Power alone is not enough for tyrants.
They want legitimacy.
They want destiny.
In the inner chambers of the Reich,
Adolf Hitler
has grown increasingly fascinated with ancient mythologies — particularly those tied to the North.
But unlike historians, he does not seek understanding.
He seeks validation.
Across the table from him stands
Johann Schmidt —
calm, analytical, far less interested in romance and far more interested in application.
He seeks validation.
Across the table from him stands
Johann Schmidt —
calm, analytical, far less interested in romance and far more interested in application.
Recovered occult archives reference
Asgard
as more than legend — a realm described in fragmented medieval manuscripts as "the golden world beyond the veil."
Hitler fixates on it symbolically.
A warrior race.
Divine bloodlines.
Chosen strength.
He interprets Asgard through ideology:
Proof, in his mind, that superior beings once ruled openly.
Schmidt does not correct him.
But Schmidt reads deeper.
Asgardian myths do not describe conquest of humanity.
They describe guardianship.
That detail does not interest Hitler.
It interests Schmidt immensely.
Because it suggests power without domination — which he finds inefficient.
More troubling are scattered references to something else.
Not Norse.
Not European.
A sovereign myth-state referred to in broken translations as Valmythra.
A civilization predating structured pantheons.
Not gods of storm or trickery.
But architects of boundaries.
Archivists recovered a fragment describing:
"A sovereign who binds chaos not to rule, but to prevent unraveling."
Hitler dismisses it as mystical embellishment.
Schmidt does not.
Because unlike Asgard, Valmythra is described as:
Intervening quietly.
Preventing incursions.
Enforcing balance.
That implies control beyond spectacle.
And Schmidt respects systems more than symbols.
Hitler sees myth as destiny.
Schmidt sees myth as precedent.
If Asgard exists, then beings beyond humanity exist.
If Valmythra exists, then containment of cosmic forces is possible.
Schmidt begins asking different questions:
What energy source did they use?
How did they anchor dimensional boundaries?
Can those principles be replicated technologically?
Hydra's research shifts.
Less folklore.
More physics.
Hydra's deeper excavations reconnect Schmidt to ancient Norse references to the "Blue Flame of the Gods."
He correlates it to rumors of a relic once worshipped by followers of
Odin.
Hitler smiles.
It fits his worldview.
But Schmidt's ambition quietly diverges.
If gods are advanced —
Then they can be surpassed.
One recovered manuscript contains a damaged passage:
"Those who attempt dominion without restraint awaken the Watchers of Balance."
Schmidt circles the phrase.
Hitler laughs at it.
Superstition.
Schmidt is not so dismissive.
Because Hydra's early experiments have already encountered containment failures that defy standard explanation.
Energy fluctuations.
Unpredictable resonance interference.
As though something in the structure of reality resists extreme destabilization.
Schmidt does not believe in divine punishment.
But he believes in systems reacting to imbalance.
If Valmythra was real —
It may have engineered such safeguards.
This is the beginning of the philosophical fracture:
Hitler wants myth to justify supremacy.
Schmidt wants myth to unlock ascension.
Hydra begins operating increasingly independent of Nazi command.
Not openly.
But ideologically.
Because Schmidt no longer wants Germany to rule the world.
He wants to outgrow it.
