Dead Radiance (13 page)

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Authors: T. G. Ayer

BOOK: Dead Radiance
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"Not all of them," I blurted out. I managed to defend Aidan despite the distraction of the entrancing bracelet, but deep down I sensed I didn't entirely believe that. Would he have hurt me if he'd been forced to?

And suddenly my knees shook, threatening to fold and take me straight to the ground. She grabbed hold of me, helped me move closer to the bed and waited while I sank onto the blankets. Satisfied, she perched at the foot of the bed. "You were in very grave danger. It was my job to bring you here safely. I had to wait outside the house while those men talked and talked. I was glad when you finally left the house." She grinned.

Did she really expect me to believe such nonsense? She'd just admitted she'd abducted me. I figured I'd play along for now. "What do you want with me? Why have you brought me here? And where exactly is
here
?"

Her bright grey eyes sparkled as she laughed, little pink spots appearing on her cheekbones. "Oh, you are going to be fun. That is good. You will pull through faster than some of the other new ones."

"Pull through what?" My heart kicked in my chest.

Just a horrible hallucination, Bryn. Nothing to worry about. Probably just a side effect of some newfangled drug meant to force the victim into a state of total delusion.

Or was my mind rebelling and turning against me?

"Never mind that for now. Shall we get you ready? You will find out in a few minutes anyway, and besides, I do not have permission to spoil the surprise." She winked, then rose and walked to a bench beside the fire, bringing with her an armful of bronzed chainmail similar to her own. "Come, you have to dress. We must not keep them waiting."

She spread the armor open. It was fashioned into a single coat-like garment, which opened at the back. Odd, but I said nothing, merely poked my hands through the arms, waiting as she pulled and tugged at straps and buckles behind me.

I glanced at the door, longing to make a run for it, but the armor was deceptively heavy and I wasn't confident I would be quick on my feet. And my captor seemed too strong to knock out in one blow. Ropy muscles knotted her upper arms, and sinewy calves peeped from slits in the hem of her dress. I didn't stand a chance.

I craned my head to get a view of the back of the armor. My back was bare from neck to waist. Strange.

"Come now. We have to hurry." She rushed me with both her command and the urgency of her tone.

A trickle of fear ran through me. Was I about to follow her to my death in some sort of arena? Or maybe a crazy gladiator fight-to-the-death reality show? Everything was too surreal yet a traitorous part of my consciousness screamed it was real. I should really find out more about this place if I was going to try to get the hell out of here.

"What's your name?" I demanded, the confidence in my voice sounding way too weak to my ears.

She glanced at me, impatient with my question which no doubt would delay us further. But when she saw my face her expression softened. My fear, my trepidation, were both clear in my eyes. "Oh, I should have introduced myself when I arrived, but I do not meet new people very often, so I rarely get many opportunities to dust off my manners. My name is Sigrun. You are Brynhildr, yes?"

It was a statement, not a question. I didn't answer. She nodded, then led the way out of the room. I followed, tracing the warm curve of my amber stone, planning, plotting.

"Where are we, anyway?" I asked.

"Oh. Yes. That is the best part." She smiled broadly. "We are in the marvelous city of Asgard."

 

Chapter 15

 

Asgard!

When Sigrun uttered those words, my jaw dropped and I stumbled, certain that I was caught within a fantastical dream. Maybe I'd been reading far too much of Aidan's abandoned book of translations because this wasn't possible. Not possible at all.

My feet slowed their pace, and I soon stopped moving altogether. Needing to breathe, needing to think. Needing to be back home, thanking Ms. Custer for being such a wonderful protector, such a wonderful mother.

I didn't want to be here in this strange place, with a strange girl telling tall tales of magical locations in unknown lands that simply should not exist. Asgard was a darned myth told by ancient peoples to explain the way the world was.

Asgard couldn't possibly be real.

Could it?

Up ahead, the girl glanced over her shoulder and hurried back to me. "Yes. I brought you here, to Asgard, from your world, Earth, or as we call it, Midgard. But we have to be going. I am sorry." She spoke with a kind sweetness that lightened my mood slightly. "I know this must be hard for you, but all will be explained soon and I promise you will feel much, much better."

Midgard. Yes. A vague memory from basic Norse Mythology.

Sigrun tucked her arm into mine, and with a gentle tug she set a rapid pace through darkened passages lit by a scattering of flickering torches. I allowed her to pull me along, grateful for the human comfort of her body beside mine. The entire building was pleasantly warmed so even my bare feet could handle the stone floors.

We hurried through passageways, broken here and there by large archways opening into more passages. The arches, rimmed with intricate carvings, were strikingly similar to the ones drawn in Aidan's leather volume. I slowed, drawn to the lines of almost familiar script, but Sigrun tugged at my elbow. And I allowed her to pull me away. If I'd had time I would've been able to decipher much of it.

The density of the air heightened my awareness. I assumed we neared our destination as Sigrun slowed her pace.

"Just a few rules before we enter." Her voice was soft as she drew to a halt before a magnificent, enormous doorway. A small knot of anxiety twisted again in my stomach. What awaited me beyond that gigantic door? She turned to me, taking both my hands in hers. "Do not speak unless you are directly questioned. Keep your eyes lowered, or at least your chin. You may look upon our Lord, but do not affect an attitude of defiance. Our Lord does not appreciate insolence."

Sigrun held me by the shoulder. "Everything will be fine. Do not be afraid."

"So who is this Lord you are talking about?"

"Oh, our lord is the Lord of All Things, the Blessed One. The Wielder of Power, the Great Warrior."

When she paused, I frowned, hoping she would reveal the All-Powerful One's name. I asked, "So? Who is he?"

"You will find out soon enough, Brynhildr." With those words, she gave me a little shove, sending me through the arch and into the bright, warm cavernous hall.

The way she spoke my name sounded strange to my ears, as if I were really hearing it for the first time. As if it had a new specialness imbued within each syllable.

With a tiny sigh, I walked into the welcoming brightness of the magnificent hall. When I looked upward, I stopped and stared, entranced by the height and beauty of the ceiling.

Yikes! How would the artisans have gotten up so high? The ceiling was sixty to seventy feet at its highest point, but like the Sistine Chapel it curved, joined by six separate beams carved with entwined branch-like figures.

I squinted to make out the finer details of the carvings, which resembled those on the six monstrous pillars that seemed to hang from the ceiling. Each pillar was thicker than the body of a large man, and intricately etched with serpentine creatures and tree-branch curves. My eyes blurred from the confusion of trying to figure out what the carvings were.

Entranced by the architecture of the ceiling and pillars, I'd forgotten I was meant to meet Sigrun's powerful Lord. Her low hiss brought me back to my senses and propelled me further into the hall.

I walked toward the back of the Great Hall and silenced a gasp at the magnificence of the thrones. A matched pair sat on a raised stone dais. Here too, hypnotic carvings edged the entire dais, beautiful and entrancing. Music echoed around the room, and a strange tune floated by, as if it rang out from a long-forgotten memory.

The thrones, carved from a grey-white marble, were beyond amazing. Legs and armrests were normal, carved again with the curving, serpentine design, while the seat itself provided sufficient space to sit five hefty men. The backrests both rose at least eighteen feet in the air.

Stunning!

A hunched old man occupied one of the marble thrones, gnarled fingers curling around a dark hand-carved cane.

Sigrun had claimed this was Asgard. If I had my mythology straight, the god she spoke of must be the Great Odin, the ruler of Asgard, husband to Frigga and father of the famous Thor, god of war.

But surely she must have been mistaken. This ancient man hardly resembled a king. Neither did he resemble what the modern depiction of the Great Odin would be.

To start with, he was small, human-sized actually. I'd expected Odin to appear as Zeus did, gigantic even. His fingers were twisted and arthritic. His flowing grey hair was topped with a large floppy hat, which shadowed almost half of a face so wrinkled it seemed impossible for the man to still be alive. To me, he looked at least a hundred years old.

Garbed in a dark cloak, he was far from my mental image of the Great Odin. Even his eyes were grey, a silvery, smoky grey. One of his eyes. The other eye hid within the shadow of the hat. I strained to part the shadows with my eyes, to confirm the possibility. That single visible eye compelled me toward him, and my feet moved of their own volition.

I frowned and tried to pull back, but soon found I was standing before the old geezer, my head tilted to get a better look at him up on the dais. With a start, I remembered Sigrun's reminder not to look straight at him. I lowered my eyes in case this rickety old man really was the powerful Odin.

A great rumble of laughter echoed around the empty hall, so loud that fine specks of dust fell from the ceilings. I doubted the tiny old guy had barked such a powerful laugh, but I dared not look up.

Movement around me drew my furtive glances. Women, both young and old, filed into the hall and gathered around me. As much as my stomach turned like a windmill, stirring slight rushes of fear, an instinct assured me their presence was neither threatening nor dangerous. Just supportive.

Many smiled as I made eye contact and I sighed, releasing the twisted muscles in my gut. Perhaps it would be okay after all. If this was all in my mind, and I'd just gone seriously cuckoo, then what the heck, I might as well enjoy the ride while I was here.

"Come closer, child." The voice boomed, tinged with amusement. My head shot up, enticed by the happiness in his voice, expecting a benevolent smile on the old man's face.

I gasped.

The old man had vanished and in his place sat a twelve-foot-tall giant of a man, decked out in glorious golden armor and a magnificent helmet, which emitted sporadic bursts of living flame.

I stared open-mouthed at the all-powerful Odin.

Though Sigrun's warning reverberated in my head, it was impossible not to stare. He was, well . . . beautiful. Incredibly, amazingly beautiful. For an old guy. But he shimmered with a golden glow similar to the haze I always saw when a person was soon to be dead.

Instinctive dread filled my bones until it was clear that this glow was different, in tone and in . . . vibration. I wasn't sure how I could know this from a mere feeling but I did, and I accepted it.

His armor was made of the same red bronze material as the one I now wore, only not chainmail. Odin's was fashioned in a more masculine manner, worked by the smith to fit the shape of his body. Beneath the armor, his blood-red shift ended mid-thigh, revealing solid, muscular thighs and calves. This god worked out major.

A sooty raven sat on his left shoulder, large head tilted to one side as if aware of what was happening and waiting for the next episode of Bryn's Introduction to Odin and Asgard. Its knowing eyes gleamed obsidian, its feathers so black it was as if a little spot of nothing hovered over the god's shoulder.

The only thing missing from the scene was Odin's famous winged helmet, but from the headdress he wore it was easy to understand how historians may have misinterpreted it as a helmet with wings. Rounded, it hugged the top of his head, curving down on each side to his sideburns. Fine gold and silver motifs covered its gleaming surface, inscribed on small square panels, which formed an arc across the top of the helmet. Down the center lay a carved golden serpent-like creature whose head settled above Odin's eyebrows. The helmet was a thing of absolute beauty.

Odin watched my face, one eye hidden beneath a leather patch, the other still sparkling grey, the color of storm clouds and lightning. I stared, unable to help myself. My eyes darted first to the strange raven, then back to the old man, who was a real, honest-to-goodness, in-the-flesh, larger-than-life god.

If this was a dream, boy did I have a cool imagination. And if this were real . . . I didn't want to contemplate that right now. I was happy to play along, as long as I didn't have to analyze things too much. I had to hold on to my sanity for as long as I could.

"Do not be afraid, Brynhildr." The words rumbled around the hall like roiling storm clouds.

A sharp elbow stabbed me in the back. Sigrun stood behind me, urging me forward. "Kneel before our Lord, Brynhildr," she whispered. "Before he gets impatient and strikes you dead with a lightning bolt."

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