1943.
Europe burned.
Men froze in trenches carved by artillery.
Convoys vanished beneath U-boats.
Hydra laboratories hummed beneath mountains.
And in America—
Captain Steven Grant Rogers
became a costume.
The serum had worked.
The scientist who believed in goodness was dead.
And the military machine moved faster than grief.
Colonel Phillips stood in a conference room that smelled of tobacco and urgency.
"We have one enhanced soldier," he said.
"One. The formula's gone. We are not risking him on some beach."
A general tapped a cigar against an ashtray.
"You don't waste a miracle in mud," he said.
Peggy Carter's jaw tightened.
"He volunteered to fight," she said.
"He'll fight," the general replied smoothly.
"Just not the way you think."
They redesigned him in a week.
The uniform wasn't armor.
It was optimism stitched in spandex.
Bright blue.
Clean white stripes.
A painted shield more decorative than defensive.
He was given a script.
A smile.
A stage.
Howard Stark built stage props that looked like tanks but were hollow.
Hydra villains in exaggerated masks.
Explosions timed to applause.
Steve stared at the mirror the first time he wore it.
The man reflected back was powerful.
Broad shoulders. Strong jaw. Steady eyes.
But the costume…
It felt like a lie.
"Ladies and gentlemen!" the announcer boomed.
"Presenting America's own super soldier — Captain America!"
Music blared.
Steve jogged onto stage under bright lights.
He punched a fake Hitler actor.
Crowd roared.
Children waved flags.
He danced.
He sang about liberty.
He posed with chorus girls.
The war became choreography.
Across the ocean, real soldiers bled into snow.
War bonds surged.
Posters printed his face by the millions.
Comic strips told exaggerated stories of heroism that hadn't happened.
The newspapers loved it.
"Invincible Sentinel of Freedom!"
He toured from city to city.
Detroit.
Chicago.
Boston.
He smiled.
He saluted.
He told rehearsed jokes.
Every night, he slept badly.
The first letter shook him.
It was from a private in the 107th.
"Sir, we saw your show before shipping out. Gave us a laugh. Hope you'll join us over here someday."
The words weren't mocking.
They were hopeful.
That hurt more.
Steve folded the letter carefully.
He had the strength to rip steel doors from hinges.
But he was forbidden from opening the right ones.
Peggy visited one rehearsal.
She watched him rehearse a choreographed shield spin.
The audience would gasp at the athleticism.
But she saw the tension in his shoulders.
Afterward, backstage—
"They're wasting you," she said quietly.
"They say morale wins wars too," Steve replied.
She stepped closer.
"You're not a poster, Steve."
He smiled faintly.
"Feels like I'm a dancing monkey."
She didn't laugh.
In a hidden fortress, Johann Schmidt viewed footage of the performance.
The Red Skull tilted his head.
"So this is the doctor's final gift," he murmured.
He did not see a warrior.
He saw distraction.
America had turned its only super soldier into a carnival attraction.
Schmidt smiled.
"Good," he said. "Let him dance."
While Steve performed beneath stage lights,
Hydra tested weapons derived from stolen relic energy.
Villages vanished.
Allied scouts reported impossible artillery bursts.
Rumors spread of a red-faced warlord wielding advanced technology beyond comprehension.
Steve read fragments of intelligence reports between shows.
He wasn't cleared for most of it.
But he saw enough.
The war was evolving.
He wasn't allowed to.
Eventually, someone decided the propaganda should visit the front lines.
Not combat.
A morale tour.
They flew him to Italy.
The stage was erected near a muddy encampment.
He stepped out in bright costume against gray skies.
The soldiers didn't cheer.
They stared.
One man muttered, "You here to sing us to victory?"
Another laughed without humor.
"Where were you last month?"
Steve began the performance anyway.
He delivered the lines.
He punched the actor playing Hitler.
The applause was scattered.
Not hateful.
Just tired.
After the show, a soldier approached him.
"Cap," he said, not sarcastically. "My buddy's unit got captured by Hydra. 107th. You gonna dance for them too?"
The question wasn't cruel.
It was honest.
Steve didn't have an answer.
That night, he removed the costume slowly.
Spandex folded neatly on a wooden chair.
He stared at it.
It was clean.
The war wasn't.
He remembered Erskine's last words.
"Not a perfect soldier. A good man."
Good men didn't pose while others were taken prisoner.
He walked to Colonel Phillips' tent.
"I want combat clearance."
Phillips didn't look up from his paperwork.
"Denied."
"With respect, sir—"
"You're worth more on stage."
"Worth more to who?"
Phillips met his eyes.
"To the country."
Steve's voice lowered.
"The country is those men out there."
Silence.
Phillips' jaw flexed.
"You step outside orders, Rogers, you're on your own."
Steve nodded once.
"That's fine."
He didn't burn the costume.
He didn't reject the symbol.
He took the shield.
And left the rest.
Peggy found him near the vehicle bay.
"Going somewhere?"
"Yeah."
She studied him.
"This isn't authorized."
"No."
A beat.
"Then I suppose I'll need to drive."
History would later call it an embarrassment.
But it wasn't entirely useless.
The shows had raised funds.
Boosted morale in cities far from gunfire.
Given children something bright in a dark year.
But it had nearly buried something far more dangerous.
The serum had amplified Steve's goodness.
The propaganda had nearly smothered his agency.
Power without purpose becomes decoration.
