I glanced at my bandaged hand. The blood seeping through was dark now. Brown.

Wonderful.

Survived Kronstadt just to die of infection. Gangrene would be very on brand.

I wondered—briefly—what Maria would say if she could see me now. "Monster," that was the only answer.

Excerpt from Stephen Kotkin's 2014 book: Mikheil Jugashvili, The Red Rockefeller and His Rivers of Blood

After Mikheil Jugashvili was expelled from Kronstadt following the collapse of negotiations in early March 1921, reports of the island's defiance reached Moscow with alarming speed. Jugashvili himself made no attempt to soften the message. In memoranda to the Politburo and senior Party organs, he dispensed with euphemism altogether: the sailors, he insisted, would not compromise, would not retreat, and would not fracture without overwhelming force. "Only the application of arms," he wrote, "will ensure the rebellion is extinguished. Send everything available. Kronstadt must be crushed."

The Party's response came swiftly. On March 5, command of the suppression was entrusted to Mikhail Tukhachevsky, one of Leon Trotsky's most gifted protégés. Fresh from the humiliation of defeat in the Polish campaign and eager to rehabilitate his standing, Tukhachevsky approached Kronstadt not as a symbolic problem but as a military one. Jugashvili, who remained in Petrograd, provided him with a detailed map of the fortress and island—compiled from interrogations conducted by the Cheka, testimony extracted under torture from captured sailors, and information supplied by Bolshevik-aligned sailors who had fled the island and cooperated fully. Jugashvili further recommended that no immediate assault be attempted. Instead, he urged sustained bombardment, including the liberal use of chemical shells and incendiaries, in order, as he later recorded in his journals, "to kill morale, disorient the defenders, and buy time to assemble an overwhelming force for a decisive blow."

From March 6 through March 11, Kronstadt endured relentless bombardment. Artillery batteries on the mainland fired continuously across the ice; aircraft dropped high explosives and incendiaries; chemical shells were used against barracks, infirmaries, and defensive positions. The bombardment was not selective. Military installations, civilian quarters, hospitals, and ships trapped in the ice-bound harbor all sustained damage. By the end of the fifth day, scarcely a structure on the island remained untouched. Casualties mounted steadily, and the line between combatant and civilian dissolved entirely.

By March 11, Tukhachevsky had assembled a force exceeding thirty thousand men. His plan was straightforward and brutal: a simultaneous assault from the north, south, and east across the ice, designed to overwhelm the defenders through sheer mass and prevent any organized withdrawal. Yet on the night of March 11, in an act that would become one of the most infamous episodes of the Civil War, Jugashvili intervened directly. He requested that the bombardment be halted temporarily and asked permission to approach the island alone.

Shortly before midnight, Jugashvili stepped onto the ice carrying only a torch and a white flag. He later recorded that he issued explicit instructions before departing: should he be killed, the assault was to commence at dawn, with no distinction made between sailors and civilians. His diary entries from this period suggest a man consumed by grief following the assassination of his wife and marked by an open indifference to his own survival. This attitude—part despair, part calculation—gave his indifference a credibility that conventional negotiation could not achieve.

Jugashvili was taken before Stepan Petrichenko and the remaining leaders of the rebellion. There, he laid out his terms with characteristic bluntness. The defenders could flee across the ice to Finland, surrender immediately, or stand and die. Officers, committee leaders, and those associated with the Socialist Revolutionary Party were marked for death. Rank-and-file sailors and civilians, however, would be spared if they cooperated. Having delivered this ultimatum, Jugashvili turned and began walking back toward the mainland, calling on those unwilling to die to follow him.

At the start of the uprising, Kronstadt had housed slightly more than fifteen thousand people, sailors and civilians combined. By the time of Jugashvili's parlay, bombardment had reduced that number to roughly twelve thousand. Approximately five hundred—sailors, civilians, elderly men, and children among them—followed Jugashvili across the ice that night. A further three thousand attempted flight toward Finland. Their departure left behind a hard core of roughly nine thousand individuals. Within the garrison, divisions sharpened into open conflict: some argued for surrender, others for escape, still others for resistance to the end. When the assault began in the early hours of March 12, hesitation hardened into fatal resolve.

Jugashvili himself joined the first wave of attackers, advancing across the ice alongside Red Army units and Cheka detachments. Multiple accounts attest that he personally shot those who attempted to flee during the assault. Fighting raged throughout the day, accompanied by renewed artillery fire, aerial bombardment, and the continued use of chemical munitions. By evening, organized resistance had collapsed. The attackers took custody of roughly three thousand civilians and approximately fifteen hundred wounded sailors.

What followed marked one of the darkest episodes of Bolshevik rule. According to Jugashvili's own journals, the purpose now was "to sow fear among all counterrevolutionary elements." Civilians were lined up and presented with a choice: kill the captured sailors or be killed themselves. Over the ensuing hours, under armed supervision, civilians beat sailors to death. Those who refused were shot, often by Jugashvili personally. By nightfall, Kronstadt had been transformed from fortress to mass grave. Civilians were compelled to dispose of the bodies by casting them into the icy waters of the bay.

In Moscow, meanwhile, the Tenth Party Congress was in session. News of Kronstadt's fall arrived abruptly, and the hall fell silent as reports circulated. Vladimir Lenin maintained a controlled public posture, describing the episode as "a tragic and unavoidable result of counterrevolutionary betrayal." Joseph Stalin, equally restrained, characterized it as "an ugly but necessary affair." For Grigory Zinoviev, the events marked another blow to his already eroding authority; from this point forward, Petrograd was governed not by the Petrograd Soviet but by the informal duumvirate of Stalin and Jugashvili.

Among Party cadres and the wider revolutionary movement, Jugashvili's reputation underwent a decisive transformation. The "Hero of the Revolution" and "Savior of Petrograd" acquired a darker epithet. In whispered conversations and private correspondence, he was increasingly referred to as the Red Tamerlane—a figure whose audacity, strategic daring, and calculated brutality evoked comparisons with the great conqueror of an earlier age. Kronstadt did not merely end a rebellion; it marked the moment when the Soviet state demonstrated, to itself and to the world, how far it was prepared to go to survive.
 
Jugashvili isn't the man that the (early) Soviet wants, but what they need.

And from the snippets into the future? It's confirmed again with the Alternate WW2. And to think, that Alternate WW2 with semi-liberal use of chemical weapons is the less terrible version compared to our original timeline...
 
Omake (I'm just here to see) New
Excerpt from the wikipedia page of "I'm just here to See" (Film):

I'm Just Here to See, is a 1990 Soviet satirical black comedy directed by Yuri Mamin. The film is a work of political satire that follows the former Chairman of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Joseph Stalin, who inexplicably awakens in 1990 and attempts to make sense of, and interfere with, modern Soviet society.

Sypopsis

The film opens with Joseph Stalin on his deathbed, surrounded by his grieving family. He closes his eyes for the final time—only to awaken suddenly in the middle of Gorky Park in Moscow.

Disoriented but immediately alert, Stalin wanders the city, growing increasingly appalled at what he sees. The Soviet Union, in his eyes, has become soft, materialistic, and ideologically hollow. Tourists and passersby mistake him for a street performer or impersonator, saluting him jokingly, asking for photographs, and treating him with casual irreverence. Stalin is baffled by their behavior, unsure whether to be offended or impressed.

Eventually, he reaches Red Square, where he finds it filled with statues and posters of Lenin, Marx, himself, and even his son Yakov and his grandson. Entering the Mausoleum, Stalin discovers Lenin's preserved body lying beside his own, with his son's body nearby. This triggers a brief existential crisis, as he stares at his own embalmed corpse, then at his living hand, silently questioning whether he is truly Stalin—or merely a very convincing historical mistake.

Emerging from the Mausoleum, still treated as an impersonator, Stalin concludes that destiny must have spared him for a reason. He resolves to somehow "correct" Soviet society himself, though he has no clear plan beyond strong opinions and a remarkable tolerance for public confusion.

Meanwhile, at Mosfilm Studios, a struggling Georgian filmmaker from Gori, Iosif Sakashvili, is denied a promotion after his latest project is dismissed by his supervisor as overly experimental and avant-garde. Recently married, named after Stalin himself, and deeply dissatisfied with his stalled career, Sakashvili drowns his frustrations in alcohol.

After drinking too much, he stumbles through Moscow and passes out on a bench in Gorky Park—where he is awakened by Stalin. Startled, Sakashvili instinctively snaps to attention and salutes before realizing he is drunk, hungover, and possibly hallucinating. Embarrassed, he apologizes and offers Stalin a few rubles for the trouble.

Stalin sternly asks his name and why he was passed out in public, remarking that "in my time, you would have been sent to a labor camp for anti-Soviet behavior." Sakashvili laughs, assuming Stalin is merely a talented impersonator. Suddenly inspired, he declares that a film about Stalin—especially one like this—would be wildly successful.

Sakashvili proposes that they work together on a film: a roaming social critique of Soviet life. Stalin agrees, seeing it as an opportunity to learn what has happened to the USSR since his death—and possibly to lecture the population along the way. The two embark on a journey across the Soviet Union, filming Stalin as he interacts with ordinary citizens, reacts to modern customs, and delivers increasingly outdated but passionately confident commentary on contemporary issues.

After a month of filming, they submit the project to Mosfilm. The censorship panel is divided: younger members praise the film's originality and humor, while older, more conservative officials decide to "submit it to the Party for further review"—effectively shelving it without formally banning it.

Stalin is furious, but Sakashvili reassures him that there are other ways to distribute the film. He turns to his wife, Polina, who owns a video shop and quietly distributes samizdat materials. Within weeks, the film begins circulating underground across Moscow. When the son of a Central Committee member is caught watching it—and finds it amusing rather than subversive—he pressures the censorship board to approve it. Shortly afterward, the film is officially released and sells out across the USSR.

Celebrating their success, Stalin and Sakashvili go out for drinks, only to be attacked by hardline Komsomol youths who believe Stalin is a disrespectful impersonator mocking Soviet history. Both men are hospitalized, but news of the assault sparks public sympathy. Stalin and Sakashvili are soon invited onto Soviet prime-time television, where Stalin delivers the film's final line directly to the audience, breaking the fourth wall: "My time may have passed—but with this, I will ensure the flame of Marxist-Leninist-Stalinism will never perish from this Earth."

The film ends abruptly as the studio audience applauds, unsure whether they have just witnessed satire, propaganda, or a very elaborate prank.
 
Omake: Kitchen confessions New
Excerpt from the wikipedia page of "Kitchen confessions" (Book):
Kitchen Confessions is a novel written in 1981 by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. It is a deeply ironic meditation on survival, guilt, class, and the lies men tell themselves in order to live. The novel centers on the reunion of two childhood friends from radically different social backgrounds, each burdened by a lifelong secret, each convinced that confession—finally spoken aloud—may grant a kind of absolution.

The story opens on a quiet spring afternoon, the day after May Day celebrations in 1980. Anatoly Iosifovich Rossevensky, an aging colonel recently diagnosed with terminal cancer, makes his way through Moscow to the apartment of his boyhood friend, General Pyotor Vladimirovich Ivanoff. Anatoly has been told he has little time left to live, and with death approaching, he feels compelled to confront what he calls "affairs from the distant past"—truths he has carried for decades, unspoken and unresolved.

When Anatoly arrives, he is struck immediately by the luxury of Ivanoff's apartment: the polished floors, the spacious rooms, the quiet presence of servants. It is a life far removed from the one Anatoly has known. Ivanoff greets him warmly, embracing him with genuine affection and remarking with amused nostalgia that even in their eighties, they still resemble one another closely, as though time had chosen to wear them down in parallel. He ushers Anatoly into the kitchen, insisting they talk there, as they once had as boys. A servant prepares a meal, and the two men sit across from one another at the small kitchen table, surrounded by the ordinary intimacy of food, steam, and clinking utensils.

Anatoly wastes little time. He explains his diagnosis and admits that he has come to confess a secret he has carried since youth. Ivanoff listens quietly, nodding, and then surprises Anatoly by admitting that he too has recently been diagnosed with a terminal illness—and that he, too, has something he has never told anyone. With a bitter smile, Ivanoff suggests they decide who goes first the way they used to as children: a game of rock, paper, scissors. Ivanoff wins.

The narrative then plunges backward to 1916. Anatoly and Pyotor have just turned eighteen. They are inseparable friends despite their sharply divided social origins. Anatoly is the youngest and only son of Iosif and Natassia Rossevensky, prosperous Cossack landowners. Pyotor, by contrast, is the son of Vladimir and Nadezhda Ivanoff, gentle and hardworking peasants employed on Rossevensky land.

As the First World War grinds on and the Russian Empire bleeds itself dry, the age of conscription is lowered. Anatoly receives his draft notice. For Iosif Rossevensky, the prospect is unbearable: his only son sent to the front, where death or mutilation could extinguish the family line. Desperate, Iosif offers Vladimir a large sum of money to send Pyotor in Anatoly's place.

Vladimir hesitates, torn between the love of his children and the crushing weight of poverty. Before he can decide, Pyotor volunteers. He claims he wants to help his family, to spare Anatoly, to do his duty. Vladimir breaks down in tears but accepts the money. Pyotor goes to war.

Against all expectation, Pyotor survives the First World War—not through bravery, but through a peculiar combination of blind luck and instinctive cowardice. During the Brusilov Offensive, he becomes an unwitting hero when he is discovered as the sole survivor of a forward trench, clutching the regimental flag and surrounded by enemy corpses. The official version celebrates his heroic last stand.

The truth is far less noble. Pyotor had stumbled into the trench by accident after a scouting party was annihilated. When the German assault came, he collapsed, sobbing, paralyzed by fear. Only under threat of execution by his own captain was he forced to fire his weapon. When the final assault arrived, Pyotor was not defending the flag—he was trying to surrender it. By chance alone, every witness to his cowardice died in the fighting. The lie survives; Pyotor does.

This moment defines the rest of his life. Over the next forty years, Pyotor Ivanoff is dragged into nearly every major Soviet conflict and internal crisis, always attempting to avoid danger, and always emerging with greater honors. His undeserved reputation ensures he is repeatedly assigned to the most perilous tasks. He survives Petrograd, Kronstadt, the Basmachi rebellion, Kiev, Lake Khasan, and countless unnamed battles. He meets Stalin, Jugashvili, Tukachevsky, Zinoviev, Bukharin; serves under legendary commanders, and collects decorations like a man trying to outrun his own shadow.

Ivanoff is brutally honest about his motivations. He admits he clung to his heroic identity not out of ideology, but fear: fear of execution for cowardice, fear of losing his rank, his privileges, his pension, his access to women, comfort, and power. By 1980, at the age of eighty-two, he is the most decorated man in the USSR—having received the Order of the Red Banner and the title Hero of the Soviet Union more than twenty times combined. He boasts, not without pride, that he has "beaten both Tukhachevsky and Zhukov in medals."

When the narrative returns to the kitchen, Anatoly laughs softly. He says he is not surprised. He confesses that, in his own way, he too has always been a coward.

Anatoly recounts his own past. Unlike Pyotor, he avoided the First World War—but not the Revolution. Drafted alongside his father into the White forces, he participates in Kornilov's Ice March and the brutal southern campaigns under Denikin. When the White offensive on Moscow collapses, Anatoly and his father recognize the cause is lost. They defect to the Bolsheviks and fight against the same forces they once served.

They survive the civil war only to return home and find devastation: their farm burned, the workers slaughtered. Among the dead are Pyotor's parents and siblings, as well as Anatoly's own sisters. Overcome with despair and guilt, Anatoly's father takes his own life—but not before revealing a final secret. He confesses that he once had an affair with Pyotor's mother, making Anatoly and Pyotor half-brothers.

Anatoly's life continues in quiet frustration. Barred from the party due to his Cossack origins, he devotes himself to the Red Army, becoming an officer and rising slowly through the cavalry. His progress is repeatedly stalled by suspicion and prejudice. When cavalry is phased out during the purges of the 1930s and replaced by mechanized warfare, Anatoly experiences the loss as personal annihilation. In one scene, he touches a tank in his base and weeps silently, realizing the world he was born into no longer exists.

He marries a young nurse, Yelena, and for a brief time lives peacefully—until the German invasion drags him back to war. Fighting as an infantryman on the Eastern Front, he learns that Ivanoff is alive and celebrated. He attempts to reconnect, only to find himself excluded by rank, reputation, and politics. Bitterly drunk, he laughs at the irony: "Now I'm the peasant, and he's the Cossack."

After the war, Anatoly is finally admitted to the Party. His career advances modestly but stalls permanently at the regional level. At home, however, he finds contentment. His children rise in the system, shielded from his stigma by their mother's peasant origins. He grows old surrounded by a caring family, gradually forgetting Ivanoff.

Until the diagnosis.

Back in the present, the two men finish their meal in silence. Anatoly reaches for a bottle of vodka, pours two glasses, and hands one to Pyotor.

"Now," he says quietly, "we're both Cossacks—like we pretended to be when we were children."

They drink.
 
What the hell is wrong with this idiot? You know how you survive Stalin when you have over a decade before he is THE powerful monster? Kill him!
 
To save a life New
In order to eradicate the criminal-fascist system responsible for mass murder, terror, and the enslavement of our people, and acting in the name of revolutionary justice and the security of the Soviet state, it is hereby ordered that current and former rank and file members of the Schutzstaffel (SS), including the Waffen-SS, concentration and death camp guards, regardless of rank, age, gender or function, from clerks and enlisted men to the highest leadership shall be arrested, have their affiliation with said organizations verified, then executed by shooting; no claims of ignorance, coercion, or obedience to orders shall be recognized, as membership itself constitutes criminal participation, with exceptions permitted for individuals possessing or claiming indispensable expertise in weapons development or scientific research, who shall remain under strict guard and subject to subsequent forced scientific labor and research and verification of their expertise.

Order number 66, proposed by Mikheil Jugashvili and signed off by Joseph Stalin


March 21, 1921
Fittinghoff house
Petrograd, Russian SFSR


Stalin stepped into his brother's room and stopped.

The smell struck first.

Human waste. Old blood. Sweat soaked deep into bedding that had not been changed often enough. The stench of a body lingering too long between life and death, of fever and rot doing their quiet work. It was the smell of collapse. Stalin did not react outwardly. His face remained carved from stone, though a flicker of disgust passed behind his eyes before being crushed into nothing.

Then he noticed the woman.

A Red Cross uniform. Swedish. Elsa—yes, Elsa Brandström. He recognized her at once. His brother had spoken of her more than once, always with that irritating tone Mika used when he believed himself morally correct.

One of the few genuinely decent human beings I've met, Mika had said once. Better than either of us.

Stalin had dismissed it at the time as sentimentality, perhaps even guilt masquerading as admiration. Yet here she was, seated beside the bed, sleeves rolled up, hands stained with antiseptic and blood. Her posture was rigid with exhaustion; her eyes were rimmed red, not from fear but from sleeplessness.

Why was she here?

That was the only question that mattered.

No one stayed near someone like Mikheil Jugashvili without a reason. Not unless they were bound by blood—or ambition. Information, influence, leverage. There was always something. Stalin cataloged the possibilities automatically, the way other men breathed.

He remembered Mika's voice, irritatingly calm, irritatingly confident.

You should be more trusting of people, Joe. Not everyone is out to get us.

That instinct—trust, laxness—had put a bullet into Maria. Had shattered his brother. Had destabilized Petrograd and forced terror where discipline might once have sufficed. Mika's failure, yes. But also his own, for not hammering the lesson into him sooner.

He stepped closer, boots quiet against the floor.

"What is happening?" Stalin asked.

His voice was flat, devoid of concern, deliberately so.

The woman turned. She did not flinch. Stalin noted that immediately. There was no fear in her expression—only resolve and fatigue. She looked like someone who had made peace with responsibility.

"Infection," she said simply. She gestured to Mikheil's left hand, wrapped in layers of darkened bandages. Brown blood had soaked through, tacky and dry at the edges. "A knife went through his hand during the assault on Kronstadt. I cleaned it as best I could, but—"

She carefully unwrapped the cloth.

The flesh beneath was blackened and swollen, dead tissue creeping past the palm, climbing the forearm. Gangrene. Advanced.

Stalin's jaw tightened.

"How long?" he asked.

"He developed a fever four days ago."

Four days.

That meant delirium had already taken hold.

"I have insisted on amputation," she continued, her voice controlled but urgent. "But no surgeon will act without authorization. They are terrified. I am a nurse—I could attempt it, but I am not trained for such an operation. I would likely kill him."

She met Stalin's eyes directly now.

"If we do not remove the hand—no, the forearm—within twenty-four hours, he will die."

Stalin shifted his gaze to the bed.

Mikheil Jugashvili—the Hero of Petrograd, the Red Tamerlane, the butcher and savior of the revolution—lay reduced to a trembling body. His lips moved faintly.

"Maria," he whispered, over and over.

For a moment—just a moment—something stirred in Stalin's chest.

A memory surfaced, unwanted and sharp: himself as a boy, burning with fever after smallpox, half-conscious, while their mother prayed aloud and Mika sat beside him, forcing water into his mouth, muttering jokes, refusing to let him drift away.

Stalin crushed the feeling instantly.

Sentiment was a luxury that killed men.

This was calculation.

If Mika died now, the consequences would be… manageable. Martyrdom. A symbol. A dead hero could be shaped, preserved, wielded. A living one remained volatile—reckless, haunted, unpredictable.

Yet another memory intruded, uninvited.

Joe, eat before you cry yourself into a puddle, Mika had said after Kato died, pushing a plate toward him. Nobody wants to mop up grief and snot before breakfast.

Or the gun—his gun—returned later that day, unloaded.

Kato would want you to live.

Stalin exhaled slowly through his nose.

He turned back to the woman.

"I will send men with you," he said. "You will carry a letter bearing my authority. You will find a surgeon. Do whatever is necessary. He will live."

He paused, eyes hardening.

"And if you fail," he added evenly, "there will be consequences for killing the Hero of the Revolution."

A threat. But also a test.

She did not look away.

"Whatever you say," she replied.

Good, Stalin thought. Fearless people were dangerous—but useful.

He turned and left the room without another word, calling sharply into the corridor.

"Patruchev."

The Chekist, Mika's old friend from his police days appeared instantly.

"You will escort Miss Brandström. Bring men. Bring a surgeon. Immediately."

"Yes, Comrade," Patruchev snapped.

Minutes later, the room was empty.

Stalin returned to the chair beside the bed and sat where the woman had been moments earlier. He looked down at his brother's ravaged face.

"Don't die yet," he said quietly. "You are too useful."

That was what he told his brother.

That was what he told himself.

March 21, 1921
Fittinghoff house
Petrograd, Russian SFSR


Elsa Brandström walked quickly through the narrow street, her boots crunching through frozen slush that had turned gray with ash. The air still smelled of smoke and damp stone, the residue of bombardment clinging to Petrograd like a second skin. Even days later, the city had not exhaled.

Behind her followed half a dozen armed men—Cheka and Red Army by the look of them—coats heavy, faces shut tight with professional indifference. At her right shoulder walked Patruchev, silent, efficient, his presence both reassurance and warning. He did not speak unless necessary. She appreciated that.

She did not have far to go.

Barely a block from the Fittinghoff building stood the apartment of Dr. Smirnov—the same surgeon she had begged two days earlier, the same man who had wrung his hands and whispered apologies while refusing her outright. She remembered his eyes then: frightened, calculating, already rehearsing excuses for later.

She stopped at his door and knocked. Firmly. Not loudly.

For a moment, nothing happened.

Then she saw movement at the window to her left. A curtain twitched. A pale face appeared—Smirnov's—eyes wide, already resigned. A second later, the door opened.

"Miss Brandström," he said, his voice thin and brittle. "What is this? I told you—I cannot do it. Not without—"

"—official authorization," Elsa finished calmly. "Yes. I remember."

She met his gaze without blinking.

"I have it now. Stalin has returned. Mr. Jugashvili's brother." She let the words settle before continuing. "He has ordered me to find a surgeon immediately."

She gestured—not dramatically, simply—with her chin toward the men behind her.

"He has also sent the Cheka to make sure you come."

The doctor swallowed hard. His shoulders slumped, as if the last of his resistance had finally found a place to rest.

"I am sorry," Elsa added quietly, and meant it. "I truly am. But I have no other choice. You remember what I asked of you two days ago."

He nodded slowly. "Yes. I… I understand."

There was a pause. Then, with a tired sigh, he stepped back.

"Please," he said. "Let me gather my tools."

Elsa turned her head slightly. "Patruchev. Help him."

"Yes, ma'am," he replied, already moving.

She remained outside while the two men disappeared into the apartment. She forced herself not to pace. Ten seconds passed. Then twenty. She focused on breathing evenly—the way she had learned in Siberia. Panic helped no one. It never had.

They emerged less than a minute later. Patruchev carried a heavy medical bag. Smirnov followed close behind, coat hastily buttoned, hands trembling despite his effort to steady them.

They returned to the Fittinghoff building in under ten minutes. Guards stepped aside at their approach, eyes flicking from Elsa to the bag to Smirnov with poorly concealed curiosity—and fear.

Inside the room, the air was thick.

Stalin sat beside his brother's bed, rigid, his hands clasped together as if holding himself intact by sheer will. On the other side sat Jugashvili's mother, murmuring prayers in Georgian, fingers moving ceaselessly as she crossed herself again and again.

Elsa stepped forward.

"Stalin," she said softly. "He's here."

He turned. His gaze flicked from Smirnov to the bag to the bed itself.

"Do what it takes to save him," he said flatly. "Now."

Jugashvili's mother spoke sharply, her voice rising. Elsa did not understand the words, but she understood the tone—fear, accusation, grief compressed into anger. Stalin answered too quickly, too curtly.

Then it happened.

The old woman stood and struck him.

The sound cracked through the room like a gunshot.

Everyone froze.

Elsa felt her breath catch. She had seen many things—violence, cruelty, collapse—but she had never seen anyone strike Stalin. Not even imagined it.

The woman shouted again, striking him once more, then again, words pouring out in Georgian like blows themselves. On the fourth slap, Stalin caught her wrist.

He did not raise his voice. He said something low and firm.

She stopped.

Slowly, she nodded.

He released her and turned sharply to Patruchev.

"Find a priest," he ordered.

Patruchev blinked. "A priest? Why—"

"Shut up and go," Stalin snapped. "Now."

Then his gaze swept the room, cold and warning.

"You saw nothing," he said.

It was not a suggestion.

Smirnov cleared his throat, hands already moving as if habit might steady his nerves.

"You said you were a nurse?" he asked Elsa.

"I was," she replied.

"Then you will assist me."

She nodded once. There was no room for hesitation.

She glanced at Stalin, then at Jugashvili's mother, who had returned to praying. Elsa exhaled slowly.

What have I gotten myself into? she thought—not for the first time.

"Bring a table," she instructed one of the guards. "Place it beside the bed. Lay out the tools."

They obeyed at once.

She opened the medical bag, arranging its contents with practiced hands—antiseptic, scalpels, clamps, saws. The metal gleamed harshly in the lamplight.

Smirnov removed the bandages from Jugashvili's arm and laid it straight. The smell made Elsa's stomach tighten, but she did not flinch.

"We will need to amputate the lower forearm," he said quietly. "Possibly higher. Apply antiseptic to the saw. I will make it as fast as I can."

She did so carefully, deliberately.

Just as she lifted the saw to pass it to him, Jugashvili's mother spoke again.

"Wait."

Stalin raised a hand. "She wants the priest to give anointment first."

Smirnov stiffened. "Comrade Stalin, with respect—the infection is spreading. If we delay—"

"And whose fault is that?" Stalin cut in, his voice sharp as glass. "You refused him before. Now you speak of urgency?"

The room fell silent.

"We wait," Stalin said. "When the priest arrives, you proceed."

Elsa lowered the saw back onto the table, slowly.

She said nothing.

A part of her—small, unwise, exhausted—almost wanted to laugh at the absurdity of it all: a regime that closed churches and jailed priests now desperately searching for one at the insistence of a grieving mother.

But she held her tongue.

She knew better.

March 21, 1921
A church near Fittinghoff house
Petrograd, Russian SFSR


Father Sergey Eldarevich Patruchev stood beneath the stone arch of the church entrance, as he did every day after the final blessing, his cassock brushing softly against the worn steps as he bade farewell to the faithful one by one. Their faces carried the same mixture of exhaustion and stubborn devotion that had become so common in Petrograd since the war began—since hunger, requisitioning, and fear had become part of the city's daily liturgy.

Some crossed themselves hurriedly, as if the gesture itself might draw unwanted attention. Others murmured brief greetings, eyes already darting toward the street. No one lingered. No one wished to be seen standing too long outside a church anymore. And who could blame them? Not when the city was ruled by Mikheil Jugashvili.

The butcher of Petrograd.

When the last parishioner departed, Father Sergey closed the heavy wooden doors and allowed himself a long, careful breath. Even now, days after Kronstadt, the air still smelled faintly of smoke and damp ash, as though the city itself had absorbed the violence and could not release it. The memory of artillery and gunfire lingered like an afterimage. He crossed himself slowly.

"Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I will fear no evil," he whispered, the words of the psalm as familiar to him as his own name. "For You are with me; Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me."

He had clung to that verse since the civil war began. Perhaps clung too tightly. He had heard the stories—priests shot against walls, churches shuttered overnight, icons burned, men vanishing into prisons and never returning. He had expected the same fate here.

Yet Petrograd was different.

All because of the same man who had butchered Kronstadt.

Father Sergey shook his head slightly as he retrieved the broom from behind the altar and began to sweep the nave. He remembered that day clearly, the way one remembers a fever dream. Jugashvili standing before them in Smolny, his eyes cool and appraising, his tone almost friend, more conversational than threatening.

"I don't really have anything against the Church," he had said. "Marx says religion is the opium of the people, yes—but he never said to shoot priests or burn churches. So I'll make it simple. Pay your taxes. Don't preach rebellion. And you can exist."

Then, with that faint, unsettling half-smile:
"I give you my word—as a former seminarian who chose a different calling."

Father Sergey had not believed him then. Even now, he did not fully believe him.

And yet—churches remained open. Bells still rang. The faithful still gathered. There were propaganda campaigns, insults, whispered threats. But no mass arrests. No midnight executions. Jugashvili had, in his own monstrous way, kept his word.

The broom rasped softly against the stone floor.

It had been no more than five minutes when Father Sergey heard footsteps outside—heavy, deliberate. Not parishioners. He froze.

When he turned toward the door, his heart sank.

Cheka.

He recognized one of them immediately—Jugashvili's man, a face he had seen before near Smolny. The others stood behind him, rifles slung casually, expressions unreadable.

"What is the meaning of this?" Father Sergey asked, his voice steady despite the tightness in his chest.

"Come with us, Father," the man said. "We have need of you."

"I haven't done anything," Father Sergey replied quickly. "Comrade Jugashvili said—as long as we pay our taxes and remain loyal, we would—"

"Sir," the Chekist interrupted, not unkindly but firmly. "Please come with us. You will not be harmed."

Father Sergey looked past him then—counted them. A dozen men. Armed. Waiting.

There was no point arguing.

"Very well," he said quietly. He set the broom down where he stood, its handle clattering softly against the stone. As he stepped forward, the psalm came to his lips again, unbidden, like a reflex of the soul.

"Even though I walk through the darkest valley…"

They escorted him out into the cold. A truck idled nearby, its engine rumbling impatiently. As he climbed into the back, something inside him finally broke. He pressed a hand to his mouth, stifling a sob.

He thought of his home. Of the simple, holy ordinariness of it. His wife's stroganoff waiting on the stove. The faint smell of onions and butter. The weight of his newborn son in his arms, warm and impossibly small. The way the child's fingers curled instinctively around his own.

Such small joys. Untouched by ideology. Untouched by blood.

He was certain now: he would never return to them.

When the Cheka came, a man did not come back.

"May I send a message to my wife?" he asked quietly as the truck lurched forward. "Just to tell her not to worry."

The Chekist hesitated, then shook his head slightly.

"Relax, Father," he said. "We'll be done soon. Then you'll go back to your wife."

Father Sergey closed his eyes.

He had heard many lies in his life. This one, somehow, felt the kindest of all.

They drove for perhaps five minutes, though to Father Sergey it felt longer. Time had a way of stretching when one believed—quite reasonably—that one was being driven toward death.

The truck slowed and stopped. He recognized the place immediately.

Fittinghoff House.

Even the name carried weight in Petrograd now. People lowered their voices when they spoke it, if they spoke it at all. The Cheka headquarters. A place of screams whispered through walls, of families that entered together and were never seen again. He had heard the stories—everyone had. Prisoners tortured for days, entire households erased overnight, confessions extracted and rewritten until they fit whatever narrative was required. And always, always, the same name attached to it all.

Jugashvili.

Father Sergey closed his eyes and bowed his head slightly, his lips moving without sound at first, then quietly.

"Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I will fear no evil," he whispered, gripping the edge of his cassock as the truck came to a full halt. "For You are with me; Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me."

The back doors opened.

"Please step out," one of the Chekists said.

The word please startled him more than a shouted command would have. The man's tone was almost gentle, as if he were escorting an honored guest rather than a priest summoned at gunpoint. That, more than anything, unsettled Father Sergey.

He obeyed, stepping down onto the frozen street. Armed men closed in around him—not roughly, but decisively—and guided him toward the entrance.

Inside, the house was… ordinary. That was the most disturbing part.

If one ignored the rifles slung over shoulders, the red armbands, the pale clerks hunched over paperwork with the expressions of condemned men, it could almost have been any respectable residence. Somewhere down the hall a woman hushed a child. Somewhere else a door opened and shut softly. Life went on inside the belly of the beast.

He was led up the stairs to the second floor. Each step echoed louder than the last in his ears.

At a door midway down the corridor, the escort stopped and knocked once, sharply, before opening it.

Inside were five people.

A woman in a Red Cross uniform—foreign, unmistakably so—her sleeves rolled up, her face drawn with exhaustion. A surgeon, his hands already stained, eyes darting nervously between instruments and authority. An older woman seated near the bed, murmuring prayers in a language Father Sergey did not understand but somehow recognized in his bones. And standing apart from the rest, rigid and watchful—

Stalin. Jugashvili's master.

"Comrade Stalin," the Chekist announced. "We have the priest."

"Leave us," Stalin said flatly. "Close the door."

The men withdrew at once. The latch clicked shut behind them.

For a moment, no one spoke.

Stalin looked at Father Sergey with an expression that was not hostile, not welcoming—merely assessing, like a man examining a tool to see if it would hold.

"My mother wants my brother to receive anointing of the sick," Stalin said at last. "He is not part of the highest Bolshevik leadership. He has not been excommunicated. You will begin immediately. Be quick. The infection has spread."

Father Sergey almost laughed.

Not from humor—God forgive him—but from the sheer, crushing absurdity of it. The revolution that mocked faith, shuttered monasteries, jailed priests, now stood here demanding the sacraments at gunpoint. All of it balanced on the trembling will of an old woman and the authority of her son.

He swallowed the laughter before it could become hysteria.

"As you wish," he said quietly.

He stepped toward the bed.

The smell struck him first—rot, fever, antiseptic layered over decay. Then he saw the hand.

Gangrene.

He did not need medical training to know what that meant. Even at seminary, books on anatomy and illness had circulated among curious students, and the signs were unmistakable. The flesh was blackened, swollen, dead. Whatever life had once been there was gone.

His gaze lifted slowly to the man's face.

Mikheil Jugashvili.

The butcher of Petrograd.

The savior of Petrograd.

The monster whose name had become a prayer and a curse, depending on who spoke it.

Up close, he looked… smaller. Younger than Father Sergey had imagined. Clean-shaven, his face free of the pockmarks that scarred Stalin's. Lines of exhaustion etched deep around his eyes, shadows beneath them, but otherwise—disturbingly ordinary.

Almost innocent.

His lips moved faintly.

"Maria," he murmured. Again and again. The word trembled with longing, with grief so naked it nearly undid the priest where he stood.

For a fleeting, dangerous moment, Father Sergey wondered if the stories were wrong. If this was simply a sick man, a suffering soul, stripped of myth and terror by fever.

Then he remembered the mass graves.

He began the prayers.

His voice was steady, though his hands trembled slightly as he traced the sign of the cross, anointing the forehead, the chest, the uninjured hand. He forced himself not to look again at the ruined limb. He forced himself not to think of how many hands like this man's had ordered deaths, signed papers, pulled triggers.

He prayed not for Jugashvili's power or legacy, but for his soul—whatever remained of it.

When he finished, he stepped back and inclined his head.

"It is done," he said. "Is that all you require of me?"

Stalin did not answer at once. Instead, he turned to the older woman and spoke rapidly in Georgian. She replied, her voice sharp, insistent. Father Sergey caught only fragments, but the meaning was clear enough.

Stalin turned back.

"She wants you to stay," he said. "Pray while the amputation is performed."

Father Sergey nodded.

"As you say."

It was all he could say.

He folded his hands and stood by the bed, whispering prayers as steel instruments were laid out on a table nearby. Outside, Petrograd continued to breathe—smoke, ash, fear, and faith mingling in the frozen air.

And somewhere in the distance, bells rang. He wondered, not for the first time that night, whether God was listening, laughing, weeping; or maybe all of them at once.

Inside Jugashvili's head

Cold.

That was the first thing I understood when I came to. Not knew—understood, the way an animal understands pain. I was cold in my bones, cold in places bones shouldn't feel anything at all. I was shivering so hard it felt as though my body were trying to shake itself apart, as if it wanted to leave me behind.

I didn't remember where I was. I didn't remember who I was.

I only knew I was cold.

Ice pressed against me from all sides. Not just beneath me, but above me too, crawling up my chest, my throat, my jaw, until it kissed my cheeks. Snow screamed as it whipped across my face, needles of white tearing at my skin, forcing their way into my eyes, my mouth. I tried to breathe and tasted iron.

I was buried.

Not alone.

All around me were bodies—men, women, children—half-swallowed by the snow. Only their faces were visible, pale and frozen, arranged around me in a terrible circle. Their eyes were open. All of them. None blinked.

Tears streamed down their faces, but they weren't tears. They were blood—dark, thick, endless—sliding down their cheeks and vanishing into the snow beneath their chins. The ground drank it eagerly.

Every head turned toward me at once.

Their mouths opened together.

"You," they said.

The word struck harder than the cold.

"You put us here."

Their voices layered over one another—deep and thin, old and young—until it was impossible to tell where one ended and another began.

"You dumped us in this icy hell."

I wanted to deny it. I wanted to scream that I didn't know them, that I didn't remember doing this, that there must be some mistake. But the words wouldn't come. My throat locked, my tongue useless.

Because somewhere deep inside me—below the fear, below the confusion—I knew.

I knew.

I didn't know their names. I didn't know their crimes, or if they even had any. I didn't know how they had ended up here, frozen and broken and staring at me like judges.

But I knew I was the reason.

Whatever I had done, whoever I had become, it had been terrible enough to create this place. This wasn't hell imposed on me. This was hell I had built.

Shame seeped into me, heavier than the ice. It pressed on my chest until breathing hurt. I wanted to sink down, to let the snow close over my face, to disappear among them.

The voices rose again—angrier now, closer—and I couldn't bear it.

I looked up.

The moment my eyes lifted to the sky, the voices stopped.

Silence fell so abruptly it rang in my ears.

The sky was vast and dark, scattered with stars that felt impossibly far away. And there, framed against that endless black, stood a woman.

She was young. Beautiful in a way that hurt to look at. Familiar.

She said nothing.

That was worse.

Her eyes held something unbearable—love, deep and undeniable—but tangled with disappointment so sharp it cut deeper than hatred ever could. She didn't accuse me. She didn't shout.

She simply looked at me.

Tears welled in her eyes and spilled down her cheeks, falling slowly, gracefully, as if even gravity respected her sorrow. When they reached me, they didn't melt against my skin.

They struck like nails.

Each tear landed with a jolt, driving itself into my face, my chest, my soul. And with every impact, memories flooded into me—not whole, not orderly, but jagged fragments that cut on the way in.

"What's wrong with you, Mika?"

Her voice—soft, hurt, familiar.

"You've become a monster."

The words replayed again and again, each time synchronized with another tear falling, another piece of me cracking under the weight of it. I saw flashes—parks, arguments, laughter that curdled into silence, her face twisted in disbelief at something I had said or done.

She had loved me.

That was the worst part.

She had loved me enough to stay, long enough to watch me change. Loved me enough to be afraid of me. Loved me enough to be disgusted.

I tried to reach for her. My arms wouldn't move.

"I didn't mean to," I tried to say, though I wasn't sure what it was. The words dissolved in the cold before they left my mouth.

Another tear fell.

Another memory broke me open.

Her disappointment hurt more than all the accusing dead combined. They hated me—and maybe they were right to. But she had believed in me once.

I felt something inside me fracture, slow and final, like ice giving way beneath a man who has walked too far already.

"I'm sorry," I thought—or maybe I said it. I wasn't sure anymore.

The tears kept falling.

They did not splash or run—they pierced. Each one struck me like a nail driven into memory, and with every impact something inside me cracked open. Images poured in, uninvited and unstoppable.

Her name came back to me first.

Maria.

And then everything else followed.

Men falling backward as bullets punched through them. Women clutching children that went limp in their arms. Orders barked, written, signed—executions reduced to columns of ink and numbers. Prison yards slick with blood. Faces twisted in terror as I told them to choose: kill, or be killed. I saw hands trembling as they raised stones, bricks, knives. I heard myself speaking calmly while entire lives ended because I had decided they should.

Me.

I wanted to cry out—What have I done?—but my mouth would not obey. My body had forgotten how to form words that meant anything. All that came out was her name.

"Maria."

Again.

And again.

Over and over, like a child repeating a prayer he no longer understands, hoping the repetition itself might save him.

I could not look at her anymore. I couldn't bear the disappointment in her eyes, the love twisted into something heavier, something unbearable. I turned away.

That was a mistake.

They were closer now.

The faces—those frozen, half-buried heads—were no longer distant shapes in the snow. They crowded me, inches from my own face, mouths opening impossibly wide, breath cold and rancid.

"You," they screamed.

"You."

"You put us here."

"You dumped us in this icy hell."

Their voices merged into one, a single roar that drowned out everything else. Tens of thousands. No—hundreds of thousands. The sound of them crushed me, flattened me, pressed me deeper into the ice.

Maria's tears were falling faster now, striking my skull, my eyes, my chest. Each tear carried a memory with it. Her voice in the park. Her hands on my sleeves. Her saying my name the way she used to when she was trying to pull me back from myself.

"What's wrong with you, Mika?"

"What have you become?"

I wanted to scream for them to stop. For her to stop. To tell them I was sorry, that I hadn't meant for it to go this far, that I hadn't known how to stop once it began.

But all I could manage was her name.

"Maria."

A whimper. Nothing more.

A pathetic sound, swallowed instantly by the screaming of the dead.

The visions shifted.

My children appeared—our children. I saw their faces as they slept, as they laughed, as they clung to my legs. I saw myself lifting them, teaching them, promising them safety.

Then the image fractured, split clean down the middle.

Me—the father.

Me—the monster.

And there was no bridge between them anymore.

Then the pain came.

At first it was distant, like heat felt through layers of cloth. Then it grew teeth.

A burning sensation crawled up my right arm, as though the ice encasing me was melting, exposing raw flesh beneath. The pain spread slowly, deliberately, savoring every nerve. I tried to pull away, but I couldn't move. My body would not listen.

I tried to scream.

I couldn't.

I could only whisper her name again, my voice breaking as the pain intensified, climbing higher, gnawing deeper.

And then—another voice.

Low. Steady. Measured.

A prayer.

The words cut through the screaming like a blade through fog. The accusing faces began to dissolve, their mouths still moving even as their forms collapsed into snow and shadow. Maria's tears slowed.

The pain did not.

It sharpened.

It cut.

The ice around me shattered. The snow peeled away from my face. I felt myself ripped back into my body all at once, sensation crashing down like an avalanche.

And I screamed.

A raw, animal sound tore out of me, loud enough to split the world open. The ice cracked beneath me. The visions exploded outward, blown away by the force of it.

"Hold him down!" someone shouted.

Hands—real hands—gripped me. Solid. Merciless. I thrashed, fought, howled as the pain consumed everything.

I could see now.

My right forearm lay exposed, blackened, swollen, dead. The flesh was wrong, ruined, already gone. A blade moved through it, slow and deliberate, sawing me free from what remained.

I screamed again.

And again.

And again.

Until the ice was gone.

Until the snow was gone.

Until my forearm was gone.

Until there was nothing left but pain, and blood, and a wasteland all around me.
 
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with exceptions permitted for individuals possessing or claiming indispensable expertise in weapons development or scientific research, who shall remain under strict guard and subject to subsequent forced scientific labor and research and verification of their expertise
cosmonauts will be landing on the moon before the end of the century
 
Awakening New
Arise, you who are branded with a curse,
All the hungry and enslaved people of the world!

Mikheil Stalin (Son of Yakov Stalin) singing the Internationale as his first words after landing on the moon.


March 22, 1921
Fittinghoff house
Petrograd, Russian SFSR


I opened my eyes.

That alone felt like a mistake.

The ceiling above me swam in and out of focus, a pale blur stained with cracks and watermarks. My head felt like it had been hollowed out and refilled with lead. Not a normal hangover—this was something biblical. Like I'd personally offended God and He'd responded with a hammer.

I tried to speak. My mouth opened, but nothing useful came out.

"Wh—" My voice rasped like sandpaper dragged across concrete. I swallowed hard, my throat burning. "What's g—"

I cleared my throat again, coughing weakly. Every breath hurt, as if my lungs resented being asked to work.

Footsteps.

Measured. Careful. Close.

Two shadows slid into my field of vision. I squinted, forcing my right eye to focus—well, my remaining eye. The world sharpened just enough for faces to emerge.

One tall. Familiar. Rigid as a statue carved out of suspicion.

The other smaller, tense, watching me like I might shatter if she moved too fast.

I lifted my right arm to rub my face.

Or rather—I tried to.

Nothing happened.

I stared at the space where my forearm should have been.

"What?" The word came out thin, almost polite.

"Mika." A voice said.

I turned my head slowly, every muscle protesting. "Joe?" I blinked hard. Stalin stood there, arms crossed, face unreadable. "Joe… is that you?" My heart began to pound. "Where am I? Am I dead? Is this heaven? Hell?"

"Neither," he said evenly. "You're alive. Cheka headquarters."

Alive.

That word landed wrong.

"How do you feel?" another voice asked.

I shifted my gaze. Elsa stood beside him, hands clasped tightly in front of her apron, exhaustion etched into her face.

"I…" I looked down again. The stump where my forearm had been was wrapped thickly in bandages. Clean. Too clean. "What happened?"

"You don't remember?" she asked softly.

I shook my head. "I remember coming back from Kronstadt. I remember asking you to clean the wound." A pause. "Then the fever." I swallowed. "Nothing after that." I looked at her. "Infection?"

She nodded once. "Gangrene. We didn't have a choice."

"No choice," I repeated, staring at the bandages. "So it was my arm or my life."

"Yes."

"My forearm," I said quietly.

I stared at it for a long time.

That arm. That hand.

The one that signed execution orders. Pulled triggers. Held pistols steady while people begged. A reliable tool. Efficient. Loyal.

If bodies had achievement systems, I'd have unlocked a lot of badges with that hand.

Probably not Hitler-tier—he was more of a late-game grinder—but I'd say Emerald. Diamond, maybe, depending on metrics. If history ran ranked ladders, I was climbing fast.

And I wasn't done.

That realization hit next.

The future rushed back in like a cold wave—Hitler, wars, oceans of blood still waiting their turn. I exhaled slowly and laughed once, hollow and short.

"Still not enough," I muttered.

The dream came back with it. The ice. The heads. The screaming. Maria's face above me, silent, crying.

I looked up abruptly, half-expecting her tears to fall again.

They didn't.

Instead, I turned back to Elsa.

"Who allowed it?"

She frowned. "What?"

"Who gave you permission to save me?" My voice dropped, sharp now, cutting. "Who authorized this?"

Her lips parted, but I didn't let her answer.

"Do you know what I am?" I asked quietly. "Do you know what I've done?"

My breathing sped up. I pressed my left hand into the mattress, grounding myself.

"Men. Women. Children," I said. "Thousands. Tens of thousands." I laughed weakly. "For the revolution. For you, Joe." I looked at him now. "For Lenin. For the party."

I gestured clumsily at myself.

"And look at me." My voice cracked. "One eye. One arm. A broken body." I swallowed hard. "Maria—the only person who ever tried to stop me—she's dead. She died for me."

My chest tightened painfully.

"She called me a monster," I whispered. "And she was right. And she died anyway."

I looked between them, my vision blurring again.

"Every time I try to die, I live," I said. "Every battle. Every charge. Every time I stand in front of guns." My voice rose, breaking now. "So tell me!"

I shouted then, the sound ripping out of me.

"Why did you save me?!"

The room froze.

"Why do I have to live?!" I screamed. "Why do I breathe while she's dead? While all those people are dead? What's the point of it? Why am I still here when so many better people aren't?!"

My chest heaved. My head spun.

For a moment, no one spoke.

It didn't take long for Joe to break the silence.

He always did.

"Because you are useful."

The words landed without ceremony—flat, practical, almost bored. Not cruel, not kind. Just factual. Like stating the weather.

He stepped closer. I felt the weight of him before I saw him, the way a shadow precedes a storm. His hand came down on my shoulder, firm, possessive. Not comforting. Claiming.

"You are my brother," he continued. "And you do not decide when this ends. You do not decide when it begins. And you do not decide when you die."

I inhaled sharply. "Y—"

"Quiet."

His fingers tightened. Just enough to remind me that my bones were still breakable.

"Look at me."

I did.

And there it was. The thing I had been avoiding. The thing I had always known and pretended not to.

This wasn't anger. This wasn't grief. This wasn't even cruelty.

This was ownership.

I saw it clearly now—what this life was about. What he was. What I was to him.

I shouldn't have shouted. I shouldn't have questioned it. I shouldn't have cracked in front of him like that. Weakness was a currency here, and I'd just spent too much of it.

My children flashed through my mind—Iosif's stubborn jaw, Kato's soft voice, Aleksander, Besarion, Aleksandra, Yakov trying so hard to be brave. And with them came the understanding of what Joe was capable of if he ever felt cornered.

I was a monster, yes.

But he was something worse.

I wasn't his equal. I wasn't his conscience. I wasn't even his shield.

I was his sword.

His disposable sword.

And yet—another thought crept in, unwelcome but persistent. The future. The camps. The purges. The mountains of corpses still waiting their turn for the meat-grinder that was world war 2.

If I stayed alive.

If I stayed useful.

If I helped end the war faster, streamlined the system, redirected the machinery—

Maybe I could pull some people out before it swallowed them.

Maybe I could save a few million.

Maybe… I could make some small accounting with the dead.

"I…" My voice faltered. I swallowed. "I understand."

I forced the word out.

"Brother."

That seemed to satisfy him.

He released my shoulder, just like that, as if nothing had happened. As if he hadn't just drawn the borders of my existence with a single sentence.

"Take as long as you need to recover," he said. "Once you are able to stand, you will report to Moscow. I will go with you."

"Moscow?" I asked, faintly.

"Yes." He nodded. "Now that Kronstadt is finished and the civil war is winding down, our work here is done. I will take my proper place in the Politburo."

He paused, then added, almost casually:

"And you will go as well."

"For what?" I asked.

"For your new role."

I looked at him, suddenly very tired. "New role?"

"Yes," he said. "You will become General Secretary of the Cheka. Deputy to Dzerzhinsky."

The words took a moment to register.

"General Secretary?" I repeated.

"There has been… discussion," he continued, his tone smooth. "Kronstadt disturbed many people. A vocal minority has called for your expulsion from the party. They say you are excessively enthusiastic. That you enjoy repression."

He allowed himself the faintest hint of a smile.

"Idiots."

My stomach tightened.

"But," he went on, "you are far too useful to discard. Your organizational abilities in Petrograd were exemplary. Dzerzhinsky wishes to reform the Cheka—centralize it, rationalize it, make it more efficient."

He looked directly at me.

"I recommended you. He agreed. As did Lenin."

So that was it.

Not punishment.

Promotion.

I leaned back against the pillows, staring at the ceiling again. One arm gone. One eye gone. Whatever illusions I still had—gone.

I wasn't being spared.

I was being repurposed.

And the worst part—the part that hollowed me out completely—was that some part of me understood why.

And another part, smaller but louder, whispered:

If I'm going to be damned anyway… I might as well try to change how everyone dies.

I closed my eyes, breathing in relief, hearing him walk out of the door, and leaving me and Elsa alone.

March 22, 1921
Fittinghoff house
Petrograd, Russian SFSR


Elsa watched Stalin leave without looking back.

The door closed with a soft, final sound, and with it the pressure in the room shifted. It was subtle, but unmistakable—like a storm passing just far enough away that one could finally breathe again. For the first time in what felt like weeks, perhaps longer, there were only two people in the room.

Mikheil lay back against the pillows, pale and thinner than she remembered, his breathing shallow but steady. Whatever terror had seized him moments earlier—whatever instinctive submission he had displayed before his brother—had faded. In its place was something quieter. Older. He looked less like a frightened child now, and more like a man who had survived something humiliating.

"I'm sorry you had to see that," he said at last.

His voice was hoarse, but calm. He stared at the ceiling rather than at her.

"Stalin…" He stopped, then exhaled slowly. "Believe me, he is not as forgiving as I am. And neither are the others. Lenin. Trotsky. The rest of the Politburo. They do not forget weakness. They catalog it."

Elsa remained where she was. She said nothing. She had learned long ago that silence often drew out more truth than questions ever could.

He turned his head slightly toward her. "But there is something I want to understand," he continued. There was no anger in his voice. No self-pity. Just a genuine, unsettling curiosity. "Why did you save me?"

She met his gaze.

"You know what I am," he went on. "You've seen what I've done. You're disgusted by it—I don't blame you. If you had refused, if you had simply… let the infection take me, the world would have one less monster in it." His mouth twitched, not quite a smile. "You could have smothered me with a pillow and slept soundly, knowing you'd done humanity a favor. So why didn't you?"

Elsa answered without hesitation.

"Because your mother asked me to."

He blinked.

"And because I am a nurse," she continued evenly. "A humanitarian. I don't choose my patients based on worthiness. I can't. Not when a woman—your mother—was begging me in broken Russian to save her son. Not when her grandchildren were clinging to her skirt, translating her words from Georgian into Russian because she couldn't find them herself."

For the first time since he'd woken, Mikheil's composure cracked.

"My… my children?" he whispered. "They… they were there?"

"Yes," Elsa said, nodding. "They were. And instead of shouting at me, or at your brother, perhaps you should have shouted at them."

His breath hitched. He looked away, his chest rising too fast now.

"My children," he murmured. "God." He squeezed his eyes shut. "I told them… I told them Joe would take care of them."

She frowned despite herself. "Your brother?" she asked carefully. "You truly believe that man would care for them? After what I just saw?"

He looked at her then, sharply.

"First of all," he said quietly, "never say that in front of him." There was no threat in his voice—just fear and concern. "Second… you don't know him like I do."

Elsa raised an eyebrow but remained silent.

"We grew up together," he went on. "I saved his life twice when we were boys. He wasn't always like this. Before… before his first wife died, he could still laugh. He had friends. Real ones. He loved her. Losing her broke something in him."

He swallowed.

"If Kato were still alive," he added softly, "maybe he would be different."

"Kato?" Elsa repeated. "Isn't that your daughter's name?"

He nodded.

"Her mother was Kato's sister," he said. "My daughter was born years later. Maria named her after her sister. Joe has a soft spot for her." A faint, sad smile crossed his face. "She looks like her aunt. And lately… she's starting to sound like her, too now that she's growing."

For a long moment, neither of them spoke.

Then Elsa reached for the water on the bedside table and held it out to him.

"Drink," she said gently.

Elsa watched him lift the glass of water with his left hand, the motion careful and slightly hesitant, as if his body had not yet accepted the new rules imposed upon it. His fingers closed around the glass too tightly at first, then loosened. He drank slowly, deliberately, pausing between swallows the way one does when expecting pain—or betrayal.

When he set the glass down, he studied it for a moment, as though disappointed it had behaved itself.

"It's not poisoned," he said at last. His voice was low, almost conversational. "Disappointing."

A faint, crooked smile passed over his face, more reflex than humor, the remnant of a man who once joked easily and now did so out of habit alone.

Elsa did not smile back.

She sat opposite him, hands folded neatly in her lap, posture straight despite the exhaustion that weighed on her bones. She had learned quickly that levity, however mild, was often a mask with him—and masks were dangerous things.

"Miss Elsa," he said, turning his head toward her. The light caught the sharpness in his remaining eye as his expression shifted, focus snapping into place with unsettling speed. This was the look she recognized now: the look of a man arranging the world in his mind, calculating pressure points and leverage. "Will you remain in Petrograd, coordinating aid here? Or would you consider going to Moscow?"

She did not answer immediately.

Instead, she adjusted her grip on her own hands, feeling the roughness of skin cracked by antiseptic and cold. Silence, she had learned, invited him to reveal more than he intended.

He mistook it for encouragement.

"I will have access there," he continued, voice measured, almost clinical. "Direct access. The Politburo. Sovnarkom. Lenin listens to me—if not because he trusts me, then because he fears me." A brief pause. "My brother ensures the rest of them do the same."

He watched her closely as he spoke, gauging, measuring. Elsa kept her face composed.

"Supply bottlenecks," he went on, "obstruction, officials hoarding food, delaying trains, losing paperwork at convenient moments—all of that disappears when I speak. You have the skill. I have the leverage." His lips pressed together. "Think of what we could accomplish."

He leaned back slightly, then stopped himself, as if the movement reminded him of something he no longer possessed. His gaze dropped to the stump of his arm, his mouth tightening.

"And also…" he began, then exhaled sharply, irritated with himself. "No. Forget it. That's foolish. I shouldn't say more."

He shook his head once, as though physically dismissing the thought.

"Still," he added more quietly, almost reluctantly, "you should consider it."

"I can't," Elsa said.

The words left her mouth before she had fully prepared them. They were simple. Final.

He looked at her—not with anger, not even disappointment. Only curiosity, as if she had presented him with an unexpected variable.

"Why not?"

She hesitated. Of all the things she had said to him—about executions, about cruelty, about guilt—this felt strangely harder to articulate.

"My father," she said at last. "He's been ill for years. I've received more letters recently. The tone has changed." Her voice wavered despite her effort to control it. "He's worse. I think… I think he may not have much time left."

She hated the warmth gathering behind her eyes. She hated that she was admitting this vulnerability to him of all people.

"I'm sorry," he said immediately.

There was no calculation in it. No defensive edge. Just a statement, offered plainly.

"I imposed on you for too long," he went on. His shoulders sagged, just slightly. "If you need to leave Russia—immediately—you may. I won't stop you." He frowned, thinking aloud. "Bullitt is competent. We could arrange something through him. Aid won't collapse because you're gone."

Elsa looked up at him then, genuinely surprised.

"I don't know what to do," she said quietly. "You once asked me how I could live with myself if I walked away while millions suffered. Do you remember that?"

He nodded. Shame crossed his face without resistance, as if he no longer had the strength to fend it off.

"But he is your father," he said. "We cannot save everyone. Sometimes… sometimes one must choose those they love."

He fell silent for a moment, then continued, his voice softer now, almost reflective.

"You know, before this war started—not the civil war, the great war back in 1914—before all of that, Maria and I had a dream. We would have gone to America. Me, her, Mama, the children. We would have settled down, opened a restaurant." A faint smile touched his lips. "I even had a name for it. Do you want to know what it would have been?"

Elsa blinked. "Sure. What was it?"

"McDonald's," he said, then chuckled quietly at himself.

"McDonald's?" she repeated, unsure whether she had misheard.

"Yes." He nodded. "I got it from a book at the library. Something about Scottish clans, I think. A good name. Catchy." His eye grew distant. "I even had ideas—golden arches, a giant cursive M. Burgers, ice cream, fried potato sticks with a simple sauce. It would have been perfect." His voice darkened. "Better than this hell."

She did not know what to say. The dissonance unsettled her: this man, capable of ordering mass death, speaking with earnest nostalgia about hamburgers and slogans.

"Why?" she asked softly. "Why did you stay?"

"Joe," he said simply.

He met her gaze again. "I offered him the chance to come with us. I wanted him to. But he refused. He was already in too deep. And I was raising his son." His jaw tightened. "Despite everything, a child deserves to be with his father."

He gestured with his stump, then pointed clumsily toward his eyepatch.

"What I'm trying to say is this is what loyalty to other people gets you," he said. "It's too late for me now, Elsa. I cannot step away. Stalin will walk down a river of blood." His voice was flat, resigned. "And I will be the one to dig the channel."

He looked at her then, truly looked at her.

"But you," he said. "You're a good person. You should go see your father. Take time away from this place. Breathe." A pause. "You've told me what you've endured—Siberia, famine, typhus, trains full of corpses. And now you're doing work that will save millions. I've been exploiting you." His mouth tightened. "You deserve rest. You deserve to be with people you love—and who love you."

Elsa sat very still.

She wondered—without bitterness, without judgment—how a man capable of such deliberate, merciless violence could also speak with such tenderness. How the same hands that signed death warrants could tremble when granting someone else permission to live.

Elsa hesitated, the words catching briefly in her throat before she allowed them out.

"I… I will return, then," she said carefully. "I will go back to Sweden."

For a moment, he said nothing. Then he nodded once, as if confirming something he had already expected.

"That's all right," he replied. His voice was even, measured. "Take as long as you need, like I said. Whatever happens—if your father recovers, or if he doesn't—send him my best wishes." He paused, choosing his next words with unusual care. "And when that chapter closes, however it does, don't rush your decision. Think. Rest. Your work is important. Millions are alive because of you."

He studied her face for a moment, not intrusively, but with a quiet intensity that made her uneasy.

"But your health matters too," he continued. "Not just your body. Your mind. Your heart. This place…" He gestured vaguely at the walls. "It eats people alive. Take time away from it. When you're ready—if you're ready—come back. I'll handle the rest. I always do."

Elsa nodded, but even as she did, her mind betrayed her. She saw again the aftermath of Kronstadt—the bodies dragged across the ice, the sailors crushed under artillery, the civilians broken by fear and coercion. She remembered the maps, the bombardment, the casual way orders had been given that erased entire lives.

This man—this same man—had conceived much of it.

And yet here he sat, speaking to her with gentleness, with consideration, as if the world were not soaked in blood because of his decisions. The contradiction made her stomach tighten. Disgust rose in her, sharp and undeniable. And yet, beneath it, something else lingered—pity. Not forgiveness. Never that. But the clear-eyed recognition of a man who understood he was trapped and despised himself for it.

"I'll be leaving within the week," she said. "I'll make the necessary arrangements."

"Of course," he replied. He exhaled slowly, then let out a short, almost self-mocking laugh. "It'll be lonely here without you."

He shook his head as if scolding himself. "I hate that I said that. Truly. You remember what I told you before—how, if I survived…" He hesitated, then continued more lightly, "how I wouldn't mind lunch someday. No war. No reports. No accounting of the dead. Just music. Caruso."

For a fleeting moment, he looked almost embarrassed—like a schoolboy who had spoken too much, too honestly.

"No," Elsa said immediately. Her voice was firm, not unkind. "I can't."

He nodded at once. There was disappointment in his eyes, but no resentment.

"I understand," he said. "I'm sorry for imposing. That wasn't fair."

She rose, smoothing her coat, grateful for the physical motion, for something ordinary to anchor her.

"I have to go," she said. "There's still work to be done."

"Yes," he replied quietly. "Of course there is."

She left without looking back, her footsteps steady in the corridor. And as she walked away, Elsa knew one thing: If she had agreed, she wouldn't have been able to leave.
 
Omake: Within the Iron closet New

NEW YORK NATIVE

Within the Iron Closet

By Larry Kramer
January 12, 1987


Five years. Six in June.

That's how long this nightmare has been going on.
Five years since the first whispers.
Five years since the first funerals.
Five years since the government decided that if enough of us died quietly, the problem would solve itself.

As of today, we are looking at more than fifteen thousand dead in this country alone. Fifteen thousand lovers, sons, brothers, daughters, friends—gone. If that number doesn't make you furious, then you are either numb, lying, or already dead inside.

And yet, somehow, we are still expected to be polite.

I'm not writing today to gently remind you to donate to another hospice or to clap politely for the latest half-assed promise from Washington. I'm writing because there is something happening across the Iron Curtain that should scare the living shit out of you—and if it doesn't, then God help us all.

You've heard the rumors. You've seen the speeches. Jesse Helms practically salivates when he talks about the Soviet "solution" to AIDS. Pat Robertson and his ilk drool over it in private and hint at it in public. Forced testing. Mandatory confinement. Sanitariums. Registers. Guards.

And don't kid yourself—this isn't propaganda. The Soviets are doing it.

In the USSR, if you test positive, you disappear. You are interrogated about every person you've touched, every body you've loved, every bed you've ever shared. Names are taken. Files are opened. Those names are dragged in too. Entire networks of human beings are scooped up like garbage and dumped into "medical facilities" that look suspiciously like prisons. You don't leave. You don't protest. You don't sue. You rot.

The state calls it "public health."
I call it mass incarceration with syringes.

And here's the truly terrifying part: it works. At least on paper. Their numbers are lower. Their spread is slower. And every fascist asshole in America knows it.

That's why this matters.

Because if we don't act—now—someone in this country will stand up in Congress, wag their finger, and say:
"Well, the Soviets solved it."

And then we're finished.

Do you think it stops with gay men?
Do you think they'll stop with drug users?
Do you think Black people, poor people, immigrants, sex workers, prisoners—do you think they'll be spared once the machinery starts rolling?

Wake the fuck up.

This disease is not what's killing us fastest. Complacency is. Cowardice is. Politeness is. The endless, soul-crushing ritual of begging for scraps from people who would rather see us gone.

We cannot keep playing defense. We cannot keep organizing bake sales while they build cages. We cannot keep whispering while they sharpen knives.

I am sick to death of funerals.
I am sick to death of being told to wait.
I am sick to death of being told to be "reasonable."

Reasonable is what got us here.

What we need now is direct action. Not tomorrow. Not next year. Now. We need strikes. Sit-ins. Occupations. We need to make this epidemic politically impossible to ignore. We need to demand massive federal funding for research, for care, for education—and we need ironclad guarantees that no American will ever be locked up for being sick.

Because once you accept sanitariums for AIDS, you accept them forever.

The Soviets didn't start with camps either. They started with "necessity." With "emergency." With "the greater good." That's how every nightmare begins.

If you think this country is immune, ask the Japanese Americans who were shoved into camps forty years ago. Ask the Black men rotting in prisons for victimless crimes. Ask the women whose bodies are legislated by men who will never bleed.

This is not hysteria. This is foresight.

So let me be perfectly clear: I would rather die than be locked up for having AIDS. I would rather die than watch one more friend dragged away in the name of "order." I would rather die standing than live in a sanitarium while politicians congratulate themselves for being "tough."

And if that scares you—good. It should.

Because fear is finally what we need. Not fear of the virus—but fear of what happens when we stop fighting back.

Act now. Or be acted upon.

Hell no.
I won't go.
 
And yet—another thought crept in, unwelcome but persistent. The future. The camps. The purges. The mountains of corpses still waiting their turn for the meat-grinder that was world war 2.

If I stayed alive.

If I stayed useful.

If I helped end the war faster, streamlined the system, redirected the machinery—

Maybe I could pull some people out before it swallowed them.

Maybe I could save a few million.

Maybe… I could make some small accounting with the dead.

"I…" My voice faltered. I swallowed. "I understand."

I forced the word out.
This made sense for the beginning of the fanfic but cmon bro, he's personally killed entire families, hundreds of soliders, been through warfare, charged first in battles, and he still quakes in his boots like a little bitch, it's simply ridiculous, Stalin ain't that scary he just isn't, your character is pathetic, this attitude should've ended within the first few chapters if not scenes
 
So this Mika Lost his Wife, his Eye and his Arm Damn what's going to lose next ? And he still the better looking one hahaha.
He really need to leave the frontline to the Young soldiers
So we can say that he found a new wife ?
 

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