Tag Archives: askthegatekeeper

As the Dust Settles | Open(ish) RP

siffed:

liesmith-loki:

justaskfreyja:

odinborsonallfather:

queen-frigga:

Freyja’s words settled her a little but she kept herself near her injured son and the other woman. It was horrible to be this useless. Perhaps later she would attempt to heal but… she could feel her knees going soft and eyes itching as her body finally felt the exhaustion take hold.

There was some sort of commotion at the door and a shift of emotions but it all seemed to settle down shortly.

A small black feline itched it’s way closer to the towering strangers.

“Thor,” Odin called his other son to his side, no room in his tone for argument.  Though he did not remove his eye from the challenging stare he levelled at Freyja, a tremor ran through his hand, and the golden light around his son flickered for the briefest of moments.

Odin grimaced, willing his connection to the spell to hold on, watching as the slow rise and fall of Loki’s chest gave him a sign that his son was there for that much longer—one breath, then another.  He could feel a chilled pain begin to spread outward from his chest and through his arm as he forced more of his power into the transferred Odin-Sleep.  Odin was drawing too deeply, and as he watched the veins in his hand darken through the skin, lacing down like spreading branches to his fingertips, he knew it would take a grievous toll on him—but it had to hold.

“Thor, come here,” he insisted, barely able to indicate the spot beside the bed.  There was a chance, he thought distantly, but it was hardly a plan, and even then it would only scratch the surface.

Gently, Freyja stepped forward once more. Her fingers left their resting place on Loki’s cheek, instead bringing both hands up to lay gently on the great king’s. She reached deep inside herself, seeking down into her pool of magic and bringing a slow draw from it. By the tiniest increments, the glow was tinged with a soft blue.

After several moments of standing very still, eyes lightly closed; Freyja stumbled. She breathed heavily, but paused it to hear the slow rise and fall of Loki’s chest. Sure enough, there was a less ragged note to the air that fell out of the battered prince’s lips.

She looked into the single glowering eye of the All-father for just a moment before gently lowering her head, turning and seating herself quietly at the foot of the bed. She waited there now, not as a collector of souls, but as a concerned friend.

“He should live, he can breathe again.”

Loki’s breaths indeed were coming easier—the force or Frejya’s and Odin’s combined touch had gently healed up the failing lung, punctured as it had been by the sharp edge of a shattered rib.  He had bled elsewhere inside, now, and those deadly trickles had ebbed and stopped.

Cat dodged feet and made a beeline for Loki, clawing his way up the blankets at the foot of the bed before scampering along the sheets towards his person. 

Sif’s search of her room was fast and frenzied — when she’d finished, no healing stone to be found, the chamber looked as though a whirlwind had hit it. Still, she’d come up with needle, thread, bandages, tape, potent Asgardian tea herbs, and what remained of a bottle of mead. It would have to be enough.

With her bag on her shoulder, she made for Stark Tower once more. She knew not where to look for Jane Foster, or if JARVIS was busy elsewhere, unable to aid her. She took the elevator to the semi-demolished floor they’d left, for she could think of no other place to start. “Jane?”

No luck. Heart aching, Summer slumped on the stairs outside Loki’s door, unwilling to be driven away entirely. What worth an empath, indeed? She could feel his pain, physical, blood-red and oddly muffled; could feel the anguish of the several people inside. Death hovered, shadow-winged, then retreated along with some of Loki’s pain.

She didn’t know what had happened. He’d been gone for a while, and that was all she knew. Trying not to cry, pressing her lips together, Summer settled down to wait, watching the door and projecting love and comfort as hard as she could into Loki’s tiny flat.

As the Dust Settles | Open(ish) RP

siffed:

liesmith-loki:

justaskfreyja:

As she looked up at the All-father her eyes still held tenderness, finding herself standing in one of the last places she had ever wanted to be. She was a lady of Asgard, and yet she stood at the bed of a quite badly injured Prince, a man she considered a friend. “I am not here to take him away from you,”

And yet as Freyja spoke she gave a soft sigh, because she could not simply abandon her given duty. In truth she had come to simply wait, and hope with the rest of them that there would be no need of her on Loki’s behalf. She looked up at Odin as he was brought to his full height, slowly removing the golden helm and closing her eyes.

“So long as he has breath, he will stay.” She corrected, her tone almost a breath, her fingers still resting on his cheek gently, feeling the air that drew raggedly in and out of his lips. She took a step back from the imposing man in front of her, not nearly full of enough bravery to try and face down the All-father.

Frigga: 

Freyja’s appearance woke the Queen from her stupor. She placed herself between the bed and the new arrival in silent support of her husband’s words.

She would be dammed to Surtur’s fiery pits for the rest of time before she let her son go, or all the effort that was put into making him whole go to waste. This was not a day for death.

Loki:

Loki stirred a little under the golden spell as voices sounded about him, reminding him that he was part of the world of the living—but he did not quite wake.  

Cat squirmed in Thor’s grasp, protesting even more loudly at being handed to a total stranger.  Fixing his bright green eyes on Thor in a look which could only be described as challenging, he sank his teeth into the god’s thumb. 

A long, arduous night stretched out before Sif’s mind’s eye, but she gave Thor one decisive nod. She would seek Jane, but first she would stop at her own flat to search high and low for any misplaced Asgardian magic she may have left. A healing stone, perhaps, enough to patch the lung she feared Loki had punctured, or some bleed that wept inside him.

Sif took heart at Odin’s fierce denial of Freyja, who was her friend, but would not take Loki again this day. She let out a breath and fled the confines of the tiny space and the heat of bodies, tired legs taking her back the way she’d come.

“No, please, I’m his friend!” Summer panicked, seeing the other turn away, the door sliding closed. Some miracle seemed to jerk it open again before her, a tall, dark woman striding out, who seemed not to even see the diminutive redhead. “Please,” Summer cried, her voice cracking.

He might not count her a friend, but she counted herself one, and she had so few. Desperation led her to drop her shields, to shove a pulse of begging/demand/love into the flat.

collect your courage: As the Dust Settles | Open(ish) RP

collect your courage: As the Dust Settles | Open(ish) RP

As the Dust Settles | Open(ish) RP

ask-the-gatekeeper:

siffed:

liesmith-loki:

odinborsonallfather:

queen-frigga:

After the standoff in the small shop Frigga had hurried outside just as Loki had reappeared alone and taunted the two men. She had been lost in the confusion and left behind as Heimdall and the Man of Iron ran (or flew) towards the big tower she had been welcomed in.

The crowd of people had been quickly dispersed by what she assumed were this world’s guards. The men in blue cam up to her, hands raised holding some sort of grey oddly shaped piece of metal pointed at her. Seeing her being just as confused and distressed as the previous onlookers, they had taken her in.

She had asked to be taken to the tall tower but they had refused calling it a “danger zone”. They would not listen to reason and not even a few minutes later some men dressed in suits similar to Loki’s had requested her accompanying them. Something felt off and she felt the lie as they promised to take her to the tower.

Summoning her magic and with great effort she had slipped into the shadows and melted away from them. Unfortunately all she could muster was barely a few blocks.

As they stared searching for her she ran as fast as she could trying to take the most direct path to the building her son was in.

She had to change paths and dodge the would-be captors pursuit many times, all the while new signs of abuse showing in the tower’s upper levels whenever she could chance a glance at it.

Eventually reaching the Stark tower she almost stumbled into more men in dark suits and was forced to further drain her magic by making herself unseen while she weaved her way between those great metal steeds… cars and trying not to bump into the plethora of Midgardians.

Shifting through the walls also weakened her, but she would not allow obstacles.

The mechanical traveling room took her as far up as it deemed safe, the rest Frigga would foot by herself.

Exhausted and slightly panting, the Queen reached into the disaster of a room which was left after the battle. Leaning on the ashen remains of a wall she dreaded the worst. She was too late. The only thing she caught was a fading glimpse of Odin’s golden magic and Thor’s word.

“Where…” her voice was shallow and strained.

Odin hardly heard Thor’s voice, or anyone else’s—everything around him seemed muted, faded from his sight except the battered body pressed close to his chest.  With a hesitant hand and an unreadable expression his face, he wiped away the bloodied tear streaks from the eyes of his boy—his boy, for in his arms, though broken and bruised, Odin could not help but see the babe he had rescued from the cold winds of Jotunheim so many years ago as he poured warmth over his flesh.  The protective spell never wavered, though Odin knew this one could only be a temporary relief from the damage Loki had suffered.

He looked down at his feet where Sif knelt, and forced his throat to utter a single command, simple and urgent, but masking a well of something deeper he would not allow to be released.

“Lead,” he ordered.

Loki’s apartment was unlocked—he still had not had the mechanism repaired, so the door opened to the lightest touch of Sif’s hand.  The small parlor beyond the room was dark and bare, save for the couch, coffee table and shelf with a small, precious collection of books.  The kitchen opening off to the right was likewise dark and lonely looking.  The door to the bedroom was straight ahead—and Loki’s bedchamber was as sober and empty as the rest of the flat.  His narrow bed was neatly made, and the dark curtains were drawn over the window, though it did little enough to block out the sounds and lights of the city beyond. 

Exhausted though she was, Sif did not hesitate to follow the order of her King. She had drawn herself to her feet with another bow of acquiescence and strode toward the door, sheathing her sword, wiping sweat and dirt and blood from her forehead.

Loki’s darkened flat was grim and desolate to her eyes, so very very far from the shining and lush warmth of home, so dark where Asgard glowed. She moved straight to the bedroom, holding the door open for the Allfather and his charge, pulling the sheets back on the narrow and unwelcoming bed.

Though the journey back to Loki’s apartment was a quiet, sober one, Heimdall could feel the emotions coming off of the Asgardians. So much pain each of them had gone through to this point, physical, psychological and emotional. But he knew they could overcome it, even Loki. They needed it to turn out alright.

Once everyone filed into the apartment, Heimdall closed the front door lightly, noticing that the damage he inflicted upon still had not been fixed. Any other time, he would have found it amusing. But not now.

[I’mma just slip in here … ]

Summer might not have even noticed Macrowafter if she hadn’t been feeling ill-at-ease all day. As usual, this manifested in a total inability to sit still, and she’d been pacing in and out of the flat for the last hour. Then Macrowafter showed up, gravely parading down the staircase, and she coaxed him into her arms as a feeble distraction from whatever was buzzing in the back of her senses.

Marching up the stairs bearing a feebly protesting Cat, she rapped sharply at Loki’s door.