Odin watched my face, one eye hidden beneath a leather patch, the other still sparkling grey, the color of storm clouds and lightning. I stared, unable to help myself. My eyes darted first to the strange raven, then back to the old man, who was a real, honest-to-goodness, in-the-flesh, larger-than-life god.
If this was a dream, boy did I have a cool imagination. And if this were real . . . I didn't want to contemplate that right now. I was happy to play along, as long as I didn't have to analyze things too much. I had to hold on to my sanity for as long as I could.
"Do not be afraid, Brynhildr." The words rumbled around the hall like roiling storm clouds.
A sharp elbow stabbed me in the back. Sigrun stood behind me, urging me forward. "Kneel before our Lord, Brynhildr," she whispered. "Before he gets impatient and strikes you dead with a lightning bolt."
"Now, Sigrun, there is no need to frighten the girl." His voice boomed, but he smiled. Maybe he wasn't such a bad guy after all. But I'd just found out he had super hearing. I prayed he couldn't read minds too.
I stepped forward, my heart thudding in my chest as I knelt on one knee, terrified the weight of the armor would tip me over or pull me straight to the ground.
"Now, Brynhildr, you are no doubt in the dark about what is going to happen today."
I nodded, hesitating at first as I wasn't sure whether a nod indicated I knew or didn't know what was happening. His expression didn't harden, so I must have given the correct response. Good. Nobody would want to piss off this big guy, least of all me.
"This is what we call the Rites of the Valkyrie." His smile was benevolent but he showed no sign of giving further explanation.
I stiffened. I'd forgotten about the Valkyries. I'd recognized Sigrun as one of Odin's warrior maidens, but really, truly accepting that she was a Valkyrie was easier when I'd believed this was just a dream.
Now that I'd begun to slowly accept that Odin and Asgard might be real, everything changed. What were the Rites of the Valkyrie, and how did I qualify to experience them? Even if my father was guilty of manipulating Valkyrie DNA and implanting it into my embryo, I'd be a mutant. A freak. Not the real deal. And I'd only be half-Valkyrie anyway. The rest of my DNA would be thanks to Geoffrey and Irene Halbrook.
Odin squinted his one eye as if he could hear my thoughts. "It is time to stop denying what you are, my dear. Now rise and drink of the Mead. It will prepare you." He waved a hand and I struggled to my feet. With the unfamiliar weight of the armor, it proved a challenge. But I managed to stand upright without falling flat on my face and making myself a total fool in the presence of Odin himself.
"Come, Sigrun." He beckoned.
She moved to my side and peered past me. A young girl walked over. Her long brown hair tumbled unchecked to her waist. She was dressed in a garment similar to mine, only hers was made of stiff brown fabric and covered by a large apron.
She presented us with a wooden tray, which held a single goblet. As goblets went this one would rival the Holy Grail itself. Pure gleaming gold, encrusted with dozens of precious rubies, sapphires and emeralds, the goblet proclaimed its heavenly origins. A band of entwined carvings ran around the rim of the cup, glimmering in the light.
Sigrun raised the cup to me and said, "Take it in your hands but with care. It is heavier than it looks."
I held tight and waited as she transferred the goblet into my hand. It really was heavy. I held on, fingers gripped around the golden stem, staring at the shimmering liquid in the bowl.
Beautiful.
Although gold was not my favorite color, seeing as golden people tended to die on me, the Mead had a special, magical quality of its own. It glimmered, enticing me to take a sip. But I waited. Somehow I knew that once I drank, there would be no turning back.
"Drink, Brynhildr, Valkyrie. Warrior of Valhalla. Maiden of Odin." His beautiful voice thundered around me like an invisible arm, buffeting yet comforting as I drank.
I sighed in pure ecstasy after I swallowed my first sip. I'd waited all my life to savor this wondrous drink. I blinked, recalling weeks gone by, in which no hunger touched my belly, no thirst parched my throat. And now, for the first time, I truly tasted and enjoyed something. If only Ms. Custer could see me now. I felt refreshed, revived. As if all hunger was sated in one impossibly glorious sip.
I shut my eyes as I swallowed the Mead. A wonderful warmth filled me, spreading throughout my limbs until my entire body glowed with beautiful heat.
When I opened my eyes, the glow had spread beyond the insides of my body. A stab of fear ran through me.
Like Joshua and Aimee and poor, dead Brody, my entire body glowed with a golden light.
Chapter 16
I struggled to breathe, gasping, almost sobbing. Lifted my hands and stared, turning them over and around. As far as I was concerned, any golden glow equaled death.
I shivered with fear.
My hands quaked and spots of bright light shone behind my eyes. I could feel the swirling abyss of madness at the edge of my mind.
Though I longed for release, I strained to keep it at bay, desperate to remain conscious. Who knew what might happen, considering the last time I lay unconscious some unknown person had absconded with my underwear and clothes.
"Brynhildr, Warrior of Valhalla." Odin's voice brought me back to my senses. "Do not be afraid. It is the nature of the Mead. The nectar of the Heavens will imbue your body and your mind with the strength you will need."
Strength I'd need? What for?
I was terrified of that golden glow, but Odin's words were ominous. What was really going on here? My eyes swept the room. Each woman and girl looked on, their faces serene and expectant. Calm, prepared.
They knew. Even that darned raven knew. And they were unconcerned. I doubted I looked as unruffled as they did. But their lack of concern was strangely calming. What was the worst that could happen if none of them were alarmed enough to raise an eyebrow?
"Are you ready, Brynhildr?" Odin asked, an eternal patience in the timbre of his voice, his eye gleaming with patience and assurance.
Ready for what?
This was beginning to sound worse and worse. I could only stare, which Odin seemed to take as acknowledgment on my part. Given the choice I would have turned and run. But even that three-second daydream reminded me I had no idea where I was, how I could escape, or even which way to run if I ever managed to escape from the hall.
I nodded.
Odin nodded too, a short, sharp, no nonsense shake of his head. A rustle of movement and the other women drew closer around me, forming a supportive semicircle.
"You will be fine. Just breathe through it. And try not to be too afraid. It will all be over quickly enough." Sigrun squeezed my hand, her eyes sparkling as she gave me a quick hug and kissed my cheek.
I succumbed to the elation of sisterhood with this girl I'd met such a short time ago. Something I'd never had the pleasure of experiencing. Izzy was too young, and foster homes weren't the best places to make friends. Constantly moving around, from home to home and school to school, didn't help either. Most kids didn't bother with friendships that were likely to last all of three weeks.
But our connection lasted for the shortest instant as she withdrew to take her place with the rest of the women. A stab of fear replaced my rising emotions as warmth overwhelmed my body, swirling around limbs and torso. The heat was too intense.
Too intense to bear.
White-hot irons of pain branded my skin from inside my body. A horrible fire burned within me, demanding release through my very bones.
I gasped and cried out, falling heavily, and even when my bare knees hit the floor with stunning pain it didn't matter. Not in the face of the unadulterated agony in my shoulders.
Living fire burned in my back and I felt movement in my shoulder bones. I shivered, grossed out by the strange crawling sensation beneath my skin. Hysterical laughter burbled inside me. In my moment of pure agony my first thought was how weird it felt.
Sigrun had said to breathe but remembering was the most difficult thing I'd done since walking away from that accident, knowing Joshua was gone forever. I concentrated on taking in a breath and releasing it, one at a time. Beads of perspiration flared on my skin, from the pain and my efforts.
Time stood still as fire raced through me, throbbing and pulsing in time with the horrendous beating of my heart. I was so enthralled within the fire that I didn't hear the music at first.
A haunting melody wafted through the hall, breaking through the barrier of my pain only when the voices of the other women joined in.
It was the wind singing through the trees, the waves crashing against the shore. A mother's lullaby to a sleeping babe. Both soothing and energizing, it gave me a pleasant serenity, releasing my pent up breath and relaxing my stricken muscles.
Although I seldom took painkillers, seldom took ill in fact, I now longed for a quick, chemical release from the white-hot agony. But no relief came. And finally, when all I could do was blink through the slow torture, the nature of the pain changed.
For an instant I thought I was free, but this new agony was far beyond anything I'd experienced since first sipping the Mead. A scream erupted from my lungs, louder and louder, unlike any sound I'd ever made. And that scream, pulled from deep within my belly, was the catalyst.
A burst of pure searing pain exploded from both my shoulders. In a rush of dizzying agony and bright light, an unfamiliar weight settled at my shoulders and tilted me backward as I shivered on my knees.