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The winds howled cold and sharp off the Baltic Sea as a train slid into Helsinki Central Station.

It was December 2, 1937.

A small honor guard stood silently on the platform, breath visible in the air, rifles polished but unraised.

Protocol remained intact, but the ceremony was subdued.

President Kyösti Kallio adjusted his thick wool coat and stepped forward as the Swedish delegation disembarked.

At their head was Pri Minister Per Albin Hansson, tall and solid, his jaw clenched beneath a scarf.

They exchanged polite smiles and brief handshakes, caras clicking quietly before they disappeared into waiting black cars.

Inside the presidential residence.

Only three n sat around it Kallio, Hansson, and Juho Paasikivi, Finland’s foreign minister.

No aides.

No transcripts.

"Per," Kallio began after a long silence.

"I’ll speak plainly. Estonia fell like frost before morning."

Hansson nodded slowly, removing his gloves. "Yes. We’ve seen the reports. Not a single shot."

"Not a shot," Paasikivi echoed bitterly. "Only silence, and then red banners."

Hansson sipped his coffee but said nothing at first.

Then he leaned forward slightly.

"Finland and Sweden have remained out of war for nearly two decades. We’ve chosen restraint. Neutrality. But Kyösti, even neutrality has its limits when the map around us begins to change in the night."

Kallio stared into his cup. "Do you believe neutrality will protect you now?"

"I believe it has until now," Hansson answered carefully.

Paasikivi looked up sharply. "And tomorrow? When they co for Riga? Or Vilnius? Or perhaps the Åland Islands?"

"That’s why I’m here," Hansson replied, finally laying down his spoon. "To ask the sa of you."

Another pause.

Kallio turned his gaze toward the frosted window, where the outline of a guard moved slowly in the cold.

"We are not fools, Per. We see what this is. Hitler has taken Austria. Stalin has taken Estonia. And Moreau swallows Spain and smiles to the world. These are not isolated events. These are rehearsals."

Hansson nodded slowly. "Then what do we do?"

"We talk," Paasikivi said. "We begin. Quietly, for now. But sincerely."

Far to the south, across frozen rivers and fields, a different eting was underway in a cramped governnt office in Riga.

The air was full with tobacco, the windows shut against the wind.

President Kārlis Ulmanis of Latvia leaned over a table cluttered with maps and mos, a deep furrow between his brows.

Facing him sat Antanas Stona, the President of Lithuania watching Ulmanis with keen, tired eyes.

"They will not help us," Ulmanis said softly.

"No," Stona agreed. "They didn’t help Estonia. They won’t help us."

"France is elsewhere. Britain sleeps. The League debates and drafts resolutions."

"Resolutions do not stop tanks."

Ulmanis nodded, rubbing his temples. "They co with lists, not weapons. Nas, not bullets. And still, we cannot stop them."

Stona’s voice hardened. "Then we must prepare to resist before the lists co."

Ulmanis looked up. "How?"

"Together."

A long silence followed.

Ulmanis exhaled slowly. "We’ve spent years arguing borders, trade, language. We’ve always kept each other at arm’s length."

"Because we could afford to," Stona said. "Now we cannot."

Ulmanis sat back. "You realize what alliance ans. Open defiance. Exposure."

"I do."

"We could be signing our own death warrants."

Stona’s voice softened. "Or our grandchildren’s birthrights."

Ulmanis studied him for a long mont.

Then slowly, he reached across the table and picked up a fountain pen.

"One docunt," he said. "For now. A morandum of cultural cooperation. Exchange of students. Shared press materials. Harmless on paper."

Stona smiled faintly. "And behind the paper?"

"Military codes. Refugee protocols. Shared intelligence. Quiet promises."

Their eyes t with a kind of exhausted determination.

"Then let’s begin," Stona said quietly.

South of the Carpathians, in the halls of Bucharest’s Cotroceni Palace, King Carol II sat reviewing the agenda for his upcoming trip.

France.

A state visit.

Officially, it was a gesture of shared cultural heritage.

Unofficially, it was sothing far more desperate.

"They won’t save us, you know," said Mihail Manoilescu, his foreign minister, standing near the window with a telegram in hand.

"I know," the King replied, his voice dull. "But perhaps they’ll bargain with us."

"France is no longer what it was," Manoilescu muttered.

Carol looked up. "And what are we, Mihail?"

Manoilescu didn’t answer.

Instead, he stepped forward and placed the telegram on the King’s desk.

"German officers t with Hungarian envoys in secret. They discussed Transylvania."

Carol’s hands tightened on the desk.

"So it begins," he said quietly.

"It has already begun, Your Majesty."

Carol stood, walking slowly toward the map on the far wall.

He stared at Romania’s borders for a long ti.

"Prepare my speech for Paris," he said softly. "Tell them we co in peace, but not with empty hands. Let them know we’re willing to give much if it ans survival."

Manoilescu hesitated. "And if they ask for more than we can give?"

"Then we smile," Carol said darkly, "and lie better than they do."

In a quiet villa outside Kraków.

President Ignacy Mościcki sat facing Czechoslovakian President Edvard Beneš, both wrapped in coats despite the stove’s warmth.

"You realize the absurdity of this," Beneš said with a sad smile. "We haven’t spoken civilly in over a decade."

"Absurdity may be our only weapon now," Mościcki replied.

Beneš sipped from his cup. "I thought Austria would be the last straw. But the world barely blinked."

Mościcki’s eyes narrowed. "We thought Czechoslovakia would be the buffer. Now we know there are no buffers. Only dominoes."

"And we are next?"

"Perhaps not tomorrow. Perhaps not this year. But yes. One by one."

Beneš set his cup down. "Then let’s stop thinking like neighbors. Let’s start thinking like partners."

Mościcki nodded slowly.

"Our armies are different in doctrine. But compatible. Our rail lines already connect."

"Intelligence?"

"Shared. Beginning imdiately."

"Will we fight?" Beneš asked finally.

Mościcki looked at the fading fire. "Only if no one else will."

Outside, the wind rattled the windows.

Inside, two n once separated by distrust began drafting the outlines of sothing rare in their ti.

Understanding.

In Moscow, Stalin read through the compiled summaries without expression.

He tapped his finger once on Estonia’s na, circled in red ink.

Then he looked at Latvia and Lithuania, written below, uncircled.

Not yet.

He turned the page and lit a cigarette.

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