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Chapter 71 - Chapter 71 - Recalled by the All-Father

The second light of the Bifrost split the stormy sky above Jotunheim's moon. It touched down in a roar of color, painting the ice fields in gold and violet. Out of the pillar stepped Loki, his emerald cloak snapping behind him, and behind him thundered a column of reinforcements—hundreds of Einherjar warriors in shining mail, Valkyries with wings glinting like polished blades, and dwarven engineers driving carts of glowing runes and siege gear.

The Asgardian camp erupted into movement. Cheers, half in relief and half in pride, rolled through the miners and soldiers who had survived the earlier assault. But as Loki strode toward the command tent, his face remained unreadable.

Inside, Harry, Thor, and several captains stood over a map carved into solid ice. The lines of the battlefield were still there, blackened from the last storm of chaos.

Thor turned first, a grin breaking through his grimness. "Brother! You've brought the army!"

"And a message," Loki replied, his tone light but edged with gravity. From within his cloak, he withdrew a sealed scroll, bound in silver cord and marked with Odin's sigil—the mark of the All-Father himself.

The moment Harry saw it, his stomach twisted.

Loki approached and held the letter out. "It's from All-Father. You'll want to read it yourself."

Harry took the scroll, feeling the weight of the wax seal like a shackle. He broke it carefully, and the magic inside flared with Odin's voice—old, commanding, patient.

"To my grandson, Prince Harry of Asgard.

You have shown courage beyond measure and strength that even the gods speak of in awe. But now, you must obey.

What has begun there is not a skirmish. It is war.

Laufey has provoked the wrath of Asgard, and the conflict to come will not be one fought by the young, nor by those who must be preserved for what is yet to be built.

Return to Asgard. This is an order of the All-Father.

Leave the field to those whose task is war, not legacy.

May wisdom guide your steps home."

The voice faded. The tent was silent except for the wind sighing outside.

Harry lowered the scroll, staring at it for a moment. The paper seemed heavier than Uru. "He wants me gone."

Thor nodded quietly. "Aye. And he's right. What comes next won't be a border fight. Laufey has summoned armies from the outer moons. Odin means to strike them with the full host of Asgard."

Harry exhaled slowly, a mix of defiance and resignation. "So it's decided."

"You've done enough," Thor said, trying to sound gentle. "More than enough. Your actions here bought us time, saved hundreds. But this—" He gestured to the ice plains outside, where soldiers were erecting runic towers. "—this will become a graveyard before long."

Harry gave a small, bitter laugh. "It already is."

Loki watched the exchange, his expression unreadable. "For once," he said softly, "I agree with father. You've done your part. Don't make the same mistake your father makes every time he smells thunder."

Thor shot him a glare, but Harry only sighed. "You're both impossible."

He turned, gazing through the tent flap toward the horizon. The frozen sky still shimmered faintly red where Chaos had touched it. The marks of his power remained—scars on the world, like a warning.

He whispered, half to himself, "He's right. I can't get my way every time."

Then, squaring his shoulders, he faced them again. "Very well. I'll return to Asgard."

Thor stepped forward, clasping his shoulder. "You have made me proud, son. More than I can say."

Harry smiled faintly. "You're only proud when I listen."

"That too," Thor chuckled, a hint of moisture in his eyes.

Loki smirked. "Don't worry, little storm. I'll bring you something from the battlefield to play with."

Harry raised an eyebrow. "You mean you'll steal something shiny."

"Semantics," Loki said with a shrug. "But yes."

As the brothers laughed softly, Harry's armor shimmered around him once more, wings folded neatly behind his back. He turned to the soldiers gathered outside—the same men and dwarves who had stood beside him through fire and frost.

"You fought beside me when you didn't have to," he told them, his voice carrying across the field. "You believed in me. I will never forget it. You showed me what Asgard truly is—not a crown or a throne, but courage. You have my respect, and my promise: I'll see to it that your names are honored in the Golden Hall."

The soldiers bowed deeply, and the dwarves struck their hammers against their chests in salute.

Harry nodded once, then turned back to Loki. "You'll send me the first shipment of Uru Prime?"

Loki's eyes gleamed. "I'll deliver it myself. Try not to start another war before I do."

"Can't promise that," Harry said with a grin.

With that, he lifted his hand toward the sky.

The air shimmered, and a beam of rainbow light burst from the heavens, surrounding him in a hum that shook the ice beneath their feet.

As the Bifrost descended, Thor and Loki stood side by side, watching him fade into light.

"Safe travels, my son," Thor whispered.

The Bifrost released him in a blaze of color atop the golden bridge. Heimdall stood at the gate, stoic as ever, his amber eyes glowing faintly. "Welcome home, young prince."

Harry nodded, stepping forward. The air here was warmer, calmer — but heavy with the weight of what he had left behind. "Thank you, Heimdall."

The guardian bowed his head. "The All-Father was wise to recall you. The storm ahead is one even gods should dread."

Harry didn't answer. He continued across the bridge until the golden doors of the palace opened before him. Inside, soft music played, and the scent of blooming irises filled the air.

And then came Frigga, her silver robes flowing like moonlight, tears glistening in her eyes as she rushed forward.

"Harry," she whispered, embracing him tightly. "My brave boy. You came back in one piece."

He smiled against her shoulder. "Barely."

She pulled back, cupping his face. "I heard of the battle. Odin and Loki told me everything. You faced an army, Harry. An army."

"I had help," he said gently.

"Yes," Frigga said, smiling proudly through her tears. "You had courage. And that is still very brave."

For the first time since leaving Jotunheim, Harry allowed himself to breathe fully — no frost, no blood, no fear. Only warmth, and the quiet hum of the golden city beneath his feet.

But deep inside, the chaos still whispered — not gone, merely waiting.

The golden dome of the Asgardian forge trembled with the rhythm of hammers. Sparks leapt like fireflies through the air, and the heat shimmered in waves that made the runes on the walls pulse red and gold.

Harry stood at the edge of the workshop, his armor stripped away, his hair tied back, his hands already dusted with soot. Rows of dwarves and elven smiths worked in perfect harmony, their chants blending with the song of molten metal. The air smelled of oil, Uru, and burning stone — the scent of war being prepared.

But before this moment, the halls of Asgard had been eerily still.

After his return, Frigga had refused to let Harry leave her sight for three whole days.

He had tried to slip away twice, once to visit the royal stables and once to wander the watchtowers, but both times she caught him like a hawk catching a chick.

"You will rest," she said firmly the first morning, drawing curtains across the bright chamber. "You may have Asgardian blood, but even we must heal."

Harry grinned faintly. "I've had worse bruises, Grandma."

Frigga raised an elegant brow. "And I've seen enough children who say that right before they faint."

That silenced him for at least an hour.

When she finally allowed him to leave his chamber, it wasn't to wander but to learn.

She guided him to the great library of spells, teaching him the subtle magics that were the foundation of Asgardian sorcery — illusion wards, memory runes, protective weaving, and even the Song of Seiðr, an ancient art lost to most of the realm.

Under her calm voice and watchful gaze, Harry began to understand why Frigga was feared and respected even by Odin. Her magic wasn't loud or destructive — it was quiet, inevitable, and beautiful.

"Power is not in destruction," she told him one evening, while runes of blue fire circled between her fingers. "It is in the precision to change one thing, and let the rest of the world remain."

Harry nodded. He understood — in theory. But the chaos inside him still whispered otherwise.

When he wasn't with Frigga, he was in the war room, standing silently behind Odin as generals and captains filled the air with plans and arguments. The room was carved from marble, its ceiling painted with constellations. Massive maps floated above a golden table, runes marking each realm, each path of the Bifrost.

"Jotunheim will not accept treaty," said General Tyr, his voice like stone. "Their armies are mobilizing. If we strike the moons first, we can cut their supply lines."

Odin's voice rumbled like distant thunder. "We do not strike first. We strike final."

He turned slightly to Harry. "What would you do, boy?"

Harry blinked, startled. He hadn't expected to be addressed. Every eye in the room turned to him.

"I… would send an envoy first," he said after a moment's thought. "Let Laufey think Asgard is hesitating. Let him grow confident. Then when he commits his full army, close the trap."

There was silence. Then a few murmurs of approval. Even Odin's lips twitched faintly.

"A cunning strategy," the All-Father said. "You think like Loki, not Thor."

Harry smiled. "That's probably not a compliment."

"It is when you're planning a war," Odin replied.

The council continued for hours, but Odin kept Harry there — listening, learning, watching how kings shaped fate not only with swords, but with words. He didn't say it aloud, but Odin's thoughts were clear to all who knew him well.

This boy would rule one day.

Not Thor. Not the reckless son of thunder who sought glory in battle.

But Harry — the quiet storm who learned before he acted.

When the council ended, and the air in the hall filled again with talk of marching banners, Harry decided he had his own part to play.

The next morning, he made his way to the forges of Asgard. The smiths stopped as he entered — a young prince covered in soot and scars, yet walking with the confidence of one who knew their craft.

"Prince Harry!" one of the dwarves called out, bowing. "You honor us."

Harry shook his head. "I'm here to work, not to watch."

The dwarves exchanged glances — then grinned widely. "Then take up a hammer, lad. There's no royal title in the forge."

And so, he did.

The hammer felt right in his hand, the rhythm familiar, like a song he had known in another life. The clangs and heat swallowed his thoughts — no politics, no chaos, no fear — only metal, purpose, and creation.

Days passed. Harry worked from dawn until night, crafting sword hilts inscribed with runes, mending armor shattered from Jotunheim's frost, and even designing new alloys — mixing Uru with gold and stormsteel to make lighter, faster armor for the Valkyries.

Word spread quickly: the prince himself was working among them.

One evening, Frigga came to the forge, her white gown glowing in the dim light.

She found Harry bare-armed and drenched in sweat, his hammer ringing against the blade he was shaping. Sparks lit his face like tiny stars.

"Harry," she said softly, "you belong in the palace, not the forge."

He looked up and smiled. "This is my palace, Grandma."

Frigga sighed. "You have your grandfather's stubbornness."

"I'll take that as a compliment."

"It isn't."

She stepped closer, resting a gentle hand on his shoulder. "Do not forget who you are. You are not just a smith or a warrior. You are the heart of Asgard's future. If Odin wishes you to learn from the council, it is because he sees in you what the throne will one day need."

Harry's hammer slowed. "A king doesn't just need a throne, Grandma. He needs people who believe in him. These smiths — these dwarves — they're my people too."

Frigga smiled sadly. "You sound more like a king every day."

Far away, the horns of war began to echo faintly across the Bifrost bridge — a signal from the frontlines.

Thor and Loki were fighting under Odin's banners. The first clash of the true Asgard–Jotunheim War had begun.

Harry had done his part for now — forged blades, built armor, and learned the craft of leadership.

But he knew that soon enough, the storm would call him again.

And when it did, no forge, no wall, and no order from grandfather himself would keep him from flying back into the heart of battle.

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