Chapter 52: Fenrir the Demon Wolf (2)

There are stately castles all over the kingdom of the gods, and the rushing waves are constantly biting the feet of the castles. On the hill where the eagle crouched, there were endless palaces, the most majestic of which was Odin's Golden Palace.

Valhalla, the hall of the Golden Palace, is covered with spears and chairs, and in the center stands the Golden Throne of the High Throne, from which Odin, the father of the gods, looks around the heavens and the earth.

The high branches of the World Tree shade the "Golden Palace", the castle where Odin, the father of the gods, lives, and at the top of the golden roof of the castle stands a golden-crowned rooster who is responsible for awakening the gods every morning.

When this rooster crows, the red rooster of the Nether Dead Country also responds to him, resulting in a noisy and sharp "time".

At the top of the world where the Kingdom of Aesir is located is the Golden Palace. Inside lives a creature called the goblins, a maggot-transformed creature on the corpse of the god of light of the First Age, who possess a faint divine nature compared to the gods, but still possess great divine powers, much higher than humans. The light fairy was born very beautiful, and wore elegant and transparent clothes, shining brighter than the sun.

They love light the most, they are kind and kind little goblins, and they play happily under the light of the sun. They tend to the flowers, play with the birds and butterflies, and sometimes they can be seen dancing on the green grass on a moonlit night.

Fenrir was very fond of the pretty little goblins, and at first the goblins were fond of the cute puppy, but as time went on, they became more and more afraid of him, and they played with him even more lonely, and he often cherished the days in the Iron Forest with his brother Jörmungadr and sister Hela.

The Iron Forest is cold and ugly, and has no beauty, unlike the beauty and comfort of the Kingdom of God that is like spring all year round, but there are relatives there who really love him, and for him, the cold Iron Forest is very warm.

Fenrir went from being a cute puppy to a giant wolf-like monster with his upper and lower jaws that could hold up to heaven and earth when he opened his mouth. He hated and hated the gods who killed his mother and banished his younger siblings.

One day, he left the divine realm and came to the Iron Forest, where he lived in his childhood. There he meets a petite Giantess of the Wind who is chasing a rabbit, and of course, the so-called Petite is the rest of the relative giant group. Most giantesses are ugly and rude, but the Giantess of the Wind in front of her is as beautiful as Fenrir's mother, the Frost Giantess.

Fenrir and the Giantess of the Wind fell in love, and together they had two sons, Hattie and Skull. Scull is a wolf who chases the sun, and the name means betrayal. Hatti is a wolf who chases the moon, and the name means disgust.

Fenrir became more and more vicious, and he never hid his dislike for the gods, provoking them from time to time. The gods feared that Fenrir would grow stronger and stronger, and there were prophecies that he would destroy the Protoss, so the gods decided to tie him up. The first two times he was easily broken, both times made of steel, but the second time was far stronger than the first.

Odin enlisted a dwarf forger to create a magical lock of absurdity, which looks smooth and supple, but is actually forged from six magical materials: the footsteps of a cat, the roots of a stone, the beard of a woman, the breath of a fish, the vigilance of a bear, and the saliva of a bird.

After a lot of intrigue and intrigue, Fenrir was forever bound to a boulder by this delicate chain. He was terrified, and struggled and jumped with all his strength, but he could not break the chain, which was the chain of magic.

When the gods understood that Fenrir was completely bound, they took a rope known as Gelgar, tightened it further from Fenrir, and threaded the rope through a large stone tablet called Chior. After that, the gods took a huge rock called Teviti, stuck it deep in the ground, and used it as a stake to secure the rope.

Fenrir reacted violently, his mouth wide open, trying to attack the gods. Because Fenrir's body was so large, his open jaws almost touched the sky and the ground. So the gods took the opportunity to place a sword in his mouth, the hilt of the sword touched the lower jaw, and the tip of the sword was against the upper jaw, and the wolf's bloody jaw was parted, and the wolf let out a terrifying roar from the sting as soon as it tried to close. The sword made it impossible for him to close his mouth, and at the same time, saliva continued to drip from his mouth, forming a poisonous river, Vahn.

Fenrir was bound to the boulder of Tweti and could not leave, and he sometimes heard about his father and younger siblings from the gods who passed by.

His father, Loki, was often able to use his wisdom and cunning to solve the problems of the gods. He tricked the giants into building the walls of Asgard, and he became a mare and gave birth to the eight-legged pony Slepnis, who later accompanied the god king Odin on his conquests.

Loki also continued his shenanigans among the gods, deceitful and arbitrary. He was hunted down by Thor while Thor's wife, Siv, slept, and cut her long blonde hair, which shone more beautiful than gold, while she slept. Eventually, the dwarves were tricked into creating Mjournier (Mjolnir) and Siv with the same gold-like hair that could grow.

He also instigated the blind god of darkness Hoddle to throw the mistletoe spike at Badr, and the mistletoe spike pierced Badr's chest like a spear, and Badr's snow-white robe was immediately stained red with blood, and Badr died of exhaustion.

Until one day, when the gods held a banquet at Egil's side, Loki mocked all the gods at the banquet, and even revealed himself to be the real culprit of Badr's death. It was only when Thor, the god of thunder and power, arrived, that Loki finally stopped. Loki tries to escape, but he is captured by Thor.

After killing Badr, Loki received the harshest punishment. Odin turned Loki's son Wally, born to his third wife, into a wolf, and had him bite his brother Nalver to death and bind Loki with Nalver's intestines. Then summoned a huge viper, and from between its terrible fangs, it dripped drop after drop of venom and landed on Loki's face, not stopping for a second.

Only Loki's wife, Sigern, sympathized with him, and she sat next to the bound Loki and used the cup to bear the venom so that it would not fall on her husband's face. But every time the cup overflows with venom, she must stand up and pour it out, at which point the skin on Loki's face will be burned with the venom. In the midst of terror and pain, Loki wept and trembled, even causing an earthquake.