#Gauti
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
myauditionfordrphil · 23 days ago
Text
Hopefully GG realizes that coaching the Indian team and actually doing work is not as easy as sitting in an air-conditioned Star Sports office and dissing MSD along with other players who actually perform
8 notes · View notes
zvaigzdelasas · 10 months ago
Note
Whyd i think you were Lithuanian 😭
Most ridiculous accusation yet
16 notes · View notes
edsmusicblog · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
lys gauty 2/2/1900 - 2/1/1994
youtube
lys gauty - ce jour là
1941
Tumblr media
lys gauty at the six day cycling race 1931
18 notes · View notes
edgarmoser · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
lys gauty 1900 - 1994
youtube
lys gauty - mais quand c'est toi
1930
6 notes · View notes
instagramsekejai · 1 year ago
Text
Kaip padidinti Instagram sekėjų skaičių
Instagram yra daugelio prekių ženklų pagrindas socialinėje erdvėje. Įrodyta, kad ši platforma skatina lankytojų srautą, skatina pardavimus ir įtraukia klientus.
Net 59% rinkodaros specialistų šiais metais planuoja didinti investicijas į Instagram, ir ne veltui. Tačiau jei esate nepatenkinti savo Instagram paskyros augimu ir įsitraukimu, esate ne vieni. Konkurencija šioje platformoje yra didelė, nes joje įsitraukia vis daugiau prekių ženklų. Todėl, imtis priemonių savo auditorijai didinti yra visiškai suprantamas dalykas.
Tačiau nėra taip paprasta per vieną naktį savo Instagrame surinkti sekėjų armiją. Tai procesas, kuriam reikia laiko, tačiau, žinodami tam tikrus niuansus, rezultatus galite pamatyti greičiau. Taigi, norint sėkmingai plėstis šioje platformoje, labai svarbu surinkti daugiau Instagram sekėjų. Tačiau kaip padidinti Instagram sekėjų skaičių, ypač jei jų išvis beveik neturite?
1 note · View note
cherise54 · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
Cherise sees potential in tea vending biz, sets up contactless machines
Sensing a huge potential in the tea vending business, Pune-based Cherise India Pvt Ltd has begun setting up contactless vending machines enabled by the Internet of Things (IOT) and Android technologies in six cities across the country. The special feature of these vending machines is that they are connected to a 4G sim card that communicates with a cloud server. Visit Website
0 notes
diplomacyfcrged · 2 years ago
Text
VERSES. ( tags. )
VERSE. ( sw. / sith.  nw kash zo tash. ) ; @intcthatgoodnight peace is a lie; verse with anakin, obi, padme, reese & baby twins.  
VERSE. ( sw. / sith.  pro midwan nu gauti pergaleas. ) ; @intcthatgoodnight through power i gain victory; verse with obi ; arranged marriage.
0 notes
diplomacyfcrged · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
The defiance in her posture and expression only grow more distinct at his query and the unspoken threats within it -- not for the first time, and what she suspected was far from the last time, she wished with her whole heart that she had been born attuned to the Force as he had, as Anakin had. She would have given anything to watch the life drain from his face, her hands around his throat. She could feel the skin of her palm dampen, could feel the knuckles ache with the pressure of her formed fist, nails digging through her skin. "I may not have the power -- " yet " -- to make the Council reverse their edict on this --" Lips drew back, a near feral baring of her teeth in that moment. "Arrangement but even if I am to concede to their wishes, even bound to you through marriage, I will be your equal, not your property."
Anger and resentment burned hot in her chest -- the Council not even considered her opinions on Fernos' proposal, and now she and her children -- Anakin's children -- were to be tied forever to the man that took their father from them. "I know who you are, Fernos. I know what you are. I know what you desire. I will never be yours -- and I will never fear you." She would wait. She would bide her time. She would gather her allies, she would harvest his enemies and she would have her revenge.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
His head snapped to the side from the force of the slap, sharp pain flared across his cheek quickly turning to a low sting. The Sith Lords' expression never changed even as rage roared inside him like a wild beast. The air around him prickled with a sense of danger, but he wasn’t who the Force was warning. “I will only say this once: you will never do that again. Do you understand?” Threats were left unspoken but were clear in the fury that seeped from his voice like venom.
“Now I understand how uncomfortable you must find this arrangement between us.” An understatement for sure. A marriage of convenience was quite…inconvenient.  It was just a contract, a legal arrangement to ensure peace. But one that was already pushing his patience. “There will be an adjustment period. Perhaps we should agree to keep the past in the past and speak of it no more.” Even dead Anakins presence demanded attention. But Fernos would not let the boy who betrayed him continue to disrupt his life. Maybe easier said than done with Padmes presence about to become a constant.
3 notes · View notes
nezinaukamsitaspuslapis · 11 months ago
Text
fuck it, švęsiu naujuosius internete, kaip simbolį, kokie vieniši ir kupini pasimetimo buvo šiti metai.
iš vienos pusės, atradau nemažai naujų talentų ir drąsos dėl savo įgūdžių, investavau daug laiko į kūrybą. priėmiau daug sudėtingų sprendimų. iš kitos pusės, dažnai būdavau situacijose, kuriose per visus tuos sprendimus ėjau be jokio palaikymo ir tai užknisa.
dažnai atrodo, kad gyvenimas yra iš esmės apie dalijimąsi su kitais ir kai to nėra, darbo vaisiai atrodo ne tokie svarbūs. iš tiesų, ne tai, kad darbo rezultatai nesvarbūs, labiau, kad nuolatinio bėgimo, nesibaigiančio projektų darymo ir tobulinimo patternas akivaizdesnis. kai nėra kaip gauti patapšnojimą per petį, skubotumo jausmo nebelieka. labai svarbu laviruoti tą jausmą, kad jis netaptų apatija pasauliui. bet tokiomis akimirkomis taip akivaizdu, kad visi projekčiukai yra apie procesą, o ne rezultatą ir pagyras. ir dėl to procesas dabar suteikia daug daugiau pasitenkinimo.
aišku, aš vis tiek ilgiuosi ryšio. ryšio, kurį labai retai turiu. vis dar sunkiai suprantu save, dar sunkiau mane supranta ir priima kiti. bet aš taip pavargau atlikti „labiau mėgiamo veikėjo nei mano asmenybė“ vaidmenį, kad verčiau būsiu vienas namuose nei vienišas apsuptas rato žmonių.
linkiu sau ir jums būti apsuptais mylimųjų. net jeigu tai yra tik jūs.
21 notes · View notes
experimentjr · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
THE MAN HIMSELF IS REDESIGNED!!!
Father of men; gautr of men; allfather; the aged gautr; delight of Frigg; eagle head; attacking rider; lord of Æsir; friend of wealth; enemy of the wolf; baldr's father; flaming eye; speak shaker, flashing eye and etc are but a few of Odin's many epithets. Father of Thor, Baldr ou Meili, Höðr, Heimdallr, Vali, Hermóðr, Hildólfr, Nepr, Sigi, Sigrlami, Skjöldr, Ítreksjóð, Sæmingr, Gauti, Vegdagr, Viglek, Winta, Casere, Saxnōt and many more, he is as old as is wise and as wise as he is power-hunger.
Son of Borr, he and his brother's Vili and Vé were the ones that slayed Ymir and from his body, created Asgard, Midgard and some other realms as well. With the flood that came with Ymir's death, Odin was also the indirect killer of hundreds of other giants in the great flood. With the Earth deity he'd created with a part of Ymir's flesh, he had Thor. With the tides, he had Heimdallr. With Frigg/Freyja, he had Baldr and Höðr. With Gríðr he had Váli and Víðarr and some many more with countless women.
With his hunger for power and knowledge, he gave his hunger for meat in exchange for two of Veðrfölnir's children Huginn and Muninn so he could be updated from the realms of everything; he exchanged of one of his eyes to drink from Mímisbrunnr; he stole from Suttungr's kingdom the mead of poetry and tricked Gunnlöð, who was guarding the mead into letting him take a sip from each night he spent with her. Three nights were spent and three sips he took, but each sip he took, each one of the three barrels he emptied and left the kingdom, leaving Gunnlöð bearing his child. These were only few of his countless stories after knowledge and power and maybe more will come in the future >:) but only future will tell.
He is designed at last!!! Dang I wanted so much to redesign Odin and he finally looks more overbearing, along his spear that looks way more powerful now, but he is not the last god that will be redesigned so keep in touch with my posts and even P4TR30N for exclusive and early content >:D
OLD ODIN
36 notes · View notes
the-lady-amphitrite · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
— A FAIRYTALE BEGINNING | chapter 10
a fate already affixed
pairing: Loki / f!half-Asgardian!Reader word count: 5,043 summary: the time for your Weaver's Reading has arrived, and Skuld tells you what she can about your future in this chapter: references to Laufey's death & Odin's past removal of one of his eyes, reader feels so 15 bc of her attitude in this it hurts, blood magic & non-descript references to blood, very blatant canonical racist attitude about Frost Giants, lots of Skuld being cryptic author notes: hello everyone, i return once more after dragging myself out of bg3 hell long enough to finish polishing and uploading this! this chapter concludes what i like to think of as "act one" for AFB (with all of the setup about soulmates, glimpses at interrealm politics, and a look at how people get their godnames in this AU), and the next chapter kicks off "act two"! i'm really looking forward to posting the six chapters that make it up; it's honestly my favourite thread of this whole AU.
( previous chapter | read on ao3 | series masterlist )
Tumblr media
You yawn at the stars as you lean against the front side of the karvi as it sails along Yggdrasil’s branches. The bright, distant stars are nothing more than blurred lines as they fly past the ship. They remind you that (despite not being able to tell yourself) this ship moves faster than even the racing skiffs on Asgard.
The ship — you remember someone had referred to her as the Grey Wolf — arrived on the shore of Asgard this morning, spearing through a dense fog in such silence that it left you in awe. The sun had yet to crest above the horizon when the karvi docked, there only to pick up you and your mother to head to Gymirsgard.
Sleep still clung to you like the mist of a light, drizzling rain when your mother dragged you from bed to get up and dressed for this trip. Your birthday party had run late into the previous evening, even though the celebrations had started from the moment you walked into a private breakfast with your family. Even Volstagg, his parents, and his sister Birsa (who just returned from her Valkyrjur trials), were all invited to the family breakfast. It was the first of many surprises for your fifteenth birthday.
Fifteen.
A smile works its way onto your tired face as you remember once more. You’ve looked forward to today for as long as you can remember. You can’t count how many times you’ve dreamt of your visit to the Weavers of Fate over the years. Of facing Skuld before Mímisbrunnr.
Skuld reveals one moment — just one — from a Drekasál’s vast future when they visit her after they’ve turned fifteen. A moment that you’ve been told again and again no dragon ever reveals to anyone else. Not even their soulmate.
A thrill of anticipation sings its way through you, winding through your limbs and rattling your breath. To keep something so close, so secretive, must mean that it’s a moment of unparalleled importance to a dragon. You’re meant to be able to tell your soulmate everything. You’re meant to trust them with the best and worst of who you can be.
Your imagination runs wild with a dozen ideas of what could be so important, each one spilling across your thoughts like a overflowing bottle of watered-down ink on heavy parchment.
You look behind you at the three dozen other drekabǫrn on the karvi. More than half a dozen conflagrations are on this ship with you and your mother. Each of them a different size, and from a different realm. Dragons from across the Realms of Yggdrasil, all headed to speak with the Weaver of Futures.
It’s painfully obvious how much you stand apart from the others. They came with their conflagration; you only have your mother at your side. For the first time since you met him, you can keenly feel the two year age gap between you and Gauti. Too young still to receive his own glimpse of the future, Gauti waits back on Asgard with the rest of your family.
In some ways, you suppose it’s a bit silly to only really feel that age gap now. In all the years you’ve known him, the only lessons you’ve ever shared with him are the Drekasál ones. He’s a child of the Court of Asgard like you are, but he’s also in the class below yours, so you’ve never shared those lessons with each other. Still, watching how close the other drekabǫrn are with their conflagrations reminds you of Gauti. And not just of Gauti, but of Loki, Thor, Baldr, and Volstagg. Part of you yearns to return home already. To the familiarity and warmth of your friends.
Soon. Soon you’ll head home. You just have to get through this visit to Gymirsgard, and then you can return home.
◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦
Your first glimpse of Gymirsgard comes as you approach the realm, the excited gasps and chattering from the other drekabǫrn drawing your attention from the distant stars.
The blue star of the Jǫtunheimar system blazes brightly in the distance — though for you, it just appears white. You only know that it’s blue because of your lessons about the various star systems of Yggdrasil.
In the open space before Jǫkullknǫttr — the star — sits Gymirsgard in all its wondrous glory.
Unlike Asgard’s unique standing as a small, flat realm, Gymirsgard is a round planet, its only edges that of its atmosphere. Truthfully, for a realm, Gymirsgard is on the smaller side. Yet it not only houses more Drekasál than you can imagine, it’s also the same realm your mother and uncle were born to. For decades — centuries even — Gymirsgard was the only realm they knew. It was the realm they called home before home became Asgard.
You eyes quickly shift away from Gymirsgard to look at the vast, open space that occupies most of your view, scanning for the one other planet of this system with sharp eyes. The realm forbidden to all — and for good reason. After what happened to Princess Laufey, to High Lady Dagmær, to your uncle, and to so many other Drekasál and Asgardians there, no one should step foot on that accursed realm.
Jǫtunheimr. A realm full of icy darkness and ravenous monsters. A realm that will rip the life from any who dare venture to it.
You don’t see the ice planet though, wherever it is. Good.
Your attention shifts back to Gymirsgard as you approach the realm. Second by second, the realm swallows up the view in front of you, until the karvi is descending through the atmosphere, and the stars are swallowed by the sky and the clouds.
Your mother leans against the side of the karvi beside you as the starship breaks through the heavy clouds hanging over this part of the realm. She peers out over the vast, forested land below with a fond smile. Shifting her gaze, she points towards a seaside city in the distance, a wide smile you don’t see too often on her face.
“That’s Krossavík,” she tells you.
The name strikes a familiar chord in you, but at first you can’t place the name. When you do, it’s like a strike of lightning zips through you as you remember where you’ve heard it before.
“The city you grew up in?”
“The very one.” Her hand falls, and her smile fades a little. “It’s quite strange. Sveinn and I are from the same city, and yet we spent so long trying to find each other after our Soul Awakenings.”
“How long?” you ask, leaning your chin against your crossed forearms as you stare at the city. In the distance, you can see a few dragons in flight, returning from the sea to Krossavík. From here, you can’t hear the beat of their wings, or make out anything that makes them stand apart from other dragons. They’re just dragon-shaped blobs of grey, soaring over the grey sea.
“A century or so. Your uncle is only a little more than a decade younger than me, but I was gone from Gymirsgard by the time his Soul Awakening happened. We only met because I came home to see my mother.” The smile on your mother’s face fades further, becoming softer, sadder.
“Will we see here while we’re here?” you ask, excitement bubbling in your chest. You’ve never met your grandmother, and your mother rarely speaks of her. Photos of her are even rarer.
“No, no, she won’t be at the landing ground, my star,” your mother says. She reaches out, placing a gentle, comforting hand on your shoulder. She knows you’ve always been curious about your grandmother, what with how you prod about learning more about the dragon you’ve never met whenever your mother or uncle brings her up.
You pout a little at her words. It’s followed by a soft chuckle from your mother, and then a kiss placed atop your head.
“You’ll meet her someday, I promise,” she vows.
“But when?” you ask, impatience threaded in your words even as you keep them hushed so as not to draw the attention of the other dragons. You draw away from her, standing tall and looking Kára in the eyes. “This is the first time we’ve left Asgard. And we’re here, Mamma. Why can’t we just go see her?”
Kára looks away, but you continue to stare at her. She closes her eyes, shaking her head. She says, “It’s a lot to explain, especially now. I would love for you to meet her, it’s just… not the right time. Not with everything else.”
Everything else. That mysterious phrase is the bane of your existence. All you’re allowed to know is that phrase has something to do with her Weaver’s Reading. Something she can’t tell you. Something she is never allowed to tell anyone.
You let out a frustrated breath, leaning against the side of the karvi again, your back to her. You don’t look at Kára. Instead, you watch the land that passes below and the other drekabǫrn as the conflagrations mingle with each other. None of them come near you, though you can see the way their eyes dart to stare at you for a few seconds now and again.
Neither you nor Kára speak for the rest of the ride. You don’t even look at her, ignoring her presence the best you can.
When the karvi lands, it’s in a valley to the far north of Gymirsgard. A narrow stream flows out from the mouth of a cave at the end of the valley, the bubbling sounds of it lost beneath the flurry of activity of the conflagrations jumping over the side of the ship. You sigh, then heave yourself over the side of the ship, landing in the soft, crunchy layer of snow that barely covers the top of your boots.
You watch as the different conflagrations separate from one another entirely. The vængforinginn of each conflagration checks that their drekabǫrn are accounted for, and the adult dragon with each one merely hovers nearby.
There’s another crunch of snow beside you, one that causes your eyes to dart over before they shift towards the drekabǫrn once more; Kára hopped over the side, joining you in observing the drekabǫrn. She places a hand between your shoulder blades after a few second, guiding you forward, and everyone begins the short trek over to the cave.
The drekabǫrn trade glances with each other — and with you a few times — as all of you make your way towards the cave. Kára’s pace is swift enough that, soon enough, the two of you are leading.
Everyone is (mostly) silent during the walk. The crunch of snow is the loudest sound in the valley as you walk alongside the river that spills from the cave. Even the birds have gone quiet, the presence of so many dragons setting the forest on edge, it seems.
The conflagrations stop several metres from the cave’s mouth, but Kára keeps walking the two of you forward. You can feel the eyes of everyone drilling into your back, sending waves of unease up and down your spine. Something in your chest claws at your heart and lungs, begging you to pay attention to the danger that lurks at your back. It takes everything in you not to look back at them.
Kára stops just before the mouth of the cave, and you turn to face her, finally looking at her again. Her eyes are focused on the cave beside you. There’s a brief twitch in her jaw, a sign of her unease with being here. It makes you wonder if she’s remembering her Weaver’s Reading once again.
Her voice is hushed as she tells you, “Once you step inside, you cannot come back out until Skuld releases you. No matter what you see, what you hear, you do not leave. Understood?”
Your skin prickles at her words, hairs raising along your limbs and the back of your neck as you realise the extent of her unease.
“I understand.” You step away from her, into the cave itself. The two of you stare at each other for another moment. Then you nod at her before turning away and making your way further into the cave.
◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦
Your first steps into the cave are tentative. There’s soft torchlight coming from a few metres in, and you pass by the first of the torches on soft feet. You look back over your shoulder only once, after you’ve passed them. Your mother still stands there at the mouth of the cave, alone. It’s an unusual, unsettling sight. Uncle Sveinn is always with her. Always.
Except for this one time. He wasn’t allowed to come along for this journey. No one would explain why. All they would say is that he had to remain on Asgard.
You face forward again and continue down the tunnel.
Torch after torch, the tunnel turns into an ascending loop. Your footsteps are the only sound besides your soft breaths. Even the torches are quiet, which is far more unsettling than you would have expected. You make your steps as light as you can, your ears straining for any sounds besides your soft footfalls.
You continue your ascension, winding higher and higher with each loop. You’re not certain, but you think the loops are wider now than when you began — not that you can really tell.
When you finally reach the end, you find the tunnel opens up into a wide cavern room. There’s a slow, watery glow to the room as you step past the threshold. Like you’ve walked into a world beneath the waves, despite never stepping foot beneath water. All through the room, you can see stalactites dripping from the ceiling and stalagmites rising up from the unnaturally smooth floor.
“Ah, she finally arrives,” a voice calls out. Skuld’s voice, it has to be. You turn in a circle as you venture further into the room, searching for the Weaver, whose voice echoes all around you. “We have long awaited this day, little drekabarn. We have watched you with great curiosity. Your future is shrouded more than most.”
“Shrouded? What do you mean, Weaver?”
“Just as I said. It’s unusual for one like you. However, it always signals an interesting future as it unravels. Now, come. There is much for you to see and learn.”
Skuld glides out from behind you without warning, her footsteps soundless. You jump at her sudden appearance, wondering where she appeared from. Your back was to the cavern entrance, and you’re positive you looked at every shadow you passed as you stepped further inside. Still, you follow her as she moves deeper into the cave.
It strikes you how little of the Weaver you can see, the same as it did when Loki and Volstagg were given their god-titles. A black shroud covers her face, forbidding you from seeing beyond it, and a black dress that drags soundlessly across the floor, covering all but Skuld’s hands. Hands that you had assumed would be clean and boney, but are actually heavy, worn, and scarred.
As you cross through the cave, you approach a small seating area. Two large, dark rugs with the faint workings of a pattern woven into them, covered in a myriad of pillows, and a small circle of stones set between them. The arrangement is set at the base of what appears to be a well. The source of the watery glow of the room, if the way the ripples seem to fall onto the ceiling above it is any indication.
Mímisbrunnr. The Well of Wisdom.
Awe dances through you at the sight of an object so revered and sacred. Over the aeons since this Well was discovered, so many have sacrificed pieces of themselves just for a bit of knowledge they sought.
All-Father Odin sacrificed his eye to Mímisbrunnr years ago. No one truly knows what he’d sought an answer to when he did so, but it’s easy to guess what answers he likely sought. He sacrificed it to learn how to end the war with Jǫtunheimr. It was where the All-Father went after, appearing on Jǫtunheimr with one less eye before leading Asgard at Eldgard’s side against the Frost Giants once more.
The All-Father ended the war, but the Well had apparently not told him how to win it without losing the one he fought to bring home. Princess Laufey died on that frostbitten and cursed realm, never to know the warmth of Asgard again.
Skuld takes her seat on one side of the Well, gesturing for you to sit opposite of her. Once you’re settled, she reaches across the space between you, taking one of your hands and drawing it closer to her. Flipping it over, she leans forward and raises your palm to her shrouded face. With the index finger of her free hand, she traces lines over your palm — not following the ones etched into your skin, but different ones.
“You are remarkably calm and quiet, for one who does not know what I am doing,” Skuld says as she continues to trace lines over your palm.
“I’m not worried,” you tell her. Her tracing falters for a moment, like your answer surprises her. “I have faith in whatever you’re doing.”
“You have more faith than most. Most curious. Perhaps it is because you’ve been raised among the vættir, rather than the Drekasál,” Skuld says. You don’t say anything, despite all the questions that crowd your tongue because of her words. You have more questions than the Weaver would ever be willing to answer, that much you know.
Upon releasing your hand, Skuld sits back. You draw your hand back, placing it in your lap with the other. Only then do you allow yourself to as her the one thing that begs to be spoken.
“Why would other Drekasál not have faith in you, Weaver? You reveal Soul Awakenings, you tell us what is to come. Should we not have more faith in you than the vættir?”
“How do you break the faith of a people, and still have them seek your mercy?” Skuld asks, her voice suddenly sad and hollow. You can’t see her eyes, but you can feel her gaze as it sits heavy on you.
For several long moments, you’re quiet as you turn over her words, searching for an answer. For her part, Skuld does not press you to answer her, letting you come to your own conclusion about her question.
Mercy. Mercy implies that Skuld has more power over the Drekasál than you thought. That, if she chose to, she could punish your people. But punish them for what? And why, if their faith was broken, would they still go crawling to the Weaver, seeking Skuld’s generosity? What could she have promised —
A promise. Skuld promised them something. Something about the future. Something that they clung to desperately for so long, a hope perhaps, but —
“You promise them a hope they need, but they lose faith in that hope,” you finally say, your words slow and not entirely sure of themselves.
Skuld does not say anything, but she does nod. Something inside you fractures and weeps at the realisation. Skuld promised hope to your people about something, something they once desperately wanted to believe in. A hope they needed to believe in, and yet they have lost belief in that hope ever blooming true.
You look away from the Weaver, to Mímisbrunnr.
Silence fills the air between you both for long minutes. You think Skuld might be letting you process her answer, but it’s impossible to tell. To you, she’s just a shrouded figure, no expression to give away her thoughts. After too much silence, though, you turn back to Skuld, more words dancing sharp and angry on your tongue. Skuld speaks before you can let any of them spill forth.
“Twenty-four.” She says this like it’s an answer. When you look at her with a confused expression, trying to puzzle out the number, she explains. “Your Soul Awakening will happen in your twenty-fourth year.”
That’s nearly a decade from now. You’ve already waited forever for your Weaver’s Reading, and now you have to wait almost as long for your Soul Awakening? Impatience burns inside you.
“Isn’t that a bit old for a Soul Awakening?” you ask her. You can hear the sharp indignation in your words, and you lift your chin in an imitation of your royal friends.
“No. A soul Awakens only when it is ready. Twenty-four is a perfectly normal time for one to do so, drekabarn. Your mother's soul did not Awaken until she was twenty-seven, and her soulmate's did not Awaken until he was twenty-two.” You watch as Skuld stands, leaning over Mímisbrunnr. “I have seen souls Awaken when they are as old as seventeen, and I have seen souls Awaken as old as nearly forty. Dragonsouls are curious in that way.”
There’s the sound of something — multiple somethings being moved through the waters of the Well. The Weaver draws out several small logs from the Well, and you watch with rapt curiosity as she sits down, arranging the logs in the circle of stones.
A firepit, you realise. But the logs are wet. How does she expect to —
“Normally Mímisbrunnr requires sacrifice to learn,” Skuld says, interrupting your thoughts, “but you are not partaking in its waters, and it bends to the will of Yggdrasill, as we all do.”
“What do I need to do?” you ask her.
The Weaver passes you a knife, saying, “Three drops of blood onto the logs with the wish to know of your future. When I light the logs they will show me three things. Your most likely future paths, what your life might be in the more definitive of those paths, and which moment in your future you must hear today.” At the query on your face, she tilts her head to the side. You think she might be smiling. “Have faith, young dragon. The logs will light.”
Faith. You have plenty of that where the Weavers and Yggdrasill are concerned, even if so many other Drekasál do not.
So you listen, grimacing as you carefully make a shallow slice along the tip of your index finger. You hiss out a breath, the sting sharp as you squeeze it, letting three drops of blood fall onto different logs. Once that is done, Skuld hands you a small strip of wet cloth. You wrap it around your finger, hissing sharply at the stinging burn it causes.
Then, Skuld utters a word you don’t understand. You feel the ancient power that surges through the room. It condenses within the logs, coiling tight, then — it snaps apart, and the logs are ablaze.
You lean back on your uninjured hand, the other raised in front of your eyes at the sudden brightness. You expected thick smoke to blanket the room, but none rises from the logs. When you open your mouth to speak, Skuld raises a hand to ask for your silence. It’s only then that you realise she’s staring into the fire. You sit there, blinking as your eyes adjust to the firelight, until it no longer burns them to look at the Weaver.
“Your future is most interesting,” Skuld says. She leans closer to the fire, tilting her head to the right as she does. “I see many points that I could tell you now that will never change, no matter which paths you wander as you head towards your destiny. Most curious for one whose future is still so murky and ever-shifting.”
The hairs on your neck and arms raise. You’ve never given much thought to having a destiny. A future, a purpose to your life, yes, but not a destiny. It’s a weighted word. One that makes you think that, perhaps, you might become greater than you’ve ever let yourself imagine. That, maybe, you might live up to the legacies your parents have left for you to follow in the footsteps of.
And yet, the idea also unsettles you. To have a destiny means great things await you, yes, but you know the legends. The stories you have read, the histories you have memorised, all fall into similar patterns.
Greatness does not come without sacrifice, without pain.
“Weaver, what do you see?” you ask her, your words effused with curiosity about what she is seeing.
“I see many things, drekabarn. Every path that you might walk is open to me. I see wars that cannot be evaded, and wars that might never happen. I see a love that burns as bright and beautiful as the Kveldlagi of nights, and lasts for a lifetime; just as I also see loves that will burn like fires lit on a rainy day. I see death that will consume everything. I see your hopes, and your joys. Your wishes and dreams. Your sorrows and fears. I see the paths that you can walk, and the heartache that will shadow so many of them.”
The fire between you burns lower, barely more than embers and small puffs of flame compared to the small campfire it was just moments before. Skuld waves her hand over the embers, the fire banking until it is little more than glowing embers. The Weaver waves her hand over the fire again, and the embers begin to shift and glow in new patterns.
“I know which moment I must tell you. Are you prepared to hear?”
You suck in a breath and nod. Your heart thunders loudly in your chest. Anticipation chokes your limbs and shortens your breaths.
“Yes. I am prepared, Weaver.”
“Then listen closely to what I have to tell you, young one.”
Skuld gestures to the embers. You watch as they begin to glow in a way that forms the shape of a person. Her hand is outstretched, reaching for the hand of someone you can’t see, the image cut off. All the embers show of the other person is their hand, the details lost on you.
“This is what you must know,” Skuld begins. “You were whispered to my ancestors by Yggdrasill. Foretold by It to bring change to a great many things across Yggdrasil’s many branches. You will grow into a power that few will rival, blessed by beings far greater and more powerful than the vættir.
“Your path begins with this moment: on the day of your Soul Awakening. Much of your fate shall be sealed in the days after, for on the day of your ceremony, you will find the soul that the Voiceless One has bound you to in this life.”
You straighten up, mouth dropping open at Skuld’s words. You look at her with open awe. Warmth and giddiness floods your veins, and you don’t even attempt to hide the happiness this brings you — not that you could if you’d tried. To have your path align with your soulmate so early on? It is nothing short of a blessing by Yggdrasill for the bond the Voiceless One wove you.
You wait with bated breath for her to tell you more. To reveal any more scraps about the day of your Soul Awakening Ceremony. When she doesn’t say more, you hesitantly ask, “What else can you tell me, Weaver?”
Silence permeates the cavern, broken only by the sounds of breathing, of your heart thudding loudly, and the faint sound of trickling water. Finally, Skuld speaks once more.
“There is nothing else that I can tell you. That which I find worth telling you I cannot, for it might change the path you walk currently in ways that cannot be undone.” You bite your tongue, stopping yourself from pleading with the Weaver to reveal more to you anyway. If Skuld is concerned about changing the path you walk, then you must heed her. She's directing you towards the future you should walk, in the only way that she can in this moment. It surprises you when she speaks again. “Though, I can say this, for it is but a simple reminder. Protect your soulmate. Stand by them through all hardships, and always live for them. The Voiceless One chose this bond for a reason.”
“A simple reminder,” you murmur.
Tucking the words into your heart, you silently vow to never forget them. You’ve heard similar variations to that reminder before. More times than you can remember, your family has told you the Voiceless One chooses each bond for a reason.
It reminds you of when Frigga told you that the soulmate bond is a mixture of soul and blood magic. Of when you worried and wondered about if the bond was truly a curse in disguise, and how Lord Ivarr and Lady Tryggvadóttir’s interactions as a newly bonded pair banished such an idea. That afternoon showed you how well the Voiceless One chooses the bond for each of her children.
After all, how can something so effortless and comforting ever be a curse?
You do your best not to remember your exchange with Loki in the garden. Or the heavy, unspoken distance that lives in so many of the silences between the two of you these days in the presence of your conflagration.
Skuld stands without another word, beckoning you to follow her. You stand quickly, trailing after her as she returns to the mouth of the cavern. She stops before the mouth, and you step to the other side, but stop so you can turn and look at her. You place your left hand over your heart, bowing to the Weaver.
“Winds favour you, Weaver Skuld,” you tell her. Skuld pauses, as if your gesture has surprised her, and then copies you.
“Winds favour you, Lady Kárudóttir. I look forward to our next meeting. It will not be long now, before the vættir know your name.”
A shiver of excitement works its way down your spine. Skuld’s words promise to you that your godnaming will be soon. You smile, bowing to her once more. And then you turn around, and head back down the tunnel so you can return to your mother.
Each step is another one towards the destiny that awaits you.
( next chapter )
Tumblr media
@ladydracona @huntress-artemiss @sarahscribbles @mischief2sarawr @pbs-theundeadmaggot @loki-cees-all @bitchy-bi-trash
Tumblr media
Find the lore notes for this chapter here!
Join the taglist for this series (and other works) here!
22 notes · View notes
dosai-maavu · 13 days ago
Text
ok it's been almost a month since this happened but i saw the indian cricket team make history (aka i saw them get 46-10 and it was....sorta kinda fun bc i saw them bat and bowl on the same day, but we lost shit bad so....yikes ig)
rishabh pant is an absolute icon. mans was talking to the nz players during over switches and even drank the nz players' drinks. he was also very honestly super fun to watch but mildly terrifying bc that ball could be barelling towards you any second.
KL is tall. i couldnt see him super close but he was on the slips w kohli, and had almost a head of height on him. kohli's like 5'9", so KL is pretty much a panamaram.
jaiswal was so serious the whole time. he came towards our stand once and wouldn't look back even if you had his name written across your chest and were standing stark naked. DSP Siraj also graced our stand, but he did wave hi to all of us. we were blessed to be in his presence.
bumrah's bowling action is SO ABSURD. like how he generates that much power when he pretty much jogs for 3/4th of his run up is insane to me. i was also pretty shocked by how...aggressive (?) kuldeep yadav's action was.
i did also see mayank yadav, who came out to practice fielding during lunch. he waved hi to my stand. the only two people i wanted to see but couldn't were gauti bhai and shubman gill (pretty bummed abt that last one)
chinnaswamy needs a fucking better dj. every song they played gave me a headache.
2 notes · View notes
edsmusicblog · 1 year ago
Text
ANTI-SEMITISME SONG 1934
CHANSON ANTISÉMITISME 1934
Tumblr media
lys gauty - la dame en blanc 14/2/1900 - 2/1//1994
youtube
lys gauty - israël, va-t-en
1934
Tumblr media
11 notes · View notes
edgarmoser · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
lys gauty 1900 - 1994
youtube
lys gauty - la garce
1938
Tumblr media
5 notes · View notes
would-they-listen-to-that · 24 days ago
Note
Hi. I'm here to submit for the
Free Self-Ship/Kin Playlist.
I would like a playlist of me and Rattfink (from Roland and Rattfink).
Tumblr media
‧₊˚🖇️✩ ₊˚🎧⊹♡ hi caller!
The Masochism Tango - Tom Lehner
I'd Like to See the Bad Guys Win - Margo Guryan
Heartaches - Al Bowlly
Moonlight Serenade - Henry Mancini
Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea - June Christy
Hot Voodoo - Lys Gauty
The Devil's Doll - Skeeter Davis
La Foule - Édith Piaf
Voilà - Barbara Pravi
It's All Forgotten Now - Al Bowlly
thanks for dialing in!
3 notes · View notes
jerseyartblog · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Rare and wild FE3H fanart in the year of our lord 2023
Sylvain Jose Gauti-wyrm
26 notes · View notes