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The Ultimatum
What caused the OG13 to pull away.
âââââââââââââââââââââââ
It was in 1814, January to be specific, when the Original 13 States were summoned by the President. No other State, just the thirteen of them.
They enter the meeting room, the one saved for meetings between them and the President. Though, they notice, Adam and Robinâs seats are suspiciously empty. Those seats are never empty. Theyâre always involved in meetings with the Presidents.
Somethingâs wrong.
Very wrong.
But, thatâs probably why theyâre here, so they swallow their concern and take their seats.
President Madison clears his throat, and lifts his papers.
âMy fellow Congressmen, my fellow Senators, my fellow Representatives, and the Supreme Court have been engaged in rigorous discussion these last few years.â he says, âAnd we have agreed it is in the Nationâs best interest that you refrain from interacting with Continental Congress and Executive Assistant outside of business.â
You could hear a pin drip in the silence that ensued.
âIâm sorry, President Madison,â Virginia said with a strained smile, âIâm afraid I might have misheard. Surely youâre not asking us to stop interacting with our children.â
âIâm not asking.â is the unwavering response, âFailure to comply will lead toâŚunpleasant consequences.â
âYou canât do anything to us that hasnât been done before.â Delaware raises his brow, âWhat could you possibly do?â
âCongress and Assistant will be permanently terminated, and new Personifications will be formed in their place.â
The only way to âterminateâ a personification, especially a governmentâŚ
Is to kill them.
âYouâre humans.â Pennsylvaniaâs voice doesnât shake, but his eyes are narrowed, âYou canât kill a personification. Nor can you form a new one.â
The President smiles.
A cold, cruel smile.
âYou think no oneâs figured out how in the last million years?â he asks, âThe notes are hidden, yes, but there are ways to kill a Government Personification. Ways that have been documented, documents we have found.â heâs grinning now, âAnd, if those methods donât work, we can simply lock them up. Keep them here and make them work until they drop dead from it. No sleep, no meals, only workâ and dire consequences if they ever stop working.â Madison tilts his head, âIâve heard that Personifications can take quite the beating; I wonder how much it would take to keep them down?â
Thereâs nothing they can say. Because they know: know how cruel humans are, know how greedy they are, know how far theyâre willing to goâ and theyâre still so new. Maybe not in age, but as States. As people with power over the humans that live on their lands.
It wonât be for a few more decades that they learn they can cause their own natural disasters without affecting themselves, that they can influence the minds and opinions of their people without saying a word, that they learn they can say no.
So they agree.
They answer letters marked as business and avoid Adâ Congress and Robâ Assistant outside of meetings and nothing else. They vanish after meetingsâ though they do interact with their grandkids as best as they can, itâs hard when theyâre still youngâ and call them by theirâŚproper names.
Continental Congress. Executive Assistant.
Congress and Assistant.
They see the confusion, see it melt away into hurt, see it fade behind walls and locks and chains within burning green and stormy blue eyes.
They feel the worst sort of pain when theyâre no longer called Pa or Papa or Pop or Uncle, and instead are summoned by their State Title.
The weekly letters end not long after that, gifts sent only on the gifting-sort of Holidays. The mail Postmaster brings always entails business, or the names of their newest grandchildren (even those stop eventually, and theyâre left to figure it out from newspapers or the first meeting they attend)
They donât learn about the Fire of Washington until weeks after it happened, when AâCongress attended a meeting with a bandaged throat, face and arm, with a dull look in his one visible eye as Roâ Assistant spoke for him.
âŚ
The letters from the Civil War were the hardest to read, with blood and teardrops smeared on parchment and Congressâ elegant writingâ the handwriting he had been so proud to master when he was a boyâ devolving into frantic, desperate scratches on paper.
And when DC appears, when he tells them that Congressâ their boy, their nephew, their sonâ couldnât do it anymoreâŚthey assumed the worst.
They knew it had all been in vain. Even after Madison had long passed, the boy they were trying to protect still died. The girl they were trying to save from a broken mind left with a broken heart.
But in 2021, with the flurry and worry around DCâs condition, Gov appeared.
He seemed older than a new personification usually was, he looked far too familiarâ though many hardly noticed at the time. With dull grey eyes belaying walls and locks and chains they had once seen in Congressâ eyes.
They learnâ it takes too long, they shouldâve seen itâ that their boy never died.
He changed, they all had, but he hadnât died and heâs back with them once again. He brings their girl with him, still such a spitfire with the determination of a bloodhound.
They decide the Ultimatum they were given had an expiration, one long since overdue.
They were going to get their kids back, even if they had to drag Madison out of Hell, just to kill him all over again to do so.
Doors
The States try and open the door. Gov starts to have a breakdown.
âââââââââââââââââââââââ
Florida stares hard at the front door of the Statehouse, expression serious.
Louisiana side-eyed him with concern, and everyone else stayed a few feet away.
âWhatcha thinkinâ âbout, sha?â Louie asks, but Florida doesnât turn away.
âPapiâs here, right?â
They know itâs him, know that Gov is the Father and son they thought they lost, but theyâre not readyâ theyâre not prepared to bring it up. Not yet.
âYeah, what of it?â
âHe does this weird thing, watch.â Florida springs up, approaching the front door with sure, confident steps.
Before he can grab the door handle, another hand appears to pull the door open. A body blocking the entryway, but he hadnât come in from outside, had simply stepped in the way.
Gov hadnât been there a second ago.
âWhere are you off to?â The man asks, raising a brow as he opens the door.
âNowhere!â Florida grins, âJust wanted to go out!â
âHm.â Gov studies him for a moment, scrutinizing. Florida can feel himself start to sweat, before the man turns away. âAlright, donât cause any trouble.â
And the manâs gone, as if he was never there, leaving the door wide open.
Florida turns back to them all with a grin.
âSee?â
âHas he always done that?â Montana asks with a furrowed brow.
âCome to think of it, I donât think weâve ever opened the front or back door.â Iowa reclines on a couch, staring up at the ceiling with his hands folded over his stomach. âPaâs always shown up to open the doors, but only when weâre going out? He never opens it coming inside unless itâs a building other than the Statehouse? Itâs kinda weird.â
âI think weâve gotten used to it. I mean, I know Iâve started waiting for him to open other doors too.â
A few moments of contemplating silence.
âFirst to open the front or back door before Papi shows up wins.â
And that sealed it.
.1.
Florida, of course, was the first to try it. Multiple times in the span of several hours, in fact.
Heâd reach for one door handle, wait for it to twist and wait for the Static to fill the air as Gov starts to teleport, before he bolts to the other side of the house to the other door.
It doesnât work, and Gov looks more tired each time.
Gov snatches him up in the middle of one of his sprints, hand holding the back of the Southernerâs shirt to look him in the face.
Amber meets grey, and Florida grins- somewhat nervously- at the blank expression on the man's face.
âStop that.â Is all the man says, lowering him to his feet, and patting his shoulder twice, âItâs late. Go to bed.â
Florida scurries off, feeling very much like the young Ian Jones who stayed up past bedtime.
That doesnât mean he stops though.
.2.
Idaho and Iowa thought theyâd be the ones to win, being two of the most often forgotten States.
Idaho had gone to the back door, and Iowa to the front. They were going to try and open them at the same time, or as close to the same time as possible.
When Iowa heard the back door swing open, he reached for the door handleâ only for the front door to swing open from the outside, revealing Govâ Popsâ with a disoriented Idaho held under his arm.
âYou were both planning on tending the crops today.â The Statehouse properties are expansive , a lot of it used for things to keep the States entertained; such as farming or animal care. âThey are next to each other, you do not need to leave out two separate doors.â
Iowa shuffles his feet as Idaho is straightened to stand on xir own once xe was put down.
Xir face flushed, âPapa!â Xe says, slightly whiny, âWhat was that for?!â
Gov merely raised a brow.
âMakes it easier,â he says, leaning to press the side of his head against Idahoâs hairâ the younger personification squirming slightlyâ âCall if you need anything, Gem, alright?â
âYeah, yeah,â Xe mutters, squirming out of the smug manâs grasp and hauling Iowa out the door.
The Hawkeye State feltâŚjealous. That Noah could have what Caleb himself craved.
.3.
West Virginia and Nevada, Boe and Cassian, were quite the odd pair of friends; a retired coal miner and a ex-mobster-turned-showgirl.
But they were formed little more than a year apart, and stuck together through thick and thin.
Sure, their plan may involve Boe taking off his prosthetic legâ but, really, it was his idea.
Nevada sets the prosthetic against the porch rails before he trots back inside, shutting the door behind her. West Virginia leans against the back of the couch, and the Silver state nods. They lean against the front door carefully, not making any noise.
âPops!â the man yells, and the air fills with static, a sign that the manâs listening, âLeft mah leg out on the back porch earlier, mind grabbinâ it for me?â
It happened more often than one would think. He usually took the leg off later in the day, but it wasnât unusual for him to take it off and leave it somewhere without thinkingâ someone always around to assist without a second thought in grabbing it or helping him get to it.
Heâd forgotten to take it off last night, and thatâs what birthed this plan. The need to let his nub breathe.
The static shifts to the back as Nevada carefully reaches to the front door handleâŚ
It turns in his grasp, and the door opens behind her. They stumble back, their shoulders falling against the person behind them, who holds them up with one arm.
She looks back, spying his father looking at them both with a raised browâ Boeâs prosthetic leg in his hand.
Nevada smiles nervously, âHi, daddyâŚâ
âHello, Cassi,â Gov returns the greeting as the Silver State shifts to stand back up. âBoe is still in the sitting room, yes?â
ââM here, old man.â
âGood, then. Help me with him, Cassi?â
âYeahâ sure.â
Their father looksâŚtired. More so than usual as he helps strap the prosthetic back in placeâ Boeâs fond of the older modelsâ patting the Mountain Stateâs shoulder as he heaves himself up.
âPlease behave,â he sounds so tired, âand please remember to grab your leg before you leave it in the middle of a street.â
Boe snorts as his Pops strong hand ruffles his hair, and Cassian grins.
Theyâre fine with losing.
.4.
To be completely honest, Connecticut hadnât wanted to be involved in it. He saw how tired Gov looked, and how he only seemed to grow more haggard as each day passed with several States trying to open the doors.
But he had been a pirate, once. Mischief and the want for chaos carved in his bones.
âDavie.â he whispers with a grin, leaning over his husband's desk chair. âDavie, letâs go open the door.â
âHenryâŚâ Delaware plucks his glasses off his face and pinches the bridge of his nose. âYou know it wonât work.â
âIf it doesn't, we can get Johnny or someone to hold him still while we open it.â The Constitution State shrugs.
Delaware sighs again, âFine.â
Connecticut gives a small âyesssâ, hauling Delaware up and tugging him down the stairs.
There was no plan, they were banking on Gov being too busy withâŚanything. They were just going to try and open it, no special plans or strategies involved.
And, of course, it didnât work.
The handle twists from their grip and a body shifts to block their path as the door opens outwards.
Once again, Gov blocks their way. He stares at them a moment, back straight despite how utterly exhausted he looks.
âPleaseâŚâ his voice is quiet and gravely, and both Northeasterners cringe inwardly at the sound. âPlease, stop trying to open the doorsâŚâ
âGov,â Delaware's voice is careful, âWhenâs the last time you slept?â
The man twitched, âLast night.â
âDid you sleepâŚwell?â
âNo- no.â The man sways a bit, âToo focused. Iaâ Florida tried to open the door fifteen times in the span of two hours.â
They notice the slip, it makes their chests ache, but they have something more important to worry about. Theyâre uncles, after all, and their stupid, self-sacrificing nephew needs to go to sleep.
âCâmon, buddy,â Connecticut comes up to the man's side, carefully closing the door with one hand, the other going across the manâs shoulders, âWe gotta spare room you can have for the night. Davieâll message Ro for ya.â
As the First State pulls out his phone, they guide Gov to one of the guest rooms. They watch him fall onto the bed with a slightly pained grunt, and watch as he near immediately passes out.
They look at each other once the door is shut.
âIntervention?â
âIntervention.â
They need to show Gov that nothing will happen if someone else opens the door.
And what better place to do that than at the Legislative building? Where security is tight and no one there will hurt any of them?
..5..
Govâs has one office in Washington, DC. Much like their home in Pennsylvania, the door can open to any of the government buildings.
The office itself is lined with bookshelves that go up and up until you canât see the top. A hand drawn map of every state and territory on the wall behind the grand, mahogany desk.
On either side of the desk were two archways, leading further and further into the maze of bookshelves that never seemed to end. The space was larger than it had any right to be, and stretched further than the buildings themselves seemed to. It was never the same when you looked back, the pathways always changing.
Only Gov and Assistant were allowed in the labyrinth unattended, as they were the only ones who could find their way out again without trouble. Anyone else had to accompany one of them, or theyâd never return. There were things in there no one should see, and only the presence of one of the government personifications would keep those things away.
From the noises that sometimes echoed from within the bookshelves on occasion, not everyone heeded the warning.
But it was a familiar, safe space; perfect for them to intervene in Govâs ridiculous habit of opening the doors of their own home.
Only three of them had shown up for this, they know that anymore and Gov would possibly grow defensive; just the three of them would be enough to make him suspicious.
Georgia and Maryland, there to hold him back, and Kentucky, the one to open the door.
They knock on the door to the office, always so obvious that it leads to Govâs office with the aura it gives off and the ornate gold details on dark wood.
They donât wait for a response, as usual, and simply shove the door open. Gov had always said his office is open whenever they need him, after all.
The man jolts in his seat, blinking at them as they enter.
âHello,â he greets, body relaxing when he sees who it is, but he furrows his brow when he sees the serious look on Georgiaâs face, âI wasnât expecting you today, has something happened?â
âNothinâs happened, hon.â Maryland says as he rounds the desk, Georgia coming around the other side, âJust wanted to visit ya for a bit.â
Gov purses his lips.
Heâs suspicious.
Georgia settles his hands on the manâs shoulders from behind the chair as Maryland holds onto one of his arms.
Gov looks to Kentucky, whoâs stayed resolutely by the door. He wants to reach out and call his son to his sideâ no, no. Not his son, they donât want to be his children, they donât want any relation to him. Itâs why they only call him Gov.
He sees the southernersâ hand reach for the door handle, and he shifts to standâ he needs to get the doorâ but the hands on his shoulders go firm, and he finds he canât move.
Panic grips his chest, as Kentucky turns the doorknob. Everything tunes outâ the hands on his shoulders, the weight on his arm, the voices of Georgia and Maryland trying to soothe him. All he can hear, all he can sense, is the presence of a loaded gun behind the doorâ
He pulls himself out of their grip, faster than they can stop him, the jerking motion pulling his shoulderâ and the metal that holds itâ out of place. He grits his teeth at the feeling, tugging Kentucky out of the way as the door falls openâ
BANG!
The bullet strikes him in his dislocated shoulder, and he grimaces silently, staring the politician, who now eyes the States behind him with fear.
He never often cared if they shot him, itâs been happening for centuriesâ less so now than in the age of dueling, but humans rarely changeâ but they never got away with it when any of his States were present.
He moves to do what he always does, close the door and handle itâ but thereâs a pair of hands on his arm, another body coming around to his front as a third tears into the hallway with a loud bellowâ like a bear mauling those foolish to get too close to its cubs.
âSit downâ sit down.â Maryland hisses as Kentucky flutters next to them.
In this office, Gov has several loveseats and armchairs in front of his desk, and he soon gets pushed into one. He grunts at the jostling in his arm, confused for a moment, before he waves their hands off.
âDrawerâ bottom left.â he mutters, âGotta medkit in there.â
Maryland freezes for a moment, but Kentucky scurries off to grab the kit as told.
âIâm sorry, hon,â Maryland says, too sweetly, as Georgia hauls the bloodied politician into the office and chucks them a few ways down into the labyrinth. âDid you just say, âI have a medkit for things like thisâ? As in, this is a normal occurrence.â
Gov can feel Georgia glowering from behind him as he shifts, preparing to pop his arm back in its socket.
âIgnore that.â Gov says as Kentucky props the medkit open at his side, âEliâ Kentucky,â the man says, muttering under his breath, âNein, nein. Kentucky, get the tweezers ready, alright?â
âPut your hands down.â Maryland shoves the younger entityâs hands to his sides, âYou stay focused on telling me why youâre acting as if this is normal! Elias, Eli! Put those down and go get your Gigi and your Grandad. Now!â
The younger State pops away, and Georgia immediately takes his place.
âItâs fine, itâs fine.â Gov tries to shift away from their hands, âIâll call Robin and itâll be fine. Itâs not the first, nor the last time, a politician has shot me.â
âGonna need you to explain that, boy.â Georgia rumbles angrily, âYou should be gettinâ shot never, preferably.â
âIt happens,â he keeps trying to brush them away, barely grimacing when Georgiaâs hands pop his shoulder and the metal plates back into place, âThey canât shoot each other, so they shoot me. Theyâre always behind the door waiting for me to open it, but itâs not every time.â he chokes on his breath when Maryland checks the wound, digging out the bullet with the tweezers, âNearly shot Daniel onceâ just started opening the doors. Rather be me than the kids.â
âJesus,â another voice speaks up, a new set of hands lifting his face to meet theirs. Pennsylvania, âFuck, kidââ
âHe says this is normal!â Maryland hisses as his suit coat is removed by Virginia, âHe says itâs been happening for centuries!â
His sweater is pulled up over his shoulder so the bullet hole can be cleaned and wrapped.
Gov feels four sets of protective, furious eyes on himself, and heâs even more confused.
âItâs fine,â he assures, exasperated, âIâve been shot far worse than this over things so minor I wasnât even informed of it. At least I know this time it was over a legal dispute.â
He tugs his sweater back down over his arm, but leaves the suit coat off for the time being.
âThey shoot you over things that donât EVEN CONCERN YOU?!â Virginia near shrieks, and Gov flinches at the sound, âWhy are we just now learning this information?!â
âItâs not important,â Gov stresses, but they just donât seem to understand, âIt has not and has never been important. Itâs just something that happens.â he shoves himself up off the couch and past Pennsylvania, nearly stumblingâ heâs so tired. âThank you for your help, but it is incredibly unnecessary to take on such a choreââ
Heâs tugged back by a hand on the back of his shirt, a snarl building up behind him.
âA chore?â An enraged voice asks as heâs pushed back into his seat, the four of them glaring at him, âYou think patching up our son, after heâs been shot, is a chore?â
Thereâs a sudden tugging on his ear, and he flinches at the feeling.
âYoung man, if you ainât have metal in yer spine and just got a bullet put in ya, youâdâve just earned yerself a whoopinâ!â Virginia snaps, their thumb and index finger holding firm on the manâs ear for a moment before they let go, hands going to their hips.
The brunette rubs away the stinging feeling, grimacing as he glares straight back at them.
âI said itâs fine, how many times do I have to repeat that?â He snaps in response, baring his teeth in a snarl. âNone of you are listening.â
âWe ainât gonna listen when you tell us gettinâ shot is fine.â Georgia growls.
âBecause it is fine, when itâs me.â he goes to stand back, âLet me go, I have work to finishââ
âAdam Jones, if you take even one step close to that desk, yer age wonât stop me from dragging you down to the southern house.â Pennsylvania barks, crossing his arms as he speaks, âSee if you can âget back to workâ after I kick yer ass.â
Gov freezes in place the moment he started speaking. He doesnât move, doesnât speakâ just stares straight ahead.
He stands there for so long that the anger starts to fade, replaced by a growing concern as the man doesnât even twitch.
Georgia is the first one to step around to look at the manâs face, orange-brown eyes going wide when he sees the wetness in Govâs grey ones.
âOh, kiddo.â The large man brings the other close to him, pressing his face to Govâs hair and letting the other hide in his windbreaker as the other three crowd around them, a flurry of concerned movement as Georgia feels a wet spot growing on his shirt. âWhatâs wrong, Adam?â
Govâs shoulders are hitching, he doesnât appear to be breathing properly, Georgia runs a hand through his hair in hopes to calm him down enough to get him to speak.
âYou called me AdamâŚâ the man says in heaving breaths, âYou called me son.â
And suddenly, it made sense.
They havenât called him either since 1814.
âOh, babyâŚâ Maryland runs his own hand across Govâs shoulders, âItâs okay, hon, itâs okayâŚâ
âYou didnât want me as your sonââ
âNo, no.â Virginia soothes, âYouâve always been our son, sweetie, itâs okay.â
âYou leftââ
âAnd it was the worst mistake weâve ever made.â Pennsylvania snarls quietly from where he leans on Georgiaâs arm, âAnd weâre so, so fucking sorry, kiddo.â
âMy kidsââ
âMiss you so much.â Georgia rasps, âThey want nothing more than for their papa to come back.â
Gov makes a strangled sound, before he goes completely silent.
âKiddo?â Pennsylvania whispers, âWhatâs up?â
âPlease,â is the only response, â...just stop trying to open the doors⌠I canât sleep with them always trying toâŚâ
âOkay, okay.â Georgia kisses the top of his head, âWeâll stop, weâll stop the kids too. Donât worry buddy.â
âItâs okay, itâs okay.â Virginia hums, âJust rest now, baby.â
Gov mumbles something, in response, before he goes limp with exhaustion.
The four of them look at each other over the top of his head.
They had to talk to the other States.
Hello đ. Its 4 a.m and I canât sleep. Have five of my Family Ties States.




