Locations
The Greenbrier and Relocated White House
The Greenbrier and the relocated White House represent continuity of government after the United States is physically shattered. The location is less.
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Place in the story
The Greenbrier belongs to the post-war and Dark Age governmental layer. It is part of the path from emergency survival to Allied States reconstruction. Characters such as Cedric Long help link this institutional world to the soldiers who continue guarding people long after the main fighting ends.
Chronological story arc
After the war, Ringgold’s administration rebuilds governance around surviving outposts, military remnants, and protected command locations. Cedric’s service history includes security duty at the relocated White House before his retirement assignment to Outpost Turkey River. The Greenbrier is therefore part of the unseen but important governmental infrastructure that lets the Allied States function.
Book-by-book role
In Extinction War, Ringgold’s wartime presidency establishes the need for protected continuity. In Dark Age, references to the relocated White House and Cedric’s security assignments show that post-war government is not abstract. It has guards, facilities, routines, and political vulnerability.
People, groups, and lore connected to this location
[[jan-ringgold|Jan Ringgold]]: President. Her leadership gives continuity of government moral force
[[george-johnson|George Johnson]]: Vice president and commander. His wartime command links government survival to military force
[[cedric-long|Cedric Long]]: Security veteran. His service history ties outpost life to high-level government protection
[[allied-states|Allied States]]: Government lore. The relocated command network becomes part of the rebuilt state
Why this location matters
This location matters because the series treats government survival as more than a title. A president only matters if there are people, places, and systems that let lawful authority endure after capitals, bases, and cities fall.