Reincarnated: Vive La France

Chapter 279: Empire was on loan. And the lease is ending.



The fog over the Thames that morning was not the soft, grey veil poets once loved.

It was heavy, brackish, as if London itself had inhaled the the darkness while forgetting to breathe.

Britain had been an empire.

Now it was something else.

What exactly, no one seemed to know.

The Cabinet gathered in silence.

The chairs scraped slightly on polished oak as men older, thinner, wearier than the portraits behind them took their places.

Chamberlain sat at the head, pale and drawn.

Halifax was already leafing through foreign ministry reports.

Kingsley Wood poured tea without ceremony.

"The issue is clarity," Chamberlain said at last. "Or rather, the lack of it."

He looked around.

"France has changed the tempo of Europe. Germany's tempo is changing with it. And we" he tapped his own chest, lightly.

"Are out of step."

Eden exhaled through his nose. "Because we've clung to rules no one else follows."

"That is precisely why we must hold the line," Halifax said. "Or we become like them."

"The line is a fiction if no one else sees it," Eden snapped.

Chamberlain raised a hand. "Enough. We do not solve this by shouting. We must understand that our strength lies in continuity. The Crown, Parliament, commerce..."

"All of which are cracking," muttered Duff Cooper. "India burns. Egypt whispers sedition. Canada hesitates. Even the bloody Australians are demanding guarantees before sending another ship."

There was a pause.

"Where is Churchill?" someone asked.

"Still in the Commons," replied Sir Horace Wilson. "Speaking on naval funding."

Chamberlain leaned forward, clasping his hands. "This is not just about France. Or Spain. Or Austria. This is about perception. Our allies see hesitation. Our colonies see erosion. We must project unity..."

A knock interrupted him.

An aide entered and whispered something to Halifax, who read the note and frowned.

"Another march in Calcutta," he said aloud. "Gandhi again. Tens of thousands."

"Another salt tax protest?" Eden asked.

"No. This time, it's the railways. They're demanding full Indian administration of all transport lines."

Kingsley Wood scoffed. "They'll demand the Viceroy's head next."

"They already have," Halifax said quietly.

"What of Wavell?" Chamberlain asked.

"He's watching. He's warned New Delhi not to overreach."

"And what do we do?" Cooper asked. "Arrest Gandhi again? Deport Nehru to Ceylon?"

"The moment we resort to violence," Halifax said, "we validate every line in their speeches."

"Then what?" Eden asked, exasperated. "Appease them? Let the Raj crumble from within while we sip tea and pray the Channel holds?"

"We don't know how to govern a changing world," muttered Cooper. "We only know how to resent it."

Outside, Parliament Square filled slowly with movement.

Not protestors though those came later but clerks, correspondents, minor MPs.

All shivering in coats too thin, holding portfolios too full.

They whispered about Spain.

About France.

About rumors that France was now stationing engineers in the Pyrenees for a second wave of development.

Development, not war.

And that was worse.

Back inside the Cabinet room, a new discussion began.

"The Dominions are demanding clarity," Halifax said. "Canada is spooked. South Africa is hedging. Australia is… distracted."

"And Ireland?" Chamberlain asked.

"Neutral, coldly so."

"And America?"

No one answered.

Finally, Eden said, "Roosevelt has begun laying groundwork for some new intelligence network across the Atlantic. But he won't intervene in Europe. Not unless blood spills."

Chamberlain stood slowly.

He walked to the tall windows and stared out into the fog.

"France moved with bread," he said. "Germany plans to move with ballots. And we… send telegrams."

A hush.

"We are becoming, gentlemen, a power of footnotes."

Then, after a moment, softer.

"And the Empire knows it."

In a back room, an overworked young officer named John Vickers was translating intercepted pamphlets from Bengal.

The phrase appeared again and again.

"London is fading. We must rise."

He underlined it in red and slid the paper across the desk to his superior.

The man glanced at it, said nothing, and lit a cigarette.

At 10 Downing Street, Chamberlain met with his private secretary.

"Draft a letter to the King," he said. "I want him briefed on the possibility of a rearmament speech. We may have to address the nation."

"A war speech?"

"No. A… reality speech."

Meanwhile, MI5 and the War Office debated internally whether to reinforce Gibraltar or Singapore first.

"If France stays focused on Spain," said one colonel, "Germany will take Austria. Then what?"

"Then the Balkans."

"And after that?"

"The Channel."

No one laughed.

In the East End, at the docks, sailors argued over Moreau.

"He took a dead country and stood it up again."

"France? Bollocks. Just looks tidy on postcards."

"No shots fired."

"Because he didn't face anyone real."

"You think Germany's fake?"

They went quiet.

And in a pub in Camden, a grizzled veteran from the Somme muttered to no one in particular.

"Europe's waking up mean again. You can feel it."

The Colonial Office was worse.

Telegram after telegram. Colombo. Nairobi. Karachi. Delhi. Rangoon.

All speaking with one voice now.

Reform. Autonomy. Accountability. Or consequence.

One Indian civil servant in London, Krishna Menon, handed a petition to a Labour MP outside the Commons.

"Thirty-seven Indian lawyers," he said. "All British-educated. All demanding constitutional clarity within twelve months. Or independence within five years."

The MP nodded gravely.

"Too many clocks ticking," he said.

Menon didn't blink. "And none of them set in London anymore."

In a room not far from Fleet Street, three journalists sat in silence, looking at a proof of the next day's paper.

One headline was bold.

"IS BRITAIN STILL IN CONTROL?"

The editor stubbed out a cigarette. "Run it," he said.

"We'll get hammered," one reporter muttered.

"We're already bleeding," the editor replied. "Might as well show the wound."

That night, Chamberlain stood before the fireplace in his study.

Outside, the fog had thickened.

Halifax arrived late.

He stood by the fire without taking his coat off.

"You're not sleeping," he said.

"No one is."

"They think you're weak."

Chamberlain smiled bitterly. "Perhaps I am."

"You're not."

"I believed the world could be managed. I believed reason could temper ambition."

Halifax said nothing.

Chamberlain poured them both tea.

"Do you remember Verdun?" he asked.

"Too well."

"I remember the letters," Chamberlain said. "From the French. Half-ripped, soaked in mud, barely legible. But proud. They were proud. Of what, I still don't know."

"And now?"

"Now their grandchildren are rebuilding Europe while we draft memos."

Halifax sipped his tea.

"And the Empire?"

"It's not ours anymore," Chamberlain said. "It was on loan. And the lease is ending."

Another silence.

"Can we hold it together?" Halifax asked.

Chamberlain didn't answer.

Instead, he looked toward the window.

Toward the fog.

And beyond it.

Toward a world slipping from grasp, not in flames but in distance.


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