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#loki x in-unga
caughtaghostsomehow · 2 years
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Just a Matter of Time
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A flurry fanfic for MoA’s ( @maiden-of-asgard ) Frostbite *again* because tumblr is being a lil bitch
Especially for @sassy-potato-yall​
 She notices it for the first time when she's getting ready for bed. She's gotten into the habit of moisturizing her whole body before going to sleep, the cold of Jotunheim not doing any favours for her skin. She starts with her legs as always and works her way up. She's tired after a long day in the courtroom, there's always so many people who need something, have a complaint or a demand or a long list of ideas for improvements. She thinks back to the days when she wasn't Queen, how so far away this all seemed, the royal duties only a hindrance to her time spent with Loki. She smiles to herself, amused by her naivety when she spots the wrinkles on her hands. Her veins seem a bit more prominent than usual. Huh, she wonders how she didn't notice that before. She doubles on moisturizer that night.
 Next time it happens, In-Unga is soaking in the baths. She didn't feel great for most of the day and decided to skip dinner in favour of a long bath. She's been dealing with a few more aches and pains than usual but she figures it's probably normal, given the time she spends just sitting on the throne. She makes a mental note to take more walks around the palace when she has the time. She reaches for shampoo to lather into her hair and as she starts, she notices that a lot more hair is staying on her hands than she remembers. The exhaustion is probably getting to me, she thinks and continues washing her hair, promising herself to take a day or two off. Maybe go somewhere nice and quiet with Loki, just the two of them. Yes, a break would be nice, indeed.
 She's been sent prescription glasses from Midgard. Reading and writing Royal Mail has been getting more strenuous recently and she's been horribly irritated by it. She would squint and strain her eyes trying to decipher what's on the papers until she complained to Loki about it and he has most graciously offered his help as well as a brand new pair of glasses, shipped over-realms especially for his Queen.
 She sits in bed, a book she attempted to read lies abandoned on her lap, new pair of glasses perched on top of it as she watches her husband snoring softly right next to her. He looks young, even younger when he sleeps. To be truthful he looks exactly the same as the day she married him. It's been some time but not that long, has it? There is a voice in her head that tells her she should worry, some heavy feeling in the pit of her stomach. But Loki looks so beautiful sound asleep and she doesn't want to think about anything else. When she finally falls asleep she dreams about the day she fell through the convergence. Only this time Loki doesn't find her. She's alone in the cave, the cold seeping through her skin and into her bones and she fights to keep her eyes open but her eyelids are so heavy and she's tired so she lets them close. The rest of her dream is shrouded in darkness.
 They stopped celebrating her birthday a while ago. Time passes differently on Jotunheim and it wouldn't make any sense. It mostly just served as a bitter reminder of In-Unga's mortality. As she's sitting at her vanity, watching her reflection she thinks it was a rather futile attempt at tricking themselves into believing they have more time together than they actually do. There are smile lines around her mouth, crow's feet at the corners of her eyes even when she doesn't smile, the skin on her cheeks sags a bit and lacks the plumpness it used to have. The grey streaks in her hair are taking over her natural colour. She frowns at herself and the lines on her forehead don't disappear long after she'd smoothed her features.
 She's still sitting in the same place when Loki walks in, makes his way towards her and kisses the side of her face before walking over to the bed and taking off his boots. She's watching him in the mirror with a frown on her face. He must've noticed… right? She observes his reflection as he goes through his routine. When he notices her staring, there's a teasing smile on his face and she feels a stirring of affection deep inside her. She looks away quickly and goes back to observing her own face in the mirror.
 Loki walks over and stands behind her, then bends down to kiss the top of her head and watches her watching herself, with an amused expression. He opens his mouth, undoubtedly, to make some smart comment but she's faster, "I have wrinkles."
She would laugh at Loki's baffled expression but she doesn't feel like laughing at all.
"What?"
"I have wrinkles," she repeats carefully, "And grey hair, and bags under my eyes."
She looks at Loki's reflection to see his frown deepen.
"What are you talking about, darling?"
Now it's her turn to frown.
"My face. Can't you see it?"
"I can see it perfectly well, and it's certainly a sight to behold, my love."
 She turns around and searches his face for… something. Anything, really. Some sort of sign that he understands what this means. But there's nothing in his eyes aside from adoration and love and he looks at her the way he's always looked at her and she wants to cry because he doesn't realise. Is this some sort of coping mechanism or is he in denial?
 She suddenly doesn't feel like finding out. He loves her so much, there's no reason to break his heart tonight. She makes a silent promise to herself that she'll talk to him about this soon.
Soon never comes.
 She forgets so many things nowadays. She knew emissaries from Vanaheim were coming, Gjálp has been reminding her everyday for the past week but somehow she still managed to forget. She feels tired. Everyone around her is so patient with her struggle to remember things but there are times when she catches Býleistr watching her with a weird, worried sort of expression and it makes her feel uneasy. She writes notes to herself, trying to regain some of her independence but then she forgets she ever wrote notes and she's forced to rely on everyone else to remind her of her duties.
 She's more tired than she's ever been and there's an ache deep in her heart for the young woman who managed to survive against all odds. She sleeps more and doesn't join official dinners. She hasn't been to the courtroom in a while.
 She lies in bed one night, staring at the ceiling. She knows there's something she wanted to do but she can't remember… She'll ask Loki tomorrow, he always helps her remember. She thinks it's important, a vow or a promise she made to someone a while ago but she cannot recall what it was. It nags at her brain but nothing comes so she turns to Loki who's sleeping beside her and she smiles, knowing he'll help her figure it out. He always does.
 She falls asleep that night with a smile on her face and when morning comes, she doesn't wake.
fin
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Loki x In-Unga (modeled by me) from my favorite fanfic of all time, "Frostbite" by @maiden-of-asgard. Seriously folks, this fanfiction is so good that I had a print copy made, though you can read it here too! 🐍❄
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cozy-the-overlord · 4 years
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Running with the Wolves
Summary:  After the events of Infinity War ripped her life to pieces, Queen In-Unga forges forward as sole ruler of Jotunheim, finding solace in the two orphaned wolf puppies she finds outside her sleigh.
AU in which Loki didn’t die at the beginning of Infinity War-- he accompanied Thor to Nidavellir, then to Wakanda, and died in the Snap alongside the Avengers.
Based on Frostbite by @maiden-of-asgard​
Word Count:  12,192
Pairing: Loki x Reader/Loki x In-Unga
Read it on Ao3
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A/N: So let’s flashback to last summer. I had three obsessions: Avengers Endgame, A Song of Ice and Fire (which I was reading for the first time), and Frostbite by Maiden of Asgard. Those obsessions merged into a story that’s been swirling in my head ever since. I never thought I'd actually write it-- back then, I still wasn't fully comfortable with writing my own fanfiction, let alone writing fanfiction of someone else's fanfiction. But when Moa announced that she was going to be turning Frostbite into a physical book and would be accepting fan submissions, my dumbass brain went "i CaN dO tHaT."
This is the most I've struggled with writing a story ever. I've never written from the perspective of a character that wasn't my own, and I found that to much more difficult than I anticipated. Combine that with how the story I was trying to tell spanned over an overwhelming five years, my constant stress that I was ruining Moa’s characters, and the fact that I kept finding myself in "this-made-more-sense-in-my-head" territory and I started getting pretty frustrated. I had expected to be done by the end of June; when at the beginning of July I was only barely halfway finished, I kind of threw in the towel and said "forget it." I took a week off from writing to clear my head, and after a pep talk from my sister (thanks, JJ!) I decided I had to complete it. So here it is! Am I completely happy with the final product? No, but seeing as I never thought there'd be a final product, I'm proud of myself nonetheless.
One last note (this a/n is obnoxious, I’m sorry): Moa, I did intend for this story to be a part of your Frostbite book, but I totally understand if you don't want to deal with it. It is disgustingly long, and I know that you said that the book is already huge. I won't be offended if you don't put it in-- I don't want to create more trouble for you.
Thanks for reading!
It was freezing.
That was saying something. Freezing was an adjective In-Unga had learned not to use lightly. Living on Jotunheim came with the acceptance that you would be existing in extreme sub-zero temperatures year round, warmth being an elusive gem found only in the recesses of furry coats or underneath thick blankets. In the years she had spent in the realm of the Frost Giants, In-Unga felt that she had come quite accustomed to the cold. It was something she was rather proud of—when Captain Rodgers had visited with Thor a few years back, he had joked that she must have taken some kind of super soldier serum herself in order to handle it so well. She had responded, beaming, that as long as she had Loki, she didn’t need anything else to keep her warm.
She had never really considered the truth to that statement.
Njal, her burly head guard, pulled his mount alongside hers. “The temperature is dropping, my queen,” he said. “Perhaps you would be more comfortable in your sleigh—”
“No.” She hoped her voice sounded stronger than she felt. “I appreciate your concern, but I am perfectly fine as I am.” Just for good measure, she added a queenly nod.
Njal seemed unconvinced, but he bowed his head just the same. “As you say, my queen.”
In-Unga exhaled, trying to ignore the white cloud that enveloped her when she did so. She wasn’t sure how much longer she could stay out here. She couldn’t see the skin of her hands under her mittens, but she was certain they were blue. Her face, as well. In fact, at the moment she probably looked more Jotun than Midgardian.
But she was determined to continue riding. Loki had always made a point of it, in the early days when his main concern was showcasing his strength. Now that he was gone, she needed to be strong for him, and for her people.
Those that were left.
Her eyes burned in warning, and so In-Unga shook her head and went back to thinking about how horribly freezing it was. The cold hurt less.
Býleistr had questioned her decision to tour the kingdom so late in the year. The weather would be awful, he said. Her people would understand if she waited until spring. In-Unga had argued that waiting brought its own danger: ignoring the far-away regions during such a tumultuous time would foster restlessness, and the last thing they needed on top of everything that had happened was a civil war.
What she couldn’t put into words was how she needed to get out. There were too many missing faces in Utgard, gaping holes in the tapestry of family she had woven around herself. The throne room was empty even when it was full. She couldn’t focus on mealtime conversations because her gaze kept drifting to the vacant seats where her Forest Twins should be sitting. Her bedroom had become a tomb.
She had to leave, before she drowned in the silence.
Shouts at the back of the party startled In-Unga out of her pity spiral. Members of her guard rushed down the line of sleighs, weapons drawn. Those that remained by her side closed in a tight wall around her.
“What’s happening?” she called to Njal. “Are we under attack?” That’s just what we need now. The forested wilderness that surrounded them provided cover to any would-be assailants. Here, they were sitting ducks.
The wind picked up again, ice cutting straight through her many layers, and this time In-Unga found she couldn’t control her shivering. Frozen sitting ducks.
Soon enough, the cries died down, and her guards came riding back.
“All is well, your majesty. It was only a vargr.”
In-Unga thought of Mánagarmr and shivered again. “A wolf?” she asked. “Is anyone injured?”
“No, my queen.” In-Unga didn’t know the name of the guard that spoke. He was a new member of her defense, one of the many who got an unexpected promotion when their superiors turned to dust. “It jumped out at the last sleigh and startled many, but it was small, and taken down rather easily.”
The mortal queen of Jotunheim frowned. “Why would a wolf attack a party this large?” she asked.
“I cannot say, my queen.”
“Your majesty,” Njal spoke. “Shall I give the order to continue?”
In-Unga shook her head. This didn’t make any sense. “No,” she said. “I want to see this wolf.”
It shouldn’t have surprised her that a giant’s version of a small wolf was bigger than a Clydesdale. The majestic animal now lay lifeless in the snow, the pure white of its fur sullied only by the crimson stain spreading from the spear in its neck. The soldier who brought it down was only too pleased to relay the story to his queen.
“It came tearing out of the woods like a beast from Hel,” he cried, waving his hands for dramatic effect, “Snarling and hissing and baring its teeth. Most of us were caught off guard, but I’ve always been quick with a spear, and so when it turned to me, I was ready for it—”
In-Unga nodded, only half listening. She scanned the treeline from which the wolf had appeared. It made no sense to her—what would cause the creature to attack unprovoked? Right now, with the trees casting crooked silhouettes and the wind whistling in her ears, it seemed like an omen.
But of what? She wondered uselessly. What else could go wrong?
A clump of snow caught her eye. For a moment, she couldn’t understand why—it looked no different than any other clump she had come across in her life. Completely ordinary, but… there was something…
Warmth.
It was warmer than the rest.
The realization shocked her a little. Sensing changes in temperature from afar had been one of the skills Loki had taught her (unsurprisingly, given his affinity for snakes), but she had thought she lost it, along with all her other magical abilities, when she lost her husband.
Better make a note of that.
“There’s something over there,” she said, pointing. “In the snow. Something alive.” She made her way off the road, her guards scrambling to maintain their positions around her.
Damn, it was cold. In-Unga knelt in the ice, biting back curses as the snow soaked through to her knees. Getting back on her mount was looking more and more impossible.
The clump whimpered.
She let out a small gasp when the fluffy puppy head popped out of the snow, blinking ice out of its eyes. It shook the glistening snow from its fur with a tiny whine. A petulant growl followed, and a second pup appeared, pushing its way in front of the first and baring its teeth.
“Oh!” In-Unga reached out cautiously, the cold already forgotten. The growling puppy yipped and she pulled her hand back. The other merely yawned.
Behind her, Njal cleared his throat. “My queen, perhaps you should back away. They are feral—”
“That was their mother,” In-Unga interrupted, looking back at the bleeding body on the side of the path. “She must have felt they were threatened by the caravan and attacked. And we killed her.” Although, even that seemed unlikely.  In-Unga eyed the wolf-killer where he stood over the body of his prey, animatedly retelling the story of his deed to a growing crowd. It was easy to picture him wandering off the trail and provoking the frightened mother. Her gaze darkened.
Njal shifted uncomfortably. “It is unfortunate, my queen, but at this point there’s nothing to be done. We should continue before the weather takes a turn for the worse.”
“We can’t just leave them to starve!” she cried. She reached out again. The growling puppy flinched but didn’t back away. Its sibling craned its neck to sniff her mitten, sneezing when it breathed in a noseful of fuzz. Puppies in the dead of winter. That’s got to mean something. “Look at them! They won’t survive without their mother.”
“I can give them a quick end, your Majesty, if it would ease your worries,” one of her guards spoke up. “It would be merciful—”
“No.” Her guards stiffened at the ice in her voice. The first puppy nuzzled into her hand, rubbing against her like a cat and letting out a contented sigh when she scratched the fur on its neck. The other slunk forward guardedly, curiosity seemingly cracking its tough guy exterior. To her surprise neither resisted when she scooped them into her arms.
“I’ll have no more killing today,” In-Unga said as she stood. “I’ll care for them myself.”
Huld seemed absolutely horrified when the mortal queen plopped the little balls of fur on the floor of the sleigh.
“My queen, they’re wild animals!” she cried.
In-Unga laughed as the first puppy attempted to burrow back into her coat pocket. “Yeah. Real wild.” Its head popped up at the sound of her voice, and for the first time, In-Unga noticed its eyes: one brown and one blue. “Why, you’re a little David Bowie wolf, aren’t you?” she cooed, scratching its pointed ear. The puppy licked her wrist happily.
Her maid wasn’t quite as pleased. “My queen!” she exclaimed, backing away as the other pup growled. “What do you plan to do with them?”
“Keep them, I suppose. Raise them as pets.” She left the Bowie wolf to rein in his brother. They were both so small—when she held them in her arms they could easily be mistaken for Earth dogs. In-Unga found herself recalling her first sleigh ride in Jotunheim, with Greip and Gjálp and Snowball the Not-Melrakki, how shocked the twins had been at the concept of Midgardians owning pets.
How many years ago was that? Five? Feels like a lifetime.
She swallowed the lump in her throat, hoping Huld was too preoccupied with their new companions to smell her grief.
“Do we have anything for them to eat?” she asked with forced brightness. “Seal milk, or something?” Huld frowned, but obediently prepared a bowl of milk.
“They’re going to grow to be monsters,” she warned. “My queen, you saw Mánagarmr—”
“That’s right, I did,” In-Unga interrupted as her puppies began lapping up the dish. “And let me tell you, these guys are nothing like him.” The tough pup looked up with an offended growl. Laughing, she reached out to pet him. “Although this one thinks he is.”
The maid’s look of concern only deepened.
In-Unga sighed. “Don’t worry, Huld. Their mother wasn’t even that big. They won’t grow up to be Mánagarmr.” She cringed as she thought of the blood-splattered wolf lying in the snow. These puppies were so small, they had to have been born within the last month, after the Snap. Their poor mother survived the event that massacred half of every living being in the universe so she could give birth to her children, only to be stabbed to death by some hotshot with a stick. It was too cruel for words.
His hunger satisfied, the Bowie wolf paddled over to where In-Unga sat cross-legged on the floor and plopped down in her lap, grinning up at her with his multi-colored eyes.
“Awww!” In-Unga stroked his fur as he snuggled against her coat. “Huld, look at this! Isn’t he precious?”
Huld gave some non-descript reply, but In-Unga didn’t hear her. The second puppy was sniffing her boot, chewing on the sole with pearly teeth. “Come here, little guy.” He whined as she pulled him into her lap with his brother but didn’t try to escape. Quickly, they were both snoring.
In-Unga cradled them as the caravan trudged on, completely oblivious to the cold.
Her wolf pups quickly became the highlight of her entourage. At first In-Unga kept to leaving them with Huld while she met with the nobles on their various stops, hoping to spare them from the information overload of court, but they howled something terrible whenever she was out of sight, crying and chasing after her and giving poor Huld nightmares. Ultimately, the queen had two leashes fashioned out of leather, which they wore reluctantly in exchange for accompanying her everywhere she went. It certainly was a sight to behold—she had already looked rather ridiculous before, this tiny mortal woman encompassed by giants, and now here there were these two little fluffballs constantly nipping at her heels— but perhaps it just added to her effect.
They grew quickly. Within a week it seemed they had doubled in size, which In-Unga only realized when she nearly pulled a muscle trying to scoop them both up as she had done when she first found them. Their appetite grew with them. She was seriously concerned for a while that the caravan would run out of things with which to feed them until Njal pointed out one night that they were born hunters.
“Let them loose while we travel, my queen,” he said. “They’ll find food.”
In-Unga frowned. “You think they would come back?” she asked.
Her guard’s gaze traveled to Bowie, sprawled out on her lap fast asleep, his brother hunched protectively over her feet. “I don’t think you have to worry, your Majesty.”
She started taking them off the leash in the morning. At first, they’d only trot alongside her mount, too anxious to leave her side, but soon they were venturing off the trail for pockets of time, reappearing later with some bloodied creature dangling from their mouths. Birds, rodents, small animals—nothing was safe. Her little fur-babies were stone cold killers. She would’ve been lying if she said it wasn’t unnerving to see the little puppies she cuddled up with at night licking blood off their faces, but honestly their prowess was impressive. Her eyes nearly bulged out of her head when Brynjarr returned one day dragging some furry mammal twice as big as him.
Unlike his brother, Brynjarr had remained nameless for a large part of the journey. He had been bestowed with nicknames of all sorts—Hunter, Tough Guy, Mommy’s Little Fighter—but it wasn’t until they reached Márfjall that he got a proper name.
“That’s a warrior,” Hrossþjófr said to her while watching the two wrestle on the beach. “He needs a warrior’s name.”
In-Unga had been dreading this final stop, dreading having to walk down these hallways alone when the very walls of the castle screamed for Loki. She had resolved be strong, but just seeing Hross as they alighted, withered and wilted without Griep by his side, had been nearly enough to cause her to fall apart.
The wolves kept her together. Their childlike fascination with the crimson sands was almost enough to distract her from the other memories swirling around in the dark bay. In her few moments of free time, she’d take them down to the shore and laugh as they’d go tearing up the surf, Brynjarr barking menacingly at the ocean when the waves crashed too close to his feet, Bowie rolling around in the sand until his white coat was stained pink. Hross joined her often with his children, likely as desperate for a diversion as she was. They didn’t talk about the event. It was easier just to focus on the wolves.
Hross was endlessly impressed with their obedience. “How do you get them to do that?” he asked when they stopped what they were doing and came running at In-Unga’s whistle.
She shrugged. “I don’t know,” she said as she attempted to dust off Bowie’s coat before he plopped down on top of her. Even though the two wolves were nearly at the height of her hips, Bowie still seemed to think he was a lap cat. “They just always do.”
Dagný shrieked and buried her face into her father’s chest when the wolves came too close, but her brother leaned forward, his eyes like saucers as he reached for Brynjarr with chubby hands.
“Woof,” he cried. “Woof.”
Hross pulled him away. “Dali, we don’t want to bother the vargr, now—"
“It’s okay,” In-Unga said. “Bryn, sit down so Dali can pet you.”
Brynjarr sank into the sand obediently. Dali gasped in delight as he ran his fingers through the wolf’s thick mane.
“Woof!” he cried again, happily. Hross and In-Unga laughed.
From her lap, Bowie whined for attention. She reached to scratch behind his ears.
“So devoted,” Hross mused. “I’ll have to add it to your song. ‘In-Unga, charmer of wolves.’”
The party arrived back at Utgard just as the winter freeze was beginning to thaw. There was an audible gasp from the crowd gathered when she exited her sleigh flanked by the two animals, but Býleistr only raised an eyebrow.
“There were rumors, but I supposed no one really believed them,” he told her as they walked in.
She smiled. “But you did?”
“Of course,” he said. “If there’s anyone on this planet stupid enough to mistake a vargr for a pet, it’s you.”
“I missed you too, Bý.”
Býleistr and the rest of her advisors tried to catch her up on all the business she had missed over dinner, but the very presence of her wolves was quick to derail any serious conversation.
“They’re so well behaved,” marveled a forest giant In-Unga probably should’ve known the name of. “How does one inspire such loyalty, your Majesty?”
In-Unga forced an artificial laugh. “They only stick around because they know I feed them.”
The wolves laid down at her feet, eyeing the meat on the table. She reached down to scratch Bowie’s back. She doubted the giant had meant anything by her question, but the way everyone was looking at Bowie and Brynjarr was reminding her of the way everyone had looked at her when she first arrived in Jotunheim with Loki, and it was stirring up emotions in her chest that she wasn’t prepared to deal with.
She thought of the golden collar she had worn for so many years, a sign of ownership that had turned into a display of loyalty. She had despised it at first, but by the end she had been proud to wear that collar.
Lokakona. Loki’s woman.
It was in a box under her bed, along with the knife he had given her after the Rann Steinar debacle and the wooden Yggdrasil pendent Griep had given her before her first trip to Asgard. In the days following the destruction of the stones, as the heavy truth that this was a nightmare she wasn’t going to wake up from sank in, In-Unga had collected everything that broke her to look at and stuffed them where she wouldn’t see them anymore.
It hadn’t helped much.
The nights were the worst. It was stupid, because she had lived alone for years before Jotunheim, but now the concept of sleeping by herself made her sick to her stomach. When everything had first happened, In-Unga had refused to even touch the bed. It was too big, too cold, too empty to even attempt sleep in it. She piled furs and blankets on top of the couch and laid there all night, haunted by missing faces and broken memories and outstretched hands that were just beyond her reach. By morning, she’d be curled up so tightly into herself that it hurt to sit straight during the day.
At first, it was just temporary. Wasn’t that what Agent Romanov said, when she finally got into contact with her? They’d find a way to reverse it. Once they were able to locate Tony Stark, they’d find a way. It would be okay. She’d just have to rule in Loki’s stead for a little bit, just like she had before. Keep his realm together for him until he came back. But a month later, she got another call. This time, Romanov’s voice held none of the steadfast determination that In-Unga had been clinging to so desperately. They were gone. The infinity stones, and the people too. It was over. They failed. She was so sorry.
Vaguely, In-Unga remembered asking if she could talk to her brother-in-law, the silence that followed as Romanov went looking for him, her apologetic tone when Thor refused to come to the phone. The next thing she knew she was in the courtyard, heavy snow pummeling her body as Býleistr dragged her back inside with an arm around her waist.
“Are you completely out of your mind?” he snapped. “You’ll freeze to death out there!”
She held up her hand, hazily noting that her skin looked an even darker blue than his.
It was soon after that In-Unga decided to tour the kingdom. The voice inside her head scolded her for the decision even as she attempted to provide political rationale. She was running away. Pushing her problems further down the road in a childish attempt to avoid the unavoidable. Loki would be disappointed in you.
But how could she rule a planet when she couldn’t even bring herself to sleep in her own bed?
So she had left for a few months, for better or worse, and now she was back. After dinner her wolves, obviously exhausted from the long journey, trotted into her old room without issue. Bowie plopped down on the floor and was asleep in seconds. Brynjarr, ever distrustful, made his cautious way around the room, sniffing at odds and ends and barking at items that seemed too suspicious. In-Unga stood in the doorway, watching. It was almost enough of a distraction. Almost. The room was untouched since the last time she had entered, so much so that it still reeked of Loki. The feeling was so strong that for a moment she didn’t trust herself to move.
She entered slowly, drinking in the memories. Loki’s desk, where she’d lean on top of him and read his paperwork over his shoulder, currently piled up with documents he was never going to review. The table across from empty fireplace, where on rare occasions they could have their meals when the only company they felt like entertaining was each other’s. The rug next to the fireplace, where they always seemed to end up after such occasions.
And there was the bed. Brynjarr rushed ahead of her as she made her way to the bedroom, seemingly intent on confirming its safety before allowing her access. In-Unga found herself laughing despite the ache in her chest.
“Does it meet your standards, Bryn?” she asked as he slipped under the bed and out again, sniffing every corner and examining every fur. Eventually, he laid down at the foot of the bed, satisfied.
In-Unga sat down next to him, stroking his ears as he rested his big head on her thighs. This was the last place she had seen Loki. Here, in this room, on this bed. They had been woken up in the middle of the night by a messenger at the door. Groaning, he had dragged himself out of bed to answer it, only to return shortly after considerably more alert.
“What’s wrong?” she asked sleepily as he dressed. “Where you going?”
“Thor’s made a mess of things on Asgard,” he replied, pulling his tunic over his head. “He needs my help.”
“What?” The gravity of his tone woke her up quickly. “Wait, you’re leaving now? What happened?”
He leaned forward to kiss her. “It’s probably nothing. My brother is known to blow things out of proportion. I should be back within a few days.”
“Loki—”
He muffled her with another kiss. “Don’t worry, dröttning,” he whispered against her lips. “It will be fine. I love you.”
“I love you too,” she whispered back. “Stay safe.”
And then he was gone.
For months, In-Unga wondered if there was something she should’ve done. Pulled him back into bed, forbidden him from walking through that door? “Stay here with me. Thor can handle it himself.” Would it have even changed anything? Loki had told her about Thanos—not a lot, but enough to understand that his influence stretched across galaxies. Would he still have collected the stones, regardless of whether she managed to keep Loki with her? She didn’t know which alternative was worse: the idea that there was something she could’ve done but didn’t, or the thought that she was so useless that Loki and the others were fated to die regardless of her actions.
Brynjarr whined, sitting up taller so he could lick the tears off her cheeks. She buried her face in his fluffy neck.
“I miss him, Bryn,” she sobbed. “I miss him so much.”
He followed her into bed that night. It was a bit surprising—Brynjarr normally wasn’t one for bedtime cuddles, that was Bowie’s thing—but not all together unwelcome. In-Unga was a little more concerned about the bed—on all fours her wolves were now taller than her, and significantly heavier. But it seemed to hold together alright, minus a few creaks, and honestly, the comforting weight of Bryn’s head on her stomach was worth a damaged bedframe if it came down to it. Slowly, she drifted off to the sound of his breathing.
Court was sparse these days.
In-Unga had become so accustomed to the looming hallway being packed with faces that seeing it half-empty kindled even more anxiety in her chest. The faces that were there seemed anxious as well—although In-Unga was rather certain their apprehension came more from the massive wolves at her feet than the vacancies in the room. Bowie and Brynjarr were still for the most part, but they were always ready to pounce at a moment’s notice.
Everything was threatening to them. If someone addressed her with a less than respectful tone, if someone tried too come to near to the throne, they were on their feet, teeth bared and growling. In-Unga found it hard to take them seriously. Bowie was a big sweetie who liked belly rubs and snuggling next to the fire, and whenever Bryn growled, she could only picture the tiny little fluff ball she found in the snow trying to be intimidating. But they certainly succeeded in unnerving the court, a little too much perhaps.
“Maybe I should have them wait outside next time,” she wondered aloud to Býleistr after a civilian who had come to petition the queen had been so frightened he was unable to string together a coherent sentence.
“No, most certainly not,” he countered. “They give you an extra sense of authority. The Queen already controls the Casket, now the vargrs bow to her command—it’s a powerful statement, and Jotuns respect power.”
“I suppose,” she said, thoughtfully. “But I don’t want to feel like I’m ruling through fear.”
Býleistr scoffed. “If your subjects don’t fear you to some extent, then you’re doing something wrong. Besides,” he added, “they should be fearful of your wolves.”
He was probably right. In-Unga trusted Njal and his men with her life, but she knew that if there was any sign of danger it would be the wolves who acted first. Bryn and Bowie accompanied her everywhere, flanking her like a set of furry bodyguards. It was especially odd given how large they had grown—they had long been towering over her, and now were approaching Býleistr’s height. Thankfully, Utgard had high ceilings.
With time, the palace became more accustomed to their presence. In-Unga liked to think that seeing her so at ease with them had begun to rub off on her subjects. If she ever had free time during the day, she’d take the two outside to run around and play in the snow. It wasn’t nearly as spacious as the beaches at Márfjall, but they had enough room to wrestle and cavort around. A crowd usually gathered when she played fetch with an old stick of wood she had picked up while still on the road, watching cautiously with wide eyes. She felt rather like a zookeeper putting on a show in an exhibit.
And if you look here, boys and girls, we have an overgrown doggo in his natural habitat.
It had also become a well-known fact that Bowie and Brynjarr slept in In-Unga’s bed with her. She wasn’t quite sure how this had become a well-known fact—perhaps those in charge of washing her bedding had taken note of the clumps of white fur tangled in the blankets—but Huld told her that this fact was seen as quite impressive to the other servants.
“It’s brave,” she said. “To leave yourself vulnerable to such beasts every night.”
In-Unga laughed humorlessly from where she sat hunched over at the desk. It had been a rough day. “At least they’re impressed. I’m pretty sure Loki’s glaring daggers down at me for letting animals sleep in his bed.” She had meant to make a joke, but there was a familiar lump building in her throat that she couldn’t quite swallow.
Hesitantly, Huld reached out to touch her forearm. “He’d love them,” she said. “He loved anything that made you happy.”
Maybe that was so. But In-Unga was still pretty certain that he’d be pissed—if not for the constantly shedding vargrs taking over his bedroom, then definitely for the stupid ideas that they spawned.
“Alright,” In-Unga said, drawing a line in the air from her chest to the ground. “Lie down.”
The two wolves sunk into the snow obediently, though not without confusion. They clearly expected playtime when she brought them outside, as did the growing crowd of faces at the palace gate. She sighed. This was one time where she’d rather not have an audience, but she didn’t feel right having them dispersed.
“Have I mentioned that this is a terrible idea?” Býleistr drawled from behind her.
“You have, as a matter of fact,” she replied, rubbing Bowie’s neck. He sighed contently, multicolored eyes slipping closed. “I’m still not listening to you.”
“It was worth a try.”
It was Hross who had put the idea in her head, when he had come to visit a month or two ago. Even after he returned to Márfjall, she couldn’t stop imagining what it might be like to ride one of her wolves like a horse.
“Just picture it!” he had said excitedly. “Queen In-Unga, riding into battle alone atop a vargr, casket in hand—”
Býleistr had interrupted to inquire under what circumstances would the kingdom become so inept as to send their mortal queen into battle alone, but In-Unga was sold.
Although, looking at it now, mounting didn’t seem as simple as Hross had made it out to be.
“Okay,” she murmured to Bowie as she made her way around his body. “I’m going to get on your back, buddy. Don’t freak out.” She grabbed a clump of fur on his back—even with him laying down, she had to reach a bit—and tried to pull herself up.
Key word being tried.
“No—what are you doing?” she cried as Bowie stood up with her still hanging off his side. “Bowie, sit down!”
The wolf yawned.
“Oh my,” Býleistr was doing his best to sound disinterested, but she could hear the suppressed laugher hiding under his voice. “Do you need a push?”
“Shut up.” She leveraged herself against the wolf, trying to wriggle her way to a sitting position. Bowie suddenly decided to obey her earlier command and plopped his bottom on the ground, the movement throwing her off enough to tumble into the snow.
“Oof!”
Bowie grinned at her.
Býleistr’s laugh rang out across the ice.
“I take it back,” he said. “That was well worth it. Now, have you had enough of this nonsense, my Queen, or might we go back inside?”
In-Unga was already back on her feet. “Do whatever you want, Býleistr. I’m not finished yet.”
This time, she went to Brynjarr. He was still lying down, despite all the ruckus.
“Okay,” she murmured, scratching his ear. “Take 2.”
Bowie whined. In-Unga turned around to see him lying down with his head between his paws, eyes wide and repentant. “Oh, hush!” she said, rolling her eyes. “You had your chance.”
Pulling herself on to Brynjarr’s back was surprisingly easy, likely because he actually listened to her when she told him to stay still. It took her a minute to get situated and comfortable, seated in a position where she didn’t feel like she was immediately going to slip off. She wondered if she should have a saddle made. But she felt like that would be too complicated—they’d have to get measurements from the wolves since no such saddle had ever been made before (to her knowledge, at least), all the while working on the assumption that Bryn and Bowie would even wear such a contraption.
Besides, she told herself, Daenerys Targaryen rides her dragons bareback without problem, right?
Yes. That was definitely the type of logic she needed to live her life by.
In-Unga clutched his fur as tightly as she could. “Okay, Bryn,” she said, tapping his neck. “Up!”
The wolf rose to his feet in one fluid, graceful motion that nearly sent her sprawling again. Oh boy. She tightened the grip of her legs around his sides. If I die today, blame George R.R. Martin.
She was high. Extremely high. Geez, she had to be at least ten feet in the air! Since when had her babies gotten this big?
Býleistr cleared his throat. “So,” he said, looking up at her (Býleistr had to look up at her!), “Are you just going to sit up there all day or do you plan on doing something? Because if not I would like to remind you that—”
“Hold your horses, Bý.”
He blinked. “Excuse me?”
In-Unga ignored him. She leaned forward to flatten herself against Brynjarr’s back. “Okay buddy,” she whispered, tapping his shoulder. “Whenever you’re ready.”
He started off slowly, a fact for which she was exceedingly thankful. He crept ahead almost as if he was tiptoeing, so soft that she barely felt his feet on the ground, a far cry from the clodding she was used to with the wooly rhinos. He wandered around in a circle, continually looking back to check if she was still there.
“Good boy.”
They continued riding in a circle for a while. It wasn’t anything grand, and it was certainly a far cry from Hrossþjófr’s vision of her galloping into battle, but there was still something thrilling about being atop such a powerful creature. In-Unga didn’t have any delusions about being in control—she knew damn well the moment Brynjarr decided he had had enough he’d plop down in the snow and she wouldn’t be able to do anything about it—but the illusion of control was enough to make her feel unbelievably powerful.
“Look at me, Býleistr!” she called. “Aren’t you impressed?”
“Exceedingly,” he said dryly. “Are you finished? Remember, we do have things to accomplish today.”
In-Unga frowned. Býleistr was right, of course—she was the Queen of Jotunheim, she couldn’t just spend the entire day playing with her wolves. But on the flip side, she was the Queen of Jotunheim—if she wanted to spend the entire day playing with her wolves, who could stop her?
Just as she was beginning to favor postponing her next few meetings on account of essential wolf training, Bowie rose to his feet.
She sighed. “Bowie, what did I tell you—” The wolf wasn’t listening. He knelt close to the ground, muscles tense as he eyed something in the distance. Brynjarr turned around abruptly, In-Unga grabbing at his mane to maintain her balance. He too tensed, staring unblinkingly into the snow.
She squinted into the distance. At first, she couldn’t spot anything out of the ordinary, but the tiniest movement of white fur soon gave it away. A kanína. They were smaller, rodent-like creatures that lived all over the place, not unlike the rabbits she knew from Earth. Their meat was extremely tough, practically inedible to giants and mortals alike, but her wolves loved to hunt them.
Uh oh.
“I think I’m going to get down now,” she said, patting Brynjarr’s neck. “You can chance down that furball once I’m on the ground. Lie down.” Bryn didn’t move. Oh dear.
She tried again, more authoritatively. “Brynjarr, lie down! Brynjarr—” She cut herself off with a very unqueenly shriek as the kanína bolted, the wolves bolting after it.
All In-Unga could do was hold on for dear life. The wind smacked her face as they picked up speed, whistling so loudly in her ears that she could only barely hear Býleistr shouting her name. The landscape flashed by in a blur of color.
Holy shit holy shit holy shit!
“Bryn!” she screamed. “Bryn, stop!”
It was like riding a giant rocking horse running at the speed of light. Straightening up was out of the question, so she flattened herself against Brynjarr’s body and tried to sway with his movements. To the left, she could barely make out Bowie running alongside them, leaping so far that it looked like he was flying above the snow.
Just breath. Focus on breathing. Don’t think about how much it’ll hurt if you fall. Just focus on breathing.
Although… it wasn’t that bad. The longer she held on, feeling the vibration of their paws travel up her spine, the more her panic began to fade. She pushed up a little, risking a glance over her shoulder at the distant dot that was Býleistr. Shit. They were going fast.
Exhilaration flooded her body. This is what Hross had been talking about!
In-Unga, Charmer of Wolves
For a moment, she felt like a superhero.
When she hooted, the wolves howled with her. The kanína was still running in front of them, scrambling to stay ahead, but its time was up: Bowie pounced and had the poor rodent dangling in his mouth in a second, snapping its neck like it was nothing. They slowed down, Bowie stopping completely to grin at her with his prize. Look at me, Mom! Aren’t you proud of me?
In-Unga laughed. “Good boy.”
Trotting back to Býleistr was slightly less thrill-inducing now that she could actually see where they were going without getting pelted in the face with wind. In-Unga made a mental note to have a pair of goggles made for any future wolf-runs.
“So what do you think?” she asked, grinning down at her brother-in-law.
Býleistr gaped at her. He shook his head. “I don’t know why I still haven’t learned to just expect this madness from you.”
She snickered.
After that, wolf rides became a part of In-Unga’s daily routine. Every afternoon she’d climb onto Bryn’s back and take off into the snow for about an hour, flying across the countryside with only her wolves for company. That last detail drove Býleistr mad.
“You are the single most important individual on this planet,” he snapped at her one day. “And, if you’ll excuse my saying so, likely the most vulnerable as well. You need to take a guard with you.”
“I can take care of myself, Bý,” she replied nonchalantly from where she sat with Bowie in front of the fireplace. “You should understand that as much as anyone. Besides, the wolves will take care of me.” Bowie looked up with a grin, thumping his tail against the stone floor in enthusiastic agreement. Býleistr rolled his eyes.
“And when you go flying off their back while they’re running at full speed? How will they protect you then?” He shook his head. “I’d doubt they’d even notice you were missing.”
“That will never happen,” she said stubbornly. “I’d never fall off, and they’d never leave me behind.”
It was easy to sound fearless while bathed in the warmth of the fire, but there were moments where In-Unga was a little less sure of herself (although she’d stab herself before admitting such to the prince). The landscape around Utgard was high and rocky, and although her furry companions were sure footed, she often found herself swallowing her heart as they scampered up craggy ledges.
Still, every hair-raising experience she survived increased her confidence in her abilities as a wolf-back rider and encouraged her to go farther. She taught Brynjarr to understand her commands just by the way she shifted her weight on his back. Luckily, he picked it up easily— trying to yell instructions with the wind blasting in her face got old very quickly.
Bowie took a little while longer, but they got there eventually. He wasn’t as much of a fan of having In-Unga on his back, but he also wasn’t a fan of being left out, and weeks of watching his brother get all the attention for carrying the queen wore him down. Soon enough, she could ride him as well as Bryn.
They tended to keep to the rocks on their journeys. Running through the caves would have been a lot easier, as well as less windy, but the caverns that Loki had carried her through when she first arrived on Jotunheim were haunted by ghosts of memories In-Unga couldn’t bring herself to face. Instead, she stuck to sights less sacred: mountainous cliffs and jutting rocks that Bryn and Bowie loved to race each other around, places so far off the beaten path that there was no chance of stray flashbacks popping up to punch her in the gut.
Sometimes, on the way back from the palace, she’d ride through town. It was a risk, of course, but then again when was anything not? She always wanted to laugh at the crowd that gathered whenever she came through, at the way her people’s eyes would bulge at seeing the giant wolves plodding down the road completely unphased. They would whisper amongst themselves, just as they did that first time she came to the marketplace with Griep, but the words were slightly different.
In-Unga. Vargdröttning.
Usually, she made a point of stopping at some small vendor and purchasing something— a dagger, a blanket, a piece of jewelry— the item didn’t really matter to her. She just liked interacting with her people, asking them about their families, checking up on their wellbeing. With everything that had gone wrong in the past few years, she felt that was the least she could do. That too was reminiscent her trip with Griep. So much had changed since then, and yet still so much was the same. Back then, the Jotuns hadn’t known what to make of a mortal wandering through life on Utgard as if she belonged there. In-Unga got the feeling that they still weren’t sure what to make of her now, but they treated her with respect and grace and that was all she could ever hope for.
Some of the changes hurt. The absence of her Forest Twins was an ache she carried with her everywhere she went. In-Unga had never really realized how deeply she depended on them both until they were gone. Now, without them, she missed them everywhere. At the table during meals. In the throne room when she held court. Just walking through the halls—it was such a silly, stupid thing, but she felt naked making her way through the palace alone even now, a couple years after she lost them.
Most times during her afternoon ride, she’d dismount at the top of some mountain and let Bowie and Brynjarr hunt for a bit. She’d find a rock to sit on, sheltered from the wind, and make a list of all the things she wanted to tell them. How she had been trying to teach Huld to play gin rummy, but Bowie ate half the deck. How Hross had written that Dagný had finally said her first word: daddy. How Býleistr was all pissed off because Bryn had somehow gotten into his greenhouse while In-Unga had let them out to hunt and knocked over some important plants from Alfheim.
Griep would have gotten a kick out of that last one: in the months before everything went wrong, Gjálp had been spending a suspicious amount of time in Býleistr’s greenhouse, something her sister and In-Unga had been relentlessly teasing her about. You know, payback for all the teasing she had doled out over the years. She had been getting pretty annoyed about it.
“I don’t know what the two of you have gotten in your heads,” she had scowled. “Prince Býleistr was simply showing off his imported aster flowers. They only bloom for a short period of time—”
“Riiight,” In-Unga said, smirking. “That’s definitely what he’s been showing you.”
Gjálp sputtered, scandalized, while Griep exploded into a fit of very uncharacteristic giggles.
On her rock in the middle of the snow, In-Unga giggled too. It was nice, having these quick little moments where she could almost trick herself into thinking that everything was fine. They were fleeting though. By the time her wolves returned to her, a few minutes later, she was sobbing uncontrollably.
She missed them so much.
But with everything that had changed in the past few years, everything that had been uprooted and ripped to shreds, at least there remained one constant in her life.
Periods still sucked Hel.
Regardless, In-Unga always tried to carry on with her day as usual. She was the queen, after all—she couldn’t be seen as weak. So, she’d hold court like everything was normal, sit up straight on the throne and pretend she didn’t feel like someone was wringing out her insides like wet laundry. If the giants around her noticed the stench of blood (which of course they did), they knew better than to bring it up.
But today had just been too much. Meetings heaped on top of meetings, every new face bearing a different demand or a different complaint, every new conversation only exacerbating the ache in her head and the knots in her stomach. By noon, she called it a day.
In bed, burrowed into her nest of blankets, In-Unga existed in the frustrating in-between: too tired to be fully awake, but too uncomfortable to drift off to sleep. She buried her face in her pillow and cursed the blizzard outside. It seems periods always worsened with the cold.
From the doorframe, Bowie whined. Brynjarr had easily accepted the reality that there would be no afternoon run today, instead electing to pass out at the foot of the bed, but his brother did not give up so easily. If In-Unga hadn’t felt so awful, she would’ve laughed at him—the doorway to her bedroom was far too narrow for the giant wolf. He was just barely managing to squeeze through.
He whined again.
She groaned. “Can’t play with you right now, buddy.”
Rolling over, she nestled deeper under the covers, seeking protection against the biting cold. It was a useless attempt. She never seemed to be able to get warm anymore.
Bowie padded over to her bedside, his claws drumming on the floor making him sound like some sort of depressed tap dancer. He snuffled at her hair.
“Go away, Bowie,” she muttered when he pressed his clammy nose to her forehead. She pushed his giant head away halfheartedly. “Lie down with Bryn.”
Suddenly, the whole bed dipped, and the giant wolf was attempting to snuggle his way into to her blankets.
“Bow—” she tried to push him away again, with even less effort than before. “You’re too big!” But with a final push, he nuzzled under her blankets next to her, grinning widely and smacking her face with a mouthful of doggy breath. In-Unga winced.
“Such an attention hog,” she groaned, even as she reached to scratch the fur under his chin. “You don’t even care that I’m trying to rest, do you?” He snuggled closer, sighing in contentment when In-Unga shifted so that she was resting her head on his fluffy neck rather than her pillow.
“Yes, you’re a good boy. I’m sorry. I’m just having a bad day.” She heaved a sigh of her own. “Do you know what my small council said to me, first thing when I sat down?”
He cocked his head. In-Unga took that as a sign to continue.
“They think I should get married. Remarried.” She swallowed bitterly. “They said it would help ‘maintain my legitimacy as queen.’ As if I’m not already fucking legitimate!” She smacked the mattress with her palm, glaring at her wolf. “Do you know the shit I went through to get to this point?”
Bowie whined.
“Right, of course you don’t,” she apologized. “You weren’t born yet. But take my word for it, it was a lot.”
On the floor, Brynjarr shifted in his sleep. In-Unga continued.
“And then there’s the whole subject of heirs. ‘Your Majesty, since you failed to have a child to King Loki before he died, you have no one to advance your lineage’—yes I’m well aware of that!” she shouted at the ceiling, blinking the steaming tears from her eyes. “I’m reminded of that fact every damn day of my life! I don’t need you to tell me!”
Her nose was running. She wiped it angrily with the heel of her hand. They had been trying to have a baby, her and Loki. After years of pushing it off, waiting for things to stabilize, they had finally felt ready. Loki had told her not to be frustrated if she didn’t get pregnant right away.
“Our biologies are fundamentally different. It may take some time.” They had been in bed, tangled up in each other under the cover of darkness. In-Unga could still feel his breath in her hair when he leaned down to kiss her head. “Don’t worry, dröttning. We’re in no rush.”
He had gotten called away a few months later, her womb still empty.
“They had a whole list of men they thought would be suitable,” she muttered to Bowie, blocking out memories that hurt too much to touch. “They had organized it all and everything. I felt like the Bachelorette. Totally ridiculous! And they had the audacity to look at me like I was the crazy one!”
The way they had stared at her, when she categorically refused to even consider their proposition. “But my queen, don’t you want to have children?”
Yes. Yes she did. She wanted to have children whose ebony hair matched their father’s, who carried both his intelligence and his mischievous streak within them. She wanted to see her husband’s eyes light up when they learned a new magic trick, wanted to laugh at the regal King of Jotunheim crawling around the room on his hands and knees with his toddler giggling on his back. She wanted to cradle her baby and smile at its sleeping face in awe, wondering at the perfect mix of her and the man she loved so much, a mix that could exist with no one else.
Yes, she wanted to have children. Loki’s children.
In-Unga ran her fingers through Bowie’s fur. “He’s not coming back,” she whispered. “I know that. I’ve made my peace with it. But I can’t pretend that it’s okay. I can’t just… replace him.”
Bowie licked her cheek with a tongue the size of her entire face. In-Unga sputtered, snorting. “Ugh… thanks buddy.” He nodded, moving to rest his head on her stomach so she could scratch his ears. She stroked his long fur absentmindedly. The wolves were the closest thing to children she was ever going to have. She was at peace with that too. Her advisors may not understand, but they didn’t have to. She had done so much for her kingdom. They could give her this.
And so time marched on. Winter turned to spring, spring to summer, then back to winter again, over and over as if nothing had ever happened.
It was a quiet night in her quarters when things changed.
In-Unga was skimming over a document by the fire, having abandoned the desk in favor of the furry rug, a warm blanket, and her wolf-pillows. Bryn’s eyes were fluttering. Bowie was already fast asleep, sighing contently. Behind them, Huld softly cleaned up the remnants of the late dinner she had eaten alone in her room. Save for the crackling of the flames, the room was silent.
It was becoming increasingly difficult to focus on the lines of script. The flickering light was almost hypnotic—In-Unga leaned against Bowie’s back to rest her eyes for a moment and found herself unable to sit back up.
She yawned. Probably time to call it a night. Still, she felt so nice here—her bed would be large and cold, and she’d have to get up and walk all the way to the next room to even get there…
In-Unga was just beginning to doze off completely when the high-pitched beep nearly scared her out of her skin.
The wolves were on their feet immediately, knocking her out of her reverie and barking so loudly the room shook. The beeping continued, shrill and ear-piercing, and In-Unga cursed under her breath as she pulled herself up.
I live in a damn circus.
Huld was standing at the table, hands over her ears and red eyes trained on the corner of the room. “Your majesty!” she cried. “It’s the thing!”
In-Unga followed her gaze to the telephone-like communicator Tony Stark had created for them, back when everything was nice and happy and Thor had convinced everyone it was a good idea for Jotunheim to have some method of contact with the Avengers. For the first time in five years, it was flashing red.
She made her way across the room in a fog. The last time it rang… that call had broken her. Broken everything. Told her that the hopeless mess her life had turned into would be here to stay, and that she would have to clean it up alone. In-Unga hadn’t touched the device since. What could Earth’s Mightiest Heroes possibly have to say to her now?
Still, it couldn’t be worse than last time, could it?
In-Unga hushed the wolves, who fell silent at her command, and picked up the receiver.
“Hello?”
Agent Romanov’s sharp voice said her Midgardian name. “How have you been?”
“Alright, I guess, considering everything,” she answered cautiously. Somehow, she doubted that after half a decade the assassin had just decided to phone for a social call. “Is everything okay?”
She was right. “We’re working on something,” Agent Romanov said. “We’re not positive how everything’s going to turn out, but at the moment, things are looking good. I thought you should know, just in case things get crazy.”
In-Unga frowned. “What are you talking about?”
“The Snap,” she said. She inhaled softly. “We think we can bring everyone back.”
In-Unga’s heart stopped.
For a moment, she just stood there, barely comprehending her words.
We can bring everyone back.
Romanov said her name again. “Are you still there?”
“Yeah,” she said shakily. “Are—are you serious? You going—how is that even possible? You said before—without the stones—”
“I know,” the assassin said. “We still need them. But Stark’s come up with something that would allow us to retrieve them before they were destroyed. We’ve planned out where they are across the timeline, the easiest times and places for us to access them—”
“Wait.” In-Unga’s head was spinning. “Retrieve them before they were destroyed?” She had to be misunderstanding. Surely Romanov wasn’t suggesting what it sounded like she was suggesting. “How is that possible? Unless you have a—”
“Time machine?” There was a wry smile to Romanov’s voice. “Yeah, that’s about right.”
“What?”
“It’s a long story, but like I said, Stark’s come up with something,” she continued. “I know it sounds insane, but we’ve proven it works—we ran a test with Barton, and Lang basically did it unintentionally for five years—”
“Lang?” In-Unga asked weakly.
“You don’t know him. But my point is it’s possible.”
It’s possible.
“Time travel,” she said. “That’s what’s happening? I haven’t gone crazy, you’re actually telling me you can time travel?”
“Well, you did marry the guy who attacked New York, so I can’t say you’re not crazy,” Romanov said. In-Unga was so overwhelmed that the poor attempt at humor didn’t even bother her. “But yes, that’s exactly what I’m telling you.”
They’re going to bring them back. In-Unga was shaking. Loki, Griep, Gjálp… they’re going to bring them back!
“When is this happening? How is this going to happen? Is there something I can do?” The questions tumbled out faster than she had time to think.
“We’re going out tomorrow. Technically speaking, everything will only take a few minutes, so we should have the stones by then.”
In-Unga gasped. “That soon?”
“Yeah. We’re not sure exactly how they’ll work once we have them, but Thanos was able to wipe out half the universe just by snapping his fingers, so we’re guessing it’s not that difficult.”
“So, everyone could be back tomorrow!” The shock was beginning to wear off, replaced by a surge of pure elation. The wolves, sensing her excitement, began barking again. “Hey, shut up! Both of you!”
Romanov laughed. “I didn’t know you had dogs.”
“It’s a fairly new development.” So new that Loki and the Twins never got to meet them. Her eyes were stinging. “Tomorrow?”
“Hopefully, yes,” In-Unga had never known Romonov to sound so excited. “That’s why I wanted to get into contact with you. We’re not sure how this will work, what kind of widespread effects it can might cause. I thought you deserved a heads up.”
She nodded. “Thank you. Will you let me know when you get back with the stones?”
“Sure thing.”
“Well…” In-Unga wondered if she was dreaming, if she was going to wake up and curse her stupid brain for letting her hope for a moment. But this was real. This was happening. “Good luck!” she said into the receiver, pulse thrumming.
She could hear the smile in Romanov’s voice. “Thanks. I’ll get back to you tomorrow.”
In-Unga set the receiver down in a daze. When she turned, both her wolves and her maid were staring at her with eyes so wide it was practically comical.
“Huld,” she said quietly. “Get Býleistr in here, would you?”
She spent the next day huddled next to the communicator, anxiously tapping her feet on the stone floor.
Býleistr had been willing to hold court in her place today, but he had been less inclined to share her eager optimism.
“The past has already been written, In-Unga,” he said softly. “That’s not something anyone can change.”
“But there’s a chance they might,” she cried. She pushed the hair out of her face. “A chance. That’s more than we’ve had for the last five years!”
“Getting your hopes up will only cause yourself more pain when they fail. You’ll be grieving all over again—"
“I never stopped grieving,” she whispered. Her eyes were damp again as she looked back up at Býleistr. He sighed.
“I hope it works,” he said. “I do. It’s just—” he cut himself off, shaking his head and abruptly standing up to leave. “Goodnight, your Majesty.”
Behind her, the wolves paced back and forth, whining softly as they picked up on her nervous energy. In-Unga couldn’t tear her eyes away from the phone. Had they left yet? Was everything going to plan? She let out a worried breath. If only there was something she could do. Something besides just sitting here and feeling useless.
By the afternoon Romanov still had not called and In-Unga had completely chewed through her bottom lip. She should have heard something by now. She was certain of it. Hadn’t Romanov said that it was only supposed to take a few minutes?
Huld brought her lunch at around noon. In-Unga left it on the table untouched. She wasn’t hungry. In fact, she felt like she was going to be sick.
Bowie was scratching at the floor. The sound of his nails dragging across the stone put her even more on edge than she was already, but he ignored her when she told him to stop. In the corner, Byrnjarr growled softly.
Her room was warmer than usual. She found herself shrugging off the blanket she usually kept draped across her shoulders in her quarters and letting it fall to the floor. Out of nowhere, she felt confused. Nothing was the way it was supposed to be. Everything was happening at once. It was overwhelming—so overwhelming. She couldn’t think— wait.
These aren’t my feelings.
In-Unga shot up so quickly she knocked her chair over. Bowie and Bryn were on their feet in less than a second, bouncing around and barking at the top of their lungs. With shaking hands, she reached for her neck, for what had become nothing more than an old scar these past five years. At the brush of her fingertips, sparks shot through her skin.
Her gasp melted into messy sobs. “Loki.”
Outside, people were shouting, voices blending together into an amorphous blob of noise. Someone pounded at her door.
“Your Majesty!” Njal shouted. “Your Majesty, something is happening—”
They’re back. They’re all back…
In-Unga barged through her door without a word to her guards, dashing down the hallways at lightning speed with Brynjarr and Bowie trotting at her heels. There were people everywhere—servants, nobles, people gasping, people embracing, people running through the halls like maniacs like her—In-Unga ignored all of them. She flung herself down the stairs with her wolves still behind her.
The room she was rushing to hadn’t been touched in five years. She had felt stupid, giving that order, but having someone else move in was admitting that they were gone forever, and she couldn’t do that.
But it didn’t matter anymore.
In-Unga was completely out of breath by the time she flung open the door. The woman standing in the middle of room looked up as she pressed her fingers to her temple, red eyes furrowed in a frown.
“In-Unga,” she asked. “What is—”
Gjálp didn’t have time to finish before In-Unga crashed into her in a bear hug, bawling.
She sputtered. “In-Unga—”
“You’re back!” In-Unga sobbed. “You’re back! You’re back!”
Gjálp returned the embrace tentatively. “What is happening? What—Norns!” She stiffened, yanking In-Unga backwards. The mortal queen turned to find that Bryn and Bowie had followed her into the room and were now looming over the couch with all the intimidation of a pair of overexcited Labradors.
“Oh no, it’s fine—” In-Unga hiccupped, finding words astonishingly difficult to control in the moment. “Mine. They’re mine. Don’t worry! Uh—lie down!” Thankfully, they obeyed without an issue, their tales flying around like propellers. “See?” She gulped, turning back to Gjálp. She gripped her wrist, just to remind herself that this was real, and she wasn’t dreaming.
“You’re back,” she whispered again, hoarsely.
“You keep saying that,” Gjálp said, still frowning suspiciously at the wolves. “What happened? Where am I back from?”
In-Unga let out a wet laugh. “You were gone. He got the stones and took out everyone—half of everyone, half of everyone everywhere,” she laughed again, because it suddenly sounded funny saying out loud with Gjálp staring down at her like she had lost her mind. Maybe she had. It didn’t matter anymore.
“Your Majesty.”
They both jumped at the unfamiliar voice behind them. In-Unga turned to find herself face to face with a man—a human man, with a goatee and red cloak, standing in the middle of a ring of fire. In a second, the wolves had flanked her, teeth bared and growling.
Shit, I guess I have lost my mind.
Gjálp was the first to find her voice. “Who—what—how did you get in here?”
The man ignored her. “Your Majesty,” he said, facing In-Unga. “I am Dr. Stephen Strange of New York.”
The name vaguely stirred something in her memory. “You died in the Snap,” she said. “You were with Mr. Stark.”
Dr. Strange nodded. “The effects of the Snap may have been reversed, but this isn’t over yet.”  He fixed her with a solemn stare. “Your husband needs your help.”
Somehow, she had known he was going to say that. A wave of resolution washed over her. Standing straight, she wiped her cheeks. “What do you need me to do?”
The smoke was stifling. Strange had said it was a war zone, but In-Unga hadn’t expected for even the upstate sky to be blackened with debris. She had been to this compound before, years ago with Thor and Loki. It had felt a bit like stepping into the future, with the manicured lawns and the crisp white doors that whooshed as the slid open automatically. It had been nothing like the scorched wasteland flaring before her. The smoke was so thick she could barely make out the looming warships hovering over the skyline.
The dark warriors lined the horizon, a mass of limbs extending far beyond her range of sight. In-Unga squared her shoulders as she road through the portal. She could see him, standing in the middle of all this destruction, the golden light of the portals casting shadows on his purple skin. For so long, he had been faceless to her, the untouchable enemy who she had never seen but whose name she fell asleep cursing every night. And yet here he was in the flesh, living, breathing, vulnerable.
Thanos.
Brynjarr howled. From her perch atop his back, In-Unga felt the vibration in every part of her body. Bowie joined in, his usually mournful cries dark and full of promise. The sound mixed with the battle cries from portals down the line, words chanted in languages she didn’t speak, but in sentiment she understood perfectly.
You took everything. Now we’re taking it back.
The Jotuns behind her understood too. With deep voices, they answered the cries with chants of their own, shouts crescendoing with every individual rushing through the portal. Utgard had been in such chaos that she hadn’t expected anyone to rally to her call, but vengeance was a powerful motivator. She had stood on the balcony and told her people that the one responsible for their suffering was out there, still struggling to once again rip their loved ones from their arms, and just like that, her armies mobilized.
Now here she was, Queen In-Unga of Jotunheim, facing down the enemy atop a howling vargr, her soldiers armed and ready behind her. She felt strangely calm.
I’m bringing Loki home.
He was here somewhere. Even if Strange hadn’t told her how he had been resurrected on the plains of Wakanda with the other fallen warriors, she would have known. She felt his steely resolve as he prepared for battle, let it swirl and mix with hers across the battlefield.
This is it.
When Thor shouted, she screamed with him. And then they were all running. The appeal of two nine-foot-tall wolves in combat was quickly apparent: her babies tore through alien fighters like rare steaks. Brynjarr didn’t even need to be directed; he seemed to know exactly where to go, when to duck, when to tackle. Bowie cleared a way through the chaos, trampling everyone in his path.
They zig-zagged across the battleground, In-Unga pressed tightly into Bryn’s fur to avoid shooting darts of light and projectiles flying through the air every which way, no clue who was shooting them. A roar consumed the land, built from rallying cries and death shrieks, guns shooting and bones cracking, and in the midst of all this pandemonium, she found him.
Loki threw his blades with a catlike grace, completely surrounded and yet completely in control, as if he had never left.
“Bryn!” she steered him left, and he understood instantly. Snarling, the wolves rushed the scene. Loki whipped around in shock, In-Unga barely registering his fleeting moment of confusion as she felt the thud of alien bodies crushed on the ground. When Loki called out her name she found she could barely breathe.
“Down!” she choked at Brynjarr. She slid off his back to unsteady legs and managed to hold back her tears until she threw her arms around her husband.
The battle faded away. She sobbed on his shoulder, drinking in the scent she thought she’d never experience again, relishing the way he gripped her so tightly she felt as though she might break. She clutched at him too, afraid that if she let go he’d disintegrate through her fingers. He whispered her name against her hair, that soft baritone she thought she’d never hear ever again, and she held him even closer.
He was the one to pull away first, cupping her cheek in his palm as he wiped her teardrops with his palm. His green eyes held her in their stare.
“Are you alright?” he asked.
In­-Unga exhaled, the tiniest laugh. Less than an hour ago he had been dead, and he was worried about her?
“Yeah,” she murmured. It was a tiny breath under the rage of battle, but somehow, she knew he heard. “I am now.”
“Come on, you scaredy-cat, it’s fine,” In-Unga laughed from atop Bowie on the beach at Márfjall.
“I’m not scared, just concerned.” Loki stood on the ground besides Brynjarr, the two sizing each other up suspiciously. For the most part, her husband and her wolves had been getting along well—at least, well enough. Bowie was still bitter that his place in In-Unga’s bed had been taken from him, and Bryn was untrusting by nature, but it was getting better. Loki still didn’t understand how creatures that showed such savagery on the battlefield could be so cuddly at home.
“Look, if I can do it without a problem, you certainly can manage.” Bowie whined as he shifted his weight between his feet, anxious to sprint down the red sand. She rubbed his neck and fixed Loki with a pointed stare.
He shook his head, smiling uneasily. “You’ve had five years of practice, love.”
“Yeah, which I never would’ve got if I hadn’t gotten on first.” She turned back to the small group watching behind them. “Give me some help here!”
Griep frowned, holding Dagný in her arms. “I don’t know, In-Unga. I don’t think vargrs are meant to carry people.”
“I thought you liked animals—”
“It’s a giant vargr—”
“Now, my precious ice-heart” Hross said, intertwining his fingers with hers. “In-Unga has proved time and time again that there are those more than capable of riding a wolf. Both myself and Prince Býleistr can attest to that.”
Býleistr chuckled. “She fell off the first time she tried.”
“No, no!” In-Unga whipped back to Loki. “That was on Bowie, because Bowie likes to be difficult.  Brynjarr has never given me a problem, which is why you’re going to try riding him.” Bowie gave an offended snort.
“I still can’t believe you can tell them apart,” Gjálp said. “They look exactly the same, smell exactly the same—”
“I told you, Bowie is the one with two different colored eyes!”
“But when you can’t see their eyes—”
Dali pulled at Hrossþjófr’s free arm. “Wanna ride wolf!”
“Oh, for Pete’s sake!” In-Unga groaned. “Loki, get on the damn wolf before I give your spot to a toddler.”
Loki huffed indignantly, but he pulled himself over Bryn’s back and into a sitting position. “Happy, wife?”
“Ecstatic,” she tried to maintain her stern, but the sight of him balancing haphazardly on the back of her wolf made it hard not to grin like an idiot. “Now, tell him to get up.”
“Get up, wolf,” he said emotionlessly.
Brynjarr looked at her in exasperation. Are you kidding me with this guy?
In-Unga sighed. “Tell him nicely.”
He through his hands in the air. “It’s a wolf!”
“Loki…”
“Fine.” He looked back down at Bryn. “Get up wolf, please.”
Behind them, Hross was cackling uncontrollably. In-Unga rolled her eyes. “I think that’s the best he’s gonna do Bryn,” she said. “Come on, up, up!”
Brynjarr grunted, but still hopped to his feet far more quickly than usual. Loki gasped as he struggled to right his balance. She pressed her hand to her mouth to muffle her giggles.
Loki scowled. “I hear you snickering over there. This is why I didn’t want to do this.”
“What do you mean?” she asked innocently. “You’re doing great, sweetie!”
He glared.
Oh, if looks could kill.
“Now what?” he asked sourly.
She leaned forward, clicking her tongue. “Now, you hold on, and try to keep up.”
“What—” Loki was cut off with a cry as the two wolves took off down the rusty beach. In-Unga laughed as they rode alongside each other, Loki clinging desperately to Bryn’s fur. His startled expression morphed into something more sinister when he noticed her amusement.
“I’m going to get you for this!” he yelled over the wind.
She grinned. “You better!”
In-Unga wouldn’t have it any other way.
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on-thedge · 4 years
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I felt like I had to write a follow up to the In-Unga death.
Never forgotten a Frostbite flurry
Based on Frostbite by @maiden-of-asgard
——
He awoke the next morning and she didn’t. His queen, his love, his life was gone and would not return. It wasn’t as if he didn’t know it was coming, she had aged, quite gracefully to her end, but nothing could prepare him for it.
He didn’t show up to court that day, many came to check on him but he sent them all away, he needed time, what he needed was more time, but time had run out. He sat holding her in his lap, like the first day he met her. She had hated him then, the closeness had been a necessity then, it felt like a nececity now.
And he cried. And so did many others. It was his responsibility to tell the court what would happen. The grief was tangible in the room, but there was nothing that could be of comfort. Jotunheim’s Queen, so full of life, was lost to them forever.
The trip to the coast was solemn. She was to have a proper send off to Valhalla, at sea, the coast she had loved so much, the coast where he had wed his love, now the coast where he would lose her. He could bring himself to stay in the caravan, instead he rode with His brother in silence, he ate and slept very little on the trip up, and when he arrived the joy he was previously met with was gone, the light of the coast was stoned up.
He stayed in his quarters up until the moment of the funeral, His queen lay silent and unmoving in the attached room, perfectly preserved and fully dead. It was sickening. The room that they had spent their nights together now only for him. His only Queen would never return to him. The ceremony came to fast, and somehow not fast enough.
The Court was all gathered and solemn, each with a white flower to send her off, their final goodbye. Loki watched as her closest friends, his closest friends wept by her boat, hand crafted and so small. She was so small. Her white gown was light and flowed against the harsh colors of the sand and sea. Their children said their goodbyes. Her own children had lost her and were now gathered by her final resting place. The final flower was to be placed by him, before sending her out to sea.
He knelt by her small boat, full of flowers and took a long, last look at the woman who had changed his world, had given him a reason to live, and to make life wonderful. The woman who had taken Jotunheim by storm and changed the lives of all she met. Now lying here so simple, adorned with her crown and his ring. He pushed the boat off shore. Greip clung to Hross and Gjálp as Býleistr lit the arrow, before pulling back his shot. It hit the wooden boat and burst into flames. The wind whipped harsh, but the fire burned strong. And suddenly they were there, his daughters and sons, gathered from where they had traveled, all of the court and those from other lands. Queens and kings, lords, ladies, nobles from every land were there. For her.
The flame vanished over the horizon but her presence weighed on all who knew her.
You will never be forgotten Drottning
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positivewitch · 4 years
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Frostbite ❄️ @maiden-of-asgard
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kason-nvidiade-art · 5 years
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Various In-Unga’s from @maiden-of-asgard​‘s AFAB-Reader x Loki fic Frostbite! it’s a good fic and I highly recommended it. The best part is there’s no Y/N, a fic style that.....absolutely kills the read for me. But for this I wanted to be as inclusive as I could be, given the limited number of In-Unga I was drawing, I don’t remember how much is described about her, I’m pretty sure she’s hella vague? Which is good for immersion, which is what fics like these are all about, I didn’t really draw any different body types because I’m not all that good with them yet, and I really want want to get more practice in before posting so sorry!
Either way, this was a lot of fun and great warm up, I still have some other Frostbite art I’ve been needing to finish....oops....sorry about that 0u0′;; but yeah! so this is my version(s) of In-Unga! I hope ya’ll like it And if Maiden want’s to use any of the clothing styles she totally can, That’s another thing I’ve been meaning to do lol....I really like that bikini and I get the feeling Loki would too ;]
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ao3feed-lokiangst · 4 years
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Running with the Wolves
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/3hw4Z7Q
by Cozy_The_Overlord
After the events of Infinity War ripped her life to pieces, Queen In-Unga forges forward as sole ruler of Jotunheim, finding solace in the two orphaned wolf puppies she finds outside her sleigh.
AU in which Loki didn’t die at the beginning of Infinity War– he accompanied Thor to Nidavellir, then to Wakanda, and died in the Snap alongside the Avengers.
Words: 12164, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English
Fandoms: Marvel Cinematic Universe, Thor (Movies), Loki-Fandom, Frostbite by Maiden of Asgard
Rating: Not Rated
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Categories: F/M
Characters: Loki (Marvel), In-Unga, Byleistr, Hrossþjófr, Griep, Gjalp, Huld
Relationships: loki X In-unga, Loki x Reader
Additional Tags: Infinity War AU, Based on Frostbite by Maiden of Asgard, Angst, Fluff and Angst, Grief/Mourning, Hurt/Comfort, Angst with a Happy Ending, Wolves
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/3hw4Z7Q
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cozy-the-overlord · 4 years
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Cozy’s Masterlist
Here are all the stories I’ve posted to Tumblr as of 5/2/24.
Thanks so much for reading! :)
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Original Works
Miss Americana and the Heartbreak Prince
Word Count: 1,888
Chapters: 1/1
Summary: She came to the school with a singular goal: to be crowned Miss Americana at the End of Year ceremony. But with the crown comes clarity, and she may not like what she sees.
Based on the Taylor Swift song of the same name
Getaway Car
Word Count: 4,618
Chapters: 1/1
Summary: Everything had been going so well until he almost hit the bride…
Based on the Taylor Swift song of the same name
Safe and Sound
Word Count: 2,836
Chapters: 1/1
Summary: Since the war ripped through her village and took her husband from her, Ainsley’s only priority has been shielding her young daughter from the violence. At night, she fears even that is too much to ask for.
Based on the Taylor Swift song of the same name
Viva La Vida
Word Count: 1,155
Chapters: 1/1
Summary: He built his empire from the dust and dirt with his bare hands, high above anything the men of his court had ever dared to dream. But he failed to see that his castles stand upon pillars of salt and pillars of sand.
Based on the Coldplay song of the same name
Fanfiction
Until Tomorrow
Word Count: 2,463
Chapters: 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Reader
Summary: Quarantine by itself is lonely enough. Quarantine amidst a rainstorm of biblical proportions is downright depressing. Lucky for you, a visitor arrives just in time to keep you company.
Dances and Daggers
Word Count: 51,970
Chapters: 18/18
1: The Dagger; 2: The Piano; 3. The Wish; 4. The Indiscretion; 5: The Aftermath; 6: The Discovery; 7: The Gatekeeper; 8: The Musician; 9: The Practice; 10: The Consequences; 11: The Games; 12: The Letter; 13: The Apothecary; 14: The Reckoning; 15: The Truth; 16: The Unveiling; 17: The Resolution; 18: The End
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x OFC
Summary: The Summer Festival is upon Asgard, as is the tradition of the dagger ceremony, where each unmarried gentleman chooses a lady to bestow with the honor of carrying his dagger for the night. As Prince Thor’s betrothed, Teki’s only goal is to accept his dagger with grace and hope that her violent stepfather doesn’t find fault with her in the process. But Prince Thor is unpredictable, and when he ignores his engagement on a whim Teki finds herself in a desperate situation. Luckily, Thor isn’t the only prince in Asgard…
Attached
Word Count: 3,518
Chapters: 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x OFC
Summary: Her master warned her not to get too attached. If only she had listened.
AU where Asgard and Star Wars coexist and Loki actually died at the end of the first Thor movie.
Running with the Wolves
Word Count: 12,192
Chapters: 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x In-Unga
Summary: After the events of Infinity War ripped her life to pieces, Queen In-Unga forges forward as sole ruler of Jotunheim, finding solace in the two orphaned wolf puppies she finds outside her sleigh.
AU in which Loki didn’t die at the beginning of Infinity War– he accompanied Thor to Nidavellir, then to Wakanda, and died in the Snap alongside the Avengers.
Based on Frostbite by @maiden-of-asgard​
Crimson Curls
Word Count: 15,307
Chapters: 3/3
1: Disappearance; 2: Perception; 3: Solace
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x OFC
Summary: A barista at the Avengers Tower coffeeshop goes missing. Her boyfriend, prominent Avengers engineer Michael Hauer, headlines a desperate campaign to find her, aided by the support of Tony Stark and the rest of the super-powered team. But as Hauer’s narrative begins to unravel, it becomes clear that a certain Asgardian prince knows more than he’s telling.
Christmas Across the Stars
Word Count: 2,938
Chapters: 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x OFC
Summary: A backlogged mission on Jotunheim means Piper’s going to miss Christmas with her family this year. At least she’s not completely alone.
Written for @the-emo-asgardian​‘s ‘Tis The Season Writing Challenge on the prompt “snowed in and unable to get to family”
Now, Forever, and Always
Word Count: 7,031
Chapters: 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x OFC
Summary: She was perfect—intelligent, entertaining, kind, beautiful… but mortal. Loki was determined not to lose her.
Whole
Word Count: 2,809
Chapters: 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x OFC
Summary: After surviving years of torture at the hands of the Mad Titan Thanos, a broken, weary Loki returns home to find his childhood sweetheart has moved on with another man.
For the Lobster of Loki
Word Count: 2,850
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Fem!Reader
Summary: Exposure to terrigen mist during a mission-gone-wrong results in you developing some newfound aquatic abilities. Unfortunately, this opens the door for your Avengers teammates to make use of the bane of your existence: fish puns.
Look at Me
Word Count: 1,799
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Medusa
Summary: Medusa didn’t get many visitors. Those she did usual were there seeking her head. But there’s something different about this stranger …
Just One Last Word
Word Count: 4,360
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x OFC
Summary: As children, she swore she’d become the greatest author in all of Asgard. Loki had his doubts.
Happiness
Word Count: 4,078
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x OFC
Summary: A daughter of Thanos, Eija had grown accustomed to the isolated nature of life on the Sanctuary. Only when her father orders her to keep watch over an injured prisoner does she begin to realize how lonely it is.
Funny Little Ups and Downs
Word Count: 3,824
Chapters: 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Sigyn
Summary: Loki is having a bad day. The love of his life is being sent away to marry some ridiculous Vanir prince, and there’s nothing he can do about it. Then her little sister shows up to give him a pep talk.
Severed
Word Count: 5,130
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Jedi!OFC
Summary: When the Council sends Sydaya to retrieve the tesseract, she’s forced to confront an old friend she thought she’d never see again.
Requiem
Word Count: 910
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: None
Summary: He let go, and he fell.
Sweet Duplicity
Word Count: 2,107
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x OFC
Summary: She was sent to Asgard with a mission, clear and simple. Fate had other plans.
Kiss the Girl
Word Count: 1,181
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Gender Neutral Reader
Summary: A night of roller-coastering has left you without a voice, Little Mermaid style. If only you had a dark haired prince of your own to kiss it better.
Masquerade
Word Count: 1,659
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x OFC
Summary: It didn’t have to be bad, Loki told himself. His parents were married through such an arrangement, and they were happy together. He would be happy too.
Miles To Go Before I Sleep
Word Count: 1,663
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Sigyn
Summary: She could accept this fate, did accept this fate, if it meant that he would escape safe and sound. But Loki could never let her fall alone.
A Breath and a Whisper
Word Count: 6,273
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: None
Summary: Find me. That’s what the voice bids. Loki wants to ignore it. He’s the only one who can hear its whisper, who can see the strange symbols that appear before him everywhere he turns. He closes his eyes, tries to drown it all out, but still it persists. Find me.
Birdsong
Word Count: 1,087
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Female Reader
Summary: In the middle of the night, Loki gets up to comfort his infant daughter and thinks about how lucky he is.
Fractured
Word Count: 22,519
Chapters: 2/2
1. Before; 2. After
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x OFC
Summary: Before the Bifrost, Runa's life held everything she could possibly want-- a respected position as a warrior of Asgard, a freeing separation from her overbearing father and fainthearted brother, and a lifelong home in the arms of the love of her life. After the Bifrost, it held only sorrow.
Orange is the Happiest Color
Word Count: 2,657
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Gender Neutral Reader
Summary: “I had a dream that you proposed to me with an orange.” He chuckled, relaxing back into his pillow. “Did you say yes?”
Burning the Midnight Oil
Word Count: 1,858
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Gender Neutral Reader
Summary: You’re alone and miserable, up far too late losing your mind over an essay that isn’t even due tomorrow when Loki pops in with flowers
A Friend From Work
Word Count: 5,084
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Gender Neutral Reader
Summary: Loki pops into your lab one day at Stark Tower. Things just get weirder from there.
Taking Notes
Word Count: 1,926
Chapters 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Gender Neutral Reader
Summary: You need a whiteboard. Loki offers to be of assistance.
Free Fall
Word Count: 3,482
Chapters: 1/1
Pairing: Loki (Marvel) x Gender Neutral Reader
Summary: Tony Stark arranged for an Avengers Teambuilding Day at a local amusement park. Loki had been hoping to avoid it — he’s had enough thrills to last a lifetime time, he has no desire to seek out more — but you and your endearing enthusiasm for roller coasters convince him to come along. However, the free fall drop tower you start out with turns out to be a bit more thrilling than he bargained for.
The Lighthouse
Word count: 10,141
Chapters: 1/1
Pairing: Loki x Sigyn
Summary: Stabbed by Kurse on Svartalfheim and fading away in his brother's arms, Loki expects to wake in Valhalla, having finally died in battle like a true Asgardian warrior. Instead, he finds himself drowning in a sea of inky black, the only light coming from the stoic tower guarding over the darkness. The woman who tends the lighthouse is as mysterious as she is caring, and Loki can't shake the feeling that she knows far more than she's telling …
The Little Thrall Girl
Word count: 4,874
Chapters: 1/1
Pairing: None
Summary: A young Viking thrall sent out after dark to collect firewood finds herself hopelessly lost in the freezing cold woods. Desperate to warm herself, she turns to magic, but luckily for her, her inexperience ends up catching the attention of a benevolent god ...
Through Panes of Glass
Word count: 1,435
Chapters: 1/1
Pairing: Loki x Sigyn
Summary: A mission to an alternate timeline brings Loki face to face with a relic from his past. Against better judgment, he finds himself seeking out one far more dear.
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cappa-cappa · 5 years
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Asgard Has Fallen
Really shitty fic inspired by @maiden-of-asgard ‘s Frostbite
Canon divergent (and fic divergent) Loki Laufeyson x Gender Neutral Reader even though Loki’s barely in it.
Summary: After the fall of Asgard, In-Unga moves on... until they don’t.
Mostly just set up for a potential future story. I thought I might as well post it? Idk.
Word Count: 994
Asgard has fallen. 
The world was destroyed in a chaotic battle between the children of Odin, and the Fire Giant known as Surtr… or so the story goes. On Midgard, there was no thought to the calamity happening in the other realms. On Midgard, the majority of the population simply lived their lives, while a small portion of supposed “Superheroes” protected them from tragedy. To one midgardian, the news of Asgard was rather taxing. The idea of the world of gods being massacred held their mind hostage, dredging up memories the human had long since tried to forget. It was debatable however, that Y/N was even fully human anymore.
They try to forget the heated stares, the thrilling missions, the endless fear. They try to forget the smiling twins and the curious prince. They try to forget the king who still ruled their dreams, the bitter biscuits, the salty sea snake, the dances, the disasters, the touches and the distance. They try to forget the grand plans the man they were in love with spoke of, and to forget the hope it brought to the giants, the triumph after Asgard, the hurt of insecurity, the bliss of validation. They try to forget the magic lingering in their core from being his for so long. They try to forget everything, as if it wasn’t what their heart screamed for. It was hard to tell how long it really was since Y/N had met him, been saved from their unfortunate fate… but when they’d reappeared in Iceland, shocking everyone and their mother, people told Y/N that they were only gone for a month and a half.
The people who found them already knew their name. Knew their face from the media. Didn’t recognize the clothes on their back, or the look in their eye, or the magic lurking in them. The people who found them were kind. The people who followed were debatable. They called themselves S.H.I.E.L.D., a secret organization associated with threats to the world and superhumans. In this case, Y/N, having survived in an unknown world for a month and a half and returning with a similar energy reading as the God of Mischief, was possibly both of those things. After weeks of testing and interviewing and recuperating, Y/N was given the all-clear to go back to normal civilian life.
That only lasted 3 weeks. The first week, they didn’t go out much. Holed themselves up inside, cried and watched the news and tried to just sleep and survive. Domesticity no longer had the appeal it did before. The second week, they grew restless. They lived recklessly. The extremes of alcohol and cheap thrills in their area did nothing to soothe the burn inside for the excitement they were used to. The third week, there was calm. The veil was lifted. They detoxed from the consequences of the manic behavior they lived the week before, then contacted S.H.I.E.L.D. Within two months, they were an active agent. After a few years, they meet the sorcerer known as Doctor Strange after he took on the mantle of Sorcerer Supreme, and began to learn under him in their free time so they could harness the broil in their blood left behind by their purpose as an offset bank for Loki’s magic. They wore the name gifted to them on Jotunheim as their alias in all fields regarding work. In-Unga. No one questioned it. It felt almost more right than their real name almost days.
Now, they’d been an agent for nearing on four years. The realm they’d visited with the green-eyed God of Mischief to reclaim the Frost Giant’s relic was gone. Apparently, as they learned from debriefing, it was because the death of Odin, who had been smuggled onto Earth, allowing Loki to give more free access to Jotunheim while also changing Asgard for the better. It prospered under the rule, the realms beneath them who had long ago been conquered unjustly were given the opportunity for independence.
When the news of the asgardian refugees reached S.H.I.E.L.D., Y/N was recruited to help them adjust. The agent was knowledgeable from late nights learning with Loki. They focused on their task, assisting in helping the asgardians who survived the travel to find housing and acclimate to the community they were in. The days were busy, but that was something they enjoyed. The asgardians seemed to appreciate them. When they heard the name that people called them, however, it always resulted in surprise and confusion.
“That name is—“
“Jotun, yes.”
And that was it, most often. No one knows what more to ask. Or so the human assumes. The asgardians have more to say, though. They just bide their time. The gossip topic is plenty enough. The agent ignores the gossip as they work. One day, it’s especially bad though… one day, they’re not expecting it. That day, they hear the whispers and see the looks, but ignore it as they walk through the village, making their way to check up on the older asgardians and the families. They ignore it all, head in the clouds, until they run into something a bit too solid. A familiar scent hits them, but they don’t connect it immediately. They just get irritated.
“Shit…!” They hiss out, rubbing their nose where they came in contact with the person. There’s a pregnant pause, before the person’s hand brushes against the side of their face to touch the short locks brushing against the side of their face.
“You’ve cut your hair.”
Those few words wouldn’t have been shocking if they hadn’t been from him. If it hadn’t been his voice, if she couldn’t hear the mix of snark and soft lingering even in the most well intentioned words. They were at a loss.
“Loki?”
“We’ve got a lot to talk about, Y/N.”
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