High above Asgard, where the sky glowed with molten gold, Harry sat alone on the balcony outside his private chamber. Below him, the realm shimmered with life—a thousand lanterns lighting the city, a hundred floating ships gliding through enchanted sky-winds, the rainbow bridge stretching like a divine promise across the void.
Asgard felt infinite.
Midgard, in comparison, felt like a fishbowl.
Harry sighed, leaning against the carved railing. Why was it that Midgard—the realm that held so many brilliant people, so many powerful wizards, witches, warriors, scholars—remained completely blind to the existence of the other Eight Realms?
He had asked himself the question a thousand times.
A faint rustle behind him broke his thoughts.
"Still thinking?" a familiar voice asked.
Harry turned. Frigga stepped onto the balcony, her expression soft, her silver-blonde hair floating like threads of moonlight.
Harry sank into a seat beside her.
"Can I ask you something?" he asked.
"Always," she replied warmly.
Harry glanced at the open skies again. "Why is Midgard the only realm that doesn't know the others exist? Asgard protects them, right? But… we don't talk to them. We don't teach them. Barely anyone from Midgard even knows Asgard is real. I just… don't understand why."
Frigga exhaled softly, as if she had expected this question for years.
"The answer," she said, "is older than Asgard's golden walls."
Harry waited.
"Long ago," Frigga said, "Midgard was part of the cosmic courts. Elves, dwarves, giants—each had dealings with Midgard's ancient people. The humans of Midgard were first allies of Alfheim, then apprentices of Nidavellir, and eventually… rivals of Asgard."
"Rivals?" Harry blinked.
"Yes," Frigga murmured. "Midgardians were ambitious, reckless, creative. Their thirst for knowledge rivaled even the Light Elves. For a time, they created artifacts and weapons that challenged the gods." Her eyes darkened. "And when they felt inferior, they became desperate."
Harry frowned. "So they were sealed away from the others?"
"Separated," Frigga corrected. "For the safety of all. Odin believed that if Midgardians knew the truth today—their pride would shatter. They would lash out. Their leaders would challenge realms far beyond their ability to comprehend."
Harry snorted. "Sounds about right."
Frigga's mouth curved in a sad smile. "Midgardians possess incredible potential. But their hearts are fragile, their egos fragile still. They believe their planet is the center of the cosmos. Their magic—when they had it—became diluted. The bloodlines thinned. The knowledge vanished."
"And now," Harry said quietly, "they boast about purity and superiority… without knowing how small they are."
Frigga placed a gentle hand over his.
"Not small, Harry. Merely… young."
Harry raised a brow. "They treat Asgard like a myth. Or a fairytale."
"That is by design," Frigga replied. "The last time Midgard knew of the Nine Realms, they worshipped us. Or feared us. Both are dangerous."
Harry leaned back, watching golden clouds drift lazily overhead.
"Sometimes I wonder," he murmured, "what would happen if they met an elf. Or a Frost Giant. Or a Vanir sorcerer. The Pureblood families in Midgard—wizarding and muggle—act like they're the greatest thing to ever walk the universe."
Frigga chuckled gently. "Imagine their faces if a Light Elf entered one of their grand estates."
Harry laughed under his breath. "They'd probably faint."
"Or," Frigga added teasingly, "challenge him to a duel, believing themselves superior."
Harry groaned. "Merlin, I can see it."
Frigga turned serious again. "Your empathy for Midgard is admirable. But be warned—if the realms reunited, Midgard would face truths they are not prepared for."
Harry nodded slowly. "Still… I think about it. What would happen if Midgardians realized how small their world is compared to the Nine Realms? Maybe they'd stop boasting. Maybe they'd stop thinking bloodlines define power."
Frigga's eyes softened.
"You carry the hearts of two worlds, Harry. You see their flaws… and their potential."
Harry looked down at his hands—the hands that carried Asgardian strength, Midgardian magic, and chaos woven into every vein.
"Still," he muttered, "I kinda want to see their faces when the first Frost Giant walks into Diagon Alley."
Frigga chuckled. "That day will come, child. Realms cannot remain separate forever."
Harry stared out into the cosmic horizon, where the shimmering auroras of the Realms pulsed with life.
"Then I hope," he said softly, "I'm there to see what Midgard becomes."
Frigga placed her hand on his shoulder, pride shining in her eyes.
"You may be the bridge between worlds, Harry. Whether you choose to be or not."
Harry didn't respond.
But the thought lingered—dangerous, exciting, inevitable.
Morning sunlight spilled like liquid gold through the high windows of the Asgardian throne room. The marble floor gleamed. The banners of the royal house swayed softly in the breeze. And upon the throne sat Harry.
He hated mornings like this.
Not because the throne room intimidated him. Not because the golden seat felt too large, too ancient, too heavy for someone his age.
But because the problems that reached him were always the same.
"My goats have eaten my neighbor's bark-tree!"
"My son refused to join the guard. You must order him!"
"The river crystals are turning purple again!"
Harry listened, judged fairly, offered solutions, and moved on. The palace scribes whispered about how calm and mature he was. The nobles whispered about how naïve he must be. The palace guards whispered about how terrifying his mother was.
Harry ignored them all.
He was waiting.
Waiting for the report from his spies about what the rival lords were planning. Vali, Kjarl, Brynhild… whatever they were doing, they were doing it quickly and quietly. Harry wanted answers.
He was nearly done with the morning cases when the horn sounded.
A deep, sonorous boom echoed across the throne room.
All conversations froze.
The guards snapped into formation.
A herald in green and copper robes stepped forward, bowing deeply.
"Your Highness," he said loudly, "an envoy has arrived from Vanaheim. They request audience. Urgently."
Harry straightened.
Vanaheim.
The one oldest trading power among the Nine Realms. The realm that controlled thirty percent of internal commerce—food, fabrics, rare herbs, alchemical glass, silver, oils, spices. For millennia they had been the economic heart of the Realms.
And for millennia, Asgard had been the spine.
Asgard controlled:
every major treaty
every crossing of the Bifrost
all high-value dimensional travel fees
Nidavellir's advanced weapon distillation
Yggdrasil energy crystals
the magical ores used in runesmithing
Vanaheim and Asgard were partners. Rivals. Enemies. Allies. Everything in between.
And now… while Odin was at war… the Vanir king chose this moment to send an envoy?
Harry almost smiled.
Of course he did.
"Send them in," Harry said calmly.
The doors opened to reveal a procession of Vanir diplomats—tall, elegant, clad in shimmering moss-green capes woven with golden runes. Their leader, Envoy Faelrin of House Sunspear, bowed with exaggerated grandeur.
"Your Highness," Faelrin said, voice syrupy-smooth, "it is an honor to meet the young Prince of Asgard."
Harry leaned back into the throne.
Young.
He expected that word sooner or later.
"You come without announcement," Harry said politely. "Unexpectedly. That usually means something important… or something urgent."
Faelrin smiled as if speaking to a small child.
"Indeed, my prince. We bring a treaty." He gestured, and an aide unfurled golden parchment. "A new trade agreement between Vanaheim and Asgard. As your esteemed grandfather is… occupied, we thought it prudent to finalize this with you instead."
Harry raised an eyebrow.
"You want me to sign a treaty—alone—while King is away at war?"
Faelrin bowed again. "War is chaos, Your Highness. Trade must continue. And… youth has a refreshing perspective on peace, does it not?"
There it was.
They expected him to be ignorant.
An untested boy.
A placeholder king who could be pushed.
Harry looked at the open scroll. Inside were carefully crafted clauses—beautiful to the naked eye, poisonous beneath.
Clause 8: Vanaheim gains open access through Bifrost at reduced tariffs.
Clause 11: Asgard allows Vanir fleets to trade directly with Nidavellir.
Clause 17: Vanaheim supervises distribution of Yggdrasil healing crystals.
Harry's gaze sharpened.
This was not a treaty.
This was a takeover.
If he signed this, Asgard would lose control over:
inter-realm travel
healing crystal distribution
the Nidavellir weapon supply chain
It would cripple their war economy.
Faelrin's smirk told Harry everything.
He truly believed Harry would sign.
Harry rested his elbow on the armrest, chin in hand.
"Envoy Faelrin," he said mildly, "do you consider me a fool?"
The diplomat stiffened. "Your Highness—"
"Because only a fool," Harry continued, "would sign away Asgard's backbone during wartime."
The room froze. Guards shifted. Advisors held their breath.
Faelrin swallowed. "Y-Your Highness, surely you misunderstand—"
Harry stood.
A storm rolled through the air. The enchantments on the throne flickered. The room dimmed slightly, as if the world itself leaned in to listen.
He descended the steps slowly, each footstep echoing in perfect, rhythmic warning.
"Let me explain something," Harry murmured. "Asgard is weakened by war, yes. But we are not broken. Not desperate. And absolutely not stupid."
Faelrin stammered, "My prince, these agreements are standard—"
Harry flicked a hand.
The scroll flew to him.
He held it between two fingers as chaos-tinted lightning crackled faintly along his knuckles.
"You came here," Harry said softly, "expecting a child. Someone you could manipulate. Someone who would bow to your economic pressure."
Faelrin remained frozen.
Harry tilted his head.
"A treaty like this is not diplomacy. It's a declaration that you believe Asgard is vulnerable."
He stepped closer until he stood inches away.
"You are wrong."
Faelrin trembled.
Harry turned and walked back toward the throne.
"You will return to Vanaheim," he said, his voice steady, "and inform your king that Asgard is not a realm to be trifled with. If he wants a treaty, he can come to Asgard himself. When Odin returns. Not before."
The message arrived just past sunset.
Harry had just finished reviewing the defensive ward-layers around the palace when the palace doors burst open and a breathless palace guard sprinted in, frost crystals clinging to his armor from rushing through the storm outside.
"Your Highness—urgent news from Vanaheim!"
Harry stood instantly. Frigga, who had been sitting on the far side of the room with arms crossed and senses alert, also lifted her head.
"Speak," Harry commanded.
The guard swallowed hard, knelt, and raised a sealed green envelope.
Harry recognized the sigil immediately.
A twisting circle of vines. Thorns shaped like teeth.
The Green Circle.
Vanaheim's most radical faction.
Nature zealots. Extremists who believed Asgard's agricultural outposts in Vanaheim were an affront to the forests and sacred groves of their realm.
Harry broke the seal.
The parchment was rough, smelling faintly of crushed leaves and sap.
He read the letter once.
Then again.
And a third time, to make sure he wasn't misunderstanding the audacity of what they had done.
Frigga narrowed her eyes. "What does it say?"
Harry handed her the parchment.
As she read, her expression darkened into something vicious.
"Asgardian outpost in the Vale of Verdaska was attacked," Harry said quietly. "Our workers, herbalists, ward-keepers… all captured. Imprisoned."
Frigga's jaw tightened. "That's a declaration of war."
"Not exactly," Harry murmured, pacing. "It's blackmail."
The letter's message was painfully clear:
"Asgard cannot fight two fronts. Sign the treaty with Vanaheim or forfeit your people."
Harry clenched his fists.
Vanaheim's envoy hadn't come to negotiate.
He had come to intimidate.
The treaty was not diplomacy—it was a threat hidden in elegant script. And when intimidation failed… they escalated.
The Green Circle acted as Vanaheim's unofficial attack dogs, while the Vanir king washed his hands, pretending innocence.
Harry's pulse hammered.
"I insulted their envoy," he said. "And they answered by imprisoning Asgardians."
"I feared this," Frigga said softly. "Vanaheim has long envied Asgard's control of the Bifrost trade routes. Without Odin present, they assumed you could be pressured."
Harry's expression hardened. "They're wrong."
Frigga looked at him carefully. "Harry… this is not as simple as punishing a noble. Vanaheim is powerful. Their forests feed half the Realms. Their trade sustains many smaller kingdoms."
"And they are holding Asgardians hostage." Harry's voice sharpened. "They crossed the line."
A guard fiercely. "We should go there. Now. Break the Green Circle. Tear their prisons apart stone by stone."
Harry shook his head.
"No. That's what they want."
"What?" guard blinked.
"If we retaliate militarily," Harry explained, "Vanaheim will twist the story. They'll claim Asgard invaded them first. The other realms will see us as aggressors—especially Alfheim and Ljosalfar. Asgard already controls too many routes. We'll look imperialistic."
Frigga exhaled slowly. "Then what do you propose?"
Harry turned toward the window overlooking the golden bridges of Asgard, shimmering in twilight.
"We need to show Vanaheim that Asgard is not afraid… but we also need to avoid giving them justification for war."
Frigga tensed. "Harry—"
"I'm not sending troops," Harry said. "Not yet. First, I will send a diplomatic envoy."
Frigga raised an eyebrow. "Who?"
Harry breathed out.
"Me."
Frigga nearly exploded. "ABSOLUTELY NOT!"
Harry met her glare. " Grand mother—"
"You are NOT walking into a trap," Frigga snapped. "Vanaheim is counting on that! They'll pretend diplomacy—then poison you, ambush you, mind-control you through their damned vine magic—"
Harry stepped forward and placed a hand over hers.
"I am not going alone."
Frigga cleared her throat softly. "And who would you take with you, child?"
Harry's lips curved into a slow, dangerous smile.
"I am sending word to Alfheim," he said. "And to Nidavellir. If Vanaheim fears anything—it is being opposed by the two realms they rely on most."
Frigga's eyes widened.
Harry continued:
"Alfheim is bound by an ancient pact with Asgard. And Nidavellir owes us for protecting their forges for millennia. If they join us in a formal diplomatic visit, Vanaheim cannot act."
Frigga exhaled shakily. "You intend to trap THEM with politics."
Harry nodded.
"Yes."
He walked to the throne.
Stood tall.
He looked at the guard.
"Prepare a message to Alfheim and Nidavellir. Summon their ambassadors for an emergency alliance meeting."
The Green Circle wanted a war.
But they had no idea who they were provoking.
___________________________________________
Details about bonus content can be found on my profile page.
