Г„gir [FAST]

The doors swung wide, and the gods entered. Odin, draped in his blue mantle; Thor, still smelling of ozone and goats; and Loki, with a smile as sharp as a jagged reef.

Thor, ever the pragmatist of the hammer, had journeyed to the ends of the earth to seize the mile-wide cauldron from the giant Hymir. Now, it sat in the center of Ægir’s hall, bubbling with a brew so potent it could make a mountain weep. Г„gir

Ægir watched from his high seat, his pale eyes unblinking. He was not a god of order like Odin, nor of chaos like Loki. He was the sea—vast, indifferent, and inevitable. The doors swung wide, and the gods entered

"Drink," Ægir commanded, his voice a calm tide. "The sea provides, and the sea takes. Tonight, we drink. Tomorrow, the storms return." Now, it sat in the center of Ægir’s

Deep beneath the churning grey waves of the North Sea, where the light of the sun is but a pale, flickering memory, lies the hall of Ægir. It is not built of stone or timber, but of polished coral and the bones of leviathans, illuminated by the cold, rhythmic glow of phosphorescent deep-sea blooms.

The feast began. The ale flowed like a golden tide. But as the night deepened, the atmosphere turned as heavy as a coming hurricane. Loki, his tongue loosened by the potent brew, began to weave his insults, stinging the gods one by one like jellyfish. He mocked their courage and their loves, turning the celebratory hall into a den of simmering rage.