Authors: Francesca Simon
Somehow she was outside. How had she got here? She looked up and saw a horse. A huge grey horse with eight legs, dancing nervously, its hooves thrumming the cobblestones, striking fire.
She was hallucinating. Woden's priestesses went into trances sometimes after pouring wine on an altar. (The High Fane ones still used ox-blood â yuck.) Maybe this was a trance. A strange trance, hearing honking cars, seeing the lights of Woden's domed Temple lit up in the London night sky and a horse with eight legs.
Uhh, thought Freya, this is some strange random dream. Maybe I'm in hospital. Or maybe I'm dead, and this is Hel. Freya shivered. It was certainly cold enough to be Hel.
Freya saw twin light beams coming towards her. Headlights. Car headlights.
I have to move, she thought. I really have to move. But somehow that seemed too much effort.
âGet up! Run! Now!' yelled the boy. He yanked her to her feet. âNow. On to the bridge! Now! Run!'
âRAAAAAAA!' A giant man wearing a bear skin, sword outstretched, raven shield raised, charged straight at her, snarling and roaring like a frenzied beast. Foam dripped from his mouth.
Freya screamed.
The crazed creature hurtled past her towards an oncoming car, bellowing and shrieking. The car screeched to a halt. Its windscreen shattered as the Bear-Man plunged his sword through the glass.
Cars slammed on their brakes. Freya heard a terrible howling as the Bear-Man attacked another car. Then screams.
She turned. The Bear-Man was surrounded by cars.
âWe can'tâ' stuttered Freya.
âLeave him!' ordered the boy. âHe's a berserk. He's crazy. We can't wait.'
âBear-Shirt!' shouted the girl. âWe've got to get on to the bridge!'
âShut up, Roskva! Save yourself,' said the boy.
âDon't tell me to shut up, you stupid troll!' screamed the girl, adding a few more harsh words in her strange language.
Suddenly Freya knew where she was. On Upper Thames Street by the wobbly Millennium Bridge. The Tate Modern was straight ahead. Clare had taken her there only last week to see the Salvador Dali lobster phone.
The boy-king grabbed Freya's hand. The girl-queen grabbed her other hand and the horse's bridle. Half-running, half-dragging her, they sped along the pedestrian passageway between the City of London School for Boys and the headquarters of the Asgard Army. They moved incredibly fast. Everyone heading in their direction stopped and gaped. Someone started taking pictures. âI'm telling you, the horse has eight legs,' gabbled a woman into her mobile.
âWhere are we going? Where are you taking me?' screamed Freya.
âShut up!' said the girl.
âWe have to get on to Bifrost before it vanishes,' said the boy.
âBifrost?' said Freya. â
Bifrost?
But that'sâ'
They were racing across the wobbly bridge towards the dark hulk of the Tate Modern, their feet clinking
on the metal surface, when she saw the flaming, three-coloured rainbow. It curved out of the night sky lower than any rainbow Freya had ever seen, the bottom edge hovering over the middle of the Millennium Bridge. The rainbow shimmered, reddish-yellow, greenish-blue. Flames shot into the sky from the red band at the top, reflecting in the dark water of the Thames. A rainbow at night? thought Freya. A rainbow on fire? What's happening to me? The other pedestrians hurried past, unseeing.
âJump on!' said the long-haired blond boy, pushing her. âThere's no time to lose.'
âWhere are we going?'
âAsgard.'
Freya stopped dead.
âAsgard? The Realm of the Gods?' said Freya. This was definitely the strangest dream she'd ever had. She made the sign of the hammer. âThor protect me, Thor protect me,' she whispered over and over.
âNo, Asgard, Iceland,' snapped the freckle-faced queen. âAsgard, Sweden. Asgard. Asgard. Where else does Bifrost lead?' She jabbed Freya hard in the back. âJump!'
Freya jumped. She was too scared and too shocked to resist.
The dazzling, flaming bridge wobbled beneath her. Freya swayed, then steadied herself as her feet sank into the shimmering road. She kept well away from the flames rising from the edge. Behind her the horse's eight hooves chimed on the gleaming surface.
She took one step, and then another. It was like walking on blue-green sand. She was on Bifrost, the trembling rainbow road of the Gods. Freya had learned about it in Sunday school. Bifrost, built by the Immortals, connecting their sky-world to earth.
And now it was no longer night, but day. She was walking up a gently sloping rainbow across a blue sky.
Mum was right, thought Freya. My mum was right. (Oh, how it pained her to even
think
those words.) The Gods exist. They really truly exist.
The immensity of what was happening overwhelmed her.
I can't do this, she thought suddenly. Her parents had always warned her, don't go anywhere with strangers. And yet she'd been swept off by the strangest strangers in the world.
She turned and started re-tracing her steps downwards, trying to ignore the sickening way Bifrost swayed.
âHey! Where are you going?' shouted the boy-king.
She ignored him and started to run. The boy blocked her in a flash. One moment he was behind her, the next in front.
âYou can't go back.'
âI can! I will!' said Freya.
âLook down,' said the boy.
Freya glanced down for a moment, then wished she hadn't. She was bad with heights. She suddenly remembered the terrible moment she'd been travelling in the lift high up the Eiffel Tower, when she started shaking and sweating as the ground receded beneath her. Her stomach lurched as she glimpsed flame-bright water below. Water that looked nothing like the turgid Thames.
She wanted to clutch onto the side but the red flames stopped her. Her knees wobbled. Then her stomach lurched again, and she vomited.
The boy-king caught her arm.
âDon't worry, you'll get used to the wobbling. Bifrost is strange the first few times, then you don't even notice it shakes.'
Freya's mouth tasted sour. She panted and wiped her lips on her frayed sweatshirt sleeve.
âCome on,' said the boy. âWe don't have much time.'
Freya allowed him to lead her.
âI don't understand,' said Freya. âWhere did Bifrost come from? I've been on the Millennium Bridge before and I've never seen it.'
The boy-king smiled.
âOnly people the Gods wish to see can cross over to their world.'
Then the boy suddenly dashed ahead and started turning cartwheels like a mad imp. His crown rolled off and slid down the curving rainbow road.
âOh Gods, how wonderful to feel my body again. Hello, legs! Hello, arms! Hello, toes!' He hugged himself tightly then did a little dance.
âRoskva! Isn't it wonderful to stretch your legs again!' he yelled to the silent queen walking ahead of him, leading the huge grey stallion as easily as if he were a greyhound.
âWho are you?' said Freya.
âI'm Thialfi. Alfi,' he said, swooping down and replacing the crown on his head in one graceful move. âThat's my sister, Roskva. Grump-face we called her at home.'
Roskva turned and stuck out her tongue at him.
âBut
who
are you?' said Freya.
âWho are
you
?' said Roskva. âYou're very pale. Do you sleep in a grave mound with corpses?'
âNo!' said Freya. What a mean cow Roskva was. âI'm Freya.'
Roskva looked astonished. âI've lived in Asgard and I know the goddess Freyja. She's extremely beautiful. You most certainly aren't her.'
âI never said I was,' said Freya. âI'm just named after her.'
Freya stared at Roskva. Roskva held her gaze. Her lip curled faintly.
I don't believe kings and queens are any better than anyone else and I won't be scared of her, thought Freya.
âWhy can you speak English?' she said.
Alfi snorted.
âWhere are the toilets?'
âI'm sorry?' said Freya.
âOù sont les toilettes? ¿dónde están los aseos? Dov'è la toilette? Waar is het toilet?
?' said Alfi. âWe've been frozen in that place of dead things for years and years and years.' He shivered. âListening and waiting ⦠All those people ⦠Babble babble babble. Where were we?'
Freya swallowed. âLondon. The British Museum.'
Alfi shrugged. âBefore that it seems we were in a sand dune on an island called Lewis. Do you know it?'
Freya shook her head. Her throat was parched.
Roskva said nothing. Tears dripped down her face.
âI hate you, Alfi. I hate you.'
âCan't you stop?' said Alfi. âCan't you let it go?'
Roskva shook her head. She patted the grey horse's muzzle and murmured to him. The horse snorted.
âWe are the playthings of the Gods,' said Roskva. Her feet stomped as she walked.
But I'm not, thought Freya. âWhy am
I
here? I have a history test tomorrow on Tudor England. I haven't written my book report â¦'
âYou called us,' said Alfi. âYou blew Heimdall's horn.'
âI didn't mean to! I think there's been a terrible mistake.'
âYou called us. You woke us. It is your fate. That cannot be changed.'
âNo,' said Freya. âThat can't be my fate.'
âFate is stronger and the Gods mightier than anyone can imagine,' said Roskva. âWhen the Gods give orders, we obey. My life has never gone according to
my
wishes.' She looked at Freya curiously. âWhat strange clothes you wear. No cloak. No arm rings. No jewellery at all.'
âWe're not allowed to wear jewellery in school,' said Freya.
âSchool?' said Alfi.
âWhere you learn stuff,' said Freya.
Alfi frowned. Then his face cleared.
âOf course,' said Alfi. He looked at her respectfully. âOf course. You must have great wisdom for the fates to have chosen you.'
Freya didn't like the sound of that.
âChosen me for
what
?' said Freya.
Roskva snorted unpleasantly. âHa.'
âThe All-Father of Asgard, who rules all things, will explain,' said Alfi.
Freya's eyes widened.
âYou mean ⦠Woden?'
Alfi looked at her and smiled.
âWoden. Odin. All-Father. The Much-Wise. The God of Victory. The One-eyed. Who else?'
Freya shook her head. âHe's going to â¦
talk
to me?'
She was having trouble breathing. The Gods didn't meet humans. Long, long ago they did, but not now.
They fell silent. There was just the sound of their feet, padding on the bridge, and the huge grey horse skittering and snorting and jerking his head as he meekly followed Roskva, unperturbed by the flames leaping around him. Freya felt hot and a little out of breath. She took off her sweatshirt and tied it round her waist. She still couldn't see the end of the rainbow
bridge, lost in the clouds and mist above them.
Alfi raced ahead, a blur of speed, then just as quickly dashed back. His fingers drummed restlessly against his sides as he fell into step beside Freya. Roskva walked on her other side, the stallion following obediently behind them. Just in case I make a run for it, thought Freya.
âHas the dark season started yet?' said Alfi.
âDark season?' said Freya. âIt's spring. And the year is 5012 aw.'
Alfi looked bewildered.
âWhat do those numbers mean?'
How can he not know this? thought Freya. âAccording to the sacred Edda, Woden and his brothers created the world 5012 years ago,' she recited. â
AW
means the years after Woden's birth. So
A
= after,
w
= Woden. Of course the earth is much older than that, butâ'
Freya broke off. Somehow it seemed rude to question when the world began in front of the deities who for all she knew had been there when Woden used the eyebrows of the frost giant Ymir to make the earth and his blood to form the lakes and the oceans.
âYou
are
gods, right?' Freya asked cautiously.
âWe're human,' said Roskva. âLike you.'
Freya gasped.
âBut you've walked with the Gods,' said Freya. âYou've lived with them.'
âHumph,' said Roskva. âIf you like that sort of thing.'
âDon't listen to her,' said Alfi. âWe know how much thanks we owe to fate. You can never tell what will bring you luck.'
Freya stared at them in awe. They must be the luckiest humans who ever lived.
âIf you're not a goddess, Roskva, then what are you queen of?' asked Freya.
âQueen?'
âYour crown,' said Freya, pointing.
âOh that. Ha.' Roskva laughed. âI'm queen of nothing. Not even myself. I'm Thor's bondservant. Thanks to my greedy-pig brother there. This is all your fault, Alfi!'