Authors: Francesca Simon
Freya saw a familiar glaring face lurking at the back.
âSnot,' she said. âWhat are you doing out here?'
âWoden has made me redundant,' said Snot. âWhatever that means. My services are no longer required, he said. Modernising, he said. I am one of Woden's berserkers. I am one of
the chosen warriors of Valhalla. How can I no longer be needed?'
Roskva patted his arm awkwardly. âStay close,' she said. âThe giants are coming.'
Snot's black wolf-eyes gleamed.
Freya, Roskva and Alfi pushed their way through the tightly packed fans to the entrance, guarded by two security men dressed as berserkers.
Freya's name was still on the approved list of visitors, and the electronic, wrought-iron security gates opened to admit them. More guards lurked inside, patrolling the frosty manicured lawns leading to the mansion's colonnaded threshold. Swivelling cameras tracked them as they walked through the massive front door.
âWe have to see Oski,' said Freya to the smartly-dressed assistant standing in the mirrored entrance hall. âIt's urgent.'
Roskva and Alfi gaped at the opulence, the pink crystal chandelier dripping from the
second floor, the plush carpets, the bronze statues of boars pawing the ground. The hallway was bigger than her entire house, thought Freya. Several other people milled about, one man with bulging biceps wearing jogging trousers, the others in business suits. One woman pushed a large rack of designer clothes. Another lugged a suitcase full of make-up.
âJoin the queue,' said the assistant.
Thor's bellowing could be heard echoing through the building.
âWho is trying to besmirch our bright fame?' he roared from somewhere in the house.
âThey're in a meeting,' said another assistant. âTake a seat,' he added, pointing to one of the sumptuous cream sofas.
âNo,' said Roskva. âI told you it's urgent. Tell them that Roskva and Alfi are here.'
âHe's expecting us,' said Alfi.
The assistant hesitated, then went upstairs and opened one of the massive closed doors.
âHe said to wait,' said the assistant, descending. âCan I get you a glass of water?'
â
Wait
?' said Roskva. â
Wait
?! May the trolls take you! May your end be horrible. May you never enter Valhalla.'
âThere's no need to swear,' said the young man, frowning.
âWe don't have time to wait,' said Freya.
Roskva, Alfi and Freya leapt up, dashed upstairs and ran through the closed double doors before the startled assistant could stop them.
âAll-Father. We're back. The giants are coming,' they shouted as they burst in.
The startled Gods stopped pacing the marble floor of the sumptuous black, white and gold room. Freya caught a glimpse of extensive snow-covered gardens and iced pools through the floor-to-ceiling French doors.
âSit down and shut up,' said Veronica. Honestly. How was she supposed to crisis manage with all these interruptions?
âBut ⦠but, we haveâ' said Freya.
âBe quiet,' ordered Thor. Roskva and Alfi cowered.
âEveryone, stay calm,' said Veronica. âFirst of all, we'll deny everything. I mean really, enslaving two children?'
Thor didn't look at her.
â
What
? You did?' said Veronica. âNo, stop, I don't want to know,' she continued, glancing at Roskva and Alfi. âWe'll deny it anyway. Then we'll threaten libel and demand a retraction. Plus, I can make a deal with the papers. Offer them access to you, in exchange for sitting on any other stories.'
â
More
stories?' shouted Woden. The ravens perched on his shoulders jumped in fright. His eye was impenetrable behind his aviator sunglasses. âWho defames us? Who is trying to kill us by destroying our reputation and soiling our names? Who? Why?'
A name floated unspoken in the room.
Roskva broke the silence.
âCould it be the Wolf's father?'
âThe Wolf's father?' hissed Freya.
âLoki,' said Alfi.
Loki.
Freya felt a stab of fear. Loki, the trickster, who had tried to thwart her in Hel, who had stolen Idunn and her apples of youth and almost caused the Gods to die along with her. No one had seen him since Freya had transformed herself into a falcon and left him behind in Hel, cursing her as she flew off. Had he followed her to Midgard?
âWe'll find him and shut his mouth,' said the Goddess Freyja.
âWe lost fame once. Now fate has given us a second chance, we will not lose it again,' said Thor. He was decked in his new lightning bolt tracksuit range with his name emblazoned back and front in huge block letters.
âWe now know the emptiness of life without fame and worship,' said Woden. âWe can never go back to how we were before.'
âI feel young. I feel rejuvenated,' said the Goddess Freyja. âWe can't lose our fame again. I couldn't bear it.'
âI said I could
make
you famous,' said Veronica. âI never promised I could
keep
you famous. People are fickle, and there are new celebrities coming all the time. That's the way of the world.'
âI'll kill you if I don't get the cover of
GQ
next week,' snarled Thor.
âNo, because I'll kill her first if
I
don't get the cover,' snapped Woden.
Veronica backed away.
âI'm much more useful to you alive than dead,' she said.
âLords, the frost giants are coming,' interrupted Roskva.
âThe other Gods need you back in Asgard right now,' said Alfi.
âLoki is on the loose,' said Roskva.
âListen to them,' said Freya. âPlease.'
Woden waved his hand.
âIn a minute,' said Woden, leafing through
the latest issue of
ICE
. His face flickered in annoyance.
âVeronica,' he said. âWhy is there a three-page spread about Thor, and only a small picture of me leaving that launch party?'
The Goddess snatched the magazine. A satisfied smile spread across her face. âMy holiday snaps look good,' she said. âBut maybe I should have worn a different bikini. What do you think?' she asked Woden. âThe green stripes or the gold halter-top?'
âWho cares about your bikinis,' thundered Woden. âI had two pages last month, a photo spread, and a featured interview, and now I have a paragraph about looking tired and jowly. Well, whoever made that decision will regret it. I will not be defamed. I'm taking my spear straight roundâ'
âAll-Father, please, the frost giants are coming,' interrupted Freya. âYou mustâ'
Roskva poked her hard in the ribs.
Freya gulped.
âDid you speak, thrall?' hissed the Goddess.
âDid you say we
must
?' thundered Thor.
Woden waved his hand at her. âWe'll deal with them,' he said. âAnd with Loki. But first things first. Veronica!' he barked. âI need a facial before the red carpet tonight.'
âI'm not happy with the clothes they sent over for me,' said Thor. âI'm Thor, not some semi-demi D-list celebrity.'
Freya stared at the Gods gazing at their reflections and gabbling into their phones. Facials? Photo shoots? Their new fame had intoxicated them.
The Goddess glanced at her wrist. She was wearing, Freya noticed, a new, diamond-encrusted watch.
âMust dash, my personal shopper is picking me up at 2,' she trilled. âI'm having a complete wardrobe makeover.'
âDid you pay for that watch?' asked Veronica.
Freyja stuck out her newly plumped-up lips.
âI don't have to pay, I'm the Goddess Freyja,'
she said. âMortals pay me tribute.'
âYou can't just steal things,' said Veronica. âIf that gets in the papers, your reputation.'
âThat's your problem, not mine,' said Freyja. âAre the photographers still outside?'
Veronica went to the window and peered out.
âThere's a huge crowd of them waiting,' she said. âAnd loads of fans, too.'
Freyja beamed.
âWaiting for
me
, I expect.'
âI think you'll find that
I
am the one they're waiting for,' said Woden.
âWell let's just see,' said Freyja, sashaying to the window to an explosion of clicks and ear-shattering screams.
âWe love you, Freyja!' squealed a gaggle of giggling schoolgirls.
âOver here, Freyja,' one photographer yelled.
âTo me, to me,' called another.
âLook this way,' shouted a third.
âHow are you, Freyja?' hollered a man in the crowd.
âFabulous,' she giggled, leaning out of the window and pouting at the cameras, oblivious to the bitter cold.
âWhat about those stories in the paper today â any comment?' shrieked a reporter.
âIs it true about the shoplifting?' they chorused.
Freyja slammed the window shut.
She came back to the chaise longue, looking grim.
âNow, I've been in discussions with a cable channel about doing a reality TV show about you all to tie in with the big reveal,' said Veronica. âPotentially
very
exciting.' (Though whether they will still be interested after all those horrible stories remains to be seen, she didn't add.) â
At Home with the Gods
or
Asgard behind the Golden Door
. It will be an incredible marketing tool for all your merchandise: we're thinking hammer amulets endorsed by Thor, so extra powerful, those will be luxury items, flax linen sheets â
Sleep like the Gods
â and we might think about
a diffusion range, and Woden raven soft toys, and some children's books â every publisher is interested, naturally, and charmsâ'
âNo charms,' said Woden. âI have to keep some exclusive powers for myself.'
âYou're right,' said Veronica smoothly, making a note, âand Freyja, we will need to have a separate discussion about a hair and make-up line â I think
Goddess
would be a great brand, and it gives us loads of taglines: âLook Like a Goddess!' âSmell Like a Goddess!' âDress Like a Goddess,' etc., you get the idea. If you'll just take a peek at some preliminary sketches for your first perfume bottle, which we'd like to call, obviously,
Freyja
.' Something seductive, like âJe t'aime. Freyja.'
Woden snorted.
âYou know we hardly need the money.'
Freyja yawned.
âSpeak for yourself. I can't have enough gold.'
âYes, of course,' said Veronica, âbut you
do
want fans, and your millions of fans all want a
part of you. It just spreads your fame.'
âI'm feeling stronger and stronger,' said Woden.
âGood, because I have to warn you ⦠it won't last forever. There are always new gods, new idols, waiting in the wings. This month it's you, next â who knows?'
She let the phrase hover in the air. It was always good to keep clients on their toes, let them know they had to work hard to stay on top of the churning pile and kick away the fame-seekers scrabbling desperately beneath them.
âAnd of course, we should release a calendar for the Yule Festival. Pictures of you with assorted baked goods. We can call it
Bringing the World Back to Woden One Biscuit at a Time
.
Woden made a face. âIsn't that beneath my dignity?'
âYou need to at least
fake
being humble and in touch,' said Veronica. âKeep it real.'
âI have
never
been humble,' said Woden. âI am the All-Father. Don't ever forget that.'
âWhat about the frost giants?' pleaded Freya.
âI said later,' said Woden.
Dooda-loo Dooda-loo
honked one of Veronica's phones. She answered, walking into the corner to speak quietly.
âGlory
want a story about who you're dating, Freyja,' said Veronica.
âNone of their business.'
âI think we should find you a nice footballer,' said Veronica.
Freyja frowned.
âLook, if you want to keep people worshipping you, we have to keep feeding them stories,' said Veronica.
âMake something up then,' said Freyja. âI don't want to get a bad reputation.'
Thor snorted.
âWhat?' said Freyja.
âBit late for that, don't you think?' said Thor, smirking.
âYou're just jealous because I'm more famous than you now,' said Freyja, tossing her
luxurious curls. âDid you know I'm going to be the new face of
Lustre
shampoo?'
âCome on, focus, people,' said Veronica. âThor, let's discuss the sponsorships and a possible appearance on
Desert Island Celebrity
.'
âNo way,' said Thor. âThat show's for has-beens.'
Veronica paused.
âI know, it's not
exactly
A-list stuff, but we have to do everything we can to keep you in the public eye for as long as we can. Look what it did for Peter Andre: once he couldn't open a supermarket; now he owns them. Woden, there's the interview tomorrow for the
The Times
, so I've prepared a list of possible questions and of course the movie premiere tonightâ'
âCan I just sayâ' began Freya.
âWhat's the film?' asked Woden.
âUhhhm, it's called
Gross-Out Weekend
:
The Whole Salami,'
said Veronica.
â
Gross-Out Weekend: The Whole Salami?
' repeated Thor. âThat doesn't sound like a major release.'
âOkay, it's probably not gonna win film of the year, but there will be photographers there, and we need to keep your faces in the papers,' said Veronica smoothly. She decided not to tell them that she'd had to argue hard for the invitations after the morning's disastrous headlines. âAnyhow, I've arranged for the limousines â¦'