Prince of Darkness, Part I

I still haven’t finished writing @shine-of-asgard‘s fic for my Satan-themed 666-follower giveaway… I shouldn’t even do fic giveaways, I can’t keep myself to a schedule or a word limit. Oy. I have written what I think is the majority of it, though, and I got to a good cliffhanger-y chapter break (and a little past), so I’m going to post it in two* parts so that you don’t have to keep waiting. [ETA after posting Part III: guess that didn’t happen, either.]

Here was the prompt: “Loki/Lucifer and Odin/God. Variation of the ‘Lightbringer’ theme where Loki rebels against Odin and tries to steal the Casket of Winters to give it back to the Jotnar. It can follow the ‘biblical’ version with Odin striking Loki down and Loki falling from Asgard or you can spin it any other the way you want. Bonus points for the appearance of Thor as a conflicted good archangel who loves his brother but won’t go against God for him.”

I did it as a fairly straightfoward canon-divergent AU… well, you’ll see.

————————————

After Odin fell into the Sleep, Loki kept going back to the
Vault every few hours to stand before the plinth where the Casket of Ancient
Winters lay. Like a guilty man returning
to the scene of the crime.
But what was the crime, he wondered, and whose?
Loki’s driving his father past the brink of exhaustion by confronting him with
the truth? Or Odin’s abandoning his son when he most needed his father’s
guidance? Or was it earlier: the lie he had told Loki for his whole life only
to reveal the truth in the wrong way, at the wrong moment, and then escape
taking responsibility for the aftermath? Couldn’t
he have thought of another lie?
Any story, any explanation other than the
truth that Loki had already guessed?

The Casket wasn’t the
only thing you took from Jötunheim that day.

Loki felt a strange kinship with the Casket—like it was a
long-lost brother. Perhaps that was what kept drawing him back to it. We don’t belong here, either of us. Perhaps
that had been the true crime: those twin thefts more than a thousand years ago.

He saved my life, Loki
reminded himself; I would have died if he
hadn’t taken me.
But was that even true? Could he believe Odin’s word about
anything, now? Was he a rescued castoff or a hostage? I hoped we could unite our kingdoms one day—bring about an alliance,
bring about a permanent peace—through you.
How would that have worked, if
Laufey had never wanted him? And how could Odin know he was Laufey’s son, if he
had been left alone to die?

Loki was starved for knowledge, and he knew he would not get
it from Odin. Nor could he expect truth from his mother, from Frigga: Odin
might well have told her the same lies. No, there was only one person he could
ask: Laufey himself. As a king to another king, Laufey owed him the courtesy of
truth.

Loki went through the secret path he had found deep beneath
the palace; he did not want Heimdall to know of this trip. He emerged from a
cave in the ice not far from the ruined palace where Laufey’s throne still
stood, but had to trek some distance around to make sure that he approached
openly: he did not wish to be apprehended as a spy or saboteur.

Laufey’s welcome was still far from warm: “Kill him,” he
ordered his guards, sounding almost bored, as Loki walked toward the dais
between the rows of towering ice pillars.

“After all I’ve done for you?” Loki said lightly; he was
determined to show no fear, though his stomach twisted with it.

“So you’re the one who showed us the way into Asgard.”

“That was just a bit of fun, really,” Loki said, adopting a
cocky air, half-consciously deepening his voice to match the Frost Giant’s. “To
ruin my brother’s big day. And to protect the Realm from his idiotic rule for a
while longer.”

“I will hear you,” Laufey said slowly, grudgingly.

“What I have to say is… of a sensitive nature.”

“Only a fool would dismiss his guards in the presence of an
enemy. Do you think me a fool?” Laufey’s tone was even, but his low growl held
more than a hint of warning.

“I think you a king, in the presence of a fellow king.”

Laufey scoffed. “What, is Odin dead, along with his elder
son?”

“Odin Sleeps and Thor is banished for his assault upon your
Realm.”

“In which you were an accomplice.”

Loki bowed his head. “I tried to dissuade my brother from
his bloody course, but you are right; I should not have assisted him. I hope to
make amends for the damage we have done.”

“How?” Laufey asked bluntly.

“By returning the Casket of Ancient Winters.”

An excited murmur arose among the guards and attendants who
lined what used to be the great hall. Laufey held up an impatient hand to
silence them.

“You would pay us weregild with stolen coin?”

“With lawfully taken spoils of war,” Loki corrected.
“Indeed, it would more than pay for the lives of a hundred men; with it you
could restore Jötunheim to its former glory.” He struggled to say the word
without irony.

“And what do you expect in return for this… excess of
generosity?” Laufey asked, allowing irony to drip from every word.

“Only the answer to a question, which I would ask in
private… or in the presence of only your most discreet, trusted men.”

“All of my men are discreet and trusted. Ask your question.”

Loki sighed; he hadn’t expected to be asking about his
parentage in the presence of twenty hostile Frost Giants. He would have to go
about this indirectly.

“If you will dismiss none of your men, then I ask that you
answer three questions.”

“One or three, it matters not. But ask quickly; the dinner
hour draws on.”

“And who knows what may happen when you let Jötnar get
hungry enough,” said one especially hulking guard behind the throne, baring his
teeth. The assembled giants laughed; it seemed that they knew of the stories
Aesir parents told their children to make them behave, or at least suspected.

“Peace, Byleistr,” Laufey said without heat. “Ask, Asgardian.”

“Did Odin take anything from you at the end of the war,
other than the Casket?”

“Aside from the lives, freedom, and honor of my people?”

“Yes, aside from that. And something taken from you
specifically.”

Laufey’s face darkened. “You dare to speak to me of my
beloved Queen?”

Loki cursed himself silently; he had known that Queen
Farbauti was killed in the fighting at the very end of the war. “No. Of…
something she may have left behind.”

Laufey’s eyes narrowed. “It seems this ignorant Asgardian is
of little threat to me,” he announced. “I will speak with him in my private
chambers. My sons, Helblindi and Byleistr, will join me, and as guard I shall
have only my esteemed warrioress Hvedra.”

Laufey stood abruptly from the throne and the two giants who
had flanked it—his sons, apparently—followed him down the steps from the dais.
The one who had not spoken, Helblindi, had a scar across his forehead and held
one arm stiffly at his side. One of the giants who had been standing in the
hall peeled away from her fellows, looking somewhat bewildered. Loki would not
have identified her as a female had Laufey not called her “warrioress”; she
looked much like her male companions, down to the bare chest, flat and
muscular.

Loki followed the giants through a passageway behind the
throne into another ice-cave, larger than the one he had come through and
furnished with a long table and six chairs, all carved of ice. Other openings
in the walls of the cave no doubt led to other chambers deeper in the glacier.
Laufey sat at the head of the table and his sons took their places to either
side. Hvedra remained standing, looking uncertain what to do, and so did Loki:
all of the chairs were too large and slick for him to climb into unaided.

“Hvedra, would you assist our honored guest?” Laufey asked,
noting Loki’s embarrassment.

Loki feared that the giantess would lift him by his armpits
as if he were a child, but instead she knelt and made a bridge of her hands as
if she were an Asgardian gallant helping a lady mount a horse. “Thank you, my
lady,” Loki said once he was seated on the chair opposite Laufey’s. His legs
dangled awkwardly and he could not make use of the backrest without reclining,
so instead he held himself stiffly upright. The ice of the chair chilled him
even through his cloak and thick leather trousers.

Once Hvedra had seated herself beside Byleistr, on Laufey’s
left, Laufey spoke—but instead of addressing Loki, he turned to the giantess
and said, “Hvedra, you saw when Alsvart was killed, did you not?”

“Yes, Your Majesty,” she said, looking only slightly less
puzzled than before.

“And you told me that something strange happened before his
death.”

“Yes, Your Majesty. The Asgardian who killed him”—her eyes
flickered briefly toward Loki before she turned back to her king—“Alsvart
grabbed his wrist and tried to burn him with cold” (Loki could tell that the
phrase in the All-Tongue translated a single Jötun word) “but he did not burn.
Instead, his hand and arm turned blue and marked, like a Jötun’s.”

This Alsvart had not been able to burn Loki with cold, but it
seemed Hvedra’s words could. He felt an echo of the same prickling numbness,
the same disoriented nausea, that he had felt—could it have been only the day
before?

“Is this the man who killed Alsvart?” Laufey asked, nodding
toward Loki.

Hvedra turned and scrutinized his face. “It is hard to say
for sure, they all look so similar… but he did have dark hair of about that
length and wore a dark green coat. And he killed Alsvart with a dagger he
pulled from the air.”

“Thank you, Hvedra.” Laufey turned burning eyes on Loki. “I
would be mad to ask you to pull a dagger from the air… but can you summon
something else?”

Loki was not sure it was wise to admit to having killed this
Alsvart… but they already knew he had slain many of their brethren, and Laufey
wanted him to prove that he was the one with the blue hand. So instead of a
dagger he pulled a book from one of his pocket dimensions and tossed it onto
the table.

Laufey nodded. Now he turned to Helblindi. “Burn his face
with cold,” he commanded.

Stone-faced, Helblindi rose, still holding his arm stiff,
and approached Loki, closing the distance swiftly with his long strides. Loki
did not move; he only flinched a little when Helblindi grasped his jaw in one
massive hand. He felt cold radiating from Helblindi’s fingers, but then warmth
suffused his face, the same warmth that had washed over him when he had held
the Casket.

Hvedra hissed in a sudden breath; “Well, fuck me,” muttered
Byleistr. Laufey shot his son a reproving look. Helblindi withdrew his hand and
Loki’s face could feel once more the chill of the frozen realm.

“You ask if my wife left anything behind at the end of the
war,” Laufey began. “She did bear a child, the day before she was killed. I
begged her not to rejoin the fighting so soon after, but… she was a warrior to
the last.” Grief was written starkly in the haggard lines of his face.

“And the child?” Loki asked. He could hear his voice
trembling, shameful as it was, and his tongue felt thick and heavy.

“It was one of the small ones,” Laufey said. His voice
sounded strangely flat. “She wanted to keep it, but the priests said it was
sacrilege, and would call down the wrath of the gods. That we must keep to the
old ways, especially in our hour of trial.”

“The small ones,”
Loki repeated. His own voice seemed to him to come from very far away.

“The old tales call them the children of the air and snow,
who must be returned to air and snow. But I do not credit such superstition.
Our people began leaving them to die as infants because otherwise they would
have died as children; it saved them and their parents a few years of
suffering. Perhaps we know enough now to allow them to survive to adulthood;
apparently Asgard does. But ancient customs are slow to fade, even when they
have lost their original purpose.”

Loki’s nausea seemed to have doubled. He abruptly realized
how much he had been hoping that Odin had lied, that he had parents who loved
and wanted him but were forced to give him up for the sake of peace…

“The priests fled the temple as the Asgardian army
approached. Those that survived returned to find that the baby was gone: its
body could not be burned, returned to the air as the gods demand. I killed the priests for their negligence and cowardice, and let the people think the Asgardians had
slain them in the temple they served. I thought the Asgardians must have found
the baby’s frozen corpse and disposed of it… but it seems I was wrong.”

“Odin told me I was your son,” Loki whispered hoarsely. “How
did he know?”

“Your heritage lines. Odin doesn’t let it be widely known,
but his mother was a Jötun: Bestla, my father’s sister. She was a shapeshifter,
like you, so she spent most of her life in Aesir form… which made it easier,
when relations between the realms turned hostile, to conceal the king’s kinship
with the enemy. But Bestla must have taught her son to read the markings of her
house, the royal house. He saw them on your face and he knew.”

Heritage lines? Loki
had never known that the marks on the Jötnar’s skin had any more meaning than a
tiger’s stripes. And he had known his grandmother’s name and even her face,
from the murals on the walls of the throne room, but knew nothing of her true
origin.

“Do you regret it?” Loki asked. His voice came out almost
strangled.

Laufey gave a sharp derisive sigh. “You want me to say how
remorseful I am for abandoning you. Sorry to disappoint you, boy. What would I
have done with a sickly motherless runt? The realm was suffering; my people
would have resented me for it, said the resources should be spent on worthier
lives.” He paused. “I do regret that Odin got his hands on you.” His mouth
twisted. “He styles himself ‘All-Father,’ father of all the Realms. ‘Father of
Lies’ is a truer name for him. And he has turned you into a liar like himself. I
should have slit your throat rather than let him take you.”

He has turned you into
a liar like himself.
But how did Laufey know that? “So you’re the one who showed us the way into Asgard.” Of course.
But in deceiving Odin (to show him the truth about Thor!), he had only been
following Odin’s tutelage. Father of
Lies. I should have slit your throat.

Loki hardly felt attached to his own body: the
sensations of stiffness, cold, and even nausea seemed to belong to someone else;
the sound of Laufey’s voice seemed distant and hollow. All he could hear was
his own heartbeat in his ears and he felt as though he was watching himself
from within when he grasped a knife from its pocket dimension and threw it
without aiming into Laufey’s throat.

taranoire:

stormtongue:

taranoire:

i just…., really need thor to have a serious discussion with loki and ask him what the fuck happened to him in the year between thor 1 and avengers. that is all 

oh my god next time i get drunk and feel like writing. im doing this

PLEASE

I’m gonna do one too

Not to be all self-promotey and stuff… well, what the hell, I’m self-promoting because people keep lamenting the lack of “Loki’s lost year” fic and I’ve written 72k words of one. And here’s the Thorki fic where Thor asks Loki what happened. It’s not Ragnarok or IW-compatible because it was written before both of them… but I find it comforting to think about that version of things. The Loki in the void fic doesn’t conflict with anything that’s been revealed, though.

Small Pieces – gaslightgallows (hearts_blood) – Thor (Movies) [Archive of Our Own]

gaslightgallows:

Small pieces play large parts, and small lies create large problems.

@portraitoftheoddity sent me this fantastic prompt:

Loki disappears for quite a while after “we have a hulk.” And we know his illusions have grown more and more advanced since the first movie – and he’s had the Tesseract, which radiates power, all this time… Fix-it where his last ditch effort is less of a suicide charge, and more part of an elaborate scheme?

Thank
you for reading and especially for commenting. Comments are love. ♥


             patreon (original)     |              ao3            |                  ko-fi

Small Pieces – gaslightgallows (hearts_blood) – Thor (Movies) [Archive of Our Own]

juliabohemian:

Another Post Infinity War Drabble

Under the cut, because spoilers

And just like that they are back atop Stark Tower again. They are face to face, grappling and sparring like animals, as the world comes undone around them.

“Brother, help me put an end to this,” Thor insists. It’s different this time. He’s eager, persistent, confident. “We can do it together.”

He can see from Loki’s face that he knows something is amiss. Something has changed. They should not be here now, like this. These events have already taken place, as have so many other things, some of them dark and terrible. Thor notices that it takes some getting used to, this shifting back and forth through time. He finds it not at all unlike a waking dream. Somehow he expected that it would come more easily to Loki.

“You don’t know,” Loki rambles. He grips the scepter with both hands, clutching it against his chest. “You don’t know…you don’t know what he’s capable of. This will end his way, one way or another…Thanos will have his way…” He’s breathing rapidly and so his words come out in harsh, laborious pants. His eyes are wide and fearful, darting back and forth.

“Loki, please…” Thor begins. “You must listen to me…”

“I can’t…I can’t…this is madness…it’s madness…”

Thor reaches for the other man. But Loki seems so fragile right now, that he’s not sure if it’s safe to even touch him.

“You can trust me…”

“No…no…it’s madness…”

Loki lets go of the scepter with his right hand. His fingers creep towards his own throat, as if to pry off some invisible force.

“Brother, help me. I’m choking…I’m choking…”

Thor’s soul aches when reminded of Loki’s brutal end. Even with all of the shifting back and forth, it still feels so fresh in his mind. It pains him to know that Loki might be reliving it somehow. He longs to soothe his brother’s fears, but he knows they don’t have the time.

“Loki you have to calm down!” Thor yells. He must roar to be heard over the din and confusion.

Loki’s eyes are immediately shut tight. He raises the scepter in front of his face in a defensive gesture. Thor’s heart sinks when he realizes that his brother is anticipating violence.

Softly and gently he reaches for Loki’s free hand, and presses the palm of it firmly against his own forehead.

Thor has never given up any degree of control to Loki before, not really. He’s learned that it’s easier to allow Loki to spy and stalk him from a safe distance, than to simply engage in full disclosure. Certain barriers have always been necessary between them, for both their sake. But today that will not do. Thor knows that today, Loki needs more.

“I invite you to look into my mind, Brother. See that you can trust me. See that I feel nothing but love for you.”

Loki opens his eyes. His expression is still one of sheer panic. Thor knows that he doesn’t trust people easily, and right now he cannot even trust reality.

“No, I…”

“Loki, please…”

Loki swallows several times, as though he is attempting to literally consume his distress. Finally, he lets his eyes fall closed again. His fingers curl, relaxing around the roundness of his brother’s head.

Thor can feel the other man entering his mind. Even with permission given, it’s still an invasion of sorts. He relaxes as much as he can, trying to let go of any lingering anger or resentment. He descends into the moist depths of his own subconscious. He grabs hold of that which is sweetest and most tender, and holds it up as an offering. Then he waits for Loki to meet him there.

His mind is immediately flooded with images. There’s a vast, green field, and a steep cliff, overlooking a deep pool. The colors are so rich and inviting. There are two boys -one blonde and one dark- holding hands and running. They count together, a practiced ritual. They scream and laugh as they leap to the water below. After they land, they race to the surface, gasping for air. They make their way to the shore, scrambling onto the rocks. Their clothes are sticking to their tiny bodies. They slog over to the grass and fling themselves onto it, lying on their backs. They gaze up into the clouds. It’s all so bright, so real, and so right now-

“Okay,” Loki says. He blinks several times, before slowly passing the scepter to his brother. “Okay.”

well…WHAT WAS THE OPERA???

I went with Richard Strauss’s Elektra because (1) I couldn’t determine that it wasn’t on in April 2012, (2) it was short enough that it could have played before a late-evening gala event, and (3) it’s about a family that’s arguably even more dysfunctional than Loki’s.

(The unfinished fic, probably soon to be rendered canon-non-compliant by Infinity War, is here.)

OK, that answers my question about what was going on with the Ben & Jerry’s joke…

More importantly, though, Bruce Banner’s wording is interesting: “He sent Loki.” One possible interpretation of what was going on in The Avengers was that Loki wanted to invade and rule Earth anyway, and Thanos offered to help him in exchange for the Tesseract. Bruce’s wording, if it’s deliberately chosen (rather than just being imprecise), suggests that instead, Thanos was the one who chose the target because Earth was where the Space Stone was. Incidentally, that’s consistent with my fanfictional account of how things went down…

seidrade:

philosopherking1887:

notdoinggethelp:

Whatever you do, do not imagine Loki having all his fears and insecurities exploited through illusory hypnosis at the hands of Ebony Maw after getting “rescued” from the void

OK, I didn’t know about Ebony Maw, but… sound familiar, @darklittlestories, @foundlingmother, @fuckyeahrichardiii, @illwynd, @seidrade…?

Ohhhhh man. I’m curious how much they will potentially reveal— if they’ll just imply/reference through dialogue what Loki endured, or if they’ll actually show something awful to confirm it.

Either way— I really wouldn’t be surprised if you were totally right on, albeit the character swap. The notion of Loki being manipulated with the mind stone was already so heavily supported by canon, and what else is there to manipulate but the raw emotion and insecurities he felt as he let go of Gungnir (shit, I wonder if that somehow made him a beacon in the void, rather than it just being accidental that he landed on Sanctuary— I can’t recall if you already suggested that?)

But yes, kind of difficult to draw any other conclusion at this point, unless the film goes out of its way to show that the Black Order came to Thanos after Loki had come and gone— which seems unlikely. I’m sure Loki’s dread will be used to illustrate to the audience just how much they should be feared 😦

The way I did it in the fic, Loki spent some time making a name for himself in the criminal underworld (not his real name, obviously), Thanos got wind of it and figured out who he really was, and sought him out because he thought Loki would be useful. I didn’t like the idea everyone else seemed to be assuming that Loki just fell straight into Thanos’s clutches… it didn’t line up with what Hiddleston and Whedon were saying about where he’d been. If I were to write it again, I might have Loki hear of Thanos and seek *him* out – and get way more than he thought he was bargaining for.

Debts – FoundlingMother – Thor (Movies) [Archive of Our Own]

foundlingmother:

Chapters: 1/?
Fandom: Thor (Movies), Marvel Cinematic Universe
Rating: Mature
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: Loki & Thor (Marvel), Thor & Loki & Brunnhilde | Valkyrie & Hulk (Marvel), Odin & Thor (Marvel), Brunnhilde | Valkyrie & Hela (Marvel), Hulk (Marvel) & Original Female Character(s)
Characters: Thor (Marvel), Loki (Marvel), Hela (Marvel), Brunnhilde | Valkyrie (Marvel), Hulk (Marvel), Bruce Banner, Heimdall (Marvel), Sif (Marvel), Volstagg (Marvel), Hogun (Marvel), Fandral (Marvel), Odin (Marvel), Stephen Strange, Fenrir (Marvel), Surtur (Marvel), Frigga (Marvel), Original Characters, Balder (Marvel), Tyr (Marvel)
Additional Tags: Thor: Ragnarok (2017), Alternate Canon, Canon-Typical Violence, Canonical Character Death, Imperialism, Rebellion, Álfheimr | Alfheim, Drama, Family Drama, Brotherly Angst, Protective Siblings, Friendship, Jotunn Loki (Marvel), Thor (Marvel) is Not Stupid, Loki (Marvel) Needs a Hug, Thor (Marvel) Needs a Hug, Everyone Has Issues, Everyone Needs A Hug, BAMF Thor (Marvel), BAMF Loki (Marvel), BAMF Hela (Marvel), Ragnarok, Fantastic Racism
Summary:

Thor must race against time to stop Ragnarok, the destruction of his world and the end of Æsir civilization at the hands of the ruthless Hela. Stranded on Alfheim, he finds himself embroiled in another Realm’s war, uncovers the history of Asgard, and recruits a team to defeat the Goddess of Death.

An alternate conclusion to Thor, Loki, and Asgard’s story. An alternate Thor: Ragnarok.


@lucianalight , @pennie-dreadful, @raven-brings-light, @seidrade, @writernotwaiting, @banded-bulbous-bilgesnipe, @thecrazylady10, @rmh8402, @mastreworld, @lokiloveforever, @welle-nijordottir, @rennemichaels, @artemisnightingale216

All of you expressed an interest in my post about how I’d rewrite Thor: Ragnarok, I believe. I hope you don’t mind me tagging you to let you know I am, in fact, rewriting Ragnarok. I won’t tag anyone when the next chapter comes out (unless people would like to be tagged–let me know).

Debts – FoundlingMother – Thor (Movies) [Archive of Our Own]