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Chapter 52 - ABRAHAM ERSKINE TEST OF STEVE ROGERS

There is no lab yet.

‎No chamber.

‎No transformation.

‎Only a quiet room, late evening, inside a secured annex tied to early wartime research during the rise toward World War II.

‎At a simple wooden table sits

‎Abraham Erskine.

‎Across from him —

‎Steve Rogers.

‎This is not a medical evaluation.

‎It is a moral one.

‎Erskine pours two small glasses of schnapps.

‎Steve hesitates.

‎"You're underweight but not underage," Erskine says gently.

‎Steve takes the glass.

‎Erskine studies him over the rim.

‎"Tell me, Mr. Rogers…

‎why do you want to kill Nazis?"

‎Steve doesn't answer immediately.

‎He doesn't rush to righteous anger.

‎He doesn't grandstand.

‎"I don't want to kill anyone," he says finally.

‎"I don't like bullies. I don't care where they're from."

‎Erskine's eyes sharpen.

‎There it is.

‎Not hatred.

‎Principle.

‎Erskine leans back.

‎"What if I gave you the body you want? Strength. Speed. Authority. You could make men fear you."

‎Steve frowns slightly.

‎"I don't want them to fear me."

‎"Why not?"

‎"Because fear makes people smaller. I don't want to be smaller."

‎That answer lingers in the room.

‎Erskine has heard ambition before.

‎He has heard vengeance.

‎He has heard hunger.

‎This is none of those.

‎Erskine tells him the truth.

‎Not all of it.

‎But enough.

‎He speaks of a man in Europe who was given power.

‎A man who believed strength proved superiority.

‎A man who became something monstrous under the banner of

‎Hydra.

‎He does not name

‎Johann Schmidt.

‎But the weight is there.

‎Then Erskine says:

‎"The serum amplifies everything. Good becomes great. Bad becomes catastrophic."

‎Silence.

‎Steve absorbs it.

‎No excitement.

‎No widening eyes at the word serum.

‎Instead:

‎"If it makes bad worse… why risk it at all?"

‎Erskine smiles faintly.

‎"Because sometimes good needs help."

‎Erskine drops a file on the table.

‎Inside: falsified enlistment forms.

‎Fraud.

‎Technically prosecutable.

‎"Why keep trying?" Erskine asks quietly.

‎"You could serve in factories. In support. Why insist on the front?"

‎Steve's jaw tightens.

‎"Because if someone stronger goes instead of me, they might come back different. I already know what it's like to be small. I can handle it."

‎Erskine watches for ego.

‎There is none.

‎Just responsibility.

‎Erskine leans forward.

‎"Do you want to be a hero?"

‎Steve shakes his head.

‎"I just don't want to be helpless."

‎That is the answer.

‎Not glory.

‎Not legacy.

‎Relief from helplessness — not domination.

‎Erskine stands.

‎Walks to the window.

‎The war machine outside hums quietly.

‎He remembers his first mistake.

‎Choosing a man who wanted to prove something.

‎Now he sees the difference.

‎This one wants to protect something.

‎Erskine turns back.

‎"You will not be perfect," he says softly.

‎"You will be tested. And the world will try to use you."

‎Steve meets his gaze.

‎"I don't mind being used… if it helps."

‎That is when Erskine knows.

‎Not because Steve is fearless.

‎But because he understands fear — and refuses to let it decide.

‎In a world subtly stabilized by unseen mythic agreements:

‎Infernal contracts cannot interfere with pantheon heirs.

‎Mystic surveillance tracks large distortions.

‎Power imbalances are noticed quickly.

‎Erskine senses this era is changing.

‎Science is becoming myth's rival.

‎If the next age will be built on amplification—

‎Then the first amplified man must not crave it.

‎He extends his hand.

‎"Mr. Rogers… I believe I may have found a place for you."

‎No transformation yet.

‎But the test is complete.

‎And for the first time in his life—

‎Steve Rogers has not been rejected.

‎He has been chosen.

‎War is noise.

‎Science is signal.

‎And in the shadows beneath the banner of

‎Hydra,

‎someone is very good at detecting signal.

‎Deep within Hydra's scientific division, encrypted communications are filtered for anomalies.

‎Funding shifts.

‎Personnel transfers.

‎Unusual requisitions of rare chemical stabilizers.

‎The name attached to those patterns is familiar.

‎Abraham Erskine.

‎For years, they believed him contained.

‎Then lost.

‎Now—

‎Active.

‎And not alone.

‎In a private chamber,

‎Johann Schmidt

‎reviews the intelligence report.

‎He does not rage.

‎He smiles.

‎Because he knows what Erskine was trying to perfect.

‎He is living proof of the first attempt.

‎An enhancement without balance.

‎Power without restraint.

‎Schmidt's voice is calm:

‎"He believes he can correct his mistake."

‎Hydra's inner circle proposes sabotage. Assassination. Bombing.

‎Schmidt refuses immediate action.

‎"Not yet."

‎He wants confirmation.

‎If Erskine has succeeded in stabilizing the formula—

‎Hydra will not destroy it.

‎They will take it.

‎Hydra's detection was not luck.

‎It was mathematics.

‎Erskine requires:

‎Vita radiation calibration equipment.

‎Rare chemical accelerants.

‎A power output spike consistent with cellular amplification trials.

‎These are not ordinary military requests.

‎Hydra scientists compare them against archived data from Schmidt's transformation.

‎The pattern aligns.

‎Probability of renewed super-soldier experimentation: high.

‎Schmidt's eyes narrow.

‎"Find the subject."

‎Because the serum alone is not enough.

‎The host matters.

‎Schmidt learned that the hard way.

‎In New York, early intelligence analysts tied to the SSR notice increased Hydra cipher traffic.

‎Peggy Carter flags it.

‎She cannot read the full code.

‎But she recognizes surveillance behavior.

‎Erskine is moved to a more secure location.

‎Howard Stark begins rotating laboratory access credentials daily.

‎Security tightens quietly.

‎They do not know Hydra has already confirmed.

‎Instead of striking immediately, Hydra plants something subtler:

‎A sleeper operative embedded within supply logistics.

‎No attack.

‎No explosion.

‎Just observation.

‎Hydra wants three answers:

‎Has the serum been stabilized?

‎Who is the candidate?

‎When will the procedure occur?

‎Schmidt understands patience.

‎Because if Erskine has corrected the flaw—

‎Hydra will create an army.

‎Not a single champion.

‎Hydra's ambition generates a measurable psychic density.

‎Not mystical intervention.

‎But intention thick enough to register.

‎Somewhere within global arcane monitoring networks, patterns spike slightly.

‎Kamar-Taj notes it.

‎Valmythra's watchers notice a tightening spiral around one scientist and one frail volunteer.

‎No interference yet.

‎Just awareness.

‎Because this is not myth acting.

‎This is humanity attempting to rival myth.

‎Schmidt stands before a massive Hydra insignia.

‎"Prepare a retrieval team," he says softly.

‎"Not soldiers. Professionals."

‎He turns to a shadowed subordinate.

‎"And if the doctor refuses to cooperate…"

‎A pause.

‎Cold certainty.

‎"Remind him what happens when good men hesitate."

‎Across the ocean, Steve Rogers sleeps unaware.

‎Erskine finalizes calculations.

‎Peggy reviews security rotations.

‎Howard recalibrates power output.

‎Hydra waits.

‎And the race between conscience and domination has officially begun.

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