incredifishface:

lethal-desires:

“I’ve come… for you.”

AU where Loki was betrothed to

Ægir at birth. And

Ægir

searches through the realms, for eons, to find what is rightfully his. ( @incredifishface & @satanssyn-n-things *cries into the night begging the two of you to quench this massive thirst*)

The stranger stands before the throne, proud and calm, impervious to the whispers and the looks traded across the hall by the arrogant Asgardian courtiers, used to lonely petitioners like him to behave more humbly before the king of all the realms. 

“We have heard your plea,” announces the Allfather, gripping his spear of power tight. 

“It was no plea,” counters the stranger, before Odin King can say another word. “I have not come here to beg.”

More looks, the muffled whispers rise to a bubbling roar. To the Allfather’s right, Prince Thor’s stance is combative and restless, pricked by the stranger’s tone, his words, his very presence and demeanor in the hall of his ancestors. The Lady Sif his wife beside him touches his shoulder once. Just as impetuous and full of fire as the prince himself, still she’s taken on the role of the cold-headed between the two of them, because somebody had to.

Now Odin brings Gungnir down with a loud clang that silences the hall entire. 

“We shall hear you again, in a private hearing, as befits a matter of our family,” says the king.

Your family?” repeats the stranger, with a sly smirk. 

Prince Thor’s furious huff comes like that of a raging bull. Odin glares with his one eye, a look that to many feel like being smitten by a thunderbolt. The stranger sustains it without one moment of vacillation.

“The King is retiring,” announces the Allfather. 

He is promptly assisted by his chamberlains and secretaries. 

The most courageous among them all approaches the stranger.

“Will you be so kind as to follow me, my lord,” he mutters, appropriately subdued.

The stranger casts one last look towards the dais, where prince Loki stands close to his mother still. The stranger bows his head and touches his chest, and the ripples of the one single gesture of deference the stranger has displayed since he stepped into the great hall causes a wave of agitation throughout the court. Prince Loki, unknown to this day to any displays of emotion in public, visibly gulps. He quietly thanks the Norns that the shiver running down his spine is not something that will show.

He watches the stranger exit through a side door with an agitation he can’t quite name. 

Mother follows him to his chambers. Loki is silent, his face troubled. He allows her presence because he allows her everything. 

“Did father know?” he asks in time. “When he took me, did he know?”

It was some time ago that the prince and the court discovered the young prince’s true heritage. Explained as a gesture of mercy from a compassionate king to an innocent child, it is discouraged at court to make gossip about it, but Loki has felt upon him fearful, unkind, suspicious looks from the Aesir who never quite took to him, even when they believed him blood of the King’s blood. They used to think him a bastard that kind Frigga had taken to her bosom as her own, but everything changed the day the King was attacked in the vaults, and the young prince held the first weapon within reach to protect himself and his father, and the casket of Ancient Winters responded to him like it would only for royal blood of Jotunheim, and his skin turned blue and the unmistakeable marks of the King rose on his body and face, and his secret was revealed to all.

Odin and Thor called him a hero and the protector of Asgard that day, and for years they had endeavored to make him loved and popular among the Aesir, but he had always felt alien and not quite trustworthy, and now they knew why. Loki was embittered, and Thor’s long-overdue marriage to the Lady Sif had only made him worse. 

“Did he, mother?” insisted Loki, when no answer came from his mother.

“I don’t know,” she confessed at last. “Your father has kept many secrets from me in his time. It never turns out well for him, but he always thinks he knows best. All I can tell you is that he never told me.”

“I’ve never understood… the use,” mutters Loki.

“The use?” 

“Why take me? He was knee-deep in Jotun blood, why take me?”

“You were an innocent babe,” says Frigga. “You think your father is without a heart?”

“He has never told me where he found me.”

“The sanctuary.”

“He thinks I’m a fool? Jotunheim has many!” argued Loki, furious. 

Frigga keeps her silence. Nothing she says will appease his son.

“We will not just hand you over to this… creature, whatever he claims to be,” she vows instead. “We will do whatever we must to protect you.”

Loki looks out his window, and he isn’t grateful, or trusting. 

“I will see your father now,” she says. 

He is not my father, thinks Loki to himself.

Alone now, he ambles to his balcony. His rooms open to the private courtyard, where no courtiers or even servants are usually allowed. 

When they learned of Loki’s origins, Thor and him both believed Odin’s long plan was… They had been so happy. Loki had overcome his horror quickly, when he realized that by his new, strange body, he was able to bear children. Children that would be half Aes and half Jotun, bringers of peace and harmony among the two warring realms. They could see themselves married already. 

And perhaps that had been Odin’s plan after all, except that the court never took to Loki when they thought him Odin’s own, and they hated him and mistrusted him even more once the truth was known. 

They were forbidden from continuing their secret love, which did precisely nothing, but then Odin forced Thor to marry, and two choices presented themselves. They could flee and be nobodies and live their passion, or they could obey. Thor fought tooth and nail, but Loki realized Thor the Wanderer would never be happy as a peaceful farmer or shepherd in some remote corner of the nine. In time, the Wanderer would have gathered an army behind him and become a warlord or mercenary of some sort. And a warlord in the nine realms would have to face Asgard sooner or later. Be destroyed or fight his own people. That wasn’t a choice.

Loki knew his brother well enough. He knew that, once he made his vows, he would take them to heart and honor them. He could have tempted Thor to break them, but that would have only made him more miserable. So Loki had retreated to his studies and his dark corners more and more, that Thor would not be reminded of what they could not have. And Loki knew that even that wasn’t enough. He knew that one day he would have to leave Asgard, and so did their father and mother. 

Frigga could vow whatever her heart felt, but Loki suspected that, even now, Odin was brokering a deal with the stranger to get rid of the liability and the disturbance the little Jotun runt had ended up becoming, a pebble in his golden shoes.

He felt the presence behind him and turned, his stance ready for fighting.

“Show yourself,” he muttered harshly. “Make yourself known.”

The stranger stepped from the shadows, his face hardened and marked by many battles, his eyes deeper than a hundred fathoms. Loki’s heart beat faster. This was no ordinary man, but what was he?

“Have the conversations ended?”

“No, they will carry on for quite some time. Your father drives a hard bargain, but he’ll find I have not come to haggle.”

“Then why aren’t you there?”

“I am.”

“You speak in riddles!” said Loki, unnerved, he who never lost his self-possession, reduced to whining like a child. “Who are you?”

“O, but introductions are for strangers,” said the stranger, his voice gravelly. “You know me well.”

“What do you mean?!”

“I have been there all your life. Since you were born. I held your tiny hand, and we were bonded. I was never far, that you were safe. And then I lost you.”

Loki frowned, seeking meaning in the riddles.

“They took you away from me, but our bond held. I sought you out, but while I sought, I was never far. You know. You remember.”

“I have no idea what you speak of.”

“In the night, in your dreams,” whispered the stranger. An older brother while you grew up, and then, when you came of age…”

Loki flusters.

“If we were… bonded, why did Laufey leave me to die? Why did he abandon me?”

“My people and your people brokered our marriage before you even emerged from your father’s womb. When they saw you, they said you were small and weak, that Laufey had wanted to spurn them. The deal fell through, and Jotunheim never earned my people’s help against the Aesir, or its ocean, and the prosperity that comes from it. Laufey cursed you for it. You were no use to him, and he blamed you for their misfortune.”

“If the deal fell through, why are you here?”

“Because I held your hand, and we were bonded. I care not for the deals of mortals, even long-lived as the Aesir and the Jotnar, for I am not one. We were bonded, and we belong together.”

“I belong to myself,” spat Loki.

The stranger smirked, pleased and delighted. He bowed deeply, and Loki again experienced a strange shiver, as if a wave had broken its fall to avoid falling on his head. 

“I will not go anywhere with a… creature who won’t even tell me his name,” said Loki.

“Long have I loved you and yearned for you in my loneliness and waited until you were found. I can wait a little more,” said the stranger, and he withdrew into the shadows once more, and was gone.

The stranger dined at the high table that evening, and even though more than a dozen people were between Loki and him, still Loki shifted in his seat as if he was breathing down his neck. The stranger was jolly enough, and told the court many stories. He spoke of a realm beneath the waves, and the many-times-reborn god of waves and storms who protected its people and all its living beings, and he spoke of wonders unimaginable. Loki, who was a fine storyteller himself, admired the skill and elegance of his words, which had enthralled all the presents.

His eyes met the stranger’s once or twice, and they also met his brother’s. He could not hold either one’s stares. He was much troubled.

Thor came to him before he reached his room.

“You shouldn’t be here,” Loki murmured, looking either side. Two chamber-servants scurried away when they spotted them together.

“I will not let him take you anywhere,” whispered Thor, his big hands on Loki’s arms, too tight. “I will protect you.”

His tremendous blue eyes were closer than they had been in a long time, and his mouth. Loki’s chest was heaving. Oh, it never abated, this fire.

“You should not be here,” he muttered, limp in his brother’s arms, trying to avoid meeting his eyes. If Thor wished to claim him now, Loki would not be able to fight himself. 

His brother’s grip softened, not quite gave up. He felt Thor’s lips on his forehead, tender, but not without an urgent yearning that several years of separation had yet to weaken.

“I’m not yours to protect anymore,” whispered Loki. 

“Don’t say that, brother.”

“I’m not your brother. I never was.”

Loki squirmed until Thor’s hands released him. He shut himself up in his room.

He felt the presence at once.

“Is there no place I am safe from you,” he spat.

“I am no threat,” said the stranger, but he was nothing but a voice. A voice in Loki’s head.

“No threat? You have come to claim me, to take what is yours, and you will not leave without it. Weren’t those your words to my… to the King?”

“I wasn’t threatening. It is just the way it will be.”

“More riddles.”

“I have seen it.”

“Oh, you can see the future too?”

“I can see all.”

“And do I come willingly?”

“Of course.”

Loki snorted. 

“How?”

“Because you begin to remember.”

“Remember what.”

“Remember me.” 

“You are exhausting,” huffs Loki, and turns his back to the presence, absurdly. 

And then he feels it that blow of hot air on the back of his neck, beneath his hair.

“I have been known indeed to exhaust you,” whispers that disembodied voice. “We have known many lives and many nights together.”

How.”

“In your dreams,” whispers the stranger, and this time the hot air caresses Loki’s ear, and he shivers. “You called to me, and you gave yourself to me, and I gave you all your body begged for.”

Loki’s panting slightly, his fists clenched tight.

“I remember none of that,” he spits, still holding on to his pride.

“I can remind you,” whispers the voice, and Loki thinks he has felt a brush of lips over his. “Lie down, and I will.”

“I will not,” he mutters, shutting his eyes tight, trembling. “Be gone, creature.”

There is a breath of silence. 

“I won’t be far,” says the voice.

And then there is a change in the air, and Loki is alone in the room.

He shivers as he sits on his bed, arms wrapped around his body, shaken. 

He wishes he could convince himself that he is afraid, but he has felt fear before, and this isn’t it.

***

The night goes deeply quiet and Loki wakens, his senses alerted to the unnatural absence, as if he was underwater. 

His body is awake too, tingling, wanting. He often wakes up yearning for Thor, remembering the nights they stole. He has fantasized many times about finding him in the room with him, just as desperate, just as hungry. But Thor made his vows, and if he wakes up in the night at all yearning for Loki, he will quench that thirst with his wife, or drown it out in mead.

Tonight Loki has woken up in the night with fire in his veins, and at once he knows he is not alone. He feels him close, the stranger. He knows the stranger knows he is awake, unless he is still dreaming.

“Your body calls me,” says the disembodied voice.

Loki runs his hands between his thighs. His body is calling, that is true. 

“So I’ve known you already, you say?” he asks to the dark.

“You have. In your dreams.”

“But not my body.”

And Loki doesn’t know how can you hear a smirk, but he does.

He’s on fire. He cups himself, presses hard. 

“And I am yours, you say?” asks Loki.

“You are. Many times you have given yourself to me, your love, your promise.”

“I don’t even know your name.”

“You do. If you speak it now, I will come to you.”

Loki’s panting hard, writhing with lust. He must be dreaming, because the preternatural absence of noise still fills his ears, and desire emanates from his skin without fear or reservation, and when he looks at his own hand, it’s a deep midnight blue. 

“Your name,” whispers Loki, one hand between his thighs, the other stroking down his neck and chest. “Aegir,” he sighs, and now he knows he must be dreaming.

He opens his eyes to see an impossible stream that moves like ink in the water approach from the shadows and slip under the cover of his bed. At once, he feels it, heat that isn’t anything that he has known before, and a body taking weight and density under the sheets with him, and he opens his eyes again (where they closed?) and the stranger’s face is there, hovering close to his.

“You called,” whispers the stranger. “As you’ve called so many times. Remember?”

A glimpse or a thought is scratching at the sides of Loki’s conscience. This is familiar. This is not new. But when? How?

“In your loneliness, I looked over your shoulder. In cold, I warmed you between my arms. In desire, I pleasured you. In your sleep, I watched over you. Remember.”

Loki sees it now, like a shadow, like the wind blowing that fills your hand. He sees it in his dreams, he thought… He had thought it was Thor.

“Call me once again, and I will claim you at last, and we will be one,” says the stranger, who is a stranger no more, but the one whom Loki believed he had invented to feel less lonely, the imaginary friend first, the imaginary lover after. He had thought his mind had fashioned him to resemble Thor…

“Aegir,” whispers Loki. 

“Are you mine?”

“I am yours.” His eyes are closed. “I always was.”

When the kiss falls on his lips, Loki knows he is not dreaming. The weight of another body on top of his is not a fiction either. 

And he never belonged in this place, and he was always meant to leave it, because he already has a place, in a realm beneath the waves, in the arms of a god.

His husband’s kiss takes his lips assuredly, his hands seek under the sheets. Loki’s Aes disguise has melted from him. His Jotun skin has a strange glow in the night. And between his thighs, his body is wetting. He wraps his legs around his husband. 

“I will breed you, and you will birth wonders,” whispers his husband. 

“Yes,” sighs Loki. And he can see them in his future, the great world snake, the giant wolf, the half-faced queen of the underworld. So powerful, bringer of disasters and rebirths, legends and tales.

The Ocean God thrusts inside him and it’s like the push of the tide. 

“Can you feel me now, my one, sváss mín,” whispers the stranger who never was a stranger after all.

Loki presses his mouth against his husband’s and lifts his hips and he demands. 

“What you promised,” he pants, “all that pleasure. Give it now.”

The Ocean God grins, and Loki knows why he mistook him in his visions for his brother, and he knows too that, if Thor was never meant to be his, it’s because Loki was never free in the first place. 

The Ocean God fucks him slow and deep, the pull and push of the tides abating over his body, shaking him. 

“Our children will make the realms shake and crumble and rise again,” says his husband, taking Loki hard now. 

Loki smiles, and fucks up to meet him, and he moans, and his husband is on top of him and inside him and he’s also everywhere, all around him, pressing on him, lifting him, enfolding him. With every thrust, Loki is the one who goes deeper. His husband’s hips slamming against him fast and hard now, and like the cliff eternal facing the waves, he knows he can go harder, that he can go on forever, and that he can take it, he will welcome it, for that is his fate and his place in the order and chaos of all the things that exist. 

They fuck until sun dawn, Loki’s ecstasy rising and peaking and rising again soon after. When the Ocean God finally spills inside him, Loki wonders which god or monster will he be carrying first.

The stranger stands before the throne, and Odin king proclaims the whole of Asgard will fight him if the stranger insists on taking a prince of Asgard against his will.

The stranger nods.

“That is fair,” he says. And he offers his hand to the prince. “Will you come with me of your own free will, sváss mín?”

Loki looks at his brother for the last time, and wishes one day there will be time to explain. Loki had accepted that dark corner he had been pushed to as his rightful place for the rest of his days. He would not have fought it. He would have had to leave in time, when his pain or his brother’s would have been too much. He had accepted this fate, not knowing it wasn’t what the Norns had dictated for him.

“I will,” he says, descending from the dais to his husband. “A pledge was made, today it is fulfilled. I belong with you, Aegir, Ocean God.” 

Aegir bows his head and kisses both of Loki’s hands, which he holds warmly between both of his. So big and strong, covered in strange markings. Loki stares into the god’s eyes in the light of day, and in the light of day, he is still a stranger. But a stranger Loki already loves and desires and trusts. They will reveal to each other their many secrets, in time, and it will be exciting. 

“Asgard is under my protection now, if you so desire,” proclaims the Ocean God. “And should you build a shrine to Loki, your once-prince, consort of the Lord of Waves and Tides, Mother of Gods and Monsters, and you speak to him there, he will always be able to hear you.”

He enfolds Loki in arms as strong as any god of war, and Loki feels a pull inside, and they are gone. 

When he finds himself again, his hair floats around him, his hands move slowly and with strange grace. 

“Welcome home, my love,” says his husband, floating before him. 

Loki waves his arms and feet and breathes in and he is amazed. 

“You will soon learn all that you are capable of in our world,” says his husband. 

Loki struggles to remain in place, currents swaying him. He has a question of a very practical nature he doesn’t dare ask, but his husband smirks as if he’d read his thoughts.

“Suffice to know for now that in our world, we have currents for beds, and seaweed forests for bedchambers,” he whispers. “You care to learn that first?”

Not sure if it’s his husband’s voice in this strange atmosphere, or his tone, or that accursed smirk, or all of it piling up on Loki’s memories of last night, but he shivers and finds himself that ocean water does not dampen lust or does anything to put out his desire. He swims to his husband as gracefully as he can.

“I do have to start somewhere,” he grins.

Prince of Darkness, Fourth and Final Part

philosopherking1887:

Two months after I got the prompt, I finally finished @shine-of-asgard‘s fic from my 666-follower giveaway. Jeezy Chreezy.

Part I, Part II, Part III

Thor
and his companions made camp on the glacier. They ate from the travel rations
they had packed because there was no hunting or forage to speak of. The sun
scarcely seemed to dip below the horizon for an hour, and it never truly grew
dark. Thor’s friends seemed to be able to sleep, shielded from the unrelenting
light by the thick fabric of their tent, but Thor could not.

He
left Volstagg’s snoring and Sif’s quiet nonsensical muttering and sat alone on
a fur blanket on the snow-covered ice, watching the sky slowly change from light
blue tinged with pink at the horizon to a deepening lilac. As the sky darkened,
a ribbon of acid-green light became visible, like a great serpent wrapped
around the Earth. Thor remembered this from his visits to Midgard in his youth:
the Northern Lights. He remembered asking Loki if he had cast some sort of
illusion, and Loki had shaken his head, his mouth slightly open in awe, and
said, “No, it’s just the sky.”

The
sun was well above the horizon again when his friends emerged from the tent and
began busying themselves with rebuilding the fire. None of them asked Thor
whether he had slept at all, for which he was grateful. After a light
breakfast of toasted waybread and slices of cured meat, they quenched the fire
with snow and headed toward the cluster of black tents where Coulson’s
comrades—the “agents of Shield,” he had called them—had made camp.

They
met Coulson and a few of his black-clad agents partway between their two camps.
“Loki has agreed to meet with you,” Coulson said. “I’ll escort you to the Jötun
encampment.”

Keep reading

Reblogging so the “Keep reading” link will show up on mobile and also to tag people who have been reading or might be interested: @acebakes, @angrymadsygin, @banded-bulbous-bilgesnipe@darklittlestories, @fuckyeahrichardiii, @illwynd, @imaginetrilobites, @incredifishface, @loxxxlay@lucianalight, @princess-ikol@sparklingmarvel, @wnnbdarklord

Prince of Darkness, Part II

This is the second of three (I think/hope) parts of my Lightbringer-themed giveaway fic for @shine-of-asgard. Part I is here.

Sorry this one is shorter… and sorry I keep getting bogged down in weird negotiations. I think I’m going to switch to Thor’s POV for the third part; gotta get things moving. And since the horizontal line doesn’t show up on mobile, I’m just using a bunch of hyphens.

————————————

All at once the world snapped back into vivid reality. Laufey’s
eyes widened and he made a wet choking sound before he slumped back into his
chair. Byleistr rose so quickly his chair fell with a clatter onto the floor
and started to lunge at Loki; Hvedra was only a little slower to do the same.
Loki was debating whether to slide off the chair and shelter under it or try to
climb onto it to hold them off, but the sound of Helblindi’s palm landing
heavily on the table froze them all.

“Be still,” Helblindi said, unnecessarily.

“He murdered our father!”

“I have eyes,” Helblindi said. His flat tone never changed.
He trained his eyes on Loki; there was no anger in them. “Speak well,
Asgardian, and you may yet leave this room alive.”

“I alone can give you the Casket,” Loki began. He still felt
too unreal to feel fear. His mind seemed clear and sharp as the blades of ice
that still gleamed around Byleistr’s and Hvedra’s hands; a plan had taken shape
as swiftly and easily as those blades.

“What stops us from invading Asgard in force and taking it?”
Helblindi asked.

“You would not find it. I told you: I alone can give it to
you.”

“And if we put you to slow torture, would you not hand it
over?”

Loki laughed. “I am a magician matched by none but Queen
Frigga herself. I can stop my own heart if I wish.” (He was lying, but he would
bet they could not know that.) “And if I die, the Casket is out of your reach
forever.”

“He’s bluffing,” Byleistr hissed.
Loki was nervous until he added, “Asgardians love their lives too much.”

Helblindi’s eyes bored into Loki’s; Loki gazed back coolly.
“I think perhaps this one does not,” Helblindi said. “Very well. Why should we
not kill you after you give us the
Casket?”

“Because I know things about Asgard’s defenses that none but
a member of the royal family could know. I will not only return the Casket to
you; I will help you wage war on Asgard to avenge the honor of your Realm.”

“Why?” Helblindi, like his father, did not mince words. “Why
attack your own kingdom? What do you want out of this?”

“Asgard is not my kingdom,” Loki said sharply.

“You are its king.”

“Temporarily.” Loki knew now that he was never meant to be
more than that; he was still keeping the throne warm for Thor. And much joy may he have of it.

“Do you think to buy the throne of Jötunheim with the Casket?”
Byleistr demanded. “Or seize it?” He raised his bladed hand threateningly.
Helblindi’s level gaze never left Loki’s face.

“Odin thought to install me as a puppet king,” Loki said,
almost spitting out his so-called father’s name. That was what he had meant
when he said that both Thor and Loki were born to be kings; that was the only
way he could have united their kingdoms or brought about a permanent peace,
given Laufey’s feelings about his third son. “This is not my kingdom either.”

“Then what do you want, Prince Loki?” Helblindi asked again,
calm and inexorable.

“Midgard,” said Loki, almost on a whim.

“Midgard?” Byleistr repeated incredulously, and even Hvedra,
who had been silent while the royals discussed bloodlines and high politics, blurted
out, “What? Why?”

Loki barely spared them a glance before turning back to
Helblindi; he knew which of them had been trained for rule and diplomacy. “That
was what started the last war, was it not? Jötunheim attempted to conquer
Midgard, using the Casket of Ancient Winters to make it hospitable for Jötun
settlers. Restore your kingdom, weaken Asgard, then let me lead a force to conquer
Midgard. I will rule it in your name and pay tribute to Jötunheim; I ask only
that you allow me the independence to govern it as I see fit.”

Byleistr was still incredulous. “And take no vengeance for
our murdered father? Our murdered king?”

Loki cast a prayer down to the Norns at the root of Yggdrasil
to strengthen the silver tongue they had gifted him, not to let its eloquence
tarnish now… but unexpectedly, Helblindi came to his aid.

“We heard the words that passed between them before Prince
Loki threw his blade. He avenged himself.”

“He should never have existed in the first place!”

“But he does, and he lived to return the Casket to us. The
gods give nothing without exacting a price. Our father should have died before
he let the Casket be taken; the gods have demanded that he die in order that it
be returned.”

“Is that what we’ll tell our people? That the gods killed their king? And just
when he happened to be in a room with an Asgardian and the next in line!”

“You’ll tell them the truth,” Loki cut in. “That the king’s cast-off
runt returned from Asgard to bring the Casket home and to punish the father who
tried to kill him—and who led Jötunheim to defeat. You’ll say it’s a sign from
the gods that the ‘children of air and snow’ are no longer to be sacrificed,
but will live among you… or in Midgard, as they choose.”

“That’s the truth, is it?” Byleistr scoffed.

“Yes,” Helblindi said calmly. “We have been given the chance
to restore Jötunheim to greatness. Would you throw that away for a misplaced sentimentality?
Or are you a patriot?”

‘Misplaced sentimentality’?
I take it their relationship with their father was about as good as mine.

Byleistr made a disgusted noise and slammed his hand against
the wall—which shattered the ice blade he had formed around his arm. He was unhappy,
but he had disarmed himself. Hvedra did not follow his lead; instead, she
seemed to warm her hand and arm from within, melting a layer of the ice and
allowing the blade to slide off and break on the ground. They both resumed
their seats; Byleistr had to right his first, and kept glancing significantly
at Laufey’s glassy-eyed corpse, near-black blood still oozing sluggishly from
its throat.

Helblindi turned back toward Loki. “If we are to present you
to our people as Laufey’s son—and if you are to lead a force of Jötun warriors—you
will need to appear Jötun. But we have only seen partial transformations, when
a part of your body is burned with cold.”

“We could have someone follow him around and burn him with cold constantly,” Byleistr growled. Loki wasn’t sure how much was sarcasm
and how much genuine malice.

“When I held the Casket, my whole body shifted,” Loki said. “I’ve
never tried shifting on my own…” He looked down at his hand and tried to reach
inward for whatever the Casket had found in him, the spring of that
all-encompassing warmth… but his hand remained stubbornly pink.

“See if you can hold the Casket and not shift back when you
let go,” Helblindi suggested.

Loki gave him a sharp look. “I will not turn it over to you
until we have addressed your people as agreed. I will present it to you only at
an assembly of your people—” He caught himself, paused. “Of our people,” he amended, testing out the
sound. “After you tell them that I have come to provide information that will
ensure Asgard’s defeat, and to conquer Midgard for Jötunheim.”

Byleistr rolled his eyes and made another disgusted noise;
Helblindi only nodded. Loki slid off the chair, less gracefully than he might
have hoped; Hvredra made a small sound of alarm and leaned forward, but
Helblindi put up a cautioning hand. Loki backed up to the far wall of the room,
putting as much distance as possible—little though it was—between himself and
the Frost Giants; he had other defenses, but every inch and every second might
count. Then he pulled the Casket out of the pocket dimension where he had
stored it.

As soon as he grasped its handles, he felt the warmth begin
to spread from his hands. Even more remarkable, his vision changed: the ice
around him seemed to glow, the dimness of the room to lighten, the features on
the Jötnar’s faces to become both softer and more distinct. All three of them gasped;
Hvedra glanced around in amazement, Byleistr swore softly, Helblindi closed his
eyes as if struggling to keep his composure. None of them moved to take the
Casket, but Loki, taking no chances, still dismissed it back to its pocket
dimension as soon as he felt the warmth reach every part of his body, from ears
to toes.

Some of the glow in the room dimmed again, but Loki found
that he could hold onto the warmth in his body; after a few moments of standing
very still and counting his breaths, it seemed to settle in. He looked down at
his hands: they were still blue. He dared to look up again at the Jötnar; they all
seemed shaken and a little forlorn. Loki thought that before his
transformation, he would not have been able to identify the brightness in Helblindi’s scarlet eyes as unshed tears.

“The Casket should never have been taken from you,” Loki
said. He had had a sense of it when standing before it in the Vault, but he had
not really felt it until now, had not known
it.

“You should not have been taken from us, either,” Helblindi
said, to Loki’s great surprise. “Welcome home, brother.”

“Yes, yes,” Byleistr said briskly; he was still
impatient, but not nearly as hostile as before. “Now we need to arrange a
funeral, an assembly, and a couple of invasions.”

Prince of Darkness, Part I

shine-of-asgard:

philosopherking1887:

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.

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.

Seguir leyendo

Love it, love it, love it! But how cruel are you, to give Loki not one but two asshole, uncaring sires? Maybe he can off Laufey, fool Odin and reign on Jotunheim with the help of the Casquet… He’d make a good job of it. One can dream…

Glad you’re enjoying so far! Yeah, I know, I’m terribly mean to Loki… but so many fic writers have already done the “he wasn’t really abandoned” thing, I’ve decided it’s my job to write a version of Jotunheim where they do expose the small infants and it’s not a good thing but it doesn’t necessarily make them monsters (it’s not an uncommon practice, historically). As for where Loki’s going to end up… you’ll see 😉

Prince of Darkness, Part I

foundlingmother:

philosopherking1887:

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.

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.

Keep reading

I adore that you’ve included Loki’s brothers. I’m always sad when they’re not included (and it seems they really don’t exist in the MCU…). The entire confrontation is excellently done! Poor Loki 😦 Yeah, I’d stab Laufey, too. He could have at least worded it a little nicer. Then again, flowery language doesn’t really seem like Laufey’s style. Not who Loki inherited his silver tongue from.

Thanks! It’s pretty standard fanfiction practice to include Loki’s brothers, even in human AUs where Thor and Loki come from different families, but the MCU seems to have decided (oddly) that Laufey doesn’t have any other kids. Careless of him not to secure the succession. And if Loki is the “rightful king of Jotunheim” (per those dimwitted hacks Markus & McFeely), who’s been in charge there for the past 7 years? Do they have a Gondor-style Steward who keeps things running while waiting for the king to return?

If Loki inherited his eloquence from anyone, it was Farbauti; more likely he learned it from Frigga.

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.