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The Monsters of Juntonheim

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Edmond Hamilton

This page copyright © 2004 Blackmask Online.

http://www.blackmask.com

* Chapter I. The Rune Key

* Chapter II. Mystery Land

* Chapter III. Jotun and Aesir

* Chapter IV. Odin Speaks

* Chapter V. Shadow of Loki

* Chapter VI. Ancient Science

* Chapter VII. Ambush!

* Chapter VIII. World of Gnomes

* Chapter IX. Loki's Prison

* Chapter X. Captive in Jotunheim

* Chapter XI. The Arch-fiend

* Chapter XII. The Laboratory

* Chapter XIII. Flight and Death

* Chapter XIV. Thor's Oath

* Chapter XV. The Fire World

* Chapter XVI. The Flame Creatures

* Chapter XVII. Magic Science

* Chapter XVIII. The Battle for Asgard

* Chapter XIX. Swords Athirst

* Chapter XX. Ragnarok

* Epilogue

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Chapter I. The Rune Key

Bray called excitedly to me from the forward deck of the schooner.

“Keith, your hunch was right. There's something queer in this trawl!”

Involuntarily I shuddered in the sudden chill of fear. Somehow I had

known that the trawl would bring something up from the icy Arctic sea.

Pure intuition had made me persuade Bray to lower his trawl in this

unpromising spot.

“Coming, Bray!” I called, and hurried through the litter of sleds and

snarling dogs.

Our schooner, the sturdy auxiliary ice-breaker Peter Saul, was lying at

anchor in the Lincoln Sea, only four hundred miles south of the Pole. A

hundred yards away, the dazzling white fields of ice stretched

northward — a vast, frozen, scarcely explored waste.

When we had reached the ice pack the night before, I had somehow

conceived the idea that Bray, the oceanographer, ought to try his luck

here. Bray had laughed at my hunch at first, but had finally consented.

“Are you psychic, Keith?” he demanded. “Look what the trawl brought

up!”

A heavy, ancient-looking gold cylinder, about eight inches long, was

sticking out of the frozen mud. On its sides were engraved a row of

queer symbols, almost worn away.

“What in the world is it?” I breathed. “And what are those letters on

it?”

Halsen, a big, bearded Norwegian sailor, answered me.

“Those letters are in my own language, sir.”

“Nonsense,” I said sharply. “I know Norwegian pretty well. Those

letters are not in your language.”

“Not the one my people write today,” Halsen explained, “but the old

Norse — the rune writing. I have seen such writing on old stones in the

museum at Oslo.”

“Norse runes?” I blurted. “Then this must be damned ancient.”

“Let's take it down to Dubman,” Bray suggested. “He ought to be able to

tell us.”

Dubman, the waspish little archaeologist of the expedition, looked up

in annoyance from his collection of Eskimo arrowheads when we entered.

Angrily he took the cylinder and glared at it. Instantly his eyes lit

up behind the thick spectacles.

“Old Norse!” he exclaimed. “But these are runes of the most ancient

form — pre-Valdstenan! What is it?”

“Maybe the runes on it can give us a clue,” I said eagerly.

“I'll soon find out what they mean,” Dubman declared.

With a magnifying glass, he began to examine the symbols graven on the

golden cylinder. Bray and I waited. I felt queerly taut. I could not

understand just why I was so excited about this find, but everything

about it had been queer. A persistent inner voice had kept telling me:

“Make Bray let down his trawl here!” And the first time it was lowered,

it had brought up a gold tube that must have lain on the sea-floor for

centuries.

“Got it!” Dubman stated, looking up. “This thing is old, all right —

the most ancient form of runic. The translation doesn't tell much.

Listen to this—

Rune key am I,

Chaining dark evil,

Midgard snake, Fenris,

And Loki, arch-devil.

While I lie far,

The Aesir safe are,

Bring me not home,

Lest Ragnarok come.”

A chill rippled through me, as though even the translation of those

ancient runes could terrify me. Impatiently I shook off the feeling.

“What does all that stuff about the Aesir and Loki mean?” I asked.

“The Aesir were the ancient Norse gods, eternally youthful and

powerful. Ruled by Odin, they lived in the fabled city of Asgard. Loki

turned against them. With his two familiars, the monstrous wolf Fenris

and the great Midgard serpent, Loki joined the Jotuns, the giant

enemies of the gods. The gods finally managed to chain Loki, his wolf

and his serpent. But it was predicted that if Loki ever broke his

bonds, that would bring about Ragnarok — the doom of the Aesir.

“Bring me not home, lest Ragnarok come,” he quoted. “This key claims to

be the one with which Loki and his pets were locked up. Probably some

ancient Norse priest made it to 'prove' the old myths, was shipwrecked

and lost it in the sea.”

“I don't get it,” Bray complained. “What made you tell me to let down

my trawl in just that spot, Keith?”

When I picked up the gold cylinder, a current of queer power ran up my

arm. Somehow it seemed to warn me to drop it back into the sea. But I

didn't obey, for something alien commanded me to keep the rune key.

“Can I study this for a few days?” I asked abruptly. “I'll take good

care of it.”

“I didn't know you had archaeological tastes, Masters,” Dubman said,

astonished. “But you were responsible for finding it, so you can keep

it awhile. Don't lose it, though, or I'll skin you.”

Through the little ring on one end of the cylinder, I passed a cord and

hung it around my neck. It was cold against my skin — cold and

menacing, persistently warning...

Naturally I tried to convince myself that I just wasn't the

superstitious type. Besides my thirty years of disciplining myself to

examine even obvious truths, and my towering height of lean muscle, I

have inherited the canny skepticism of my Scottish ancestors. Anyhow, a

scientist couldn't admit the existence of the supernatural. Like most

other physicists, I claimed there were still a lot of forces which

science hasn't had time to investigate yet. When it does, there will be

no room for superstition, for belief in the supernatural is merely

ignorance of natural laws.

But I worked twice as hard as anybody else, unloading our small rocket

plane for my first reconnaissance flight northward. Not even intense

physical labor could make me forget the sinister cold force of the rune

key inside my shirt, though.

The menacing current felt even stronger when I stood on deck that

night. Overhead, the aurora borealis pulsated in shifting bars and

banners of unearthly radiance, changing the immense frozen ocean from

white to green, violet and crimson. Like a mad musician, the freezing

wind strummed the schooner's halyards and made the masts boom out their

deep voices.

But the rune key under my shirt tormented me with its conflicting

demands. It ordered me to throw it back to the icy waters. Helpless, I

ripped it out and tugged at the cord, trying to snap it. An even

stronger command made me put it back.

The moment I buttoned my shirt, I cursed myself for being a fool. Why

should I want to destroy something of potential value to science?

Inwardly, though, I realized that the demands of the rune key were

stronger than my own will.

“It can be explained scientifically,” I muttered uneasily. “Everything

has a scientific explanation, once we can isolate it.”

But how could a small, golden cylinder penetrate my mind and order it

about like a servant? What filled my heart with doubt and dread?

For all my canny skepticism and scientific training, I couldn't answer

those insistent questions, nor keep myself from being tormented by the

damned thing...

Chapter II. Mystery Land

It was a brilliant Arctic morning. The sun glittered on the white

ice-pack, the placid grey sea and the battered hull of the Peter Saul.

I was ready for my first reconnaissance flight northward. Doctor John

Carrul, chief of the expedition, called down to me from the rail of the

schooner.

“Don't go too far the first trip, Masters. And return at once if the

weather grows threatening.”

“There won't be any storms for days,” I replied confidently. “I know

Arctic weather.”

“You'd better leave that rune key with me,” Dubman shrilled. “I'd hate

to lose it if you cracked up.”

During the past few days, the golden cylinder hadn't been out of my

thoughts. Whatever menacing force radiated from the key, it was still

far beyond my science. I had tested it with electroscopes, but they

registered nothing. Yet it did radiate some disturbing force. It was

the same with the mental command that fought the one which tried to

make me throw away the key. Apparently supernatural or not, it had to

have some rational, mundane explanation.

My obsession with the mystery had made me read Dubman's books on old

Norse myths. The Aesir, said the legends, inhabited the fabled city of

Asgard, which was separated from the land of Midgard by a deep gulf

that was spanned by a wonderful rainbow bridge. All around Midgard lay

the frozen, lifeless wastes of Niffleheim.

In the great hall Valhalla reigned Odin, king of the Aesir, and his

wife Frigga. And in other castles dwelt the other gods and goddesses.

Once Loki had been of the Aesir, till he turned traitor and was

prisoned with his two monstrous pets, the wolf Fenris and the Midgard

serpent Iormungandr.

I read about the Jotuns — the giants who lived in dark Jotunheim and

incessantly battled the Aesir. Then there were the dwarfs of Earth, the

Alfings who dwelt in subterranean Alfheim. Hel, the wicked

death-goddess whose dreaded hall was near the dark city of the Jotuns.

Muspelheim, the fiery realm beneath Midgard.

One thing in these legends impressed me. They depicted the Aesir as

mortal beings who possessed the secret of eternal youth in common with

the giants and dwarfs. None of them grew old, but any of them could be

slain. If Loki were released, bringing about Ragnarok — the twilight of

the gods — the Aesir would perish.

As I delved deeper into the books of Rydberg, Anderson and Du Chaillu,

I learned that ethnologists thought there was some real basis to these

legends. They believed the Aesir had been real people with remarkable

powers. All my reading had only intensified my interest in the

enigmatic rune key from the sea. I knew it bordered on superstition,

but I felt that if I were away from the influence of others, the damned

thing might actually get coherent.

“I'll be back by four o'clock,” I said. “It won't take me long to map a

sled route.”

“Be sure you take no chances,” Dr. Carrul called anxiously.

Streaking across the ice, the rocket plane roared into the chill air. I

circled above the schooner, climbed higher, and then headed northward

across the ice-pack. Within ten minutes, I was flying over the endless

expanse of the frozen Arctic Ocean, warm and snug in the oxygen-filled

cabin.

A vast white plain, glittering like diamonds in the sunlight, the sea

ice had jammed and split, and there were long leads of open water. My

mission was to chart the easiest route toward the Pole, so the sleds

would lose no time detouring around leads or scrambling over ridges.

Once a weather observation camp was established, I would carry in

supplies in the plane.

Hundreds of thousands of square miles of the enormous sea of ice had

never been seen by man. Earth's last real home of mystery was

dazzlingly beautiful — but it was murderous, terrifying, sinister...

Absorbed in keeping the plane on its course and making a map of the ice

below, my sense of time was temporarily paralyzed. The rocket motor

roared tirelessly, and the ice unrolled endlessly below. When my ship

lurched sharply, I abruptly realized that the wind was suddenly rising.

I looked around, startled. A huge dark wall was rising across the

southern horizon.

“Damn it, I'll never call myself a weather prophet again,” I swore.

“There just couldn't be any storm. But there it is!”

I banked around sharply and flew southward, fighting to rise above the

fury. But the higher I climbed, the higher the black, boiling wall of

the storm seemed to rise. I knew I was caught.

“Two minutes to live,” I gritted. “It'll be a fast death—”

Driving before it a cloud of stinging snow, the storm smacked my plane

like a giant hand. Stunned by the impact, deafened, I swung the nose

around and let the wind sweep the plane northward. There was no hope of

fighting. I could only run before the gale until its fury subsided. The

whole sky was dark and raging around me, filled with screaming wind and

snow. Gripping the firing wheel, I battled to keep the reeling plane in

the air.

But why did the rune key inside my shirt seem to throb with frantic

warning? Why did that alien voice in my mind seem eager and exultant?

Why did I feel there was something purposeful about this gale's

direction? The storm had come up suddenly out of a clear sky as soon as

my plane was well in the air. Now it was hurling me straight in one

direction.

The imminent peril of death grew less unnerving than the mounting

suspicion that there was something deliberate about the storm. The

warning force throbbing from the rune key, and the wildly exultant

alien voice in my brain, combined to demoralize me.

After nearly six hours of ceaseless storm-driven flight, I received the

greatest shock. Peering ahead through the frosted cabin windows, I

realized suddenly that there was a great area dead ahead — which I

could not see!

“It can't be real!” I gasped. “A colossal blind spot—”

My vision seemed to slide around that vast area. I could see the

ice-pack beyond it, scores of miles away. I could see the ice on either

side of it. But the area itself just didn't register.

“Some trick of refraction, perhaps due to the terrestrial magnetic

currents that are strong here,” I muttered. “Maybe it's connected with

the mystery of the aurora.”

My scientific reasoning didn't quiet my nerves. For the storm that bore

me on was carrying me straight toward that huge blind spot. When I was

almost to the edge of the enigmatic area my vision seemed to slide away

to either side, almost at right angles. If this was refraction, it was

a type that was completely unknown to science.

My storm-tossed plane hurtled with reckless speed toward the edge of

the vast blind spot; I could see nothing whatever ahead. Everything

seemed crazily twisted out of focus, distorted by that weird wall.

Abruptly the gale flung my reeling plane directly through the fantastic

wall that defied my vision — and I was inside the blind spot! But now I

could not see outside it.

“This — this is impossible!” I gasped with startled terror.

I could see nothing but the interior, a great space of tossing ocean,

curving ominously to every sinister horizon. Black waves, black clouds

... Suddenly I gasped in amazement. Far ahead loomed a long, high mass

of forbidding, dark land.

The storm still howled with all its original fury, carrying me

dangerously low over the foam-fanged waves toward the distant land.

Through the scudding snow, I detected a faint greenish radiance. But

realization of my immediate peril swept away my demoralization. I could

not land in that vicious sea. Yet neither could I climb again in that

gale.

The land I had glimpsed was now a mile ahead of me, its frowning

eastern cliffs stretching right across my course. The gray precipices

were hundreds of feet high. Above them, the land ran back into dark

forests and shaggy wooded hills where no landing was possible. Then I

saw a small beach strewn with boulders. Pure desperation made me head

the plane toward it.

Over the boiling white hell of breakers I shot. My wheels touched the

beach. Before I could brake with the forward jets, the port window

smashed against a projecting boulder. But that was the only damage when

I stopped out of reach of the waves.

I shut off the rocket motor and stumbled out of the ship. My knees were

trembling with the reaction of prolonged tenseness. But the land and

sea inside the incredible blind spot made me forget my exhaustion.

The air was keenly cold. It was the cold of an ordinary northern

spring, though, not the bitter polar chill it should have been. The sky

was dark with clouds, fleeing before the gale. The boom of raging surf

and keen of wailing winds were loud in my ears. Stranger even than the

comparative warmth was the faint green radiance that seemed to pervade

the air. An eldritch glow that could barely be seen, it seemed to

stream upward from the ground. It was oddly exhilarating.

“Might be gamma radiation from some unknown source,” I reasoned. “That

may account for the refraction that makes this whole area a blind spot.

I wish I had instruments here to check. Hope it doesn't have the usual

effects of gamma radiation on human tissue. But it seems invigorating.”

Excitement began to rise in me. I had found a hidden land of strange

warmth completely unknown to civilization, here in the polar wastes.

Its strange trick of refraction had defied discovery until now. No

scientist could have been dropped in that blind spot without feeling

the urge to explore. Waiting for the storm to die down, flying out of

the blind area and getting back to the ship for a regular exploration

party would have been wiser. But like every other man, I had the desire

to be first in an unknown land.

I moored the plane between two boulders and removed my flying togs to

don regulation exploring clothes for Arctic weather. With a pack of

food pellets and blankets on my back, I began to climb the jagged,

craggy wall.

Gasping for breath, I reached the rim of the lofty cliffs. Cold sea

winds buffeted me, and the boom of bursting breakers came muffledly

from below. Harshly screaming sea-gulls soared and circled around me.

To my right lay the edge of the cliffs. To my left, a strip of heather

ended in a forest of fir trees, bending in the wind. Beyond the dark

fir forest, shaggy, wooded hills rose steeply. Toward the south lay the

greater part of the land, rising into higher forested hills. It was a

wild northern landscape, bleak, harsh, inhospitable. Yet somehow I

relished being alone among screaming winds and gulls, and booming surf,

and groaning trees.

I stared at the towering little island I had glimpsed. Its cliffs rose

sheer from the green sea for a thousand feet. Its flat top was on a

level with the mainland, and separated from it only by a narrow, deep

chasm through which the ocean surged.

But upon the island itself rose massed gray towers — buildings! Great

castles stood out boldly against the gray, tossing sky, grouped into an

amazing city on the small plateau. From the island to the mainland

sprang the arch of a stupendous bridge. The flying bow of stone soared

up and out for hundreds of feet. Painted in brilliant red and blue and

yellow, it gleamed like a fixed rainbow.

A rainbow bridge, leading to the high eyrie of great gray castles! Into

my mind rushed the stupefying memory of the legends I had read so

recently — Asgard, the fabled city of the Norse gods — the rainbow

bridge that connected their abode with Midgard.

Was I looking upon the city of the Aesir? Impossible! Yet this place

was real...

Chapter III. Jotun and Aesir

A cry in the unhuman uproar startled me. I whirled around. A horse and

rider were charging along the edge of the cliff, coming from the south.

“Good Lord!” I gasped. “Must everything be like a dream?”

The rider of that charging black steed was a young woman, but like none

I had ever seen before. She wore a winged metal helmet, beneath which

her bright yellow hair streamed like flame in the wind. Blue eyes

flared hatred out of a beautiful, angry face. Her dress was a gleaming

brynja, or coat of ringed mail, over a kirtle. Her white knees were

bare, gripping the saddle. As she urged her mount down upon me, a

straight, light sword flashed in her hand.

“You dare spy upon Asgard, Jotun dog!” she cried fiercely in a language

that was remarkably close to Norwegian. “Death for that!”

Then that high eyrie of great gray castles was Asgard, home of the

legendary Aesir! And this wrathful Viking maid took me for a Jotun, one

of the race who were mortal enemies of the Aesir! Was I dreaming all

this, or had I actually stumbled somehow into the land of ancient

Viking legend?

Then I woke to realization of my peril. As the woman's sword stabbed

toward my breast, I ducked under it. I felt the blade scream above my

head as her horse thundered past. Swiftly I reached up and grabbed her

outstretched mail-clad arm. My hold tore her from the saddle.

The sword flew from her grasp as she fell. But she was up and darting

toward it in a single motion. I leaped after her and caught her before

she could reach the weapon. She fought like a tigress. The strength of

her slender, mail-clad body was amazing. Her small fist struck my mouth

furiously.

“Scum of Jotunheim!” she hissed. I finally succeeded in pinning her

arms to her sides. Her white face, inches away from my own, was blazing

with rage, her sea-blue eyes stormy in wild anger. She was beautiful,

with a vibrant loveliness like that of a tempest. Her helmeted, golden

head came only to my chin, but her blue eyes glared into mine without a

trace of fear.

“You'll dangle from the walls of Asgard for daring to lay hands on me,

Jotun!” she snapped.

She spoke a strangely antique form of the Norwegian tongue. I answered

in the Norwegian I knew.

“Why did you try to kill me?” I asked. “I'm not your enemy.”

“You are a Jotun, an enemy to the Aesir,” she declared. “You have the

dark hair of a true Jotun dog, even though you have chosen to dress in

outlandish garments. And you dared spy on Asgard!”

In the old legends, I remembered, the mighty Aesir had been

fair-haired. Their mortal enemies, the Jotuns, had been dark-haired.

“I am no Jotun,” I said earnestly. “I have but newly come to this land,

from far across the outer ice.”

She laughed scornfully. “Do you think I believe that you have come from

beyond frozen Niffleheim? Your lie is not even clever. Why do you delay

in killing me? Death is preferable to your touch, Jotun. And the death

of Freya will soon be avenged.”

“Freya?” I gasped.

This woman was Freya, whom the old Vikings had worshipped — Freya of

the white hands, loveliest of the Aesir? It was impossible! She was

real, warm, panting with hate as she sought to free herself. Yet she

had spoken of Asgard. That distant eyrie of gray castle was Asgard,

just as the legends had described it, even to the flying rainbow bridge

that connected it with the mainland.

“I can't understand, Freya,” I faltered, still holding her. “My name is

Keith Masters. I came from beyond the ice — Niffleheim, as you call

it.”

For a moment, doubt softened her stony blue eyes. Then she looked past

me, and they became bitter and hate-filled again.

“You need lie no longer. Here are your Jotun comrades now, come to help

you.”

I turned, appalled. Eight men were approaching stealthily, after

tethering their horses at the edge of the forest. They were taller even

than I. Their hair was black as mine, and hung down in shaggy locks

from under cap-like metal helmets. They wore armor tunics of

overlapping metal scales, and high buskins on their feet, and carried

swords and shields. Their faces were black-bearded, brutal.

“He is the man — kill him!” a brawny man bellowed, pointing to me with

his sword.

They rushed forward. Freya's sword lay near my feet. I released the

woman and snatched up the weapon. As I faced the Jotuns, I glimpsed

Freya staring in wonder from me to the charging barbarians. I heard

their captain shouting orders.

“Strike them both down. Be sure the man does not escape!”

They came at me in a bunch. The light, straight sword in my hand

flashed out viciously. I was a fair hand with a saber, for it was a

sport I had practiced in university days. Except for its straightness,

this sword was like the blades I had used.

It bit through a Jotun throat, then swung in a slicing slash at his

nearest comrade's neck. Both men crumpled, but the others came on. I

knew I was done for. Real life isn't like the movies. One man just

can't stand off six in a sword fight.

“We are at the edge of the cliff,” Freya said calmly. “Another step

backward and we fall.”

“Take care not to push the man over the cliff,” shouted the Jotun

captain apprehensively. “We must not lose his body!”

Whatever its reason, their caution gave me a chance I would not have

had otherwise. I stood up against their stabbing blades, fending off

savage thrusts. But such a battle could not go on for long. Already my

arm was tiring, and I was exhausted by all I had gone through.

“He weakens!” roared the Jotun captain. “Thrust home!”

At that moment I heard a thunder of approaching hoofs.

“Help comes!” Freya cried. “My kinsman and the Jarl Thor!”

The Jotun warriors stopped and swung around. A bellow of rage and

terror went up from them. Two riders were charging toward us, from

Asgard, followed by a hurrying troop. One was a helmeted, gold-haired

man, whose handsome face was wild with anger. The other's red face and

small eyes were blazing. His yellow beard bristling, he swung a huge

hammer that to me seemed his only weapon.

“The Hammerer!” cried the Jotuns.

They bolted in frantic fear toward their horses. But they were too

late. A terrible bull-roar of rage came from the bearded, bare-headed

giant. His huge hammer smashed a Jotun's helmet and skull like

cardboard. Without slackening his horse's stride, the gigantic Hammerer

swung his awful weapon at another Jotun's head.

“It's the Jarl Thor and my kinsman Frey!” Freya stated coolly.

Thor, mightiest of the old gods of legend, strongest of Aesir? Frey,

the mythical kinsman of Freya? I shrugged in defeated skepticism.

None of the fleeing Jotuns reached their horses. The lightninglike

sword of Frey stabbed two as they ran, and the terrible hammer of

bearded Thor smashed down the others. Then Thor and Frey wheeled their

horses. The Hammerer uttered another roar of rage and spurred straight

at me.

“Here's a Jotun dog we missed!”

Before I could move, his great hammer, bright-red with new blood, was

already raised. I swayed drunkenly, exhausted, unable to defend myself

from that terrible weapon.

“Wait!” Freya cried.

The hammer was checked in mid-air. No ordinary man could have halted

its downward rush so effortlessly.

“Is he not one of the Jotun skrellings who attacked you?” rumbled Thor.

“He cannot be,” Freya said. “For they tried even harder to kill him

than me, and he fought valiantly against them.”

Frey hurriedly dismounted. His handsome face was drawn with worry as he

ran to the woman and caught her shoulders.

“You're not harmed, Freya?” he asked anxiously.

“No, by the help of this outlander,” she said. “Jarl Keith is his name,

and he says he came from beyond Niffleheim.”

“It's true,” I panted. “I came in that flying ship.”

I pointed to the beach far below, where my rocket plane rested between

boulders. They stared down at it.

“So you outlanders can build flying ships,” Frey said wonderingly.

“Your civilization must be far different from ours. Odin will wish to

question this outlander. We'll take him to Asgard with us.”

Odin, chief of the old Norse gods, king of the mythical Aesir? I shook

my head and gave up the fight against disbelief.

“Very well,” growled Thor reluctantly. “I still think he looks like a

Jotun.”

Frey brought me the horse of a dead Jotun. By now, the troop that had

hurried after Frey and Thor reached us. They were all big, fair-haired

men, armored in mail brynjas and helmets, obviously disappointed at

missing the fight.

I mounted, unable to lose the dreamlike quality of the experiences.

With the troop of horsemen following. I rode beside Freya, Thor and

Frey. I heard the clatter of hoofs, the rumble of voices, felt the

saddle beneath me, and the motion of the horse. But nothing seemed

real. My body grasped the actuality, yet my tired, harried brain

refused to accept it. My eyes were so puzzled and shot with blood that

Freya looked at me sympathetically.

“You can rest in Asgard. Jarl Keith.” she said. “And you have nothing

to fear from my people.”

“I do not fear,” I answered thickly, “but my dazed mind makes me

unhappy. Are you people really the old gods?”

“Gods,” she repeated. “I do not understand you, Jarl Keith. There are

no gods except the three Norns and their mother, Wyrd, the fates whom

we worship.”

I clenched my teeth and stared straight ahead. If they weren't the

ancient Norse gods, why did they give themselves, their city, the lands

around them, the names I had found in the legends? On the other hand,

it couldn't be a fake, for they seemed genuinely bewildered by me and

my questions. Naturally they might have been fairly recent immigrants

to this weird blind spot, perhaps the tenth or fifteenth generation. In

that case, they wouldn't be immortals, of course, and there would be a

perfectly reasonable explanation for their names and those of their

city and surroundings. But would recent colonists dare the vengeance of

their gods by taking their names? I had to change that question when

another thought struck me. Even if the colony were thousands of years

old, there would still be some remembrance of the Aesir — the old gods!

But these people worshiped the Norns and their mother, Wyrd, which

meant they were not gods and did not regard the Aesir as supernatural

beings!

Defeatedly I stopped thinking when we reached the rainbow bridge. Five

hundred feet long, it consisted of brilliantly painted slabs of stone,

laid across two huge arched beams of massive, silvery metal. Far

beneath this giddy span, the green sea rolled between the promontory

and the island, Asgard. My hair stood up in fright as we rode our

horses up the arch. Their hoofs clattered on the stone, proving the

solidity of the bridge. But I shrank from looking over either side, for

there were no railings or low walls. But neither the Aesir nor their

horses showed apprehension.

Bifrost Bridge hung in the sky like a rainbow frozen into stone. And I,

Keith Masters, with Thor, Frey and Freya of the old Aesir, was riding

across it into Asgard, the mythical city of the gods!

Chapter IV. Odin Speaks

The bridge ended in a massive guard-house of gray stone, built sheer on

the precipitous edge of Asgard. The only entrance to the city beyond

was by an arched way through the fort, which was, barred by metal

gates. But as our horses clattered over the stupendous bridge, a guard

blew a long, throbbing call on a great horn that hung in a sling.

Our horses paused. Warily I glanced down into the abyss and looked at

the island more closely. I noted that in the eastern cliffs was a deep

fiord with a narrow entrance, in which floated several dozen ships.

Dragon-ships like those of the old Vikings, they were forty to eighty

feet long, with brazen beaks on their bows and sails furled and oars

stacked. From the fiord, a steep path led upward to the plateau.

In answer to the blast on the horn, a tall, lordly man in gleaming mail

and helmet came out on the tower above.

“Open wide your gates, Heimdall!” boomed Thor impatiently. “Are we to

be kept waiting here till we rot?”

“Softly, Thor,” Frey said to the Hammerer. “It was Heimdall, remember,

whose keen eyes saw Freya and the Jotuns and warned us.”

Heimdall, the warder of the guardhouse, waved his hand to us. Winches

groaned, and the barred gates swung inward. We spurred forward. I was

glad to leave that unrailed bridge over the abyss. We rode right

through the arched tunnel that pierced the guardhouse, and clattered

onto a stone-paved plaza.

Asgard lay before me.

Involuntarily I slacked my bridle and stared at the great gray castles

that were built in a ring around the sheer edge of the lofty island.

All twenty had been built of gray stone hewn from the rock of the

island itself, and all were tiled with thin stone slates. Each

consisted of a big, rectangular, two-storied hall, with two branching

lower wings and two guardtowers. They faced toward a far huger pile

that rose from the center of the island.

The largest castle had four guardtowers, and its vast, stone-tiled roof

loomed over the rest of Asgard like a man-made mountain. Between this

great hall and the ring of smaller castles lay small fields and cobbled

streets of stone houses and workshops.

Hundreds of the people of Asgard were in the streets and fields. All

were fair-haired, blue-eyed and large-statured. Many of the men wore

helmets and mailed brynjas, and were armed with sword, ax or bow. Other

men wore metal rings around their necks, but they went about their

tasks cheerfully enough. The women wore long blue or white gowis, with

wimpled hoods. There were scarcely any children.

“Must be an unbelievably low birthrate here,” I muttered. “That could

be due to the hard radiation effect.”

The faint, eldritch green glow pervaded this island, like the mainland.

It was certainly exhilarating. It was restoring my vigor with amazing

speed. But if it was actually gamma or a similar hard radiation, as I

suspected, it would be bound to cause a partial sterility among people

who were continually exposed to it.

We spurred toward the central castle, halted our horses on a stone

plaza guarded by a file of soldiery.

“This is Valhalla, the castle of our king,” Freya told me as we

dismounted. “Courage, Jarl Keith. Odin will explain all to you.”

The touch of her slim white fingers seemed to steady me. Valhalla, the

legendary gathering hall of the gods, had stunned me. I grinned weakly

and followed Thor as he clanked through the arched entrance and strode

down a stone corridor into a vast hall.

The place was two hundred feet wide and six hundred feet long! Ninety

feet above us were the great beams that supported the enormous gabled

roof. Narrow, slit-like windows admitted too little light to dispel the

shadows, but I could see that the walls were hung with brilliant

tapestries. The stone floor held massive tables and benches.

In the center was a great sunken hearth, where a few dying brands still

smoldered. Facing this, on a raised stone dais against the south wall,

sat Odin, king of the Aesir. He was wrapped in a blue-gray mantle, and

wore a gleaming eagle-helmet. Thor led our little group across the

shadowy hall and raised his hammer in salute.

“Hail, king and father! The Jotuns dared to attack the lady Freya. Frey

and I killed the skrellings, and have brought this man. He looks like a

Jotun to me, but he claims he is an outlander.”

Freya stepped forward, her slim figure martial in her gleaming white

mail, her beautiful white face wrathful.

“Thor is stupid as ever, lord Odin! Anyone can see this man is an

outlander from beyond Niffleheim.”

“Let the man speak for himself,” Odin said in a heavy, rolling voice.

The king of the Aesir seemed to be a powerful, vigorous man of about

fifty years of age. His short beard was gray. His left eye was missing,

destroyed by the accident or battle that had also left a white scar on

his face. But he radiated such deep, stern power and wisdom that I felt

like a child before him.

“You say you came from beyond Niffleheim?” he asked.

“Yes, lord Odin,” I answered unsteadily. “I was traveling over that icy

waste in my flying ship. A storm caught me and flung me far north,

toward this strange land which I could not even see until I was hurled

into it.”

“So the outland peoples have been learning science?” Odin asked

thoughtfully. “It must be so, if they can build flying craft.”

“Yes, and I am one of the scientists of my people,” I said. “Yet I

cannot understand this strange land. It cannot be seen from outside. It

is warm compared with the polar cold outside, and it seems flooded with

some mysterious force.”

“If you cannot understand these things,” Odin rumbled, “then the

science of your outland peoples cannot be deep as our ancient one.”

I was more stunned than ever. The Aesir seemed utterly without modern

scientific tools, weapons and instruments, yet their ruler was calmly

deprecating the science of the modern world.

“I cannot understand you, lord Odin!” I burst out. “Asgard, all the

Aesir, and the Jotuns have been deemed but legend for many centuries.

Yet in this hidden land I find you have the names of the old gods, and

have called your city Asgard. Most of all, I do not understand why you

speak of the science of my race as though you knew a much deeper

science. I have seen no evidences of scientific knowledge in this land

at all!”

“Outlander, who call yourself Jarl Keith,” Odin replied, “we Aesir are

men, not gods. But we have lived for many centuries in Asgard, and many

legends may have risen about us in the outer world.”

“You've lived here for centuries?” I gasped incredulously. “Do you mean

that you are immortal?”

“Not immortal. We can be killed by war, accident or starvation. But we

do not grow old, and neither do we sicken or die of disease. We do

possess an ancient science, deeper and different than your outland

science.

“But because it once brought us disaster, we prefer not to encourage

research in it, nor use it in our everyday lives. We Aesir were the

first civilized race of Earth. For we grew to civilization in the place

where life itself first evolved — beneath the crust of Earth.”

“Inside Earth?” I exclaimed unbelievingly. “Why, not one of our

biologists would agree!”

“Yet it is so,” said Odin broodingly. “There are great spaces beneath

the crust of the planet, mighty hollows formed by its unequal cooling.

It was in one of those spaces beneath this northern part of the globe

that life first began. For in those hollows are great masses of

imbedded radioactive elements.

“Their radiation, powerfully drenching certain compounds of carbon,

hydrogen, phosphorus, sulfur and other elements, which erosion carried

down into the subterranean spaces, transformed those unstable compounds

into new, complex chemical compounds. They never could have formed on

the surface. Those organic compounds finally formed into cells capable

of assimilation and reproduction.

“A rapid evolution of those first subterranean living cells into more

complex creatures took place. It was rapid because the penetrating

radiation in that subterranean space affected the genes of all living

things and caused a proliferation of mutants, a constant flood of new

forms. Thus, the first living things, the first plants and insects and

animals, were born beneath Earth's crust.

“From there, they spread out onto Earth's surface, and soon multiplied

vastly. But evolution was more rapid in the subterranean spaces. For

the gene-affecting radiation was more powerful there than on the

surface. Thus more mutants evolved there. So it was in the subterranean

spaces that the first mammals and the first men evolved. Many of those

men found their way out to the surface.

“They spread over Earth as wandering, half-animal savages who slowly

developed through the ages. But the human beings who remained in the

sheltered subterranean world developed far more swiftly. Those people

had become intelligent when the men of the surface were still brutes.

Those people in the underworld developed a great civilization and deep

knowledge of science. They were my people, the Aesir.

“Generations of us lived and died in the great, hollow underground

world we called Muspelheim. But then our scientific progress brought

catastrophe. One of our scientists, ignoring my warnings, believed that

he could enable us to live indefinitely without aging or sickening.

“His theory was that by accelerating the natural disintegration of the

radioactive substances in our subterranean world, they would emit a

terrific flood of radiation. It would destroy all disease bacteria and

deliver us from sickness. It also would constantly renew the cells in

our bodies by stimulating their unceasing regeneration.”

Odin paused, and a shudder seemed to run through all the Aesir in that

great hall, Valhalla.

“Against my orders, he carried out the experiment that brought

catastrophe to Muspelheim. The process got beyond his control. All the

radioactive matter in our subterranean world blazed up. We Aesir fled

up from our underworld to the surface. We found that the mainland

yonder, which we called Midgard, was populated by two of the barbarous

races of the upper Earth.

“One of those races, whom we called the Jotuns because of their great

stature, were quite numerous. A people of savage, brutal warriors,

lacking all learning, they dwelt in the dark city Jotunheim, which lies

on the southern shore of the mainland Midgard. The other race we called

the Alfings, for they were stunted men who dwelt mostly in the small

caves under Midgard, through fear of the Jotuns.

“The Jotuns at first pretended friendliness toward us, and learned our

language. We had taken this island of Asgard for our home, and had

built our castles here, and connected it to the mainland by the bridge

Bifrost, whose beams the Alfings forged for us. Then the Jotuns

suddenly unmasked their hatred and attacked us here in Asgard.

“Almost they overcame us, for to surprise was added treachery. But by

calling upon our scientific powers, we repelled the Jotuns. Aghast at

the dreadful forces our science loosed upon them, they gladly ceased

attacking us. Yet they have always hated us, and we have lived in a

hostile armed truce with them for twenty centuries.

“Yes, for two thousand years have I and most of my people lived here in

Asgard. The terrific blaze of radioactive fire which our rash scientist

kindled in Muspelheim far below drenches all this land with penetrating

radiation. Even as he had hoped, it kills all disease bacteria and

rejuvenates our tissues. We do not sicken or age, and can live

indefinitely, unless killed in war or accident. But because the

radiation has a strong sterilizing effect, our number has never

increased.

“The Jotuns and Alfings, who dwell in the mainland Midgard, are also

kept unaging by the radiation. And it refracts all light around this

land. It also causes the northern lights that stream from this place

into the skies. Here in Asgard we have lived thus for all these

centuries. Though we chiefs of the Aesir retain the deep scientific

knowledge we developed long ago in Muspelheim, we have chosen not to

delve deeper.

“It was such delving that brought disaster to our subterranean home. We

want no more such disasters! We are content to live here in simple

fashion, without depending too utterly on science. We know from bitter

experience that science can be perverted to catastrophic results by

reckless and unscrupulous men.”

His heavy voice ceased. I stood staring at him, my mind dizzy.

Incredible as it seemed, his story was scientifically sound. It

explained nearly all the enigmas I had met in this mystery land.

“You have lived here for centuries,” I mused. “Dim rumors of your

powers, your city Asgard, and your war with the Jotuns, must have

reached the outer world. These rumors became myths that made you gods.”

“It must be so,” Odin agreed. “Long ago, a party of the Aesir went

beyond the ice on an important mission. Some of them did not return.

Now I believe those lost ones reached the outer world. They probably

died soon, from lack of the rejuvenating radiation. But their stories

of us may have begun those myths.”

“So I am thought a mythical god in the outer world, eh?” Thor guffawed.

“It is true,” I said earnestly. “And also lord Odin, and Frey and

Freya. But there's one thing I can't understand. Those Jotuns who

attacked me and Freya seemed intent on killing or capturing me. It was

as though they expected me, and were waiting to seize me. Yet how could

they possibly know I was coming?”

Odin frowned. “I do not know, but I do not like it. It may be that the

Jotuns—”

His voice trailed off, and he stared abstractedly beyond me. Somehow

the tone of his voice had chilled me.

“But enough of that now,” he said abruptly. “We shall talk later of

these things and of the outer world from whence you come. Now Jarl

Keith is to be an honored guest of the Aesir.”

“I can't claim that title,” I replied. “I am no chieftain in my own

land. I'm only a scientist.”

“Any man who dared Niffleheim's ice has won the title of jarl,” he

declared. “You shall rest in this castle. And tonight, Jarl Keith, you

sit with the Aesir at our nightly feast, here in Valhalla.”

Chapter V. Shadow of Loki

Slowly I awoke to the realization that a hand was gently shaking my

shoulder. I saw at once that it was twilight. I had slept exhaustedly

for several hours in this spacious, stone-walled room. I lay on a

wooden bed whose posts were carved into wolf's heads. There were two

heavy chairs with hide seats, and a big chest covered by a brilliant

tapestry. Broad open windows looked out across the twilit city of

Asgard.

The hand shaking my shoulder was that of a thrall. The servant, a

grizzled, middle-aged man, wore the metal ring of servitude around his

neck.

“The feast in Valhalla begins soon, lord,” he said as I sat up. “I have

brought you proper raiment.”

He pointed to a helmet and garments such as the Aesir wore, which he

had placed on the chest.

“All right, if I'm supposed to dress in the fashion,” I said dubiously.

As he bowed and left, I went to the window. The rapidly darkening sky

had partly cleared of storm clouds. In the southwest, a bloody, murky

sunset glowed evilly crimson. The shaggy hills and ridges of Midgard

stood out black against it.

Somewhere on the mainland, miles away at its southern end, was the dark

city of Jotunheim. Somewhere in the caves of that rocky land dwelt the

dwarfed Alfings. And far below all this land, if Odin had told the

truth, lay the great subterranean world of Muspelheim. There blazed the

terrific atomic radiation that made this a warm country where no man

could sicken or grow old enough to die.

Beneath me, as dusk fell over Asgard, I could see a cheerful bustle of

activity. Armed soldiers, who had been training with sword and buckler

on a nearby field, were now trooping through the twilight toward

Valhalla. Smoke was rising from great castles and humble stone houses.

I glimpsed hunters riding over Bifrost Bridge, the carcasses of small

deer slung over their saddles. As Asgard's gates were opened, I heard

the throbbing call of the warder's great horn welcoming them.

Was it possible that I was actually here in the mythical city of the

gods? It certainly was hard to believe. But even more incredible was

Odin's saga. If he and the other Aesir chiefs possessed such profound

scientific knowledge, why did they and all their people live so

primitively?

“I suppose it's true,” I muttered. “They don't age or grow sick, so

they can live pleasantly enough without using science. Anyhow, they had

a damned unpleasant experience with one reckless scientist. It's no

wonder they don't encourage research.” Slowly I shook my head. “No.

I'll wake up and find it's just a dream. But I'd hate to have it

disappear before I could see Freya again. Wonder if she'll be at the

feast.”

That thought spurred me into taking off my heavy coat, breeches and

boots. The helmet, woolen trunks, mail coat, buskins, belt and long

sword and dagger looked uncomfortably like stage props. But women are

funny about unfamiliar clothing. Just think how they laugh when the

telenews shows them styles they wore a couple of decades ago! I didn't

want Freya to have that reaction to me.

But when I took off my own shirt to don the Aesir garments, my hand

touched something that hung from my neck. It was the rune key! I had

completely forgotten it since entering the blind spot. Now, however, I

suddenly thought of the rune rhyme.

Rune key am I,

Chaining dark evil,

Midgard snake, Fenris,

And Loki, arch-devil.

Why, I wondered, had I heard no mention of Loki? Everything else in the

old Norse myths seemed to have some solid basis here, but I had heard

nothing of the traitor Aesir. I decided to ask Odin about that at my

first opportunity, as I tucked the gold cylinder inside my new shirt

and laced up the mail brynja over it.

Hardly had I done so when the grizzled thrall again appeared at the

door of my chamber.

“King Odin summons you to the feast, lord.”

I quickly put on the heavy, gleaming helmet. Feeling stiff as a ham

actor in the strange costume, I followed the thrall down stone stairs

to the great hall. The thrall shouted a loud announcement.

“The Jarl Keith, from the outlands beyond Niffleheim!”

The voices and laughter died down, and every eye turned toward me with

eager curiosity. Valhalla blazed with light from torches set in the

walls and the great fire blazing high in the central hearth. The scores

of tables now bore metal and earthenware dishes loaded with food. Tall

flagons and drinking horns were replenished by swift serving-maidens.

At these tables sat the chief captains and warriors of the Aesir.

Hundreds of big, fair-haired men, helmets laid aside, their mail

glistening in the torchlight, were feasting and drinking. At the table

raised upon the dais by the southern wall sat the nobles of the Aesir

and their ladies. In his high, carved chair in the middle sat Odin.

Beside him was a woman of matronly beauty, his queen, the lady Frigga.

“Jarls and captains of the Aesir,” Odin boomed. “Drink welcome to the

Jarl Keith, our guest and friend from beyond Niffleheim.”

“Skoal to the Jarl Keith!” roared bearded Thor, winking jovially at me

as he raised his huge drinking-horn.

“Skoal!” pealed Freya's silver voice. Every voice in Valhalla hall

repeated the greeting. Hundreds of drinking-horns were raised. Odin

waved me toward a seat at his table of nobles, between Freya and the

delicately lovely wife of Thor. As I took the chair, serving-maids

brought me a great slab of beef on a platter, and a horn of mead. I

tasted the drink curiously. It was thin, sweet and potent.

Freya leaned toward me. She was dressed now like the other Aesir

ladies, in a long white linen gown. Her bright hair was bound by a

silver circlet, her dress belted by a heavy metal girdle studded with

flashing emeralds.

“Shall I name the others for you, Jarl Keith? You will meet them all

soon.”

At my right, beyond giant Thor and his wife, sat three other sons of

Odin — Vidar, Vali and Hermod, tall and fair-haired, stalwart men all.

There was Heimdall, the warder of Asgard gate, whom I had already seen.

Niord was a squat, jovial bald man of middle age, with his wife Skadi.

Forseti was a sober young man, apparently much respected by the other

Aesir.

To my left, beyond Freya, sat Frey and his lovely wife, Gerda. Beyond

them were Bragi, a gentle-looking man with dreaming eyes, his wife, the

noble-featured Idun; Aegir, a gaunt, white-bearded old sea-king, and

his aged wife, Ran. At the- table-end sat Tyr, a young man but most

gloomy and silent of any in the hall. Drinking moodily, he watched the

merry feasters with brooding eyes.

“Tyr is always dark and silent,” Freya explained, “but not in battle.

He is a berserk.”

I remembered the legend of the berserks — men who went blood-mad in

battle, and fought with unhuman frenzy, without mail.

“How is it that some of you are old, if the radiation keeps you all

from aging?” I asked.

“They were old when the catastrophe first kindled the radiation below.

Since then, none of them has grown older. The few children born here

grow normally till they reach maturity, and then do not age further.”

“You've all lived here in Asgard for centuries on centuries,” I

muttered. “It seems repulsive.”

“Not all of us, Jarl Keith,” said Freya. “I am not centuries old!”

She smiled when I looked at her doubtfully.

“Your name was known and worshiped in the outer world centuries ago,

Freya.”

“My mother's mother was named Freya also,” she explained. “She was

sister to Frey, who sits beside you. She and her husband Odur were

among the party of Aesir Odin mentioned, who perished in a mission

beyond Niffleheim. But Freya left two daughters, Hnoss and Gersemi.

Gersemi was my own mother. She perished from drowning twenty years ago,

soon after I was born.”

“Then you're really only twenty years old?” I exclaimed. “I'm glad of

that!”

“Why should you be glad, Jarl Keith?” she asked quite innocently.

I was spared a reply by an interruption to the feast. Tall Heimdall

stood up and called:

“A saga from the king of skalds, Bragi!”

When the feasters took up the cry, Bragi rose. Smiling, he went to a

great harp at the end of the hall. His fingers touched the strings, and

rippling, shivering music welled out. He sang in a clear, strong voice.

Give ear, all ye Aesir, Sons of the morning,

Wise men and warriors,

Men with great hearts!

Ye who fared upward,

From Muspelheim's fire-hell,

Daring all terrors

To seek a new land!

Bragi sang on, describing the migration of the Aesir from their

disaster-smitten underworld, their repulse of the Jotuns, the hunt and

the battle of their ships along Midgard's coast, and the fury of the

sea.

“Skoal, Bragi!” roared the audience, and all raised their horns.

I drank with the others. The potent mead made me a little dizzy. I

nearly forgot I was Keith Masters. I was the Jarl Keith, sitting beside

Freya in Valhalla, feasting and shouting.

“Now for the games,” Odin announced.

A gleeful yell came from the warriors.

“What games are these?” I asked.

“Sword-play with blunted blades, and wrestling,” Freya said. “As a

guest, Jarl Keith, you'll take part in them, of course.”

I saw everyone looking expectantly at me. Somewhat sobered, I stood up.

“I'm but a fair swordsman, lord Odin,” I said, “yet I'll join in.”

“Who will try sword-play with the outland Jarl?” Odin asked.

“Tyr, you are our best swordsman.”

“No, lord Odin, not I,” the berserk Tyr answered broodingly. “You know

that a sword in my hand brings the madness on me.”

“I'll face Jarl Keith,” said Frey, standing up and smiling at me.

We walked around to the open space in front of the tables. There we

were given gauntlets, shields, and two long swords whose points had

been cut off.

“Who delivers three stout blows on his opponent's helmet wins the

game,” Odin stated.

The game appeared dangerous to me, for our faces were quite

unprotected. I hadn't much hope of besting Frey; but I was determined

not to show any semblance of fear before Freya and these fierce

warriors.

Frey's blade clashed against mine. Next instant, I realized I could

never meet his equal. Centuries of practice had made him unhumanly

skillful. His blade flew like a streak of light and crashed on my

helmet. As I staggered from the stunning blow, he hit my helmet again.

A roar went up from the crowd. Resentment gripped me, and I lashed out

savagely at Frey's head.

By sheer luck, the unexpected stroke caught his mailed shoulder. When

he stumbled, I smote down on his helmet.

“Well done, Jarl Keith!” roared the bull voice of Thor.

But Frey recovered before I did. His blade became a blur of steel in

front of me. Grimly I tried to hold him off. But he soon got in his

third blow.

“Are you hurt, Jarl Keith?” asked Frey solicitously.

“Only my pride,” I said ruefully, as I put down the sword and shield.

Thor strode around the table to me. His bearded red face and little

eyes were twinkling with jovial expectation.

“You look like a wrestler, Jarl from the outlands,” he boomed. “Will

you try a fall with me?”

“Aye, a match between Thor and the outland Jarl!” the audience shouted.

“Jarl Keith hasn't rested!” Freya cried indignantly to the Hammerer.

“It's not fair!”

“I'm ready,” I said coolly to Thor. I realized to the full that the

chances of my overcoming the giant were infinitesimal. But I realized,

too, that all this was a kind of hazing which these Vikings gave to any

newcomer. Thor tossed aside his hammer. We faced each other, hands

extended, seeking a grip.

I was a fair wrestler, and I knew that my only chance was to overcome

Thor by a quick trick that he might not know.

As the giant grabbed for me, I slipped past him. Leaping to his back, I

got a half-nelson on him before he could expect it.

A mighty shout went up from the watchers as they saw the Hammerer claw

furiously to pull me loose. Furiously I hung on.

With one sturdy arm against the back of his heavily cabled neck, and my

legs braced, I strained to force his huge head downward. For a moment I

thought I had a chance to win the match. Then a bull-roar of rage came

from Thor.

He jerked his head upward with such tremendous force that my hold was

torn loose.

Like an enraged bear, the Hammerer whirled and caught me around the

waist.

This was wrestling in his style, all strength and little science. His

huge arms crushed me, though I exerted all my strength to win free. I

felt the lacings of my mail coat burst under the pressure as I strained

frantically to break his hold. But he picked me up like a child and

slammed me down upon the stone floor.

“Well done,” he roared as he let me go. “You almost conquered me with

your outland tricks, Jarl Keith. You will have to teach them to me.”

“Some other time,” I gasped, panting for breath as I stumbled to my

feet. I turned toward the king. “If you are satisfied, lord Odin, I'll

take part in no more games now.”

Odin smiled. “You have borne yourself well, Jarl Keith, and—”

His voice ceased as his stern face seemed to freeze.

When I saw that he was staring at my chest, I looked down. The bursting

mail coat had let the rune key dangle in full view.

“The rune key!” he whispered.

Everyone in great Valhalla was speechless, staring in horror at the

ancient gold cylinder that hung outside my coat.

“The rune key!” Odin repeated hoarsely. “It has come back to Asgard.

This is the day for which dark Loki has waited!”

Chapter VI. Ancient Science

The frozen stillness in Valhalla was appalling. Aesir nobles and

warriors all seemed turned to stone as they stared at the golden

cylinder hanging from my neck. I could hear the torches guttering, the

snap of logs on the blazing hearth, and the dull moan of the sea wind

around Valhalla's lofty eaves. It was as though the feast of the Aesir

had been smitten by chill terror.

“Where did you get that key, Jarl Keith?” Odin asked me hoarsely.

“Why, my comrades fished it out of the sea beyond the ice-pack — beyond

Niffleheim,” I answered bewilderedly.

A deep groan went up from the entire gathering. I turned to them

unhappily, feeling like a hunted animal that knows it has done no

wrong, yet still is persecuted.

“Why did you bring it into this land?” Odin demanded fiercely.

“I don't know,” I blurted. Remembering the queer alien hunch that had

made me find the key, I added: “Some strange whim in my mind told me

where it was and warned me not to throw it away.”

“Loki's work!” Odin whispered. “The evil one has cast forces abroad

that have brought back the rune key that will set him free.”

Thor's face flamed crimson as he sprang to his feet, clutching his

mighty weapon.

“The arch-traitor still seeks to ruin Asgard and the Aesir!” he roared

in overpowering rage. “Oh, that I could bring Miolnir down upon his

skull this moment!”

“Even your strength and mighty weapon would fail against the dark

science of Loki,” Odin said somberly.

I looked down bewilderedly at the gold cylinder hanging on my chest.

Into my mind flashed the last lines of the rune-rhyme graven on it.

While I lie far,

The Aesir safe are.

Bring me not home

Lest Ragnarok come.

Those lines seemed to throb in my mind like a beating drum of black,

dire menace that cannot be seen yet can be felt.

“I do not understand, lord Odin,” I faltered. “Have I done wrong in

bringing this small and apparently harmless key into your land?”

“Because you brought it,” Odin stated, calm at last, “we are threatened

with doom. A terrible menace has been a shadow over us for all these

long centuries. That is the key which alone can loose the evil traitor

Loki, who long has been prisoned.”

When he saw me pale at his words, his deep, heavy voice rumbled

comfortingly through the frozen silence.

“It is not your fault, Jarl Keith. I see it all now. It was Loki's

power that brought you and the rune key here. Yes, from the gloomy

prison where his body lies helpless, Loki's mind reached forth through

his deep craft of scientific powers. He caused you to fish that rune

key from the sea, and raised the storm that blew you hither. Aye, and

it was to take from you the key that would free their dark lord that

the Jotuns attacked you when you arrived.”

“But who is Loki?” I asked bewilderedly. “In the old myths of the

northland, there was a tale of a traitor by that name, who sought to

destroy you—”

“Aye, a black traitor was accursed Loki!” shouted Thor. “The shame and

the curse of the Aesir, since first he was born.”

“Aye, traitor he was, indeed,” said Odin somberly. “Yet long ago, when

we dwelt in the underworld of Muspelheim, Loki was the most honored of

the Aesir, next to myself. Handsome, valiant, cunning, and learned, he

was second only to me among the Aesir. But Loki, the greatest scientist

of my people, longed for power. His experiments endangered us all, time

and again. Finally, against my orders, Loki brought catastrophe on our

great and lovely underworld.”

“Then Loki was the scientist you told me of!” I exclaimed. “He kindled

the atomic fires of Muspelheim and nearly destroyed you!”

Odin nodded. “Loki was that rash scientist of whom I spoke. Seeking to

kindle a radiation that would keep us ever young, he touched off atomic

fires that engulfed Muspelheim and forced us to flee to this upper

world. I should have punished Loki then for his reckless disobedience.

But I did not, because the flood of radiation would keep us almost

immortal in this land. Instead I warned him that nobody must tamper

further with the raving atomic fires below.

“Loki agreed to tamper no more with those awful forces. But his promise

was worth nothing. Secretly, here in Asgard, he traveled back into

fiery Muspelheim, and began experimenting again. He hoped to forge such

tremendous weapons from those forces that he could displace me as ruler

of the Aesir and conquer all Earth. My son Baldur discovered Loki's

forbidden researches in deep Muspelheim. To prevent Baldur from

exposing him, Loki slew him. But he had already exposed himself.

“Loki fled from Asgard. Taking with him his two hideous pets, the wolf

Fenris and the Midgard snake, he fled to dark Jotunheim. There he

allied himself with the brutal Jotuns. He knew they hated the Aesir, so

he incited them to attack us, promising that with his scientific

powers, he would help them conquer and sack Asgard.

“That was the time of which I told you, Jarl Keith, when surprise and

treachery almost enabled the Jotuns to conquer us. The Jotuns, led by

Loki and aided by the hellish forces his science devised, would have

overcome us had I not used my own scientific powers to defeat Loki's

and had we not all fought valiantly. We repelled the Jotuns with great

slaughter.”

Thor grinned and nodded, but his giant face reddened with hatred as

Odin continued.

“Defeated, Loki fled with his wolf and serpent into the labyrinth of

caves in Midgard. We followed him to the cave in which he hid, but

Loki, in his extremity, bargained cunningly for his life. Loki called

out to us: 'I have an instrument which can destroy all Asgard and the

Aesir, by loosing the sea upon the atomic fires of Muspelheim. Unless

you agree to spare my life, I will use that secret and you will all

perish with me.'“

“'We agree then to spare your life, Loki,' I answered. 'You have our

pledge, if you surrender that deadly instrument.' Loki surrendered the

instrument to me. And then I told him: 'We agreed to spare your life,

Loki — but that is all! Though you shall remain alive, you will no

longer be a menace to us, for we shall prison you eternally in this

cave to which you fled.'

“And we did that to Loki, Jarl Keith. We cast him into a state of

suspended animation by filling his cave with a gas whose scientific

secret I had discovered. That gas paralyzed the functions of the body

by freezing, but left the mind conscious as ever. Into that waking,

frozen sleep we cast Loki and his two hideous pets. Then we closed that

cave forever with a door that was not of metal or stone, but of

invulnerable force.

“That wall of energy was a screen of vibrations controlled by the

generator inside a tiny projector. You, Jarl Keith, have that projector

— the rune key! Only the rune key can unlock the door of Loki's

cave-prison. Until it is unlocked, Loki must lie there with his two

dreadful familiars in suspended animation.

“But though Loki's body lies frozen, his mind is awake and active, and

he seeks by mental forces to free himself. We had given the wardership

of the rune key to Odur, husband of Freya, one of our greatest jarls.

Loki's mind worked from afar upon Odur by telepathic command,

attempting to force the keeper of the key to release Loki.

“Fearing that Loki's telepathic orders might some day succeed, I

commanded Odur to take the rune key and travel to the great ocean far

outside icy Niffleheim, and fling it into the deepest sea. Then, I

thought, Loki would not be able to bring the key back into Asgard, and

would never manage to escape his doom. Odur took the rune key and went

beyond the ice of Niffleheim, and flung the key into the ocean as I

bade.

“But before he could return across the ice, Odur and his wife Freya and

their party were lost. I think now that they reached the lands of your

outer world, and that their tales of the Aesir and Asgard started the

myths you mentioned, Jarl Keith. But we thought ourselves safe, with

the rune key resting in the ocean deeps far outside Asgard.

“For even did a stranger chance to find the key in some future day, the

runes upon it would warn him. In case he could not read the runes, the

key was constructed to telepath a constant thought message. He would

receive a constant mental warning to get rid of the key.”

“So that's why I felt that sensation of ominous warning, after I first

touched the key!” I muttered.

“That is why,” Odin replied gravely; “And yet you, Jarl Keith, were

influenced by the even stronger commands of Loki. You kept the key, and

brought it back into Asgard. And now Loki, through his allies, the

Jotuns, will seek to get the rune key from us, to use it to free

himself. And if Loki is ever freed again, he will lead the hosts of

Jotunheim once more against Asgard. And it might well be that Asgard

falls, that the Aesir perish!”

I listened in horror. Not for a moment did I doubt Odin was telling the

truth. The ancient science of these Aesir, though neglecting mechanical

discoveries for which they had little need, had clearly surpassed us in

the study of the subtlest forces of the Universe.

Yes, I knew now what the two contending, alien voices in my mind had

been. The constant telepathic warning of the rune key projector itself

— and the more powerful mental command of dreaded Loki!

“I did not know, lord Odin,” I declared with sincere regret. “Had I

dreamed that the rune key was what it really is, I'd never have brought

it here.”

“You had no way of knowing, Jarl Keith,” he answered. “And the attempt

of Loki has failed. The Jotuns he sent to take the key failed in their

task, and we still hold it.”

I took the little gold cylinder from around my neck and handed it to

him. The instant I parted with it, I felt relieved of that throbbing,

warning sensation which had incessantly oppressed me. Odin took the

key. While all in Valhalla watched, he solemnly handed it to the

wide-eyed Freya.

“Your grandfather was keeper of the key, Freya, and the office descends

to you,” the Aesir king stated. “You shall hold it until we take

council and decide what to do with it.”

“Couldn't you just destroy the thing?” I asked.

Odin shook his head. “You know little of our science, outland Jarl. The

projector in the rune key maintains the energy screen that bars Loki's

cave-prison. Destroying the key would destroy that screen. Let no fear

enter your hearts, men of the Aesir. Loki is still prisoned, and shall

remain so. Not yet has the hour come when the evil one shall escape.”

A fierce roar of shouts crashed from the throng, as their swords and

axes flashed high in the torchlight.

“Our swords for Asgard!”

“It is well,” Odin said with somber pride. “Now let this feast of ill

omen end. Heimdall, keep closest watch on Asgard's gates tonight.

Loki's mind knows the key is here, and he might telepathically incite

the Jotuns to attack us and secure it. And you, Frey, see that your

castle is well guarded, to protect your kinswoman and the key.”

Freya stood fingering the cord of the rune key. She looked at me with

wordless, troubled appeal as she left. I followed her into the night.

The eldritch faint green glow of the streaming, tingling radiation

clung to the towering castles. No aurora was visible, for that streamed

up outside the blind spot. A haggard Moon was shining through flying

storm clouds. The driving north wind wailed keen and cold. From far

below came the dim, distant booming of the surf as the stormy ocean

dashed against the cliffs. Freya turned toward me, her eyes dark and

big.

“Jarl Keith, I am afraid!” she whispered. “I, who never knew fear

before, am fearful now. If Loki is loosed—”

“There's no chance of that, while you and your people hold the key,” I

encouraged her. “And even if he were set free, he is only one man.”

“He is evil itself.” She shuddered. “I never saw Loki. Long centuries

before my birth, he was prisoned. But I have heard the tales of the

other Aesir. I know that, in their secret hearts, they still dread Loki

and his dark powers.”

She was trembling like a wind-shaken leaf. I put my arm protectingly

around her, and she shivered closer to me in the moonlight. Even the

dread that I, too, was feeling could not keep my blood from racing as I

looked down at her lovely face. Freya of the White Hands, daughter of

the goddess of long ago, Viking maid of the Aesir — I held her in my

arms!

I kissed her. As I held her close against my mail coat, the chill wind

blew her bright hair across my face.

“Jarl Keith!” she whispered wonderingly.

“Freya,” I breathed, “I have never loved any woman before, and I never

met you until this day. But now—”

She did not answer me with words. She put her small, strong hands

behind my head and drew my lips down again to hers. I felt strangely

shaken when I raised my head again. We heard a cough. Frey stood in the

pale light near us, regarding us with a half-smile.

“I'll go with my lady Gerda to our castle, kinswoman,” he said gently.

“No doubt the Jarl Keith would be willing to escort you thither.”

When he and Gerda had gone, we followed slowly. My mailed arm was

around Freya's slim waist as we walked through the silent, moonlit

streets of Asgard. She led me toward the castle on the eastern edge of

Asgard. Behind us, Valhalla towered vast and gloomy against the stormy

sky. Far to our left gleamed the incredible arch of Bifrost.

“Beloved, I feel armed now against even Loki,” whispered Freya happily.

“And I fear only that this is a dream from which I shall awake,” I

breathed.

We were approaching the dark bulk of the castle that crouched squat and

massive on the sheer cliff. A half-dozen blond Aesir warriors were

approaching us in the moonlight When they were but a few yards from us,

they suddenly drew their swords. Their leader called to them in a

fierce undertone.

“That is Freya. She has the key. Seize her, and kill the man!”

Chapter VII. Ambush!

They sprang toward us. Though stupefied by the sudden treachery of

Aesir warriors, I retained enough presence of mind to draw my long

sword. I pushed Freya aside, struck up a blade that was stabbing at my

face. My sword sliced deep into the warrior's neck. His helmet rolled

off as he fell, and his yellow hair came off with the helmet!

“These are Jotuns!” I shouted to Freya. “Run and give the alarm!”

I heard her cry pierce the night, but she did not run. A sword-point

grazed my shoulder, through my mail. The sting made me yell with rage,

and I flung myself at the disguised Jotuns. My whirling blade cut away

half the face of one. Another reeled back, clutching an almost severed

arm. Then two blades crashed down on my helmet, and I collapsed to the

ground.

As I fought to rally my senses, I glimpsed the disguised Jotuns

dragging Freya, struggling like a wildcat, toward the cliff. The last

thing I remember was trying to rise...

The next thing I knew, I was being pulled to my feet. Thor was

supporting me, and Frey was examining me with desperate anxiety.

Torches flashed as men poured from the nearby castle.

“What happened?” roared the Hammerer. “Where is the lady Freya?”

“Jotuns!” I gasped. “They got into Asgard, disguised as Aesir. They

were after the rune key, and must have seen Odin give it to Freya. They

seized her and took her that way.”

I pointed to the cliffs.

“The stair down to the harbor!” Frey cried. “They must have come in a

ship!”

As they rushed forward toward the cliff-edge, I staggered after them.

My head still ached from the shock of two swords clashing on my helmet.

At the edge of the cliff was the narrow stairway, chiseled down the

solid rock of the precipice to the fiord below. Two dead Aesir warriors

who lay on the stair showed what had become of the guards. Thor started

down the steps, but Frey's heart-stopping shout halted him.

“Look! We are too late!”

Out on the ocean, a ship was forging southward through the raging

waves, its sail taut in the screaming winds. It was heading straight

along the precipitous coast of Midgard. Swiftly it vanished beyond the

cliffs.

“The Jotuns and Freya!” moaned Frey. “They have her and the rune key.

Now they can loose dark Loki and bring destruction on Asgard!”

Thor shook his great hammer in terrible rage.

“Loki's work!” he roared savagely. “It was the arch-traitor who put the

thought of that cunning ruse into the heads of the Jotuns, by his

telepathic tricks.”

“Are we just going to stand here?” I cried wildly. “They've got Freya,

as well as the rune key.”

It was Freya I was thinking of in that moment, rather than the key.

Though the key might loose Loki and bring about the final attack on

Asgard which the Aesir feared, that possibility was less dire to me

than the threat to Freya. To have her snatched from my arms in this

very hour when I had won her love! I felt a red fury that made me long

to destroy every Jotun in payment for any harm they might do to the

Viking maid I loved.

“We can overtake them if we're quick,” said Frey. He swung around to

the Aesir warriors who had come running from his castle. “Down to the

harbor!”

At top speed, we ran down the narrow stairway in the cliff. Thor led,

with Frey and me close behind the Hammerer, and a score or more of

warriors following. The Moon shone out from behind the flying storm

clouds. It lighted our way down the dizzy path that the Aesir had hewn

to their harbor. The steps were no more than four feet wide, and there

was no protective rail of any kind.

The shouting wind that buffeted us threatened to hurl us off the steps.

Below, the black sea thundered, smashing the white foam of bursting

waves against the cliffs of Asgard. As we neared the bottom, the steps

were so wet with spray that our feet almost slipped from beneath us.

Where the stairway ended on the rock ledge that rimmed the harbor,

three more Aesir warriors lay dead in their own blood.

“The Jotuns dared do this!” bellowed Thor, his red face dark with rage

in the moonlight.

“My own ship!” Frey was shouting above the howling wind to his men.

“Cast loose the moorings!”

Dozens of dragon-ships floated in the deep, narrow fiord between the

cliffs, moored to iron rings in the ledge. The craft into which Frey

leaped was seventy feet long, undecked, and with seats for twenty

rowers. Its brazen prow gleamed like a live metal monster. We followed

him as the moorings were loosed. The yelling warriors sprang in, taking

their accustomed places. Frey grasped the tiller. I stood beside him,

while Thor climbed into the bow.

“Push off!” Frey shouted over the roar of breakers. “Up sail!”

Warriors strained their muscles to fend off with long oars. The

dragon-ship shot out of the protection of the fiord, into the open sea.

Great waves lifted us sickeningly, threatening to hurl us back against

the cliffs. But the square, painted sail rose at that moment, as Frey's

men frantically pulled the ropes. The wind swung our heavy craft away

from the looming cliffs.

The brazen prow buried itself in dark water and came up dripping as

vast black waves smashed and lifted us. Cold salt spray dashed our

faces. Through the roar and swing of the storm-piled sea, the ship

strained southward with increasing speed. The high cliffs of Asgard

dropped behind, I glimpsed torches flaring around Valhalla castle as

the alarm spread.

We surged past the strait between Asgard Island and the mainland,

Midgard. Far overhead, on our left, gleamed the arch of Bifrost Bridge.

Then Asgard and Bifrost dropped from sight behind us as our speed

quickened. We shot along the mighty cliff coastline of Midgard.

“Can you see them, Thor?” Frey called anxiously to the yellow-headed

giant.

His beard glistening with spray as he stood in the plunging and rising

bow, Thor was peering ahead.

“Not yet!” the Hammerer roared back against the howling wind.

“What will they do with Freya?” I cried.

Frey shook his head. His handsome face was drawn and desperate beneath

his gleaming helmet as he shifted the tiller.

“What will they do to us all, Jarl Keith, if they succeed in using the

key to loose Loki? That devil will lead the hosts of the Jotuns in the

last terrible attack on Asgard.”

“It is all my fault,” I said bitterly. “If I had not brought the rune

key with me, this never would have happened.”

The flying clouds had again obscured the Moon, and black shadow

shrouded the stormy sea. Close on our left rose the sinister cliffs of

Midgard, soaring sheer from the water. Frey was keeping our ship

hazardously near the precipices, to lose no time in the pursuit. So

close were we that each mountainous wave threatened to capsize us. The

howling winds were bitter cold, freezing the salt spray on our faces.

Each time the ship buried its brazen beak in the waves, we shipped

water and Frey's warriors were bailing furiously.

A high black promontory jutted from the cliffs ahead, and Frey swung

the rudder to carry us outside that rocky point. As the ship heeled

around in answer, a smashing mass of icy water almost tore both of us

away from the helm. Then we rounded the point, and the Moon broke forth

again.

“There they go!” roared Thor's great voice from the bow as the giant

Aesir pointed with his hammer.

Far ahead on the wild, moonlit waters, a single ship was flying south

along the ominous coast.

“They're heading straight for Jotunheim!” Thor shouted. “We can catch

them—”

“Ware ambush!” yelled one of our warriors at that moment.

Simultaneously a shower of arrows rattled down like hail into our

craft, instantly killing two of our men. I swung around, appalled. From

behind the sharp rock point we had just rounded, a dozen long-ships

were darting like ravenous monsters toward us, propelled by bending

oars. They were Jotun ships, crowded with huge, black-headed warriors

and rowers. Their archers loosed another shower of arrows the instant

we discovered them.

“A Jotun ambush!” shouted Frey, swinging the tiller hard. “They knew

we'd follow. They waited here for us!”

“Port helm, or they'll grapple us!” bellowed Thor.

It was too late. Next moment, the carved beak of the foremost Jotun

ship hit our starboard side with a shock that sent us all staggering.

As I scrambled up, I saw steel hooks fly over our gunwale and bite deep

into the wood.

“Out swords and cut free!” yelled Frey. I rushed with Frey, stumbling

to the side where yelling Jotun warriors were boarding us. We met them

at the head of our own men. Swords and axes clashed in front of my

eyes. I glimpsed a hairy, brutal face raging toward me behind an

upraised ax. Crouching, I thrust hard, felt my sword rip between the

lacings of a mail brynja, and bite past into unresisting bone and

muscle.

Thor reached our side. Bellowing, he whirled his hammer and crashed it

down on Jotun helmets, smashing them and the skulls inside.

Our ship was still being drawn southward by the wind that filled its

sail, dragging the Jotun craft that had grappled us. The other Jotun

ships were straining oars and sails to grapple with us. The roar of

waves under the shuddering ship was drowned by the clash of sword, ax

and the terrific clang of Miolnir as the huge hammer crashed down on

helmets. Over all rose Thor's terrible battle-cry.

The flat of a Jotun ax struck my shoulder and sent me to my knees. A

sword in the hand of a yelling enemy gleamed high above my head. I

gaped up, helpless. But Frey stabbed in like a striking serpent. He

helped me to my feet as the screaming Jotun toppled overboard.

But a second Jotun craft had maneuvered alongside us. Enemy soldiers

were hurling grapples over our port side. Frey sprang to cut them

loose, before the hostile reinforcements could board us.

“The Hammerer! Kill the Hammerer!”

Shouting Jotuns leaped upon Thor's towering form like dogs trying to

pull down a bear. Miolnir flashed in his hand, almost a thing alive.

But two axes crashed on his helmet and he fell, stunned. I was seeking

to cut the grapples of our first attacker. My sword slashed the hide

ropes. As the Jotun ship was drawn away from us by the waves, I heard a

choking cry of despair.

I swung around. Frey had cut the grapples of the other Jotun enemy. But

the wild lurch of our ship as it was freed had thrown him into the

black waters. He was helplessly sinking, weighted down by his heavy

mail coat. Instantly I tore off my own mail coat, flung it away, and

dived from the back rail into the sea. The icy shock of waters smashed

the breath from my body. As my head broke the surface, I saw the battle

that had been carried onward hundreds of yards. The Jotun ships were

trying to get their grapples on the Aesir craft again. But the Aesir

warriors were dismayed by the stunning of Thor and the loss of Frey.

They had swung their ship around and were fleeing back toward Asgard.

I trod water amid the surging waves, looking for Frey. When I glimpsed

him going down again, a dozen yards from me, I battled the raving wind

and crashing sea until I reached his side. Diving deep, I caught him

and pulled him to the surface. It was almost more than I could do to

keep him afloat, weighed down as he was by his mail and sword. Now I

began to regret taking along my own sword, for it was hampering me. The

waves were running mountainously, bearing us in toward the looming

cliffs that bulked ominously close.

“Leave me!” Frey choked above the roar of the sea. “Save yourself, Jarl

Keith — or we'll both perish.”

“Cling to my shoulder — kick hard with your feet,” I panted.

His weight threatened to drag me under at any moment. I fought to swim

away from the cliffs, but I was like a child in the relentless grip of

those great waves.

Then I glimpsed a little beach that indented the cliffs. I recognized

it at once. It was the beach where I had landed my plane!

“This way!” I cried to Frey. “We'll be shattered on the cliffs unless

we can get to that beach.”

The breakers threatened to drag us north of the little sandy

indentation. I put my last ounce of strength into swimming obliquely

across the thunderous waves. But those boiling breakers carried us

resistlessly toward the looming cliff. We were going to be flung

against it—

I yelled to Frey and made a convulsive effort. We barely cleared the

cliffs, and were washed up to safety on the beach!

Chapter VIII. World of Gnomes

For some minutes we lay on the sand. Though the roaring waves broke

over us, neither of us was able to move. Gradually our strength

returned, and we dragged ourselves farther up the beach. Frey sat up

and panted a question.

“Was Thor slain? I saw him fall as I was hurled into the sea.”

“He was only stunned, I think. The men of your ship got it free and

fled back toward Asgard.”

“I owe you my life, Jarl Keith.” Frey's voice throbbed in the darkness.

“I was sinking in the waves when you leaped after me. I'll not forget

that debt.”

I staggered to my feet.

“It's more important that we go after those Jotuns, and rescue Freya

and the key.”

“By now,” muttered the Aesir noble hopelessly, “they must be near

Jotunheim. We couldn't overtake them even if we had a ship.”

“I can overtake them in a few minutes,” I said grimly. “You Aesir may

know a lot about atomic fires and subtle forces, but you don't know

airplanes. Mine is moored right on this beach.”

“Your flying ship?” he gasped. “I had forgotten about it. Is it swift

enough to overtake the Jotun ships?”

“Swift enough?” I repeated. “Wait till you get in it. Maybe it'll make

you think a little more highly of my science!”

I hastened toward the two great boulders between which I had moored my

plane. It was gone! The tracks in the sand showed that it had been

dragged down to the water.

“Someone's stolen my ship!” I groaned.

“The Jotuns must have done it. Whoever sent them to kill or capture

you, Jarl Keith, sent other warriors later to seize your flying ship.”

“They must have dragged it down and pulled it aboard one of their

biggest ships,” I muttered. “Now we don't have a chance of overtaking

Freya's captors before they reach Jotunheim.”

“Aye, I fear that all is lost,” Frey sighed, “Now that the Jotuns have

Freya and the rune key, the Jotun king Utgar will hasten to release

Loki from his prison-cave. And once Loki is free and conspiring again

with the Jotuns, it will be doom for all Asgard and the Aesir.”

My natural inclination was to hasten by the fastest method to

Jotunheim, in an attempt to rescue Freya. But I realized that I owed my

first duty to the cause of all the Aesir. It was I who had unwittingly

brought the rune key that might loose Loki on them.

“Frey, tell me. Where and how far from here is the cave in which Loki

is held prisoner?”

“It is miles to the south, deep in the labyrinth of caves that lie

under Midgard,” he said bewilderedly. “Why do you ask?”

“If you and I hurried to the door of Loki's prison and waited there,” I

explained eagerly, “we could be there when the Jotun king came to

release Loki. We could strike Utgar down and take back the key before

he could release that devil. And then, with the key safe, we could find

a way to get Freya out of Jotunheim.”

Frey was startled by the boldness of my plan.

“It is a daring scheme,” he breathed, “and I do not crave to go near

Loki. Yet it might succeed. It might prevent his escape.”

“How can we get to that prison-cave before the Jotuns get there with

the rune key?”

“There's but one quick way — through the tunnels of the Alfings,” Frey

declared.

“The Alfings? The dwarfs who live in the caves under the mainland?”

“Yes, Jarl Keith, and they like no strangers to come unasked into

Alfheim. Yet they are friends of Freya and might let us pass through

for her sake. It's dangerous to try, but I am willing.”

“Lead on, then,” I said. “Find the nearest way into the Alfings'

caverns!”

Frey led me to a black opening in the rock wall, the mouth of a

pitch-dark passage that ran straight back into the cliff. Its sides

showed that it had been excavated by human ingenuity. We entered it.

The tunnel was only five feet high, forcing us to stoop as we

proceeded. In a few moments, we were blinded by complete darkness, but

we groped on. Then Frey stopped suddenly in the cramped passage. I

glimpsed the glimmer of green eyes shining at us from ahead.

“Wild beasts?” I asked, my hand going to the hilt of my sword.

“Alfings,” Frey answered tautly. “They can see us even in this

darkness. Take your hand from your sword and do not move, lest you die

quickly.”

I stood unmoving as a statue beside Frey, peering tensely into the

darkness ahead, listening to the muffled sound of rapid shuffling. The

green eyes shining eerily through the blackness were increased in

number. The extreme tension in Frey's figure beside me told me that we

were in peril. I remembered what Odin had said of the Alfings. They

were an older race than either Jotun or Aesir, and had taken no part in

the wars between the two great enemy peoples. “We are friends,

Alfings!” Frey called clearly.

From the dark answered a heavy, hoarse, growling voice.

“You come uninvited into Alfheim. The penalty is death, whether you be

Jotuns or Aesir.”

“We are Aesir,” Frey answered quickly, “and we entered your passages

only because of dire necessity. I am Frey, kinsman of the lady Freya,

whom you know well.”

There was a low murmur of deep voices from ahead, as though his

statement had caused excitement.

“Freya's name may save us here,” he muttered to me. “She has always

been a friend of the Alfings, as her mother and mother's mother were

before her.”

The bass voice answered from the dark.

“The lady Freya is welcome always in Alfheim. But that welcome has not

been extended to the other Aesir, as you well know. However, we shall

take you to our king Andvar for judgment. Lay down your weapons.”

“Drop your sword, Jarl Keith,” said Frey.

Our swords fell to the rock floor together. We saw the shining green

eyes approach, heard heavy feet thumping all around us and the sudden

scratch of flint on steel. A spark leaped. Big resinous torches flamed

with ruddy light, illuminating the whole cramped tunnel.

Surrounding us were a dozen Alfings, all armed with short, heavy spears

and huge maces of metal. They kept their weapons raised alertly toward

us, except the two who held the torches. The tallest was only

four-and-a-half feet high. But their bodies were squat and massive

beyond belief, with enormously broad, hunched shoulders, arms and legs

of tremendous thickness, and big heads with shaggy, dark hair. Their

faces were massive and swarthy, their green eyes shining like those of

animals. They wore leather tunics and leather sandals soled with iron.

“Andvar will judge you, Aesir,” their leader rumbled to us, his green

eyes watching us suspiciously. “If you try to escape, you die.”

“We have no thought of escape,” I assured him. “Lead us to Andvar.”

The Alfings shuffled forward with us along the cramped tunnel, one of

the torch-bearers keeping ahead and one behind. The others watched us

closely, keeping their weapons alertly raised. Presently the tunnel ran

into another low passage chiseled from the rock, and then into another.

“Do these people always live underground?” I asked Frey.

“Not all the time, Jarl Keith. They emerge cautiously by day,

sometimes. But their dwellings and workshops are in these caves.”

“Workshops?” I repeated.

“The Alfings are cunning workers with strange skills,” Frey explained.

“Not alone are they wonderful forgers of metal. They know how to

transmute metals at will, by an alchemy that makes use of radioactive

force. Freya has often told me of their weird achievements.”

After an Alfing had run ahead to bear tidings of our approach, I heard

drums throbbing hollowly through the maze of passages. Ever louder they

boomed, like the amplified beating of many hearts. We emerged from the

tunnel into a great cavern, one of their smithies. Great forges blazed

in it, and clever trip-hammers were beating out white-hot metal.

The quivering glow of the forges paled the torchlight of our guards,

and the banging clangor of the brazen hammers was deafening in the

echoing cavern. The Alfing smiths looked up from their work to watch

with wide, suspicious green eyes. We passed through another resounding

cavern of smiths, and entered a chamber that was filled with a glaring

white radiance.

“What is that?” I exclaimed, blinking.

“One of the caverns of the alchemists,” Frey said. “See, Jarl Keith,

how they use strange science to change metals.”

A strange science it was, indeed. The primitive science of the dwarfs

was accomplishing things beyond the highly advanced science of my

modern world. From leaden brackets projecting from the cavern wall were

suspended a dozen globes like brilliant, tiny suns, blazing with white

radiance. These were bits of extremely active matter procured from far

within the Earth by the fearless dwarfs.

Round shields of heavy lead confined the fierce radiation and firmly

directed it downward. That intense torrent of force was filtered

through varying plates of translucent, quartzlike stone. Thus tempered,

the streaming force played upon leaden trays set underneath. On these

trays lay iron or copper objects — ornaments, buckles, dagger-sheaths,

and the radiation was transforming them into gold!

“These little fellows aren't so primitive,” I muttered enviously.

“Transmutation of metals by radiation — it's been a laboratory

experiment in my own world, but here they actually use it.”

“It is quite simple, Jarl Keith,” Frey stated. “They get the

radioactive matter from the safer fringes of Muspelheim, the fire-world

far beneath this land, from which we originally came.”

“But what about those plates of quartz they use as filters?”

“They're not really quartz, but a synthetic substance the Alfings can

make,” he explained. “They can be adjusted to screen out any particular

frequency of vibratory force desired. Thus the Alfings are able to

apply the isolated radiation which the transmutation needs.”

We passed through two more of the alchemic workshops, and then

reentered the dark tunnels.

“Frey, will the dwarf king help us?” I asked in a low, anxious voice.

“I don't know,” Frey said doubtfully. “He may, if he thinks there's

danger of Loki's release. The Alfings fear Loki as greatly as we do.”

Chapter IX. Loki's Prison

The drums ahead stopped throbbing. Frey and I were escorted into the

greatest cavern, which was bright with the flickering light of many

torches. Hundreds of Alfings had hastily gathered here. There were a

few of their women, short-statured and hunched as the men, and not many

children. Men, women and children all stared at us in heavy silence.

Upon a stone terrace at the end of the cavern stood a massive Alfing

who wore a heavy gold collar studded with wonderful jewels. Bright,

suspicious and fearful eyes looked at us out of his dark, heavy face.

It was Andvar, the Alfing king. He listened to our guards' explanation,

then spoke to me in a rumbling bass voice.

“Who are you, stranger? You do not look like any Aesir, yet you claim

to be a friend of the lady Freya.”

“I'm her betrothed,” I declared, “and this is her kinsman Frey.”

“The lady Freya alone among Aesir or Jotun is welcome here,” Andvar

said sullenly. “She alone has always been friendly to us. But you are

not welcome. You have trespassed in entering Alfheim.”

“Dire necessity forced us to trespass,” I said earnestly. “We hurry to

reach the deep cavern where Loki lies imprisoned.”

My words created a stir of horror among the Alfings.

“Why should you wish to go there?” Andvar demanded. “None of the Aesir

has gone to Loki's prison since he was confined there, long centuries

ago.”

“We must go there,” I replied, “because even now the Jotuns will be

hurrying by other ways to release Loki. They have abducted the lady

Freya, and with her they took the rune key that will unlock the door of

Loki's prison.”

Cries of fear broke from the throng of Alfings in the torchlit cavern.

I saw Andvar's massive face grow pale beneath its swarthy skin.

“They hold the lady Freya and the rune key?” he boomed. “But if they

release Loki with the key, it means war again between Jotun and Aesir.

This time, Loki might well win the final victory!”

“He might,” I agreed quickly. “And if Loki succeeded in conquering the

Aesir, he will lead the Jotuns to subdue Alfheim.”

The terror upon the faces of the Alfings showed clearly that they had

already thought of the possibility.

“There is still time to prevent the freeing of the arch-fiend,” I

continued. “If we can get to his prison before the Jotuns come there

with the key, we can prevent them from setting Loki free. Will you help

us?”

Andvar shook his great head troubledly.

“We cannot help you attack the Jotuns. Long ago, we told both Aesir and

Jotun that we would have no part in their war, but would live at peace

and trade with both of them. We cannot break our promise by raising our

weapons against the Jotuns.”

“But unless the Jotuns are prevented from freeing Loki, it means war,

in which you Alfings may be crushed as between mill-stones! If you

strike now to help us, you may save your race. And you will be helping

to save Freya, your friend.”

Doubt and fear were written on the faces of all the swarthy, stunted

Alfings in the torchlight. But as Frey and I waited tensely, Andvar

shook his head again.

“We dare not help you. If the Jotuns ever learned that we had raised

our weapons against them, then would they seek to destroy us all. They

would ruin our gardens and slay our hunters on the surface, and we

would not dare emerge any more. Thus would we perish, since we could

not live always in darkness.”

“It's no use, Jarl Keith,” Frey muttered defeatedly. “They're too

afraid of the Jotuns to help us in an ambush.”

“But they could give us back our swords and lead us by the swiftest way

to the door of Loki's prison,” I said quickly. “We alone might be able

to prevent Loki's release.”

Frey nodded eagerly, his eyes burning with sudden impatience to match

wits and strength with the enemy.

“Andvar, you can help us without raising your weapons against the

Jotuns,” I said. “Give us back our swords, and lead us by the shortest

route to the door of Loki's prison. We ourselves will undertake to

prevent the release of the evil one.”

“If the Jotuns learned that we did even that, they would be enraged

against us,” Andvar mused. “But they cannot learn of it, unless you

tell them. Swear that no matter what befalls you, you will not tell of

our part in this. Then we will guide you to Loki's cave.”

Frey raised his hand. “I swear it by the Norns, the fates who rule all,

and by Wyrd, their mother.”

Though I repeated the oath, Andvar seemed only partly satisfied.

“It is a great risk we run. But Loki must not again go free to ravage

Midgard with war, death and destruction. We will give you back your

swords and guide you, Aesir. It rests upon you two alone to prevent the

loosing of Loki.”

The red torches bobbed as the Alfings turned fearfully to us.

“We are almost to the cavern-prison of Loki,” said Andvar. “I fear to

go farther.”

The Alfing king's massive face was pale, the dread plain in his green

eyes. Our three other dwarfed guides were equally terrified.

“You promised to lead us to the door of the prison,” I said. “Take us

to where we can see it. Then you can return.”

Andvar shuddered and hesitantly advanced with his three subjects,

though now their steps were slow and reluctant. We were passing through

a high, vaulted cavity deep in the rock beneath Midgard. Andvar and the

other Alfings had been leading Frey and myself into the maze of natural

cavities. Traveling always westward and southward, I judged we were

beneath the center of the rocky mainland.

Hours before, we had left the tunnels and work-caverns of Alfheim.

These gloomy spaces we now traversed showed no sign of their presence.

The stunted men so feared the very name of Loki that they never went

near this labyrinth of caves. It was too close to where Loki's body lay

in suspended animation.

My brain was feverish with excitement, hope and despair, as Frey and I

followed our Alfing guides. I realized miserably that even if we were

able to prevent the Jotuns from setting their dread lord free, that

would still leave Freya a prisoner in dark and distant Jotunheim. A

prisoner — or perhaps a tortured corpse by now...

At that thought, I clutched the hilt of my sword with wild passion. The

Alfings had given us back our weapons. Upon these two blades we must

depend to vanquish the Jotuns who would come with the rune key to

release and awaken Loki. It was a desperate course we had charted. But

if Frey was right, upon our swords rested the only hope of thwarting

the release of the prisoned arch-devil.

Andvar led us into a narrow split in the rock. We squeezed through it

in single file, bruising our limbs. From this crevice, we emerged into

a silent, tomb-like gallery, piled with rocks in fantastic shapes.

“We go no farther!” quavered Andvar. Tremblingly he pointed toward the

far end of the great gallery. “There lies the door of Loki's prison!”

I peered between the masses of fallen rock that filled the gallery. Far

away, something like a web of shimmering radiance closed a gap in the

rock wall.

“Aye, it is the door of the arch-traitor's prison,” Frey whispered.

“Well do I remember when Odin placed it there, long centuries ago.”

“The Jotuns haven't come yet with the key!” I breathed eagerly. “We're

in time!”

“Now we leave you, for we will not go nearer Loki,” Andvar muttered

fearfully. He handed us one of the torches. “If you succeed in

preventing Loki's release, you will rescue our friend, the lady Freya?”

The dwarf king's anxiety softened me.

“Be sure we will, Andvar,” I promised. “Somehow we'll get her out of

Jotunheim.”

“She has always been kind to us, as her mother and mother's mother were

before her,” Andvar declared. “You are lucky to have won her love,

stranger.”

“I know,” I said humbly.

“Hasten, Andvar!” called the other Alfings softly. “The Jotuns may come

at any moment.”

Andvar heeded their anxious warning, and hurried through the crevice by

which we had just come. The thump of their heavy tread died away.

“Can the Jotuns get to Loki's prison without going through Alfheim as

we did?” I asked Frey.

“Yes. There are many ways from the surface into these caves, Jarl

Keith. The Jotuns will come by one of them.”

Holding the torch high, I advanced with Frey through the lofty cavern.

A profound silence made the guttering of the torch, even my own

breathing, seem loud to my ears.

My heart was pounding as we approached the shimmering door at the end

of the cavern. Now I saw that the door was not of matter at all, but of

force, that apparently their web of light was probably less vulnerable

than any material door could be. It was projected from apertures on

either side of the opening. I guessed that hidden inside the rock must

be the mechanisms that projected the force. Frey confirmed my guess.

“Odin himself devised the projectors and sunk them in the rock. They

are operated by inexhaustible atomic power, and generate an absolute

barrier to all three-dimensional matter. They are controlled by the

tiny projector in the rune key. That is why, if the key were destroyed,

the door would vanish in one terrific flash of force.”

With a queer, shrinking dread, I approached the transparent web. I was

about to touch it when Frey hastily drew me back.

“Keep a safe distance,” he warned. “The extra-dimensional force web

would blast your hand.”

Shaken, I stood a few feet from the shimmering curtain, peering into

the small cave beyond.

“Loki!” I whispered hoarsely.

He lay upon a skin rug, dimly visible in the light of the radiant door.

His arms were outspread, his face upturned. Bright gold was Loki's hair

and mustache. slender and gracefully formed was his unmoving body. He

wore helmet, brynja and sword like those of the Aesir.

Loki's face was — beautiful! Mere handsomeness could never have struck

such awe into me. His eyes were closed, the long, golden lashes

slumbering on his white cheeks.

“Most beautiful of all the Aesir was Loki outwardly — a fair shell that

hid his black, evilly ambitious soul,” Frey said fiercely. “See, Jarl

Keith. Beside him lie his monstrous pets, prisoned like himself in

suspended animation.”

I tore my eyes from the angelic face of Loki. When I looked beyond him,

I felt the hair of my neck bristle. Upon the rough rock floor of that

little cavern crouched a huge gray wolf. Large as a bear, it held its

mighty head between its paws, its lips baring the awful fangs in an

eternal snarl. In a complete circle around both Loki and the frightful

wolf lay the black, motionless coils of an enormous serpent.

“The wolf Fenris and Iormungandr, the Midgard snake!” hissed Frey, his

eyes glittering hate. “The pets that Loki cherished, and that were

prisoned here with him by Odin's science.”

“Whoever heard of a wolf and serpent as big as that?” I gasped.

“Loki made them grow that large, by some scientific means,” Frey

muttered. “Another of his evil experiments.”

“He must have used some form of glandular control,” I said

thoughtfully. “Loki certainly must have had plenty of scientific

knowledge.”

For a few moments, we stared at the three fiends in silence.

“Frey, are they really only in suspended animation?” I whispered. “They

seem to be dead.”

“They are alive,” Frey assured me. “Only the functions of Loki's

physical body are suspended. His mind is conscious, even at this

moment. Just as a man can be paralyzed and still be fully conscious, so

it is with Loki.”

“But even if he's conscious, how could he have influenced me from afar

to keep the rune key? How could he have raised the storm that blew me

here, and given orders to the Jotuns to be waiting for me?”

“In his researches, Loki had developed the power to send telepathic

messages,” Frey explained tautly. “Do your scientists have that power?”

“They're just beginning to find out about it. They call it

extra-sensory perception.”

“Loki had developed that power to great lengths,” Frey said. “Though

his body is prisoned here, his conscious mind can send forth powerful

thought messages. Such commands he sent into your mind, Jarl Keith,

from here. And such messages he must have sent to the Jotuns, ordering

them to operate his strange mechanisms. They can raise tempests such as

blew you here.”

“And he's been held here for centuries, with his mind awake and

conscious!” I muttered in horror, shuddering. “What is that vapor

drifting about the chamber?”

“That contains the secret of suspended animation,” Frey told me. “Odin

devised the vapor, which freezes and halts the chemical activity of the

body's cells, at the same time preserving each cell unharmed. The vapor

alone holds Loki and his pets frozen. If the radiant door were opened

and the vapor escaped, the arch-traitor and his pets would awake—”

“Listen!” I hissed suddenly, clutching Frey's arm.

I had heard a dim murmur of voices, footsteps approaching from the

farther end of the gallery.

“The Jotuns come!” breathed Frey.

“Coming to free Loki!” I said. “We've got to hide, and take them by

surprise!”

Chapter X. Captive in Jotunheim

I dashed out the torch and flung it away. We were plunged into darkness

that was relieved by only the pearly radiance from the shimmering door

of Loki's prison. I pulled Frey behind the shelter of one of the

fantastic piles of rocks that littered the cavern. We drew our swords

and crouched there, waiting.

The voices and footsteps grew louder. Red torchlight began to gleam

vaguely into the dark gallery from the crevice at its far end. Then, as

the torch-bearers stepped into the cavern, it blazed with flickering

crimson light. There were ten people in the Jotun party. Besides eight

big, black-bearded Jotun warriors, three of whom bore torches, there

were two leaders.

One was a giant Jotun with a wolf-like, savage face and glittering

black eyes. His great helmet and armor were studded with gems, his

fierce face blazing with excitement. The other was a dark-haired Jotun

woman whose sinuous form was clothed in a long, deep-blue gown. Her

dark beauty was striking, but there was something unholy in the avid

eagerness of her lustrous black eyes.

“Utgar, the Jotun king,” whispered Frey. “And Hel, princess of

Jotunheim, past accomplice of Loki in his plots against the Aesir and

his pupil in dark scientific knowledge.”

“Utgar has the rune key,” I muttered, gripping my sword-hilt.

I had seen the little gold cylinder shining in the hand of the Jotun

king. From Utgar came a bellow of brute triumph, bestial exultation, as

his eyes found the shimmering door at the end of the gallery.

“It is the place!” he shouted. “There's the door of our lord's prison.”

Hel, the dark Jotun princess, uttered a low laugh.

“Said I not that I could bring you to the place by ways which would

avoid the Alfings?” she asked in a throaty, sinisterly rich voice. “For

I myself was guided by the thought message of our lord Loki, who

instructed us how to get the key from Asgard—”

Her supple figure stiffened, and her narrowed eyes roved around the

torch-lit cavern.

“I hear our lord's mind speaking to me now,” she murmured. “He warns

that there is danger lurking in this place. Enemies have been here and

are still here!”

“Frey, we must strike now,” I whispered urgently. “Fell the

torch-bearers, while I strike down Utgar and grab the key. In the

darkness, we may be able to escape.”

But as we tensed to spring out on the Jotuns, the princess Hel uttered

a sharp cry.

“Our enemies are there!” She pointed straight at the rocks behind which

we crouched. “Our lord warns—”

Instantly Frey and I leaped out, with our swords flashing in the

torchlight. But the split-second warning of Hel had destroyed our

advantage of surprise. Just as swiftly, Utgar and his warriors had

ripped out their swords. They met us with raised blades as we charged

them.

I leaped toward Utgar and my sword slashed desperately. But with a roar

of rage, the Jotun king parried my stroke with his own great blade.

Numbing shock deadened my arm as my steel clashed against his. Sparks

leaped from the blades. Seeking to beat down his guard with terrific

strokes and seize the rune key from his hand, I glimpsed Frey in silent

action. He was striking down first one of the three Jotun

torch-bearers, then another.

The princess Hel had darted out of the path of combat and stood with a

tiny dagger in her hand. Her eyes were blazing with excitement. Skilled

as Frey was, and regardless of my furious resolve to rescue Freya, we

were beset by greater numbers. They began driving us back.

“It is Frey and the outlander!” Utgar bellowed as he fought off my

attack. “Separate them and cut them down!”

“Kill them!” Hel commanded throatily. “They seek to prevent the freeing

of our lord!”

With a strength that was born of desperation, I beat down Utgar's

sword. My blade whirled up and I yelled hoarsely as I set myself to

cleave the neck of the Jotun king.

“Jarl Keith, look out behind!” shouted Frey, though he was hard-pressed

by three antagonists.

I heard a sword swish down behind me. I started to spin around, but the

blade descended on my helmet with stunning force. My brain rocked, and

bursting light blinded me.

I felt myself falling, my sword dropping from my nerveless hand, my

vision beginning to darken. I glimpsed two Jotuns leaping upon Frey's

back as he fought. Striking him with daggers, they dragged him down at

last, covered with blood.

“Now give me the rune key, Utgar!” I heard Hel cry. “I'll release our

lord before other Aesir come to stop us.”

“Aye, set Loki free at once!” Utgar bellowed, his brutal, dark face

triumphant as he handed her the golden cylinder.

Dimly, while I fought to retain consciousness, I saw Hel glide forward

to the shimmering door of Loki's prison, the rune key in her hand. I

saw her point the golden cylinder toward the shimmering web. When she

pressed the graven runes upon it in a complex combination, the door

began to fade!

“Our lord's mind instructed me well how to operate this key that Odin's

science devised!” gloated Hel.

The web of force was gone. The projectors which had maintained it had

now been turned off by the operation of the rune key. Out of the cave

within rushed a cloud of pale-green vapor. Hel recoiled from it. Utgar,

too, staggered back, choking and dazed. My consciousness was passing.

Darkly I perceived the prostrate body of Loki stirring. I saw him

stumble to his feet. The huge wolf Fenris was rising, opening blazing,

feral eyes, snarling a savage roar that reverberated thunderously. And

the coils of the giant serpent were sliding slowly in reawakened life.

Loki stepped out of the chamber in which he and his monstrous

companions had been imprisoned so long in suspended animation. As he

stood, his tall, slender, graceful form seemed to expand. His beautiful

white face and gold hair shone in the torchlight.

Blazing like those of Lucifer newly risen from the pit, those dazzling

eyes swept over the awed, trembling Jotuns, the prone forms of Frey and

myself, the stupefied and dread-shadowed face of Utgar, the unholy

eagerness of Hel's dark, beautiful face. Tangible light and force

seemed to flame from Loki's blue eyes.

Beside Loki, the wolf Fenris was snarling horribly at us. Its terrible

white fangs were bared, its huge head thrust forward with ears

flattened. And on the arch-traitor's other side reared up the great

spade-shaped head of the Midgard snake. Cold reptilian eyes glittering,

the forked red tongue flickered in and out between its scaly jaws.

Darkness was claiming my mind. As though from dim, enormous distances,

I heard the jubilant, golden voice of Loki.

“Free at last! Now comes the hour of my vengeance upon the Aesir!”

That voice was the last thing I heard. Even as its accents of

superhuman triumph struck my ears, complete unconsciousness claimed me.

A throbbing, blinding pain in my head was my first sensation of

returning consciousness. Then I became aware that I lay upon a hard bed

of some kind, and that the air was cold and damp. I tried to open my

eyes and could not. Summoning strength by a great mental effort, I

raised my hand weakly to my head. Instantly I heard a joyful, sweet

voice.

“He awakens, Frey!”

That voice, vibrating through the fibers of memory in my dazed brain,

compelled me to open my eyes. Freya was bending over me. Her pale,

beautiful face was framed by her unbound yellow hair, and it was eager

with gladness. Her warm, blue eyes looked fondly down into mine.

She still wore the white linen gown that she had worn at the feast in

Valhalla, before her abduction. And I saw, too, that Frey, pale, and

bandaged around his neck and shoulder, had stumbled over to look down

at me.

“Freya!” My voice was only a weak whisper.

Tears were in her lovely eyes as she put her face against mine, her

cool cheek against my lips.

“Jarl Keith!” she whispered. “I feared you were dying. It has been

hours that you have slept like the dead.”

Weakly I put my arms around her slim shoulders and held her close to

me. The bright gold of her hair on my face seemed at that moment to

hold all of the sweetness in the world.

Then I looked beyond her: Frey's pale, haunted face and terrible

remembrance rushed through my stunned mind. Loki and Fenris wolf and

the great serpent emerging from their prison!

“Loki!” I gasped. “I saw him come forth—”

“Yes, Jarl Keith,” said Frey. “That which we Aesir have feared for

centuries has happened. The arch-devil has been released.”

The blood seemed to leave my head as realization crashed home. The

ancient rhyme on the rune key seemed to echo mockingly in my ears.

Bring me not home,

Lest Ragnarok come.

It had happened. I had brought the fateful rune key home. And now Loki

and his monsters were free to lead the Jotun hosts in the last and most

terrible attack against Asgard. I groaned at the thought of my own

guilt, for it was all my responsibility. It was I, inspired by what

spells of Loki I could not imagine, who had caused the rune key to be

found. I had brought it into this hidden land to loose an incredibly

evil menace that had lain dormant for centuries — yet conscious to add

new torments and more vicious horrors to the old ones.

Freya had raised her face. She was looking at me with blue eyes that

were bright with dread, her red lips quivering.

“But where are we?” I cried, trying to sit up. “How is it you're with

us, Freya?”

“We are in Jotunheim, Jarl Keith,” she whispered. “I have been held

here since the Jotun raiders brought me here and took the rune key

away. And you and Frey were brought here and prisoned with me but a few

hours ago. You were unconscious — dying, I feared.”

Her slim arm supported me as I sat up. Dazedly I stared around. We

occupied a small stone cell, with walls that were of massive, damp

blocks. The heavy wooden door was solidly closed. One tiny, barred

window admitted pale daylight and barely enough air. Frey and Freya

helped me as I rose to my feet from the rude hide couch where I had

lain. I stumbled with their support to the window, and looked out at

ancient Jotunheim.

Jotunheim crouched like a great, slumbering reptile on a low plateau

above steaming marshes. A sluggish, black river wound from the rugged

hills behind the city. Down past the stone walls, it oozed through the

dank, brooding marshes to the distant sea.

It was a city of squat, massive castles and forts, built with

antediluvian rudeness. The giant stone blocks were overgrown with

green, hideous moss. Our cell was in the basement level of the most

enormous of the castles, a high, oblong structure.

Even in daylight, the city was filled by chill, foggy mists from the

streaming morasses below. From our window I could see scores of

longships moored in the river which wound past Jotunheim's northern

wall. Hosts of Jotuns were busy on ships and shore. Warriors and

thralls were carrying stacks of weapons, fitting new oars and masts,

all in a bustle of hurried activity. Through the ancient, somber city

trotted squads of hastening warriors, hurrying men and women. Everyone

was feverishly engaged in mysterious preparations.

“Captives in Jotunheim,” I moaned. “And Loki—”

“He is here, too,” Frey said unhappily. “In this palace, which belongs

to Utgar, he directs the preparations you see. Those are the

preparations for the last great attack on Asgard.”

Freya, holding my arm, looked up at me with blue eyes that were almost

black with dread.

“The Jotuns went mad when Loki arrived with Utgar, Hel, you and Frey,”

she said. “They cry that now at last shall they wipe the Aesir from

existence.”

“Ragnarok, the final struggle, draws near,” Frey declared solemnly.

“Aye, this is the struggle that we Aesir knew must come if ever Loki

were freed.”

“But Odin and the Aesir will not yield!” I cried. “They will throw back

Loki and the Jotuns!”

“I pray the fates that it be so,” Frey said. “But the Jotuns outnumber

us how more greatly than before. With Loki and his evil science, Fenris

and Iormungandr fighting on their side, we have reason to fear for

Asgard. But if perish we must, the Jotuns and Loki shall perish with

us. That I know.”

“Can't we sneak out of here and get back to Asgard?” I asked urgently.

His haggard face twisted into a hopeless smile.

“How could we even escape this cell? And if we did, the whole city is

swarming with armed warriors making ready. Never could we win past all

the soldiers of Jotunheim to freedom.”

“What will they do with us?” I pressed. “Why do they hold us instead of

killing us?”

“I don't know,” he muttered. “Be sure that Loki has some evil scheme in

mind that will make use of us.”

He staggered, and I hastened to help him to the hide couch, where he

sat down weakly.

Frey's wounds in that battle in the cave had been serious ones. He had

lost most of his unaging strength.

My own strength was rapidly returning. I had paced back and forth from

door to window of the cell, racking my brain for some means of escape.

There was none. Finally I gave it up and sat dully down beside Freya.

Hours must have passed as we sat in a heavy, hopeless silence. The Sun

was setting through the slowly thickening mists of Jotunheim, casting a

pale beam onto the stone floor. There was a rattle at the lock of our

door. It opened, and a big, fierce-eyed Jotun captain stood glaring at

us. Behind him were a dozen guards.

“You, outlander,” said the captain to me. “Come with us. Our lord Loki

would speak to you.”

'What does Loki want with me?” I demanded, rising painfully to my feet.

“Is it for me or for you, outland dog, to question the reasons of our

lord?” roared the captain. “Come, or be dragged!”

I pressed Freya's hand and went with the guards. In a gloomy, stone

corridor, they bared their swords to cut me down if I attempted escape

or resistance. The door of the cell was barred again, and two of the

Jotuns took their places outside it. The others marched me away.

The dank chill of the passage struck me to the marrow. But I felt a

greater chill of dread at this summons from Loki. I was going to face

the arch-traitor who had waked for his final most vicious revenge...

Chapter XI. The Arch-fiend

We passed through gloomy corridors and chambers of age-old stone,

crusted with evil-looking white fungi and lichens, dripping with

condensed vapor. Rats squeaked across our path unheeded. Up broad

stairs of troglodytic hugeness, we climbed into the upper levels of the

massive palace. Everywhere we met soldiers and thralls hurrying to and

fro, carrying piles of spears and arrows, stacks of shields, and other

war supplies.

Tense preparations for the attack on Asgard were unceasingly going on

through the whole palace and city. The Jotun captain led us through

another corridor, to the edge of a large, poorly lit hall.

“Wait,” he barked, stopping. “Our lord is not finished with Princess

Hel.”

“What are they doing?” I asked, awed. “What kind of machinery is that?”

“Silence, outlander!” snapped the captain.

I stood among my guards, staring at the amazing scene that was taking

place. The hall into which I looked was of great dimensions, its roof

supported by a forest of massive stone pillars. The only illumination

came from pale shafts of daylight that trembled down from small, high,

slit-windows, as though afraid to enter this dark place. White wisps of

fog still swirled amid the pillars, like homeless ghosts idly drifting.

On a raised stone platform at one end of the hall, in a massive throne

carved of black rock, sat Loki. His bright golden hair glittering in

the gloom, and the flashing mail he wore made him seem a figure of

living light. Beside his throne, mighty head between its paws, lay the

monster wolf Fenris. The Midgard snake I did not see.

Loki's beautiful face was intent, his graceful form leaning forward.

Beside his throne stood the big, black-haired Jotun king Utgar, and the

darkly beautiful Hel, princess of Jotunheim. They were staring into an

unfamiliar-looking mechanism whose complexities of glowing wires and

glass rods were partly hidden by a metal cover. On the cover, though,

was a square quartz screen that reproduced a living scene.

“See, lord Loki, the picture clears!” cried Hel.

“I see, too,” Utgar roared. “It is Asgard!”

“Aye, it is Asgard,” said Loki in his wonderfully sweet voice, his eyes

brooding as he peered into the screen. “Behold, the nobles of the Aesir

are gathered in Valhalla for council. We shall hear them.”

Loki touched another control. From the great hall's edge, I could

barely detect a low buzz of speech from the mechanism.

“I cannot hear clearly,” Utgar complained. “What are they saying?”

“The king Odin is speaking,” said Hel, with a contemptuous smile on her

beautiful face. “He tells the Aesir nobles that he fears Loki is

loosed, with Fenris and Iormungandr, and that Frey and Freya and the

outland Jarl are captives in Jotunheim. The Aesir look wildly at one

another, at that news. There is a shout from Thor.”

“That stupid, brainless bear!” said Loki scornfully. “A lout who knows

nothing but wrestling, eating and cracking skulls.”

“What says the Hammerer?” Utgard asked.

Hel laughed. “The lord Thor is angry. His head is bound from a wound,

as you can see. He roars that the Aesir vanquished Loki and the Jotuns

once before, and that they will do so again. And this time, he says,

they will slay Loki instead of prisoning him.”

Loki leaped to his feet. A flash of rage as blinding and terrible as

lightning twisted his face.

“Slay me?” he hissed. “Sons of the Aesir, my ancient people, you will

rue that thought when Asgard goes down in flame and death.”

“The king Odin is speaking again,” Hel told Utgar. “He says they must

prepare for the coming struggle. They must devise, if possible, some

way to rescue Frey and Freya and the Jarl Keith from Jotunheim. And

Odin says he fears Loki may be using his scientific powers to spy on

them. He will make sure, he says—”

Hastily Loki reached out and touched a screw on that strange mechanism.

The picture in its quartz screen and the buzz of voices ceased. I knew

it must be some super-development of television, able to operate

without a transmitter.

“We have seen and heard enough,” Loki said moodily. “The Aesir know we

will attack them, but they'll have small time to prepare. Two days

hence, we march on Asgard to crush them.”

“Aye, but be careful, lord,” warned Utgar anxiously. “Odin, too, has

great powers of ancient science. Once before, he snatched victory from

us because of your too great confidence.”

“Croak not your warnings to me!” Loki stormed. “I have had centuries in

which to think. Nothing can save the Aesir this time. Get you both gone

now, till I call you.”

At the tone of his master's voice, Fenris raised his enormous head and

snarled horribly. Utgar hastily retreated from Loki's blazing wrath,

backing toward a door. Less urgently the princess Hel followed him.

Without looking in the direction where I stood with my guards, watching

this scene in fascinated horror, Loki spoke.

“Bring the outlander before me.”

As the Jotuns marched me forward I saw that they were all trembling.

They halted me in front of the black throne. I looked up defiantly into

the brooding blue eyes of Loki. He spoke finally to the captain of the

Jotun guards.

“Take your men and wait outside the hall.”

“But, lord, we can't leave you here alone with this outland dog!”

protested the captain.

Loki turned a withering glance on him.

“Think you I need such as you to protect me?” he asked bitingly. “Get

you gone!”

The captain and his men almost tumbled over themselves in their haste

to leave the hall. I stood there alone, facing Loki, the wolf, the

snake that had slid to the throne, in that vast and gloomy hall of

drifting fog and chill. Uncontrollably my heart pounded in sudden

excitement and hope.

For my eyes had fastened on the sword that hung at Loki's side. If I

could end the arch-traitor's life with that thirsty blade, I would die

gladly, knowing that I had atoned for bringing the rune key into

peaceful Asgard.

I sprang forward with wild determination. But instantly, like a

thunderbolt of hurtling flesh, the huge wolf Fenris leaped upon me. The

monster's weight knocked me to the floor. His huge, hairy body crushing

me, his hot breath scorching me and terrible fangs gleaming, I saw

Fenris' mighty jaws yawning above my face.

The glaring, feral green eyes of the gigantic wolf blazed down into

mine with almost human hatred. Those jaws gaped to crush my skull like

an eggshell.

“Fenris, loose him!” snapped Loki's voice, coming as though from a

great distance.

Fenris turned his massive head a little, and a protesting, savage snarl

rumbled from him. He was resisting his master's order. He wished to

kill me.

“Do you grow disobedient?” flared Loki's voice.

I heard his quick step coming from the throne toward me. Still pinned

down by Fenris' huge weight, I saw Loki reach down and smack the wolf

stingingly on its great muzzle.

Fenris whimpered apologetically to his master. The wolf backed off

hastily. As Loki went back and seated himself again on the black

throne, the huge animal again crouched down beside it. But his feral,

blazing eyes never left my face. Shaking, I stumbled to my feet. I saw

amusement in the brilliant blue eyes and angelic face of Loki as he sat

regarding me.

“Do you still wish to kill me, outlander?” he asked with a shockingly

sweet laugh. “I might not be able to hold Fenris from your throat, next

time.”

Hearing his name, the monstrous wolf growled deep in his throat,

snarling and baring his great fangs as he watched me. Hot resentment at

the mocking devil who was regarding me with such amusement made me

stiffen and clench my fists.

“If you are going to have me killed, why not get it over with?” I

demanded.

“I am not sure that I shall take your life, outlander,” said Loki,

searching my face. “After all, I owe you much. It was you who brought

back into this land the rune key that finally gave me and my pets our

freedom.”

“I wish I had died before your hideous mental commands seduced my

brain!”

“Now why should you wish that?” Loki asked with deep interest. “Why

should you hate me so?”

“Because I know that you are evil and that your plans are vicious,” I

said harshly. “For twenty centuries in the outside world, the name of

Loki has been synonymous with treachery, even though no one in that

outer world dreams that a real Loki ever existed.”

Loki nodded his golden head thoughtfully.

“That is true. Yet what evil have I done to you, Jarl Keith? Have I not

brought you into a land that no other of your race has ever seen? Have

I not given you new and undreamed-of adventure? What more could I do

for you? You see, I know that in your soul you are an adventurer, a

seeker of the new and the strange.”

“It's what you plan to do to the Aesir that makes me hate you,” I

retorted. “I admire them — and you plot to use the Jotuns to destroy

them.”

Loki's beautiful face darkened, like the Sun when a storm cloud veils

it. His wondrous eyes throbbed with an age-old hate.

“I loved the Aesir, too, Jarl Keith,” he said broodingly. “Yes, long

ago when we dwelt in deep Muspelheim and I was second to Odin himself,

I did much for my race. I delved into scientific secrets that had been

hidden from them, and I found new truths. I would have done much more

for them, had they made me their ruler in Odin's place. For I was never

satisfied, as Odin was, with a static, stagnant well being.

“I burned with the desire to acquire all knowledge that man could

acquire, to know the reason for every phenomenon in the world and in

the sky. I longed to acquire every power that man ever could acquire,

so that we should be unchallenged masters of all nature. It was I who

freed the Aesir from sickness and age. I made them almost immortal, by

kindling the atomic fires whose radiation prevents disease and age. Was

that not a great gift I made to my people?”

As a scientist, I could not help feeling a certain sympathy with Loki.

Yet I realized that he was presenting merely his own side of the case.

“Yes,” I admitted. “But in making the Aesir that gift of

near-immortality, you almost destroyed them. You brought catastrophe on

the subterranean world of Muspelheim, and forced them to flee up here.

No wonder Odin forbade you to carry on such dangerous researches!”

Loki shrugged. “There can be no great victory without great danger,

outlander. I had a vision of leading the Aesir to undreamed-of heights

of power and wisdom, though by a road beset with vast perils. I was

willing to risk those perils, to be great or to die. But dull Odin

blocked my path. He said: 'It is not good to endanger all the world to

gain power and learning for ourselves.'

“The Aesir agreed with him, and turned from me and my vaulting dreams.

I would have made them like eagles soaring into the sky. But they

preferred to follow Odin and live out their lives in dull, accustomed

routine.”

Loki's eyes blazed, and his graceful form stiffened on the black throne

as he spoke. And I could not help feeling sympathy with him. No real

scientist could willingly submit to suppression of his desire to know,

his yearning to master the laws of nature. Loki's blue eyes fastened on

me, and he smiled thoughtfully, his passion fading.

“I read your mind, Jarl Keith,” he said quickly, “and I see that you

think the same as I.”

“Not your lust for power,” I snapped.

“Do not deny it,” he said. “You are of my own breed, Jarl Keith. We are

more alike than any others in this land. For just as I risked my own

fate and that of my people to win new knowledge and power, so you, who

are also a scientist and searcher after truth, came northward into

danger and hardship to search for new, strange truth. Yes, we two are

of the same minds.”

Though his voice rang with sincerity, I fought mentally against his

seductive thoughts.

“It is because we are so much alike,” he continued, “that I was able to

fling the web of my suggestion into your brain. Though you were far

away on your ship beyond the ice, yet I could direct you to recover the

sunken rune key.”

“How could you do that, Loki?” I asked with intense interest. “How

could your will range far when your body was held in suspended

animation in that prison-cave?”

“You outlanders have concentrated more on mechanical devices than on

the subtler forces of science. Otherwise, you would understand better

the nature of the mind. The brain is really an electro-chemical

generator, and thought is the electric current it generates. A brain

which has developed the power can fling its web of electric

thought-impulses abroad and into another brain. It can see with the

senses of that other brain and even somewhat direct its physical body.

“Thus, during the centuries that I lay prisoned and helpless, I sent

the web of my thoughts far afield, seeking a means of escape. At long

last, I located the rune key where the Aesir had thrown it in the outer

ocean. I could not send any of the Jotuns to secure it, for they could

not cross the vast ice without perishing. But at last your ship came

north and was near the sunken rune key.

“I seized the opportunity to influence you to have the rune key dredged

up. And once you had it, and were in the air in your flying ship, I

sent a mental message to the princess Hel, my pupil, I commanded her to

operate the storm-cones in my laboratory, which would cause a tempest

to blow you hither.”

“Storm-cones?” I repeated. “What device could be used to cause such a

tempest?”

Loki smiled and rose to his feet.

“Come, Jarl Keith, I'll show you. I think you, a scientist like myself,

will be interested in my laboratory.”

Chapter XII. The Laboratory

He led the way across the vast, many-pillared hall. The giant wolf,

Fenris, rose and followed us on padding feet, its feral green eyes

never leaving me. Loki brought me into a smaller stone chamber. It was

indeed a laboratory — the strangest I had ever seen.

Two small, blazing suns of radioactive matter, suspended in lead bowls,

illuminated the dusky room. The intense white radiance glittered off an

array of unfamiliar mechanisms and instruments.

I saw another of the complex instruments of remote vision, with a

square quartz view-screen, such as Loki, Utgar and Hel had been using

in the great hall. And I noticed devices which appeared to be similar

to the transmutation apparatus used by the Alfings. But these were

greatly refined in design. Using concentrated beams of radioactive

energy shot from leaden funnels, they could effect even more rapid

transmutation of small metal objects.

Loki led the way to the most striking feature of this array of alien

scientific instruments. Proudly he gestured at a row of big objects

which looked like heavy nozzles of fused quartz mounted on swivels

above square, copper-shielded mechanisms. The interior complexities I

could not see. Loki laid his hand on one of the nozzles of quartz.

“These are the storm-cones I long ago devised, Jarl Keith. They can

cause the most terrific tempest at a distance of hundreds of miles.”

“How can they do that?” I asked incredulously.

“It is quite simple.” He smiled. “A lightning storm is caused by a

sudden sharp difference in electric potential between cloud and Earth,

or cloud and cloud. These storm-cones spray a carefully aimed and

canalized electric field that causes such an abnormal difference of

potential in any desired location. When I lead the Jotun horde to

attack Asgard, I'll first bring destructive lightning down upon the

Aesir forces. Then they'll fall easy prey to my savage warriors.”

I was too appalled by that threat to comment. Loki led me toward a door

on the opposite side of the laboratory.

“Now perhaps you can instruct me a little, Jarl Keith,” he said. “Come

with me.”

The door opened into a big, stone-paved court outside the ancient

citadel. It was walled, but a great gate in one wall was open, leading

out onto the slope that ran steeply toward the river. Dusk had fallen,

and the white mists that shrouded Jotunheim were thicker.

My eyes flew to a familiar object in this court. It was my rocket ship.

It had not been destroyed, after all.

“Yes, it is your flying ship,” Loki said. “After you landed in Midgard,

I knew it was only a matter of days until I was released. I sent a

thought order to the princess Hel to have Jotun ships brings the craft

here, for I wish much to examine this product of the outland world's

science. But don't cherish any hopes of making a sudden escape in it,

Jarl Keith. I've only to say a word to send Fenris ravening at your

throat.”

The monster wolf behind us snarled again, as he heard his name. I

shrugged.

“I wouldn't leave without Freya and Frey, anyway.”

Loki inspected the whole interior of the plane, asking me quick,

intelligent questions about every feature of it. He seemed to grasp the

design of the ship and its highly improved rocket motor almost

instantly.

“You are clever, you outlanders, to devise such things,” he said with

sincere respect.

“Don't you want to look at the controls?” I asked.

My heart was thudding, for I had seen a wild, insane opportunity. Loki

entered the cabin, and I explained the controls. Then I opened the sack

of white chemicals which we always carried on these Arctic flights. I

took out a handful and showed them to him.

“These are chemicals that generate heat. We use them to free the

plane's wheels if they become frozen into the ice.”

“That, too, is clever,” he mused as he emerged from the plane. “You

outlanders are indeed mechanically ingenious, though you have not

probed the ancient science of the deepest forces of nature as we Aesir

did.”

He said nothing more as he brought me back through the laboratory to

the dusky great hall. Fenris stalked at our heels. Then Loki turned.

“I could teach you our ancient science, Jarl Keith,” he said, to my

surprise. “You could learn much that your science puzzles over. And you

would be second only to me, once the Aesir are conquered.”

I began to understand what he was suggesting.

“You want me to turn against the Aesir — against my friends?”

“That woman Freya — and even Frey, if you wish — can be spared.”

“Why do you wish me to become your follower?” I asked suspiciously.

Loki's beautiful face was undeniably sincere as he answered me.

“Because it is as I said. We two are more akin than any others in this

land. We seek scientific truth and love the new and strange. Besides, I

have no human friend, for Utgar is but a brute-brained tool, and Hel is

but a wicked wildcat who never can learn my science. It is true that I

have Fenris and Iormungandr. My wolf and serpent have wisdom and

cunning which are almost human, but they are not human friends. Speak,

Jarl Keith. Will you join me as friend and follower?”

Stunned by the offer, I tried desperately to think. If I could make

Loki believe I was willing to join him, and then work against him—

“Your words are convincing,” I answered as though deeply thoughtful.

“We are alike. I think that I shall join you, Loki. Loki smiled at me;

a weary, half-scornful, half-amused smile.

“Jarl Keith, I thought better of you than to expect you to try such

transparent stratagems as this upon me,” he said. “Can you not

understand that in experience you are to me but as a small child? Can

you hope to dupe me when I can read your mind?”

I looked up at him defiantly.

“I would fight the devil with fire. You know the truth now, Loki. I

have only hate for you, as for all traitors. You prepare to lead these

savage Jotuns against your own people, because your own kind has cast

you out.”

I know that got under his skin, for his eyes narrowed. His mouth

tightened, and for a split-second I glimpsed that angelically beautiful

face warp into a hell mask of white fury. It was as though the raging

evil inside him looked forth naked and unhidden. The wolf Fenris, as

though understanding his master's mood, sprang to his feet and snarled

viciously at me. Then Loki's face cleared, and he laughed at me without

a trace of ill-feeling.

“You have courage, Jarl Keith, proving even more that you are like

myself. Yes, you are afraid to admit to yourself how much we two are

alike, and how much you like me.”

That shot got home to me, for I sensed that it was the truth. I did

feel a sympathy for this fallen Lucifer that was hard for me to thrust

down.

“You shall stay prisoned here in Jotunheim until after our forces have

conquered Asgard,” Loki decided. “Once the Aesir are destroyed and the

past cannot be recalled, I think you will be wise enough to join me as

friend and follower.” He raised his voice in a peremptory order.

“Guards, return this prisoner to his cell!”

The Jotun captain and his men came running from outside. Not daring

even to look up at their overlord, they hustled me out of the hall.

As I went with them, I looked back. Loki seemed already to have

forgotten me. He sat in that dismal, mist-filled hall, brooding with

chin in hand, his bright-gold head bent. The wolf Fenris looked up at

him with faithful, brilliant green eyes.

I was conducted back through the same dank corridors and passages to

the subterranean level of the palace. The tall guards clanked toward

the door of our cell and opened it. Without ceremony, I was thrust in.

When the door was locked after me, the guards marched away.

Freya came anxiously across the dark little cell and found her way into

my arms.

“I feared that you would not return, Jarl Keith,” she moaned softly.

“What did Loki want with you?” Frey asked, his pale face intent.

I told them most of what had taken place. Freya listened with

horror-widened eyes, her kinsman in thoughtful silence.

“So Loki wishes you to join him,” he muttered, when I had finished.

“That is strange.”

“I think it's only because he's lonely,” I said. “He has nothing but

contempt for these Jotuns, whom he means to use merely to crush the

Aesir. I felt a little sorry for him.”

Freya stared at me surprisedly. Frey's pale, handsome face tightened as

he warned me.

“Heed not the arch-traitor's subtle persuasions, Jarl Keith! Never

lived anyone who could harm man or beast by his silver tongue and

handsome face as can Loki.”

“Never fear,” I reassured him. “My loyalty is with the Aesir. No

tempting could ever change that.”

I went on to tell them of what Loki had told me in his laboratory,

explaining his intention to use his storm-cones against the Aesir.

“We must get back to Asgard and warn Odin, so he can prepare a

defense,” I concluded. “My flying ship is in the court on the citadel's

riverside—”

“How can we reach your craft when we can't even get out of this locked

cell?” Frey replied hopelessly.

“I think we can escape this cell, at least,” I said. I drew from my

pocket a handful of white chemical powder and showed it to them. “It's

the chemical I always carried in my plane to melt ice from the wheels

when necessary. I showed Loki this handful and then put it in my

pocket.”

“What good will that do, Jarl Keith?” Freya asked puzzledly.

“The lock on the door of this cell is a crude one, made of soft

copper,” I answered. “I believe this substance can burn away enough of

the lock to free us. I'm going to try it anyhow.”

I stuffed the chemical powder into the large crevices of the clumsy

lock. Then I took our jar of water and poured a little over the powder.

The hissing and sizzling of the chemical reaction continued for several

minutes. When it ceased, I gently tugged at the lock. It still held. I

pulled harder, and with a rasp, it gave way.

“Follow me,” I whispered tensely. “I think I know the direction to the

court where the plane is. If we only can get through the corridors

without meeting anyone!”

We emerged into the dusty stone passage. I led the way toward the

right, taking the first cross-corridor that led northward. The cold

chill of the night fog penetrated the marrow of our bones, and our

nerves were harp-string taut as we pressed on through the dark

corridors.

Suddenly I shrank back into the shadows. I had seen two Jotun warriors

approaching from a cross-corridor ahead.

“Hurry!” one was urging the other fearfully. “Do you wish to meet the

hideous one that now lurks in these passages?”

“Frey, we'll have to jump them,” I whispered. “Be ready.”

The two Jotuns came around the corner into our dusky corridor. Frey and

I leaped on them, taking them utterly by surprise. What followed was

not pretty. We had grabbed their throats, for it was essential that

they should not give an alarm. There was a fierce, deadly scuffle in

the misty, dark tunnel, until we throttled them.

The Jotuns lay limp when Frey and I straightened, panting. We took the

swords the two warriors had not had a chance to draw.

“Come on,” I panted. “This way. Those warriors must have entered from

one of the outside courts.”

We hurried down the shadowy passage from which the Jotuns had come.

Then Freya suddenly stopped, pulling me to a halt.

“Listen, Jarl Keith,” she urged in a hushed voice. “Something sinister

is coming.”

In the silence, I heard a strange, silky, rustling sound in the dark

and misty passage ahead. It was growing nearer, louder—

A giant, spade-shaped head reared out of the curling mists ahead of us!

Two opaline, unwinking eyes that held the dull glitter of an alien

intelligence contemplated us from above a gaping mouth in which a

forked red tongue flickered.

“This is what the Jotuns feared!” Frey cried wildly.

“The fates save us!” Freya prayed. “It is Iormungandr.”

I also recognized that giant, scaly body of long, rippling blackness,

that huge head and those alien, glittering eyes. It was Iormungandr who

towered before us in the misty dusk of the chill tunnel. The ageless

and undying, the great Midgard serpent itself, was glaring down with

blood-lusting eyes!

Chapter XIII. Flight and Death

We stood petrified by horror in that foggy, stone-walled corridor,

gazing cataleptically at the hideous creature whose reptilian head was

rearing up from the curling white mists. Freya's slim figure had shrunk

against me with a choking cry. Frey stood in front of us, his sword

raised, his face wild as he looked up at the looming head.

The hideous, abnormally huge coils could only be glimpsed in the mists

beyond. But the giant spade-shaped head that hung above us was clear to

our appalled vision. The enormous, opaline eyes were coldly brilliant

as they stared down at us.

In that moment of stupefying horror, I recognized the intelligence in

those unwinking reptilian eyes. This ser- pent of a bygone age had

lived on for centuries in this land of eternal youth, with its master

Loki and wolf Fenris. It had acquired an intelligence comparable with

the human. A strange mind shone from those coldly malignant eyes.

“The Midgard snake!” Frey whispered.

“Jarl Keith!” Freya screamed to me.

The great head of the snake Iormungandr abruptly darted toward us. Frey

struck out madly with his sword. I saw the blade slash into the scaly

neck. But it caused only a shallow wound from which merely a little

black blood oozed.

The Midgard serpent recoiled, however. Its opaline eyes flamed with

rage. From the jaws of the monster, with a terrific hiss, came a cloud

of fine green spray that flew toward Frey. He reeled back, covered by

that weird vapor. But I leaped forward, dragging him and Freya ahead. I

saw our single chance. The momentary recoil of the serpent had left

open the mouth of a corridor on the right!

“Quick!” I cried, pulling them toward the black passage.

Frey seemed blinded by the green spray of the serpent. The monster's

vast coils were twitching with rage, its head swaying angrily forward

again. But we plunged safely into that branching corridor. It was

utterly dark. As we stumbled forward in it, I heard a distant babble of

alarm from the upper levels of the Jotun palace.

“The Jotuns will be after us,” I cautioned. “Loki will be warned of our

escape.”

“Jarl Keith, Iormungandr follows us!” Freya cried wildly.

The angry hiss of the giant serpent was echoing from the stone walls.

And I could hear the loud rustle and scrape of its scaled body as it

glided into the dark passage after us.

No more than a few moments could have passed before we reached the end

of the passage. But it seemed ages that we ran in blind, unreasoning

terror. Slipping on the mossy, wet stone floor, we could hear the

clamor of the far-off alarm grow louder and the hissing rustle of the

Midgard snake overtaking us.

Then I collided with a metal door that closed the end of the passage.

My heart throbbed as if it would burst as I clawed frantically for the

knob. If it were locked, if we were trapped here by the serpent—

My hand found the catch, and I tore the door open. Outside was the open

air. We stared at the night that was filled with curling white

fog-mists through which shone the ghostly Moon. I pulled Freya and the

stunned Frey through and slammed the door shut behind us. The catch

fell. Next moment, there was a loud thump against the other side of the

door as the Midgard snake's huge head struck it.

We had emerged into one of the courtyards of the great palace. In the

vague mists, the squat, brutal bulbs of Jotunheim's structures rose

darkly all around us. But now torchlight was flashing from the upper

windows of the palace as the alarm spread.

“Which way?” Frey mumbled thickly, gaping about in the shrouding mists,

his sword in his unnerved hand.

“This way,” I said decisively, leading them toward the left. “It's the

next court.”

Then I heard the stamp of restless horses on the stone paving of an

adjoining court. We ran forward. Frey was staggering like a drunken man

as we burst into that adjoining court. Out of the mists loomed a Jotun

guard, black-bearded, huge, his face a white blur in the fog.

“Who are you?” he challenged. When he saw the fair hair of my two

companions, he uttered a loud cry. “Aesir!”

He struck at me with his sword, but I had the advantage of surprise. I

ran in with an upward thrust of my blade, slid past his defense, ripped

between the laces of his brynja. He collapsed, the alarm bubbling

through the blood that filled his throat.

I began running toward the vague shape of my rocket plane, which loomed

out of the mist. But suddenly I remembered that the port window had

been smashed when I had first landed on the sandy beach below Midgard's

frowning cliffs. Flying in the cold, thin air of the Arctic, I might

lose consciousness and crash into the sea. In any case, my hands would

be too numb to handle the firing wheel.

“Hold the ship against attack!” I shouted to Frey, handing him the

guard's sword.

As I rushed into the cabin, I glimpsed him standing with the sword in

hand, but he was swaying drunkenly. I knew he could not hold off an

attack for long, and I dragged on the flying togs I had discarded

before climbing to Midgard plateau. The instant I strapped the oxygen

tank to my shoulders, I heard Freya's terrified scream.

“Jarl Keith, Frey is swooning, and Jotuns are coming!” I snatched a

super-automatic from the supply compartment and dashed outside. The

Moon slipped from behind the clouds, shining full on the Jotuns who

were rushing up to attack. Horned helmet on his head, sword in hand and

the golden mustache writhing above his savage lips, Loki was leading

two fierce Jotun soldiers. But Freya was struggling with Frey's almost

inert weight. The blade had slipped from his nerveless grasp.

“Get him into the rear of the ship and close the door!” I shouted to

the woman.

The Jotun archer drew back the string of his bow to strike me down with

a heavy arrow. I picked him off with a single snipe-shot. The pikeman

raised his javelin, dropped it as a slug blasted away his skull. Before

I could wheel on Loki and end the menace to the Aesir, Freya called to

me in despair.

“Jarl Keith, I cannot get him into the ship! He has swooned.”

I triggered a shot at Loki, saw him duck swiftly out of the bullet's

path. Then I had no more time to fight. I hurled the gun and caught him

on the right shoulder. The sword spun from his grip as he staggered

back.

Frantically I ran to the cabin door and dragged Frey inside. When I

pointed quickly, Freya opened the door of the freight hold while I

carried him in and laid him down on the floor. I wrapped him in

blankets and told Freya to do the same. It would be warmer and more

easy to breathe than in the cabin, for the ship was electrically warmed

and synthetically oxygenated. But the smashed window of the cabin would

leak its own air and warmth, and chill and thin the air of the hold,

despite the tightness of the door I closed on them as I sprang back

into the pilot room.

Jotun reinforcements were charging up as I opened the jets wide and

blasted off. The plane soared into the freezing air, and I was glad I

had taken time to don my flying clothes and oxygen tank. Even through

my wired suit, I could feel the numbing chill, and my lungs were

laboring under the lessened pressure.

Far below, I saw the glimmering river through the closing mist. The

tall masts of Jotun ships looked like dowels. I twisted the firing

wheel to top speed, and we rose so steeply that I thought the ship

would slip into a tailspin. But it righted and zoomed higher, rocketing

above the misty river and the dark, fog-shrouded forests beyond. When I

looked back, the ominous citadel of Jotunheim was alive with moving

torches. I could well imagine the blazing anger that Loki would vent

upon the Jotuns because of our escape.

“We're clear!” I thought exultantly. “Maybe by now Loki has more

respect for outland science.”

I set the robot controls and searched through the spare-parts

compartment for a new window. Fixing the smashed port was only a few

moments' work. Then I opened the oxygen nozzles wide and let the cabin

fill with fresh, invigorating air and warmth. I removed my flying togs

and opened the freight hold door. Freya and I helped Frey into the

cabin, put him in a seat. His blurred eyes looked less helpless, and he

sat unsteadily but without collapsing.

“Are you all right?” I asked anxiously.

He nodded weakly.

“Truly you outlanders have strange powers,” he mumbled. “We must warn

Odin of the attack...”

“Loki means to use those devilish storm-cones to overcome the Aesir,” I

said. “We've got to devise some defense against that weapon.”

I went back to the controls and guided the plane above Midgard's black

hills. Freya's frantic voice called to me over the roar of the rocket

motor.

“Jarl Keith, Frey has fallen!”

I whipped around. He was lying on the floor, twitching. Then I saw

something that horrified me. His body was covered with green spray

which the Midgard snake had spat upon him. Around his bandaged wounds,

his flesh was turning black!

“The venom has entered his wounds!” I cried.

I had never thought that a snake the size of Iormungandr could be

poisonous. No Earthly serpent larger than nine or ten feet possesses

venom. But I had forgotten that Loki's science had developed it to its

huge size.

Frey opened his fluttering eyes and stared dully at us. His lips moved

feebly.

“I've fought my last fight... The poison of the Midgard snake has slain

me...”

“Try to fight that venom!” I urged hoarsely.

“The Norns have spun out my long life-thread at last—” he mumbled. “I

would that I could see Gerda before I pass. But Wyrd ordains

otherwise.” His blearing eyes grew strangely brilliant and clear for an

instant. “Jarl Keith, you have been a worthy comrade. I leave my

kinswoman in your care, for I know you love her dearly. Try to save her

in the day that approaches — the day of Ragnarok.”

Freya sobbed and the Aesir's eyes dilated, as though looking past us at

some gigantic, terrifying spectacle.

“I see Loki riding in fire and storm to destroy Asgard — I see the

Aesir dying — I see the whole land—”

His eyes closed abruptly, and his jaw sagged as his life departed.

Freya turned a quivering, tear-stained face toward me as the plane

thundered northward through the night.

“Jarl Keith, he's dead. My kinsman was so great among the Aesir and has

lived so long. Now he's dead.”

I felt a hard lump in my throat. Handsome, steadfast Frey had been my

first friend among the Aesir.

“We cannot help him now, Freya,” I said. “Damn Loki and his fiendish

schemes!”

“Aye,” said Freya bitterly. “My kinsman is but the first of many Aesir

who must fall because the arch-traitor has been loosed.”

“And that happened only because I brought the rune key into Asgard,” I

said in heavy self-reproach. “I have been an evil guest to the Aesir,

Freya.”

She clasped my hand. “Don't think thus, Jarl Keith! It is not your

fault that Loki's powers brought you and the fateful rune key here.

Sooner or later, he would have accomplished it somehow. All my people

always feared that.”

Dawn was paling in the sky. During the last half-hour we had flown over

most of the length of Midgard. Against the rose-flushed sky a few miles

north of us stood the high, lofty little island of Asgard, with its

eyrie of gray castles amid which Valhalla loomed mountainously. Already

the flying arch of Bifrost Bridge was glittering as the short polar

spring night ended,

“We'll have to land on the field this side of the bridge,” I mused.

“There's not room enough to land safely in Asgard.”

I brought the plane down safely on the bare plain of the mainland

promontory. As we emerged from it, over Bifrost Bridge from Asgard a

long stream of Aesir warriors came galloping. At their head rode a

yellow-haired, yellow-bearded giant, his great hammer swinging.

“Thor has seen us and he comes!” Freya exclaimed.

In a few moments, Thor and the Aesir warriors reached us. The horsemen

seemed awed by sight of my flying craft.

“Jarl Keith and Freya!” cried the Hammerer, his small eyes joyful as he

quickly recognized us. “But where is Frey?”

“Dead,” I said bitterly. “Slain in Jotunheim by the poison of the

Midgard snake.”

Thor looked into the plane at the dead figure, as though unable to

believe his ears. He whispered blankly:

“Frey, who has ridden and sailed by my side these many centuries —

dead!” Wild rage crimsoned his face and he shook the great hammer

Miolnir aloft, “Loki's work! Aye, These are the first fruits of that

devil's freedom!”

“Loki prepares to lead the Jotuns upon Asgard,” I warned him, “Tomorrow

that host of dread evil comes against us, Thor.”

“Good! The sooner the better!” He turned to his Aesir warriors, who

were still staring awedly at the plane. “Take the lord Frey and place

him on a shield. He goes home to Asgard as a warrior should!”

Freya stood beside me, her blue eyes were bright with unshed tears as

she watched them silently remove Frey's body and lay it gently upon a

big shield, I put my arm around the woman comfortingly. But she did not

weep now. The Viking strain was too strong in her. Though her red lips

quivered, she watched steadily as the Aesir warriors lifted the shield

that bore Frey's body.

We started back toward Asgard, following the warriors bearing the

shield. Thor, Freya, the warriors and I walked slowly behind, leading

the horses. We reached the promontory at the end of Midgard. When we

started over the incredible, unrailed stone span of Bifrost Bridge, the

sea was washing loud a thousand feet below us. And as we marched, the

Aesir warriors behind us struck their sword-hilts against their shields

in a clanging funeral rhythm.

Up the arch of the Bifrost Bridge we paced to the slow, sorrowful

rhythm of that clanging. In the castle which guarded the Asgard end of

the bridge, the great gates swung open for our entrance. And from the

tower above the gates, we saw Heimdall blow a long, law, mournful note

on the great Giallar horn.

So we passed in the brightening sunrise through the gates into Asgard,

ringed round by the castles of the Aesir nobles perched upon the

cliffs, dominated by the huge pile of Valhalla. Inside the gates, a

hastily gathered group of the Aesir met us.

Odin was foremost. The strong, stern face of the Aesir king grew taut

and strange. His eyes clouded darkly as he saw the burden upon the

shield.

“So Frey had fallen to the evil of Loki and his familiars,” Odin

muttered. “Now I know that Wyrd stoops low over us. The Norns spin out

the end of their threads for many in this land.”

“Frey and I did all we could to prevent the release of Loki, lord

Odin,” I said. “But we failed.”

“You could not succeed,” Odin said broodingly. “It was written that

Loki would be loosed. How soon does he come with the Jotuns against

Asgard?”

“Tomorrow,” I answered. “And he will be armed with his storm-cones to

loose tempest and lightning on us.”

“We must prepare a defense,” Odin declared. “Now bear Frey's body to

his castle.”

Chapter XIV. Thor's Oath

Our solemn little procession wound across Asgard, through the streets

of stone houses, past great Valhalla castle. We moved miserably toward

the castle on the eastern cliffs where Frey and his line dwelt. As we

approached its entrance, the lady Gerda stood waiting to meet us. The

lovely face of Frey's wife went pale as she saw the stiff figure on the

shield. But she did not falter.

“My lord comes home for the last time,” she said quietly in the deep

silence. “Bring him in.”

Gerda walked beside us, her eyes fixed on Frey's dead form, as we

entered the castle. We took him into the great hall of the castle, a

high-roofed, big stone chamber. There the shield that bore his body was

laid across wooden trestles that had been hastily procured.

I tried to speak a word of consolation to Gerda, and could not. Her

strange eyes seemed not to see any of us, but remained fixed on her

dead husband. She had seated herself in a chair by the body. With hands

folded in her lap, she stared wordlessly. Freya plucked my arm as I

stood, swaying from exhaustion. The woman's eyes were bright with

tears.

“We cannot soothe her grief, Jarl Keith,” she whispered. “And you are

weary to the soul. You must sleep.”

“Aye, sleep,” boomed Thor, his heavy voice rumbling ominously. “For

tomorrow we shall need every arm in Asgard.”

I let thralls lead me to a small chamber in the castle. Hardly had I

flung myself upon its hide bed when I was sinking into a slumber of

utter physical and nervous fatigue. My dreams were troubled. Again I

seemed to be facing Loki's beautiful face and the snarling wolf Fenris.

Again I saw Frey confronting the venomous Midgard snake. And again,

like a dim echo from far away, the dying gasp of Frey reverberated in

my brain.

“I see Loki riding in fire and storm to destroy Asgard — I see the

Aesir dying—”

I awoke with a shuddering start. The sun was setting. I had slept

through the day. A thrall had touched my shoulder to awaken me.

“The lady Freya bade me rouse you. It is time for the lord Frey's

funeral.”

I hastily donned my mail coat and helmet and buckled on my sword. Then

I went down to the lower floor of the castle, and looked into the hall

that was now growing dusky with twilight. Gerda still sat exactly where

I had left her. Hands folded unmovingly, her lovely face was a strange,

immobile mask as she looked at the body of Frey upon the shield.

Freya touched my arm. The woman had donned her own short mail tunic and

helmet. Again she was the warrior-maid I had first met. Her white face

was composed.

“We give Frey burial now, Jarl Keith,” she said. “The shield-bearers

come. You should be one of them.”

Thor, dark-faced, brooding-eyed Tyr the berserk, and sad, noble-looking

young Forseti had entered. We entered the hall where Gerda watched her

dead.

“It is time, lady Gerda,” said Thor softly.

“That is well, “ she said in a calm voice.

We lifted the shield that bore Frey's body. Carrying it high upon our

shoulders, we paced slowly out of the castle, Freya and Gerda

following.

The gloom of early dusk layover Asgard. A strong wind blew keen and

cold from the northwest, wailing around the lofty cliffs. Warriors in

companies of hundreds waited outside, clad in full armor. As we passed

through them, they took up their place behind our cortege. They marched

after us, striking their sword-hilts against their shields in that

clangorous dirge.

We wound along the edge of the cliff to the stair that led down to the

fiord. At the head of the stair, on the cliff-edge, were gathered Odin

and his lady Frigga, old Aegir and Ran, Bragi and all the other Aesir

nobles.

“Farewell, Frey,” said Odin. “You have gone first into the shades, but

others follow soon.”

From the warriors who had followed us, from all the Aesir-folk, echoed

that solemn sorrow.

“Farewell, lord Frey!”

Now we four started down the steep and narrow stair that was chiseled

from the cliffside. Only Gerda and Freya followed us. The wind blew in

great gusts, booming and moaning around the cliffs in the twilight.

Thus we came down to the deep, narrow fiord in which floated the long

dragon-ships of the Aesir. Among them, Frey's ship stood ready to give

him Viking burial. It was trimmed and stacked with wood, and a low,

broad wooden platform had been built amidships.

We stepped aboard and laid the shield that bore Frey's body upon that

platform. Thor put Frey's sword in the dead hand. Then Frey's black

horse was led into the bow of the ship. Tyr's dagger flashed, and the

horse fell dead.

“Now all is ready,” Thor rumbled.

We stepped back onto the shore.

“All is not yet ready,” said Gerda calmly.

She stepped past up to the platform where her husband lay. When she

looked down at him, her lovely face was strangely happy.

“For long,” she said quietly, “my lord has lived with me at his side.

He could not go on this journey into the dead without me.”

Before any of us could move, she drew a dagger from her robe, and

sheathed it in her heart. We watched rigidly as she fell upon the

platform. Her golden hair fell across Frey's dead face.

Freya broke into wild sobbing and clung to me. We stared in horror and

pity, but Thor lifted his great hammer in salute.

“Skoal to the lady Gerda!” he rumbled. “She goes proudly to death with

her lord, like a true Viking.”

Tyr slashed the mooring of the ship. Then he took a waiting torch from

a socket, and tossed it into the resinous wood with which the ship was

filled. The pile blazed up with a crackling roar, casting a red,

quivering light through the deepening twilight. We bent our shoulders

against the stern. The ship of death forged out on the heaving waves.

Then, as the wind took its raised sail, it sprang forward like a thing

alive.

Back we climbed to Asgard, my arm supporting Freya. At the top of the

cliff, we stood with Odin and the other Aesir. By the light of many

torches, we gazed silently at the burial ship of Frey and Gerda.

Blazing red with flames, its high sail carrying it before the swift

wind, the ship drove south over the heaving black waves.

“Viking funeral, for a true Viking man and his mate!” Odin declared.

Thor raised his hammer into the air. His red face was even redder by

the light of the distant fire ship.

“Thy spirit hear my vow, Frey!” boomed the giant. “It was slimy

Iormungandr, Loki's evil snake, that slew thee. I swear to rid Earth of

that Midgard serpent in the coming battle, or die myself. Wyrd binds me

to that oath!”

The blazing ship that bore the bodies of Frey and Gerda was now far

away upon the dark sea. A great torch of red fire, it, was still

scudding southward before the wind. Then we saw the ship's prow dip.

The whole burning craft plunged down beneath the waves.

“So passes the lord Frey and his mate,” said Odin's heavy voice in the

silence that followed. “And now, jarls and warriors of the Aesir, we

must prepare ourselves. The hosts of the Jotuns come upon the morrow,

led by evil Loki, to destroy us.”

“We hold Asgard safe while we live, lord Odin!” cried Bragi.

All the voices shouted chorus. I, too, joined that shout, fierce desire

for vengeance on Loki and the Jotuns burning in me strongly. Only one

of us did not join in that fierce yell, and that was Tyr. The berserk

still stood gazing out into the windy night, his dark, brooding face

unfathomable.

“Tonight we hold feast in Valhalla as ever,” Odin was saying. “Now I go

to prepare that which may snatch victory from Loki's grasp. Son Thor,

come you with me — and you also, Jarl Keith.”

The Aesir king strode with Frigga and his stalwart sons, giant Thor,

Vidar and Vali, back toward the black, looming bulk of Valhalla castle.

The other Aesir nobles and warriors slowly dispersed toward their own

castles and homes. I remained with Freya on the edge of the cliff. The

chill darkness seemed alive with voices, with winds that boomed and

wailed about Asgard's cliffs as though bemoaning something to come.

Freya crept into my arms. No longer was she the fierce, proud Viking

maid who had watched the burial of her kinsman and his mate. A

trembling woman, she felt even as I the shadow of colossal disaster

deepening with inevitable swiftness over us.

“Hold me close, Jarl Keith,” she whispered. “I fear that when tomorrow

night comes, we may be separated forever.”

“No!” I exclaimed fiercely. “Whether living or dead, Freya, you and I

shall be together.”

In the darkness, her blue eyes shone up at me with bright tenderness.

Her cold little hand touched my cheek.

I kissed her quivering lips. We clung together in the frigid darkness,

the moaning wind wrapping around us both the dark cloak I wore over my

armor.

We could hear the tramping of feet, the clanging of hammers beating out

spear and arrowheads, the bustle of activity as the warships below were

prepared. All the stir of preparation was for the coming battle. Freya

raised her bright golden head with proud gladness.

“Come Loki and all his evil hosts, come the end of Asgard itself, and I

shall not weep now,” she whispered tensely. “Beloved who came to me

from beyond the ice, we are one till time ends.” She stepped back. “You

must answer the summons of lord Odin. We meet again at the feast

tonight.”

My heart was throbbing with pride and gladness as I turned from her and

hurried across Asgard to Valhalla castle.

Chapter XV. The Fire World

Odin and Thor were waiting for me in the great hall of Valhalla. The

stern, iron-strong face of the Aesir king was heavy. As he spoke, I

could hear the bustle of preparation, the clatter of shields and spears

and hurrying feet throughout the great castle.

“Jarl Keith, I shall not hide from you that Asgard is in dire peril.

The Jotun hosts outnumber us by many to one. Though we might repulse

them, if that were all, they will be led by cunning Loki and aided by

the storm-weapons of which you spoke.”

I nodded wordlessly, for all this knowledge had weighed on my own mind

through these last hours.

“It is necessary, unless Asgard is to perish,” Odin continued, “that I

devise some defense against those storm-cones. Otherwise they would

blast our forces and make us easy prey.”

“Can you prepare a defense against them, lord Odin?” I asked hopefully.

“I think I can,” said Odin, gravely thoughtful. “I possess as much of

the ancient science of our race as Loki, remember, though I have not

probed into unholy researches as he did. Tell me, what did you learn of

the nature of his storm-cones?”

Rapidly I told Odin and Thor what Loki himself had related to me of

those amazing devices. They could project a controlled electric field

to any desired spot and cause an abnormal difference of electric

potential between that place and the sky. The result would be a

blasting discharge of lightning.

“Ah, I understand now,” Odin muttered. “Loki has found a way to draw

power from the static electric charge of Earth, transform and project

it in a controlled field. Truly he is a daring scientist, as always.”

“Curse him and his devil's tricks!” growled Thor. “I always mistrusted

him, even in the ancient days in Muspelheim.”

“Couldn't there be some way of creating an electric energy field that

would screen out Loki's projected field?” I asked Odin eagerly, with

great anxiety.

“You have divined the only possible defense, Jarl Keith.” Odin nodded.

“And I could soon build a mechanism to create such a screen of energy.

But it would take tremendous power to operate it. Only controlled

disintegration of a large mass of intensively radioactive matter could

yield such power as that.”

“You said once, lord Odin, that there are tremendous masses of

radioactive matter in the deep world from which the Aesir originally

came.”

Odin's stare narrowed.

“Are you suggesting that we could get the radioactive substances from

Muspelheim?”

“That's my idea,” I stated. “You told me that there was a way down into

Muspelheim. It was a way by which the Aesir originally came up, and

which Loki later used for his researches in the atomic fires below.”

“It is true,” Odin said slowly. “There is such a path down to

Muspelheim, though it is a perilous and fearful one to follow. The

opening to that path is in the deepest chamber of this castle. When we

emerged here long ago, we built Valhalla over it. And it is the same

way that Loki used to descend and tamper with the atomic fires below,

until we discovered what he was doing and banished him.”

“But it would be deadly dangerous for anyone to go down that way to

Muspelheim and seek to bring back radioactive matter. For that

deep-buried world is a place of awful, raging atomic fires. The

terrific radiation is such that it streams even up through Earth's

crust into this land.”

“I know, but a lead garment of sufficient thickness would protect me

from the radiation,” I said earnestly. “I know that from my own

science. Let me go on this mission, lord Odin!”

He hesitated. “The lead suits which Loki used for his secret descents

into Muspelheim are still here,” he muttered. “It might be done, Jarl

Keith. I will go with you on this perilous trip.”

But Thor shook his great, shaggy head.

“No, Father, you must not go,” the Hammerer declared. “You must be here

to take command if Loki's forces attack before tomorrow. And you will

also need all the available time to build the mechanism of which you

and Jarl Keith speak.” He turned to me. “I will go with Jarl Keith down

into Muspelheim.”

Odin reluctantly assented.

“So be it, then, though I dislike to send you, Jarl Keith, upon this

fearful mission. The fight is for the sake of our people, not yours.”

“The Aesir are my people, now and always, if you will let me claim that

privilege!”

Odin's iron face softened, and he laid his great hand on my shoulder.

“Jarl Keith, I welcome you as one of us. Weal or woe, life or death,

you are outlander no longer, but jarl and captain of the Aesir.”

Hard-headed American scientist or not, I felt pride such as I had never

felt before, to be accepted into the company of these mighty men.

“Now go we down to the chamber that holds the mouth of the terrible

road to Muspelheim,” Odin said. “Come!”

Thor and I followed out of the great hall and through corridors. We

descended dark stone stairs until we reached the deepest level of

Valhalla castle. We came to a door carved with runes, and with a great

lock upon it. Odin touched the runes in a certain combination, and the

door swung slowly inward.

By the light of the torch Thor carried, I saw that we had entered a

round stone chamber of considerable size. It was dank and dusty, as

though unused for ages. Standing about were dust-covered instruments

and mechanisms of copper, quartz and iron, which I guessed were long

unused devices of the ancient Aesir science.

In the very center of the big chamber's stone floor yawned a pit fifty

feet in diameter, sinking to unguessable depths. Up from that opening

beat a fierce green glow of throbbing force, from somewhere far

beneath. I heard a dim, remote, roaring sound.

Most strange of all, in the opening of that pit floated a twenty-foot

disk of white metal, with a squat, thick standard of metal rising from

its center. It poised in the radiation, apparently without support,

rocking gently as the fierce green rays from below streamed up through

it.

“What in the world is that?” I asked startledly.

“That is the chariot on which you and Thor will ride down the road to

deep Muspelheim,” Odin explained. “And yon pit in which the disk floats

is the road itself.”

Odin looked somberly about the dusty room and its looming, enigmatic

mechanisms.

“This is the very heart of Asgard, Jarl Keith. Up that pit-road the

Aesir came long ago, fleeing from disaster-stricken Muspelheim. Over

the opening of this road I caused Valhalla castle to be built. And

secretly, from this chamber, Loki came and went to Muspelheim in the

perilous researches that caused his exile, using the floating disk

which he had devised to come and go easily.”

Thor was looking in obvious dislike at the metal disk that was rocking

eerily in empty air at the edge of the pit.

“I've not ridden that disk since we caught Loki in his secret

researches,” rumbled the bearded giant. “I've not much desire to repeat

the trip, but I suppose it has to be done.”

“Here are the lead suits, Jarl Keith,” called Odin.

I went to the side of the chamber to which the Aesir king had gone. He

had reached down, from hooks on which they hung, two of the four

strange garments which had hung there, gathering dust for long. The

garments were stiff robes of heavy but oddly flexible lead, falling to

the ankles, with leaden boots for the feet and leaden gloves for the

hands. A hood-like cowl of the same material went over the head, and

had two eye-holes of heavily leaded glass for vision.

“These are the suits which Loki and the thralls he forced to help him

used in the fiendish researches below,” Odin said. “When Loki was

forced to flee Asgard, he had to leave these behind him.”

I examined the heavy garments.

“They ought to be proof against any ordinary radiation,” I muttered.

“But we've got to have something in which to bring back the mass of

radioactive matter.”

Odin nodded understandingly. “Yon crucible should serve the purpose.

Put it on the disk, Thor.”

The crucible was a big one of lead, and so heavy that even huge Thor

grunted as he lifted it. He staggered with it to the floating disk. It

rocked a little as he put the crucible on it, then quieted. Thor and I

each donned one of the protective suits. The lead garments were so

heavy that I felt crushed, and I could see only dimly through the dark

glass of the eye-holes. Odin handed each of us a stout iron staff.

“Thor, you know from long ago how to operate the disk,” he told his

huge son. “While you are gone, I shall begin converting one of these

mechanisms into a generator whose energy may screen us from Loki's

storm-cones in the coming battle.”

“We'll get the stuff to operate that generator, or not come back,” I

promised.

The Aesir king's iron-strong face was anxious.

“I pray the Norns that you return with it, Jarl Keith.”

Thor had stepped out onto the floating disk. I followed, moving stiffly

in my hampering garments, and feeling more than a little uneasy as I

boarded the disk which floated in empty air.

“Crouch by the standard with me, Jarl Keith,” came Thor's muffled

voice. “Cling to the hand-grips.”

I followed his example and crouched down beside the squat pillar which

rose from the center of the disk. Upon that pillar was a single lever,

movable in a graduated slot, which seemed to be the only control of the

strange vehicle. There were protecting hand-grips on the pillar and

across the whole disk, for passengers to cling to. Thor's lead-gloved

hand clutched the lever and moved it slightly. It operated a simple

mechanical device which slid open scores of tiny doors in the disk,

which until now had been half—open.

At once the disk began to fall into the pit. Faster and faster we fell,

the air whistling around us, and the blazing green radiation streaming

violently up through the many tiny openings in the disk.

“How in the world does this thing operate?” I shouted to Thor over the

roar of air. “Is it by radiation-pressure?”

I heard his muffled answer.

“You have guessed it, Jarl Keith. The metal of this disk is one that is

extremely light and opaque to radiation. The pressure of the radiation

from below is so terrifically powerful as to drive the disk upward. By

opening the little doors and controlling the radiation through the

disk, the vehicle can be poised motionless against the pressure, or

caused to fall.”

“Certainly Loki is a clever scientist, to have devised such a thing,” I

declared.

Thor growled an answer, but I could not hear, the whistling wind and

din, thunderous roaring from far below were growing louder. We were

falling at an appalling speed, straight down the pit. It was a ride

wild beyond imagination, with the air shrieking like fiends, and the

fierce green rays streaming up around us. Through every fiber of my

body, even though I wore the protective lead suit, tingled stronger

vibrations of the stimulating force I had felt since entering this

land. It was wildly exhilarating and intoxicating.

Thor's big, lead-clothed figure crouched, his gloved hand on the

control lever. His cowled head was bent as he peered tautly down

through a square quartz plate in the bottom of the disk. A giddy

sensation akin to nausea shook me, so swift now was our fall.

“We approach Muspelheim!” came Thor's bellow over I the roar and

shriek. “Hold tightly, Jarl Keith!”

His hand moved the lever in its slot. The tiny doors in the bottom of

the disk closed a little. Our fall began to slow. Pressed hard against

the disk, crushed by the deceleration, I peered down through the quartz

view-plate with Thor. The end of the vertical pit was close below. I

saw, beneath it, a vast, fiery space.

The disk slowed further, as Thor moved the lever. Finally it hung

motionless again, its weight just balanced by the pressure of radiation

from below. It had halted just where the vertical pit debouched into

the roof of an inconceivably vast, blazing space. An underworld of

terrible atomic radiance stretched away for miles from the rock wall

beside which the pit entered.

“You look upon deep Muspelheim.” Thor's voice reached me muffledly.

“Once the home of the Aesir, it is the home now of the atomic fires and

the creatures of the fires.”

The scene before me was indescribably awe-inspiring. The vast

dimensions of this mighty space beneath Earth's crust were enough to

stagger the mind. This was no mere cavern, but an enormous hollow such

as many have believed was left under the planet's surface by the

hurling forth of the Moon.

The rocky roof was a mile above the floor. Our disk had halted just

where the vertical pit entered the roof, close beside one rock wall of

the great space. From the spot where Thor and I gazed, the subterranean

world stretched off out of sight, to right and left and ahead.

Many miles away from us there shone a dazzling thing that dominated the

whole vast, blazing fane with its brilliance. It was a colossal

fountain of cold, white fire that gushed from a chasm in the floor.

Hundreds of feet into the air it rose, falling back on itself in

continual blinding spray. From it shot beams and banners of blinding

light and force, a shaking, shuddering radiance.

All across the underworld rose similar but smaller geysers of white

fire, gushing jets of radiance like that mighty distant one. Wherever

the eye turned, it encountered such fiery fountains. They filled the

underworld with a roaring that was deafening, and a terrific

green-white radiance.

“Can your people ever have lived here?” I cried shakenly to Thor, as I

gazed stupedfiedly from the floating disk.

“Aye, Jarl Keith. Centuries ago we dwelt here, where we had evolved and

lived for ages. But then this was a fair world. There was no fire

except that one great atomic fountain which you see far away. It was

smaller then than now, yet its radiations were sufficient to keep this

whole underworld warm and habitable.

“Then accursed Loki tampered with our fire fountain. He sought to

stimulate it to greater activity, so that its increased radiations

would make us almost immortal. He so disturbed and aroused the fountain

that its fires shot up and fell here and there, all across the

underworld. Eventually it set masses of radioactive matter everywhere

to blazing up in atomic flame themselves.

“Thus we had to flee from disaster-smitten Muspelheim. We managed to

pierce the pit up to the upper world, and clambered up it by a toilsome

stair carved in its side. And since then Muspelheim has been a world of

fire, forsaken by men.”

I was so stunned by the awesome spectacle that I had almost forgotten

our mission here. But Thor recalled it to me.

“We must not stay here long, Jarl Keith!” he warned. “The awful

radiation here would slay us if it penetrated our leaden suits.”

I glanced down.

“There must be plenty of radioactive matter here, all right,” I said.

“But how do we get down to the floor?”

“By this stair. It's part of the ancient way by which my people escaped

to the upper world.”

I saw now that the disk had halted beside the landing of a stair which

was chiseled from the rock wall of the underworld. The stair climbed up

from the floor and disappeared into the pit-shaft by which we had

descended.

Hastily, fully awakening to the peril of remaining long in this hell of

fierce radiation, I helped Thor pick up the leaden crucible we had

brought. We stepped from the disk to the landing, and started down the

stair. It was hard walking in our stiff lead garments, and with the

weight of the crucible to carry. Moreover, the stair was without any

protective rail, and perilously narrow.

Chapter XVI. The Flame Creatures

When we reached the floor of the underworld, we stood within a hundred

yards of one of the many geysers of atomic fire. Though half-blinded by

its brilliance, I was able to see that it jetted from a mass of

radioactive mineral whose normally slow disintegration had been

tremendously accelerated. It had been kindled to this faster

disintegration, I knew, by the flame that had fallen from the central

fountain.

“We shall have to find a radioactive deposit unkindled as yet,” I

called to Thor.

He nodded his lead-cowled head vigorously.

“Let us try this direction, Jarl Keith.”

We stumbled with the crucible between the geysers of atomic flame.

Sometimes we were forced to go so near one of the jets that its

inconceivable radiation seemed bound to penetrate our suits. Dazzled

even through my lead-glass eyeholes by the raging brilliance, every

fiber of my body tingling, I searched desperately for such a deposit as

we required. If our suits should be penetrated, we would die horrible

deaths.

“This way, Thor!” I called suddenly as I found a mass of mineral in a

niche in the broken rock floor.

It was glowing with a soft light that seemed feeble in comparison with

the flaming atomic fountains. I recognized it as an isotope of radium

itself, never found in a natural state in my own upper world.

“There's more than enough of the stuff here, if we can dig it out!” I

exclaimed. “We'll have to use our staffs.”

The iron pikes we carried were ill-adapted to digging out the hard,

glowing mineral. But we set to work, prying out chunks of the stuff and

tossing them into the crucible. As I straightened once, panting for

breath, I glimpsed an amazing sight in the middle distance.

Around one of the geysers were circling and flitting a dozen things

that looked like swirling spheres of flame, with coiling, brilliant

tentacles of light.

“Those things look as though they were alive!” I yelled in horror.

Thor straightened to see.

“Flame-children!” he exclaimed, his muffled voice suddenly anxious. He

turned to me hastily. “They are alive, in a way. But it is not life

like ours. They are creatures evolved somehow from the flaming

radiation of this underworld of atomic fires. We believe they consist

of force currents that cohere in a permanent pattern, which possess

powers of movement and perhaps dim intelligence. We don't know much

about them, for they've evolved here since the Aesir left poor

Muspelheim.”

“They look beautiful, like flame-winged birds of light,” I said,

staring in awe and fascination.

“They're dangerous, Jarl Keith — pure concentrated atomic energy!”

warned the Hammerer. “We must be gone before they find us.”

I redoubled my toil of helping to dig out the radioactive chunks. We

had the crucible half-full of the precious mineral when I felt a

terrific shock of force against my back. I whirled around, uttered a

cry. One of the dazzling flame-children was poised behind me, had just

touched my suit. The mere touch of the weird creature had burned almost

through the thick lead!

“We've got to get out!” Thor bellowed. “The thing has almost pierced

your suit. The radiation will penetrate it in a few minutes, and you'll

die horribly.”

“But we haven't all the radioactive matter that Odin will need,” I

protested.

“We have most of it. If you perish here, we'll never get even this much

back to him. Quick, up the stair to the disk!”

He grabbed the crucible's handle. Reluctantly I took the other handle

and started with him toward the stair. As we hastened with our heavy

load between the roaring geysers of atomic fire, I looked back. The one

of the flame-children that had touched me experimentally was now

joining several other dazzling creatures like itself, and drifting

after us.

Hastily we started up the stair. With some relief, I saw that the

flame-children did not follow us, but drifted on and started circling

and flitting around another of the fire fountains. Apparently the dim

intelligence of the creatures, if indeed they possessed any, had lost

interest in us.

Panting and exhausted, we reached the landing and set the crucible down

on the floating disk. Thor hastily adjusted the controls to make up for

the increased weight on it. As he crouched down, preparatory to

starting up the shaft, I noticed something.

“Thor, what is that door up there, high in the roof?” He turned his

gaze to follow my pointing finger. The door looked like a massive

sliding sheet of dull metal, set in the roof of the underworld some

distance from us. There was a shielded mechanism of some kind set in

the rock by the door, obviously controlling it.

“That is the forbidden research upon which Loki was engaged, and which

caused us to banish him from Asgard,” Thor explained. “Above that door

is a tunnel connected with the sea of the upper world. If the door were

opened, sea water would rush down into this underworld.”

“Good lord!” I cried in horror. “If sea water ever poured down into

this world of fire, there'd be an explosion that would shake the

planet!”

“Aye, and Odin saw that danger,” Thor said. “Loki planned to admit only

enough sea water to produce the titanic power of which he had need in

his experiments. But Odin pointed out that if anything went wrong — if

this door were completely opened and the sea rushed down unchecked into

Muspelheim — there would be such an explosion as would rend the whole

land above. It was the reason for Loki's banishment.”

As Thor spoke, he was moving the control lever. The floating disk began

to rise in the vertical shaft, out of the fiery underworld. With all

the tiny valve-doors closed, it rose quickly under the pressure of the

powerful radiation. We shot up the dark shaft at a speed that almost

equaled that of our descent.

We were none too soon. A savage pain in my back told me that the

radiation had just been starting to penetrate my weakened protective

garment. Already it had scorched my flesh!

Clinging to the rocking, rising disk, I held the crucible to keep it

from sliding away. The radioactive matter in it shed a feeble glow upon

the dark walls of the pit as they raced downward. Then Thor slowed our

rise, and finally the disk came to a halt at the mouth of the shaft.

Again we were in the torchlit chamber under Valhalla castle.

Odin was awaiting us. The Aesir uttered an exclamation of relief as

Thor and I stumbled off the disk with the crucible and removed our

stiff garments.

“Lord Odin, I fear we didn't get all the radioactive fuel you'll need

for your mechanism,” I said bitterly. “It was my fault that we were

forced to leave—”

Odin looked with a shadow of worry in his eye at the half-filled

crucible. But he spoke confidently to me.

“It should be enough, Jarl Keith, to defend us from Loki's storm

weapons. See, I have converted another mechanism into such a generator

as we will need for that defense.”

The mechanism was concealed by a spherical copper cover upon which was

mounted a smaller copper ball. There was a hopper in its side, into

which we poured the chunks of glowing mineral.

“It should have power enough to maintain a defensive screen against the

force of Loki's storm-cones for a short time,” Odin said. “If he should

use the storm-cones for longer than that—”

He did not finish, but I shared the deep worry that was etched in his

strong face.

“I saw Loki's handiwork below,” I said, and described the sliding door

in the roof of the fire-world, which Loki had designed to admit sea

water. “No wonder you cast Loki out for such a terrifically dangerous

plan.”

“Aye, it was Baldur who discovered that plan, and was slain by Loki for

exposing it,” Odin said somberly. “Loki had perfected a remote control

for that sliding door, operating by tuned vibration. Here it is.”

And Odin showed me, among the many dust-covered instruments in the

chamber, a small, square silver box. On it was mounted a knob whose

pointer could be turned along a semi-circular scale.

“Turning this knob would open the sea-door a bit or wide,” the Aesir

king said. “When Loki fled from Asgard, he took this control box with

him. And when we trapped him in that cave below Midgard, and we were

about to kill him, Loki threatened to open the sea-gate wide and

destroy us all. That was why we had to agree not to kill him, if he

would surrender this control box to us. He did surrender it. We kept

our word and did not kill him, but placed him in the suspended

animation in which he lay for so long.”

Odin went to the door and called up through the corridors for some of

his thralls to come. When they came, he bade them carry out the big

spherical copper generator.

“We shall place it on Vigrid field, on the mainland across Bifrost

Bridge,” he said, “and keep it under guard tonight. For it is there

that we must make our stand against Loki's forces when they come in all

their fury.”

He, Thor and I followed the thralls as they bore the heavy mechanism

through Valhalla castle and out into the windy, gusty night.

Torch-bearing thralls went ahead to illuminate the way. Lights shone

from all the castles of Asgard. The Moon was hidden by driving clouds

as we moved in a little torchlit group across the giddy span of Bifrost

to the flat field on the opposite promontory,

My plane was still where I had landed it. Aesir warriors and mounted

scouts were on guard, watching toward the south for the first approach

Of Loki and the Jotun horde. As Odin directed the placing of the copper

mechanism, I went to my plane. Something had occurred to me which might

enable me to devise an additional weapon for the coming battle.

In the plane were the half-dozen big signal rockets which were to be

used in case I made a forced landing and had to summon help. I began

taking the rockets apart, pouring out the gun powder in them, and

carefully unfixing the detonators. At the end of a half-hour, I had

made three crude hand-grenades or small bombs. I hoped they might be of

some use against the Jotuns, who knew nothing of explosives. I left the

bombs in the plane and emerged to find Thor waiting for me.

“My father has already returned to Asgard,” the Hammerer told me. “And

it is time we followed him, for our nightly Valhalla feast begins

soon.”

“Thor, what of tomorrow's battle?” I asked. “If it comes to sword and

spear, with the Jotuns outnumbering us many times, what can we do?”

“We can triumph or we can die!” boomed the giant. “And if it is death —

well, the Aesir have lived long and are not afraid to die, so long as

we take our enemies with us.” He tossed his great hammer in the air and

caught it in outstretched hand, as though it were a willow wand. “Be

not impatient, Miolnir. You'll not thirst long. And now to Valhalla,

Jarl Keith.”

Valhalla was blazing with torchlight when we entered it. Logs in the

great hearth burned high. In the flickering torchlight, all the

captains and great warriors of the Aesir were gathered at the many

tables. The Aesir nobles were appearing, striding toward the high table

on the dais. I took my place beside Freya. Beyond her were the two

empty seats of Frey and Gerda, then Bragi and Idun, old Aegir and his

wife, and brooding, silent Tyr.

Odin and Frigga entered, and we all stood up. The Aesir king's eye

surveyed us with stern pride.

“Be seated, jarls and captains,” he boomed. “Let us eat and drink as of

old. Though war and death surge upon us tomorrow, yet is there no fear

in our hearts.”

“Skoal to Odin!” rang Forseti's deep voice.

We seized our drinking-horns and raised them high to a crashing shout

of confidence and pride.

“Skoal to the king!”

We drained the mead and sat down. The tall serving-maidens hastened to

bring us more drink and meat. The din of voices and laughter rang

forth, loud as ever. The deepening shadow of dire disaster which lay

over Asgard that night intensified, rather than lessened, the merriment

of the feast. Horn after horn of the sweet, potent mead we drank.

Beside me, Freya's blue eyes clung to my face. The shadowed tenderness

and love in them was more heart-stirring to me than all else.

“Come good or ill, Freya,” I whispered, “it is worth having lived to

sit here tonight with you and your people.”

“Aye, Jarl Keith,” she replied. But there was wistfulness in her voice

as she added: “I would that I could foretell our sitting here again

tomorrow.”

Suddenly all the cheery voices died. Into the hall strode tall

Heimdall, warder of Asgard's gates.

“Why are you here, Heimdall?” Odin asked. “Is it not your task tonight

to watch over Bifrost Bridge, and sound the great blast on Giallar horn

when the enemy approaches?”

“Lord Odin, Loki has sent a herald to us,” Heimdall answered. “That

herald, the Jotun king Utgar, I have admitted under truce. He waits to

enter.”

Fierce passion leaped into every face as the men reached for their

weapons. Thor raised his great hammer menacingly, but Odin spoke with

stern calm.

“Let the herald of Loki enter.”

Utgar came alone into Valhalla's blazing torchlight. Yet the big,

black-bearded Jotun king came swaggering, bearing himself like a

conqueror as he strode up to our table where the nobles of the Aesir

sat.

Chapter XVII. Magic Science

Utgar's brutal face showed no sign of fear as he met the fiery gaze of

his deadly enemies. He spoke to Odin, his coarse, rasping voice loud

with utter confidence.

“I bring a message from the lord Loki, ruler of Midgard and soon to be

ruler of Asgard.”

A fierce exclamation went up from every throat. But Odin's stern face

did not change as he replied.

“Speak Loki's message.”

“These are the words of Loki,” Utgar said loudly. “'Odin and the other

Aesir, the time of your downfall has come. I, whom you cast out long

ago, whom you prisoned for centuries, am now free and thirsty for

vengeance. Tomorrow I come against you with the Jotuns. We shall have

three warriors for each warrior of yours, three ships for each of your

ships. You cannot stand against us.

“'But because I was once of your blood, I shall offer you your lives.

If you swear to submit to me as your ruler, if you become my subjects

as the Jotuns are and crown me your king in Valhalla hall, then shall

you retain your lives. Think well before you refuse this offer. If you

refuse it, I shall utterly destroy you all.' These are the words of

Loki. What answer, lord Odin?”

“I'll answer now with Miolnir!” Thor roared, rising with crimson rage

on his face.

A fierce chorus of yells from every throat there, including my own,

seconded his cry. But Odin waved us to silence. He spoke slowly,

solemnly, gazing gravely down at Utgar.

“Take this answer to Loki, Jotun. Tell him that he knows well the Aesir

will never yield to his demands. We will fight until our swords break

in our hands, until our hands be shorn away, until our breath is no

more in us. But we will not take back among us the murderer Loki who

long ago proved traitor to our race.

“And tell Loki this also. Tell him that he shall never — even though he

and his Jotun hosts utterly overcome us — reap profit from his work.

For I say that before that shall happen, all this land will quail

beneath destruction. Flame and death shall eat up Midgard and Asgard

alike, and all the Jotuns and the Aesir. Tell the arch-traitor that!”

Involuntarily Utgar recoiled from the dark, dreadful menace in Odin's

voice. Then the Jotun king drew his huge figure scornfully erect.

“Think not that our lord will be frightened by such words,” he

retorted. “You have asked for doom, and doom you shall have.”

He turned to go, but Tyr, the brooding berserk, stepped in front of

him.

“You know me, Utgar,” said Tyr in a slow, bitter voice. “Look for me in

tomorrow's battle. I will look for you.”

“Come and find me, then, Aesir,” laughed Utgar savagely. “Too long have

I heard of your valor. Tomorrow I'll test it with my sword.”

Utgar strode proudly out of the hall, Heimdall following. In the

silence, we heard the Jotun king gallop across Asgard to Bifrost

Bridge.

“Let the feast go on,” bade Odin at last. Drinking commenced again, the

fierce babble of voices arising. My head spun from the mead that I had

drunk as the hours went by. Freya sat silent, close inside the circle

of my arm, looking up ever and again at my face. I saw Odin brooding as

he watched his people make merry on the brink of dreadful war. Pride in

these Aesir, gratitude that they allowed me to be one of them, filled

me.

The first light of dawn began slanting through the windows. Bragi

stepped forward with his harp, and all voices died as the gentle-faced

skald touched the quivering strings. His clear voice rang martial-loud

through Valhalla.

Now comes the great hour

When Norn-spinners gather

The fate-threads of warriors

Of Aesir and Jotun.

Now Wyrd's dark daughters

Make ready the battle,

The struggle long fated

'Twixt darkness and light.

Bragi sang on, firing the blood with the stirring strains. And when he

had finished, a tremendous shout of applause roared from us all. As the

echoes of our shout died, there came on their heels from far away the

low, long reverberation of a horn-blast.

Louder and louder it grew as we listened in tense silence, waxing until

the deep, tremendous note of that mighty trumpet throbbed through every

corner of Asgard. Then it fell and died away.

“The great blast of Giallar horn,” Odin said with quiet sternness.

“Heimdall warns that the hosts of Loki approach.”

We sprang to our feet. Odin's voice rang in quick command.

“We go forth to meet them. On the field Vigrid, on the other side of

Bifrost Bridge, we will await them. Gather your men and horses. Aegir,

you and Niord command our fleet! Put out with all our ships and lie off

Asgard until you see along which coast the Jotun fleet comes.”

With a yell the Aesir nobles and captains poured out of Valhalla.

Trumpets blared out in the dawn, and there was the thunder of galloping

horses, the clanking tramp of marching men hurrying up, the roar of

orders shouted loudly. I remained in the almost empty hall with Freya,

Odin and his family. The Aesir king was putting over his mail brynja a

silver emblem carved with runes.

Vidar, the tall second son, brought Odin's great sword, and the king

buckled it on. Thor, his little eyes blazing with battle-light, was

swinging great Miolnir in the air, giving a last test to the strength

of its helve.

Odin looked into the beautiful face of the lady Frigga.

“Farewell, my wife,” he said in his deep voice. “We come back victors

or dead men, as Wyrd wills it.”

I had taken Freya into my arms. Almost fiercely I held her bright head

between my hands and kissed her. Bright sunbeams from a window lit her

hair to dazzling gold as I released her. Her blue eyes looked up into

mine without a shadow of fear in their proud depths.

“Jarl Keith, I must remain with the women instead of riding by your

side as I would wish. But my heart goes with you. I am proud that you

from the outlands fight today beside my people.”

“Your people are mine, Freya,” I answered. “It was I who brought the

key that loosed Loki. I can only atone for that by fighting against the

devil today.”

Odin was striding toward the exit of the great hall. I tore myself from

Freya and followed with giant Thor, Vidal and Vali. We emerged from

Valhalla castle into the bright day. Before us were massed the warriors

of Asgard, helmets and mail gleaming in the Sun. Three thousand

horsemen and five thousand footmen they numbered, their jarls and

captains sitting their horses at the head of the men.

A great shout greeted Odin as we emerged. Thralls held our horses as we

swung into the saddles. Thor vaulted heavily onto his great black

stallion. Odin raised his hand high and shouted ringingly:

“To Vigrid!”

We spurred forward, the king, his sons and I galloping at the head of

the massed horsemen. Across the city Asgard we rode, toward the castled

gates of Bifrost. They swung open as we approached, and Heimdall,

warder of the gates, was waiting for us on his own steed.

The guards on the tower above again sounded the great, throbbing blast

of Giallar horn as we rode through the gates and onto the bridge. With

Odin leading us, our horsemen streaming out in narrow file with armor

shining gold in the dazzling Sun, we galloped up the arch of the

rainbow bridge. Like thunder clattered our horses' hoofs on that flying

arc of stone.

Far below us raged the green sea between Asgard and Midgard. Far back

to our right, from the eastern cliffs of Asgard, the Aesir ships were

putting out to sea under Aegir's command. Forty big dragons of war,

square sails raised to the wind, brazen beaks dipping into the heaving

waves, they quickly moved out to await the coming of the Jotun fleet.

Wild exultation was throbbing in me like wine as we rode down the

descending arch of Bifrost Bridge. I had forgotten that I was Keith

Masters of the outside world. I had forgotten everything except that I

was one of the Aesir, that I was to fight beside them for Freya and for

Asgard against the savage hosts of evil Loki.

We halted on the open, rocky plain that lay at the northern extremity

of Midgard. Behind us arched the rainbow bridge leading to Asgard. In

front of us, beyond the flat field Vigrid, extended the dark, forested

hills of Midgard. Odin had halted us beyond the hillock upon which his

spherical copper generator stood, and near which my plane was parked.

“The footmen will mass in our center under Vidar,” Odin ordered. “Half

our horsemen on the left wing under Thor, and half on the right under

Heimdall.”

By now the infantry was streaming across Bifrost Bridge in dense, long

files, archers, and spearmen, and swordsmen. Thor bellowed the orders

that drew them and the horsemen up in front of the little hillock. Odin

had dismounted and climbed the hillock to his generator, and I followed

him. Finally Thor, having completed the disposition of our forces, rode

up the hillock to where the Aesir king and I were examining the

generator.

“They come!” boomed Thor, pointing southward with his gleaming hammer.

We peered intently through the bright daylight. From the south, the

glitter of a forest of helmets and spear-points flashed in the Sun as a

dense mass of Jotun soldiery advanced along the cliff-edge, screened by

horsemen. Far out on the sea to the right, a great fleet of

dragon-ships was sailing northward. There were at least a hundred of

the black Jotun long-ships, and the Aesir vessels were advancing to

meet them. In the south, a growing darkness was clouding the heavens. A

strange dusk was creeping up rapidly across the brilliant sky.

“Loki's storm-cones!” I shouted. “See where he has set them up on that

crest, lord Odin!”

I pointed. Southward, well behind the advancing Jotun army, rose a

crest. Upon it was a small group of clustered objects that gleamed in

the last rays of the half-obscured Sun.

“Aye, I see,” Odin said in his deep voice. “Loki prepares to loose his

lightnings upon us, as we feared.”

The Aesir king began to manipulate the enigmatic controls of his big

spherical generator, to throw up a defensive screen. The wind was

moaning around us with increasing force as the darkness spread rapidly

across the sky. The gloom seemed to boil up visibly from the distant

crest where Loki had his storm-cones, and from which he was spraying a

terrific electric field to unlock the tempest.

Down in the sea beyond the cliffs, the dark waves were churning ever

higher. They and the shrieking winds were wildly tossing the Jotun and

Aesir ships that maneuvered swiftly for battle.

Crash!

Out of the night-black sky, a blazing flash of white lightning had

struck amid our massed footmen. It left a heap of scorched dead. On its

heels came another blinding bolt that blasted three horsemen.

“Lord Odin, Loki's lightnings begin to slay my men!” roared Heimdall

from the right wing. “Let us charge them!”

“Wait!” Odin called, undismayed.

At the same time, the spherical copper generator began to throb with

power. The radioactive matter in it, which Thor and I had procured with

such risk from deep Muspelheim, was breaking down into pure power. The

energy was being transformed into a radiant shell of power that was

broadcast from the smaller copper ball atop the generator.

Up into the storm-nighted sky, Odin's mechanism flung a great halo of

glowing light. The halo that tented our forces stopped the blazing

lightning-bolts that had begun to decimate us! Those blinding flashes

hit the halo and splashed harmlessly upon it.

“It shields us from Loki's storm-cones!” I cried jubilantly. “We've

neutralized his best weapon!”

“Wait, Jarl Keith, before you exult,” warned Odin. “There is not enough

radioactive fuel to operate this mechanism much longer. When it stops,

Loki's lightnings will play yet greater havoc with us.”

“Can't we charge with all our horsemen and destroy Loki and his

devilish weapons?” Thor cried fiercely.

“As soon as we leave the defense of this generator's screen of energy,

Loki's lightnings will cleave us,” Odin replied.

I realized the desperate nature of the emergency. If the Aesir and the

Jotuns were to fight this battle on anything like even terms, Loki's

storm-cones must be destroyed! Even if they were, the Aesir would be

facing overwhelming numbers. But there would be a chance for victory,

at least, whereas there would be no chance at all if Loki's forces were

not checked.

In this emergency, my eyes fell on my plane parked some distance to the

rear of our forces. Suddenly I remembered the bombs I had made the

night before, for possible use in the battle.

“Lord Odin, I think that I may be able to destroy Loki's weapons!” I

cried eagerly. “In my flying craft I have a weapon of the kind my

people use in war. Let me try it.”

“Can any flying ship live in this tempest?” the Aesir king asked

incredulously.

I wondered, too. The storm that raged over this strange battlefield had

now become chaotic in its insensate fury. From all the black sky over

us, bolts of lightning induced by Loki's storm-cones were sizzling and

flashing down. Though they were splattering on Odin's defense screen,

the mounts of our horsemen were rearing wildly. Our warriors were

white-faced in the light of the flashes. In the south, the mighty Jotun

army was forming up to advance against us.

“I can make it!” I persisted without conviction. “I'll circle back

around the worst of this storm.”

“Then go, Jarl Keith, and the Norns guide you,” Odin said reverently.

Chapter XVIII. The Battle for Asgard

I raced back toward the plane. In a moment I had the rocket motor

roaring, and then I managed a perilous take-off from the field. Raging

winds, blowing now in this direction and now in that, threatened to

hurl my rising plane back to the field. Sheets and flares of blinding

lightning dazzled my eyes. But I rose and zoomed out over the sea, to

circle back and approach Loki's position from the rear.

I hurtled through the unnatural darkness over the water. Lightning

flares gave me a momentary glimpse of Aesir and Jotun ships locked in

death-combat down on the wild waters. I rocketed over them. Then I

swung back toward the cliffs of Midgard and came roaring down from

behind upon the crest where Loki had his storm-cones.

I had the cabin-window open, and my crude bombs near at hand. As I

dived steeply, I peered down at the crest. Loki stood by the vicious

storm-cones. The big mechanisms were clustered close together, their

quartz nozzles pointed toward the distant Aesir forces. A fine violet

electrical brush played over them as they sprayed their controlled

static field.

I saw Loki's startled white face, and the alarmed features of Utgar,

Hel and the Jotun captains as my plane swooped down. Diving within a

few yards of the storm-cones, I dropped four small bombs. There was a

crimson flare in the lightning-seared blackness behind me. I looked

back to see the storm-cones, all but one, lying shattered and

dismounted. I glimpsed Loki and Utgar. Unharmed, the Aesir arch-traitor

was shouting orders as the Jotuns ran to their horses.

“Score one for my science,” I muttered between my teeth, as I hurled

the plane back toward the Aesir positions.

The single remaining storm-cone was still operating, and lightning was

flaring and thunder rolled. But the terrific hail of bolts that had

threatened to destroy the Aesir had stopped.

“Well done, Jarl Keith!” roared Thor, when I had landed my plane and

run back to the hillock where Odin and his captains stood.

“It was well done,” Odin declared. “For my generator is faltering now.

Had you not destroyed the storm-cones, we would have been helpless.”

“Loki's preparing to advance with all the Jotun forces,” I said

breathlessly. “See, there they come now!”

The Jotuns were deploying on the farther side of Vigrid field. At least

ten thousand unmounted warriors formed up behind their wide screen of

cavalry.

“There rides the arch-traitor!” cried Heimdall wrathfully.

I saw Loki. He rode behind the cavalry, at the head of the massed Jotun

footmen. His bright golden helmet gleamed in the lightning flashes, his

white steed curveting. Besides Loki's horse ran a great, gray shape —

the huge wolf, Fenris, coming like a war-dog with its master into

battle.

“If only Iormungandr were with him, too!” rasped Thor. “The Midgard

snake must die this day, to fulfill my oath.”

The archers of the Jotuns, advancing behind their screen of horsemen,

were discharging their missiles. Arrows rattled down like rain among us.

Men dropped from their mounts and horses squealed with pain.

“Take your places, but do not charge till I give the word,” Odin

ordered.

“Are we to be riddled without striking back a blow?” cried Thor

furiously.

“Wait till I give the signal,” Odin bade sternly. “Both our wings of

horsemen shall ride at the center and split through their main body.

Vidar will follow with our footmen. Then, if Wyrd wills it, we shall

cut their split forces to bits.”

Odin rode forward, and I followed with Vali, Bragi, Forseti, and the

other of the Aesir captains. Taking up our position between Thor's

horsemen on the left and Heimdall's on the right, we waited. I felt the

awful suspense of the moment. The arrows rattled down among us during

the slow advance of the great Jotun host. The thunder and lightning of

the storm still grumbled across the dark sky. In the face of them all,

the horsemen and footmen of the Aesir waited silently and motionlessly

behind Odin.

The Jotuns were well within bowshot, and their arrows were taking even

greater toll. So close were they that back among them I could make out

the white face of Loki, urging them forward. I could see big Utgar, the

Jotun king, riding beside the arch-traitor. An ancient feud was rushing

toward its climax in these last moments. I felt the tension of men who

were somehow more than men. When this battle joined, it would be the

clash of cosmic forces...

“Now!” cried Odin, raising his mailed fist and flashed his sword high.

The trumpets of the Aesir blared wildly in answer. With a yell of

pent-up tenseness, we spurred our horses and galloped forward. Our two

mounted wings converged, charging right at the center of the great

Jotun army. Riding forward with the others, I was scarcely conscious of

individual action. Instinctively I spurred and drew my sword and leaned

forward over my saddle-bow.

Before me, Odin's mighty figure galloped with great sword still raised

high. Beside me, Thor was already whirling his gigantic hammer,

bellowing his terrifying battle-cry. Beyond him were Heimdall, Forseti

and Bragi. And behind us thundered the three thousand Aesir horsemen,

followed by the footmen under Vidar, Vali and Tyr.

Arrows showered among us. Men and horses tumbled, crashing in our midst

as we galloped in that wild charge. Thunder roared deafeningly from the

blackened sky ahead to drown our yelling trumpets. Lightning flashed

blindingly across the sky.

We struck the screen of the Jotun horsemen like a thunderbolt, tore

through them as a sword tears through paper. Then our charge carried us

smashing deep into the main body of the Jotun army. All Earth must have

felt the splintering shock of that collision! My horse stumbled over

Jotun bodies. I leaned from the saddle and struck furiously with my

sword at black-bearded warriors who sought to reach me with ax and

blade. I hewed down two enemies before their spears could touch my

side.

All around me, swords were banging on helmets, men yelling in fierce

blood-lust or shrill death agony, hamstrung horses squealing horribly,

shields crashing together with deafening clangor. The trumpets of the

Aesir were blaring unceasingly. The hoarse horns of the Jotuns roared a

savage answer.

Thor, close beside me in the battle, was forcing his stallion forward.

His huge hammer kept falling like a thing endowed with its own life

upon the helmets of the Jotuns. Miolnir's steel was red with blood and

gray with brains as the bearded, red-faced giant whirled it. Thrice in

as many moments, he beat down Jotuns who would have slain me. And on my

other side, Heimdall was wielding an ax like a woodsman, and Vidar was

riding forward through the corpses he had made.

Right in front of us, Odin's eagle helmet gleamed through the chaos of

battle. The great sword rose and fell as the Aesir king forced deeper

into the Jotun host.

“For Asgard!” rang his deep voice.

And from the Aesir horsemen and footmen behind us shouted an answering

chorus.

“Follow the king! Strike for Asgard!”

The Jotun host began to split and give way before our concentrated

assault. Though they greatly outnumbered us, we were driving a wedge

between them.

“They waver!” shouted Vidar, wildly exultant. “Push hard and the battle

is ours. They are breaking!”

As we forced forward, the Jotun footmen were giving ever more rapidly.

If we could split them in two, cut them up and destroy them—

“Loki comes!” screamed Heimdall.

I saw his golden helmet shining through the murk of lightning-seared

storm. Loki was pushing fearlessly through the Jotun host toward us.

His face was white and beautiful with the exhilaration of battle as he

came through the fight toward us. Beside him rode Utgar, and between

them ran the great, gray shape of Fenris.

“Stand firm, Jotuns!” Utgar was yelling to his wavering host. “The lord

Loki is with us!”

With a fierce war-cry, Odin spurred forward to meet Loki. Thor, Vidar,

Heimdall, Bragi and I were all close behind the Aesir king. Heimdall

and Bragi, forcing farther ahead, met the charge of Loki and Utgar

first. I saw Loki's sword flash and Heimdall tumbled from his horse,

stabbed through.

Utgar's ax had crashed down upon Bragi's helm at the same moment. From

Thor came an awful yell of wrath as he saw our two comrades fall.

“Come to meet me, traitor!” he bellowed to Loki.

But Odin reached the arch-demon instead. Beneath the flare of

lightning, they struck at each other with swords that flashed like

streaks of light. Fearless, blazing and beautiful shone Loki's face as

he fought. His silver voice pealed in exultation.

“At last, Odin, I repay you for my long imprisonment!”

But Odin, at that moment, struck forth fiercely with all his strength

in a great blow at Loki's helm. Loki swerved, but the sword grazed his

helmet. The stunning force of the blow sent him heeling back in his

saddle.

“Death for Loki!” yelled the Aesir behind us in wild triumph.

A snarling, terrible roar, a scream of warning from my lips, both broke

at the same moment. The giant wolf Fenris, as Loki was stricken aback

by that terrible blow, leaped up like a gray thunderbolt at Odin. His

huge jaws closed upon Odin's throat. Holding fast, he dragged the Aesir

king from the saddle.

“Odin falls!” raged the shout of joy from the Jotun host.

I had already leaped from my saddle. I struck a terrific blow at Fenris

as the huge wolf tore at Odin's prostrate body. My sword slashed deep

into the wolf's shoulder. He turned, his green eyes blazing hell-fires,

and catapulted at me.

But with a hoarse shout, Vidar struck at the charging wolf with his ax.

The blow severed Fenris' head from his shoulders in one tremendous

stroke. Odin's throat was torn into red ribbons. His eyes were closed

and he seemed barely living as Thor lifted him.

“Odin is slain!” pealed Loki's silver voice. “Now falls Asgard. On,

Jotuns!”

Loki had recovered from the stunning slash that had been Odin's last.

He was urging the Jotuns forward, his eyes flaring with unhuman rage at

the slaying of his wolf. The Aesir charge had halted, our warriors

dismayed by the fall of Odin. And now, as the Jotuns rushed forward on

us, we were pushed back by their superior numbers.

Back toward the end of the field, the cliff-edge from which Bifrost

Bridge sprang, we were forced. Though the Aesir fought like madmen,

they were falling in ever-increasing numbers before the yelling hosts

of Jotuns. Thor had taken Odin's body and was bearing it back with us

as we retreated. From all sides except the rear, the Jotuns surged upon

us. The slaughter here was terrific. I seemed to be fighting in an

unreal dream.

There was no standing against the heavier Jotun mass. Our shattered

forces streamed over the high arch of Bifrost Bridge, through the gates

of Asgard. Vidar, Tyr, Forseti and I came last.

Now all our surviving forces were safe within the gates. Utgar and Loki

were leading the Jotuns hastily up onto the bridge after us. But as the

winches inside the guard-castle creaked hastily, the gates were slowly

swinging shut. Loki yelled an order. As though obeying a prepared plan,

a score of Jotuns flung heavy spears into the hinges of the closing

gates. The spears jammed the hinges, and the gates stopped closing.

“Push shut the gates!” Vidar yelled to the men at the winches.

“We cannot, for they are jammed!” was the frantic answer.

Across the rainbow bridge, Loki was leading his men forward and crying

to them triumphantly.

“Forward, Jotuns! Over the bridge! The gates of Asgard are open to us!”

Chapter XIX. Swords Athirst

Vidar yelled to the warriors behind us.

“Clear the hinges, some of you! The rest of us will hold back the

Jotuns!”

He sprang out onto Bifrost Bridge. Tyr, Forseti and I, with a score of

Aesir warriors, leaped after him. The men behind us worked frantically

to pull out the heavy spears that had jammed the hinges of Asgard's

gates. We four stood abreast on the arched bridge, our warriors behind

us, facing the Jotun masses as they rushed up behind Loki and Utgar.

The storm darkened the whole sky, and wild winds threatened to sweep us

from the unrailed, narrow span on which we stood. Lightning flared

continually across the sinister sky, and the thunder was rolling

louder.

Tyr had torn off his brynja and thrown away his helmet. His great

breast bare, streaked with blood, he held two swords in his hands. His

cavernous eyes glared with a terrible light as he stepped in front of

us. He yelled in a howl like that of a wild beast to the advancing

Jotuns.

“Berserk am I! Who comes against me?”

The Jotuns pushing up onto the narrow bridge hesitated at sight of him,

for he was truly terrible in his berserk madness.

“I await you, Utgar!” Tyr howled, his body quivering. “Come, for these

swords are athirst!”

Utgar answered with a roar of rage. He and Loki, dismounted now, came

up the arch of the bridge against us at the head of the Jotun mass. Tyr

did not wait their coming. With a ferocious scream, our berserk

companion sprang to meet them.

His two swords leaped like living things. Utgar's ax shore into his

side — and Tyr laughed! Shouting with glee, he smote Utgar's head from

his shoulders with a single awful stroke. Five Jotuns fell before him

as he raged in berserk fury. Abruptly Loki's blade stabbed through his

heart. Tyr swayed, staggered at the edge of the bridge. Then he

crumpled and fell clear from the stone, plummeting down toward the

raging, stormy sea far below.

Vidar, Forseti and I had been rushing forward with our men to support

Tyr. Now we met the Jotuns, who were maddened by the killing of Utgar,

urged on by Loki's silver voice.

For whole minutes we held the bridge against them! How, I do not know.

Before my eyes was only a blur of flashing steel and wolfish faces,

into which I struck by instinct rather than by design. I felt the

red-hot stabs of sword-blades in my left shoulder and right thigh; I

saw Forseti reel back, dying from one of Loki's incredibly swift,

deadly thrusts. I glimpsed the arch-fiend's wrathful, beautiful face as

he fought with Vidar.

We were pushed back over the arch of the bridge, toward the gates. A

yell crashed up from the men behind us.

“The gates are freed!”

We staggered back through the small opening of the nearly closed gates.

Instantly the gates were slammed shut in the faces of Loki and his

hordes. For several moments we stood motionless, panting, wild-eyed,

covered with blood. The Jotun hordes were banging vainly at the gates

with sword and ax.

No more than a few hundred Aesir warriors remained as exhausted,

wounded survivors of that dreadful battle. Out on Vigrid field, the

dead lay in thousands. Ravens were swooping down on the pathetic

corpses from the storm-black sky.

“Get to the towers and use your bows upon Loki's horde!” Vidar called

hoarsely to part of our warriors.

They obeyed, and arrows began to rain down on the besiegers on the

bridge. The howling of the Jotuns was loud even through the deepening

thunder of the storm, as they sought to batter down the gates, yet

avoid their own slaughter.

Vidar hastened with us through the guard-castle to the stone plaza

beyond. There Odin lay upon the stones. Thor was kneeling beside his

dying father. Odin's lips stirred, his wavering stare held a feeble,

dying light as he looked up at his giant son.

“The Norns sever my thread,” he whispered “Doom falls upon me, as Wyrd

ordains — upon Asgard, too, I fear. If Loki prevails, you must do that

which I ordered you.”

“I will, Father,” rumbled Thor, his big hand clenching tight the helve

of his mighty hammer. “But stay with us!”

Odin's life was already gone, though, spent by his last effort to

speak.

“Bear him to Valhalla!” ordered Thor's great voice as he arose.

“Loki and some of the Jotuns move away,” called a warrior from the

guard-castle tower.

We hurried back and looked through the loopholes in the gates. Loki and

half the Jotun forces were striding back across the bridge and Vigrid

field, marching southward. The rest of the Jotuns still battered at the

gates, heedless of the arrows that fell upon them from above.

“Loki plans some trick,” Thor muttered.

“Where are our ships?” Vidar cried. “Look!”

He pointed down at the sea east of Asgard. There the waves were running

high and foam-white beneath the howling winds of the storm. I saw the

Jotun fleet below, hacked and reduced to less than forty almost useless

ships. But they were beating southward along the coast, parallel to

Loki's marching force. Scarred and torn by battle though the Jotun

ships were, of the Aesir vessels I saw nothing but floating wreckage.

“Skoal to Aegir and Niord!” shouted Thor. “Skoal to the sea-kings who

have gone to Viking death beneath the waves!”

A clanging like the din of doom beat from the gates before us as the

Jotun horde upon the bridge sought to batter them down. We worked at

Thor's orders, hastily piling blocks of stone to hold the sagging

gates. Then into our midst a wild-faced Aesir warrior came running. He

shouted over the clangor and the terrifying roll of loud thunder.

“Loki's forces come upon us in their ships!” he yelled. “They seek to

land in our harbor!”

Thor uttered a fierce cry as he stared down at the stormy sea. The

Jotun fleet was moving along the coast, the ships jammed with men,

heading for the unprotected fiord in the eastern cliffs of Asgard.

“They try to force entrance to Asgard from the harbor — and we have but

few guards there!” Thor roared.

“Vidar, hold these gates! Half of you come with me to hold the harbor!”

The bearded giant ran with mighty strides toward the eastern edge of

Asgard island. Half of us followed him. The storm was now buffeting

Asgard with full force. Lightning burned in sheets and stabs across the

night-black sky. Torchlight was flaring from the dark, mountainous mass

of Valhalla, whence came through the tempest the dim wailing of women's

voices as Odin's body was borne home.

Out of the storm-seared dusk, a slim, mail-clad figure darted to my

side as I hastened with Thor and our scant force of warriors toward the

eastern cliff. It was Freya, wearing her mail and helmet, holding a

shield and light bow in her hand.

“Jarl Keith!” she cried. “I feared you slain in yon terrible battle! I

leave you no more!”

“You can't stay with me!” I protested. “We go to hold the harbor

against Loki's new assault.”

“Then I fight with you!” she said fiercely. “If doom comes now upon

Asgard, I meet it at your side.”

I could not turn her from her relentless purpose. She ran lightly

beside me as we hastened after Thor down the first steps of the narrow

cliffside stair. Lightning washed the cliffs, and the deafening crack

of thunder drowned the shrieking winds and boom of the sea. By the

flashing flares, we saw the Jotun ships already sweeping quickly into

the narrow fiord below us. Behind them in the raging sea swam something

long, black and sinuous, a great, incredible shape.

“Iormungandr comes with his master Loki!” boomed Thor. “It is well!”

Before we were down the stair, the Jotuns were landing below.

Overwhelming the small force of Aesir guards there, they rushed up to

meet us.

I swung Freya behind me.

“Keep at my back,” I ordered.

“I am not afraid!” argued her clear voice in my ear. Her bow twanged,

and an arrow sped down into the throat of the foremost of the swarming

Jotuns. I saw Loki leaping ashore from one of the ships. Then the

nearest Jotuns reached us.

Chapter XX. Ragnarok

Thor's hammer smashed down, and the first two Jotuns fell back with

crushed skulls. They pitched off the stair to the depths below. Arrows

from enemy archers farther down the stair whizzed up through the

lightning-seared dusk and rattled off our mail, or struck down men

among us. Freya's bow kept twanging. Each time she loosed an arrow, her

clear cry sang loud in my ears.

I tried to keep her near me as I fought beside Thor and tall Vali,

desperately trying to hold back the Jotuns. But the stair was wide

enough only for three of us to fight abreast. Thor, crimson with blood

from many wounds, swung his hammer like a demon of destruction. Yet we

were forced up the stairs. Vali dropped with an arrow in his eye, and

an Aesir from behind rushed to take his place.

Upward we were pushed, to the top of the stair, the very edge of the

cliff. There we hacked with sword and ax. The terrible weapon of the

Hammerer whirled and screamed with such fury that the Jotuns could not

force the narrow way.

“Make way for me!” pealed Loki's silver voice from below, through the

clash of battle and the storm's roar. “I will force the way!”

“I am waiting for you, Loki!” bellowed Thor to the arch-traitor.

Lightning flared again in a continuous blinding flame. It showed Loki's

golden helmet flashing up amid the Jotuns crowded on the stair. And it

showed, too, a slimy, black, scaly monster whose coils rippled up the

steps as it advanced before its master.

“Iormungandr comes!” cried Freya. “The Midgard serpent!”

The Jotuns hugged the cliff side of the stair. Even they were appalled

by their dread ally as the incredible snake writhed up toward us. Thor

raised his hammer high. Like a shooting black thunderbolt, Iormungandr

propelled himself at the bearded giant.

In the lightning streak, I saw the snake's giant spade-shaped head

darting with the speed of light. Its opaline eyes were coldly blazing.

Its opened jaws emitted a flood of fine, green poison-spray that

covered Thor's crimsoned figure.

“My oath to Frey!” roared Thor, and his hammer flashed down.

The snake, with more than human speed, swerved to avoid that terrific

blow. But not so swift as Thor's stroke was its swerve. The steel head

of Miolnir smashed down upon the spade-shaped head and ground it into

the rock of the stair. The hammer itself shivered to fragments from

that tremendous stroke.

Iormungandr's monstrous body writhed in its death-throes, flinging

Jotuns from the stair to death. Then the serpent's great body fell over

the edge, dropping to the sea far below.

“Slain — my wolf and serpent slain!” raged Loki's voice. “Vengeance,

Jotuns! Vengeance on Thor!”

The giant was staggering almost helplessly. The helve of his broken

hammer suddenly fell from his hand. His red face grew pallid through

the blood and green poison that coated it. I sprang with Freya to

support him. The few score Aesir warriors left were trying to hold back

the Jotuns. Loki's sword was stabbing in deadly strokes among them.

“I am sped,” gasped Thor. “The poison of Iormungandr enters my wounds.

Help me to Valhalla, for Asgard is lost. There still remains that which

Odin bade me do.”

Freya and I stumbled with the reeling giant away from that hopeless

battle. Our last Aesir warriors could not hope to hold back Loki and

his ravening horde. The unending drum-roll of thunder was crashing over

Asgard. By the sheeted lightning, we saw Aesir women running calmly to

stand beside their men in death. We staggered with Thor into the

torchlit entrance of Valhalla castle.

“To the chamber of — the pit-road — to deep Muspelheim — take me

there!” Thor gasped.

As we entered Valhalla castle, I heard a wild, wolflike shout of

triumph behind us. I looked back. The last Aesir resistance had been

overcome, and Loki and the Jotuns were pouring onto the lofty plateau

of Asgard. Some of the Jotuns already were running to open Asgard gates

to those who battered them from Bifrost Bridge. Women who had rushed

out to seek their dead mates were being cut down everywhere.

“Asgard has fallen!” moaned Freya, her blue eyes stricken in the

lightning flare. “Loki triumphs!”

“No!” cried Thor in a startlingly great voice. “Never shall Loki reign

triumphant in these halls. Lead me on!”

Freya snatched a torch from a socket as we entered the passages of

Valhalla. We stumbled past the great hall where Frigga still sat

motionless beside Odin's body. On we went, down into the dark passages

to the chamber of the pit that led to fiery Muspelheim.

Swaying blindly, Thor pressed the runes on the door with a swiftly

failing hand. The door swung open and we entered. Immediately the

bearded giant crumpled standing against a wall. Fighting to retain

consciousness, he pointed to the square silver box that held the remote

control of the sea-gate in the roof of the fiery underworld.

“Give me that control box, Jarl Keith,” he whispered in a weakening

voice, “that I may open the gate far below and let the waters of the

sea rush down into Muspelheim upon the atomic fires. It was my father

Odin's order to me. Yes, the atomic fires will be smothered and their

radiations will be ended. This will no longer be a place of eternal

youth and warmth.”

“But when the sea water strikes Muspelheim, there will be an explosion

that will wreck this land!” I protested.

“And that, too, would be well!” Thor shouted, swaying. “Let the land be

wrecked before Loki and the Jotuns reap fruit of their victory and

become a dread menace to all the rest of Earth. It was Odin's warning —

Loki must not be allowed to menace all the world!”

He fell heavily to the floor. But he raised his great head and his

voice came chokingly:

“Give me the box!”

I heard the quickly approaching roar of Jotun voices from Valhalla's

halls above. I heard the shriek of the last Aesir women being cut down

by the followers of Loki. In my mind unfolded a shocking vision of

Loki, using his overwhelming powers of evil science to dominate all the

outside world. I sprang toward the silver control box and was turning

to hand it to dying Thor, when Freya screamed.

A man burst into the chamber. Loki's angelic face was a hell-mask of

rage. The sword glittered in his hand and his blue eyes were blazing.

“I knew the Aesir would seek thus with my own ancient handiwork to

snatch triumph from me by destruction,” he said. “But you are too

late.”

He sprang at me with tiger swiftness, his sword raised. I ripped out my

own weapon, but Loki's blade was already stabbing through my shoulder

like a white-hot iron. I reeled, senses failing from that agony,

dropping the silver control box. Freya darted forward with a wrathful

cry, and I saw Loki hurl her back against the wall.

“You have lost, Aesir!” taunted Loki maliciously. “Asgard is mine, and

the last Aesir falls to the swords of my Jotuns.”

He did not see the great shape rising behind him. Thor, roused by sound

of Loki's hated voice, had clutched the rock wall with his nerveless,

bloodily tattered fingers and dragged himself erect. Involuntarily I

recoiled from the staggering, ominous, black-fleshed figure. But Loki

was caught unprepared. The giant hands stole close — and clutched

Loki's white neck!

“Turn the knob upon the control box, Jarl Keith!” Thor roared.

Loki stabbed his dagger blindly and furiously back into Thor's breast,

battling venomously to free himself. I lunged forward and snatched up

the silver box. I seized the knob upon it and turned it as far as it

would go.

From the pit-mouth at the center of the chamber came a dull, distant

roar of rushing waters. Then a terrific shock rocked Asgard to its

foundations. Blinding steam swirled up from the pit with a ravening

sound.

“Fool!” shrieked Loki as he tore free from dying Thor.

He hurled himself at me, seeking to snatch the control box from my

grasp. I thrust him back with the last of my strength. Through the

scalding steam that filled the chamber, Loki staggered backward — and

reeled straight into the pit!

A fading scream came up from the roaring cloud of steam as he plunged

down into the abyss...

All Valhalla castle was rocking wildly above us. One fearful

earth-shock followed another. Wild yells of panic chorused from above,

coming thinly through the tumult of grinding mountains. Freya was flung

against the stone floor, and I stooped frantically over her.

“It is well!” choked Thor. “Asgard and Midgard shall die with the

Aesir!” As he sagged to the floor, he raised his dying face toward me.

“Save Freya if you can, Jarl Keith. If you can reach your flying ship,

you may escape the death that stoops now over all this land.”

His eyes blazed up with the last light of fast departing life. For a

moment his voice rolled out as strongly as of old.

“Skoal to the Aesir! Skoal to the great race that is gone forever!”

Then his bearded face sagged to the floor in death.

I helped Freya to her feet and dragged her out of that scalding,

steam-filled chamber. The Earth-shocks were becoming more violent with

each moment. The crash of falling masonry was ominously loud.

“We can't stay here any longer!” I cried to her. “But if we can get to

my plane, we can escape.”

“Let me die here with my people,” Freya moaned, her white face

agonized. Abruptly her eyes cleared and she clasped my arm. “No, Jarl

Keith. Even now I wish to live for you. But can we escape?”

I stumbled with her up through the shaking, grinding halls of Valhalla

castle. The Jotuns had fled or been buried. The scene outside the

castle was appalling. Storm still blackened the sky. Lightning flared

and thunder roared, but all noises were drowned by the terrible

grinding crash of the Earth-shocks.

The castles around the edge of Asgard were being shaken down into

ruined masses of masonry. The Jotuns were fleeing wildly down toward

their ships in the fiord.

I hastened with Freya toward Bifrost Bridge. A terrible roar beneath us

heralded the new shock that flung us off our feet. From cracks

splitting in the solid rock of Asgard, wild clouds of steam rushed up.

There was a prolonged roar of falling stone. Freya cried out. I looked

back just in time to see great Valhalla collapsing into flaming,

tumbling ruin.

By this time we had reached Bifrost Bridge and were stumbling

precariously across that corpse-littered, dizzy, trembling span. The

rainbow bridge abruptly rocked beneath us, threatening to throw us into

the crazily boiling sea far below. Some Jotuns were escaping ahead of

us, paying no attention to us in their mad panic.

My plane suddenly loomed out of the stormy dusk. The Jotuns, in their

fierce eagerness to get into Asgard, had not even molested it. I pulled

Freya into the cabin. The rocket motor roared into life, and the plane

rushed along the quaking field and lurched into the air. Upward we

climbed, the ship bucking and rocking in the terrific currents.

As we climbed higher and headed northward, I saw the full extent of the

disaster that had smitten the hidden land. Midgard and Asgard, rocking

wildly and shaking the rainbow bridge between them into fragments, were

sinking into the sea, shrouded with steam.

The titanic explosion caused by the inrush of sea upon the raging

atomic fires of Muspelheim was forcing the whole land to collapse upon

that buried underworld. Before our eyes, as I fought to keep the plane

aloft, the land solemnly sank.

There was nothing but sea and veils of steam. The blind-spot refraction

around the whole land instantly vanished. The rhyme of the rune key had

been fulfilled.

Ragnarok had come — the twilight and doom of the Aesir, destroying them

and their amazing, wonderful civilization — and also their destroyer...

Epilogue

Of my great adventure, little remains to tell. Our night back across

the frozen ocean to the expedition's schooner was without mishap. I

shall never forget the amazement of Doctor Carrul and the rest of the

expedition's members, when I landed my rocket plane beside the Peter

Saul. Feverishly they asked excited questions when they saw Freya and

the bloodstained, battered helmets and mail we wore.

I told them the truth, though I suppose I should have known they could

not believe my story. But for their disbelief, I cared little. Nor did

I care about what happened after our return to New York. The expedition

included in its report a statement that Keith Masters, physicist and

pilot, had returned in a delirious condition. They said I had been

caught in an Arctic storm, and had brought with me a woman who was

obviously a survivor from some storm-wrecked Norwegian ship.

I know now that the smug skepticism of modern men is not to be shaken

lightly. Far in the north, beneath the frozen ocean, lie the shattered

ruins of the hidden land I trod. Though men may some day penetrate to

that submerged, lost land and lay bare the broken stones that once were

Asgard's proud castles, they will not wholly believe.

Nor can I entirely blame them. For there are times when even to me all

that I experienced takes on the semblance of a dream. It certainly

seems like a dream that I rode over Bifrost Bridge with Odin and the

warriors of Asgard. Did I really sit in Valhalla's high hall and feast

with the nobles and captains of the Aesir? How can I be sure I fought

side by side with Thor against Loki and his hordes, on that last great

day?

But to reassure myself that it was no dream, I have only to turn and

smile gratefully at Freya, my wife. She is dressed now in modern garb,

but with the same bright golden hair, sea-blue eyes and slender grace

as when I met her first on the cliffs of Midgard. For always Freya is

beside me, and not one day have we ever been separated, nor will we

ever be.

We do not speak often of lost Asgard and its people, though always they

are in my mind as I know they are in hers. But on one night each year,

the night of that doomsday eve when we feasted in Valhalla before the

coming of the enemy, I pour wine into two glasses and we drink a toast.

And our toast is in the words that Thor spoke from dying lips.

“Skoal to the Aesir, to the great race that is gone forever!” I say as

I raise my glass.

And from across the table comes Freya's sweet, sorrow-filled voice,

whispering her reply.

“Skoal!”

And we drink in memory of the greatest people Earth has ever known.

The End

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