Ragnarök Rising Read online
Ragnarök Rising
The Omega Prophecy I
Nora Ash
Illustrated by
Natasha Snow Designs
Edited by
RJ Creamer
Copyright © 2019 by Nora Ash
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
This is a work of fiction. Any and all likeness to trademarks, corporations or persons, dead or alive, is purely coincidental.
To Coyote. For your brilliant mind.
To Randie. For your unwavering patience
To Margarita. For your hunt for justice
Contents
Summary
1. Annabel
2. Annabel
3. Annabel
4. Annabel
5. Annabel
6. Annabel
7. Saga
8. Magni
9. Annabel
10. Grim
11. Saga
12. Annabel
13. Annabel
14. Saga
15. Magni
16. Annabel
17. Bjarni
18. Annabel
19. Saga
20. Annabel
21. Magni
22. Saga
23. Annabel
24. Annabel
25. Magni
26. Annabel
Weaving Fate
More Omegaverse
Also by Nora Ash
Summary
Five possessive gods and the end of mankind. That's my fate.
I always thought the end of the world was a myth. But then, I also thought Norse gods were make believe too.
They’re not.
Five of them are coming for me. They claim I will only survive if I surrender to them, body and soul.
But they don’t realize it’s about so much more than carnal servitude. I am so much more than they could ever suspect. So much more than even I knew.
I am the only one who can stop Ragnarök from covering the world in ice and darkness. The only one who can save gods and men alike from annihilation.
And in the shadows lurks betrayal so deep it will change the fate of the world...
Sign up for Nora Ash’s newsletter to receive updates about new books You can also get in touch via Facebook, Twitter & Google+, or drop by her website.
1
Annabel
“Annabel Turner?”
I looked up from where my suitcase’s wheel had managed to lodge itself in a grate just outside Keflavík International Airport. My name, as plain and American as you could get, had never sounded so sonorous before, so exotic rolling off another person’s tongue. The echo of it snatched all the crisp Icelandic air right out of my lungs.
As did the man who’d spoken it. He was leaning against a trolley sign, appraising me the way a jeweler might assess the value of a rare gem. Even from a distance, I caught the silvery flash of his eyes and the way they took me apart piece by piece, twin scalpels cutting away at my clothes to better imagine my body underneath.
I’d expected to work on my thesis, delving into certain aspects of Viking history during my vacation in Iceland—I hadn’t expected to see one in the flesh. The man currently sizing me up as if he were a wolf and I his dinner was most definitely a descendent of the old Norse warriors known to inhabit this region.
I swallowed so hard I almost choked. His thick, muscular arms and the way he folded them over his wide chest, the span of his shoulders and looming height; the way his nostrils flared as he took stock of me, pupils dilated; he was most definitely an alpha.
He was also scenting me.
As my parents’ insistence I take a vacation at their old family friends’ farm in Iceland echoed at the back of my mind, I narrowed my eyes. Since the day I’d turned eighteen, they’d suggested I visit, growing more and more adamant during the past decade until they’d finally insisted. I’d thought they just worried about how hard I was working on my thesis, but the sight of this alpha’s flared nostrils made me suspect there was an ulterior motive in play.
Such as getting their spinster daughter married off.
In past times an alpha in such peak physical condition as this man would already have an obedient omega wife by his side, and possibly a couple of kids. That was the order of things; alphas married omegas, whose sole responsibility it was to bear him offspring, while beta women—such as myself—got to pursue careers in whichever field we pleased and marry a beta of our own choosing. But that was before fertility rates plummeted some thirty years ago, and the birth of omegas became exceedingly rare. These days most alphas were all too happy to claim betas for their wives, stupidly expecting the same servitude from her as they did an omega.
And judging by this Nordic giant’s wry smirk, as he looked me up and down, someone might have suggested I was in the market for a husband.
Dammit, Mom.
I gritted my teeth as I forced my cheeks into a polite smile. If there was one thing I had no interest in, or time for, it was overbearing alpha males. I was on track for a doctorate degree in history, despite her fervent wish that I find a husband. A wish she’d voiced since the day I came of age.
Apparently she’d finally decided to make the leap from insistent nagging to international matchmaking.
“That’s me,” I said, forcing myself to lift my chin and hold his gaze. Sexy Viking here may as well know from the get-go that I’m not the kind of girl to submit to alpha dominance. “You’re one of Arni and Magga’s sons, I take it?” I hadn’t seen any pictures, but I knew my parents’ friends had three sons. And right about now I wished someone would have told me one of them was an alpha.
His lips curved from the insufferable smirk into a devious smile that made my cheeks burn. “Sure am, sweetling. They asked me to pick you up....”
He pushed off the sign he’d been resting against and stalked toward me, muscles coiling beneath his sweater. A distant primal instinct wormed its way to the surface of my brain, an animal warning that straightened my spine. This man—this alpha—cast a shadow tall and wide enough to engulf me that just his presence threatened to devour.
But then he stopped, offering his hand in greeting. “I’m Saga Lokisson.”
“Oh. Right,” I murmured, lowering my hackles as I reached out in return. Maybe I’d misjudged him. Maybe alphas in Iceland knew how to behave themselves. “Nice to meet y—”
Saga grabbed my hand and tugged me into him, plunging my face into his chest, our bodies flush. I took in a lungful of hay and wool from his sweater, pine and smoky black oud, and... something else. Something wilder, headier, that lit me up from the inside out.
As he closed his arms around me to complete our very sudden and very unnecessary hug, I shut my eyes for just a moment, trying to identify the fragrance dripping off him like spiced tupelo honey. With each new breath, the rest of my senses dulled, the din of the airport fading away until I was awash in the tide of his scent, lost to the undertow.
His chest rumbled under my cheek. At first I thought it was laughter, a chuckle at my expense, but as it rattled against his sternum, it felt more… exciting. My pulse quickened and my blood sang in harmony, until a throb low in my belly made me open my eyes again as reality came crashing down on me all at once.
Saga smelled like alpha, but much more potent than I’d ever encountered before. That was what had me enraptured—the sheer scent of him burning its way through all the others, beckoning me to remain in his arms.
Was he that in touch with his nature out here, surrounded by clean arctic air and
unspoiled wilderness?
And why the hell did I care what he smelled like?
Jerking back, I stared straight up at him, a half-formed excuse for my behavior withering on my tongue when his smile widened, a little wrinkle forming above his nose. Just like that, I was back at ease, realizing that while Saga was definitely a tall, powerful alpha, he also couldn’t have been much older than I was. He might have been a big Viking hunk, and apparently I hadn’t gotten laid in way too long if my reaction to him was any indicator, but that didn’t mean I was about to turn into a shrinking violet.
“I… like your sweater,” I said lamely, stepping away from him at last. Immediately, the wind bit into my nape. I hadn’t realized how warm he was keeping me.
“Uh-huh,” he replied around a knowing smirk. No, I firmly corrected myself, not knowing—insufferable. As was that damn lilt in his accent.
Christ, Anna. Get a hold of yourself.
Saga eyed my luggage still stuck in the grate. “Do you need help with that?”
“I can get it,” I began, loath to let him do anything that even remotely resembled saving me. But apparently, I’d mistaken his statement for a question.
With an effortless yank, he freed my bag and grabbed the other one too, lifting them as though I hadn’t stuffed both to the brim with everything I’d needed for my trip. Despite my sigh, or maybe even because of it, he looked quite pleased with himself.
Awesome.
As he slung one bag his shoulder, the contents clattered and he raised a golden brow at me. “Shoes?”
I shot him a look as I smoothed out my clothes, but no matter what I did, the scent of alpha still clung to them—and now to my hands, of course. “Books, actually.”
Saga chuffed through his nose, starting off ahead of me toward the parking lot. “I thought you were on vacation.”
“Well—yeah,” I said, struggling to keep up with his long strides, even though I wasn’t the one weighted down by about a hundred pounds of luggage. “That’s half the reason I’m here. My parents didn’t tell you I’m a historian? My thesis is on the Viking settlement of Iceland, actually, so I’m planning on getting a lot of research done while I’m here.”
He shrugged. “They told us you were coming. Finally. We expected you ten years ago, you know.”
I snorted at his huffy tone. “You can’t seriously be holding a grudge about that. I got accepted into an Ivy League school right out of high school! I wanted to backpack around Europe and meet my parents’ old friends, but I had to put my education first.”
Saga grunted, either unimpressed with my explanation or not paying attention. A stitch pinched my side.
“You could slow down,” I suggested. “Not all of us are built like a giraffe.”
“This is how I walk, sweetling,” he replied as we crossed into the parking lot ahead. “Keep up, or get carried.”
I scowled up at him, squinting against the sun casting a halo around his stupid blond head. “I think I’ll manage.”
His eyes sparkled. “Suit yourself.”
True to his word, Saga didn’t slow down for an instant, maintaining his “leisurely” pace all the way across the lot to where he’d parked his truck.
His truck. Not a car, as he’d said. Throwing my bags unceremoniously into the bed, he left me staring at the back tires. They were almost as tall as I was.
“Need a boost?” Saga asked, using his key fob to unlock the solid black behemoth he expected me to climb into the belly of. When I glared, he grinned. “There’s also a step.”
Coming around to the passenger’s side did, in fact, reveal a step—one that was about level with the tops of my knees.
Fuck.
I opened the door, scanning the interior for a handle to help me hoist myself up, but it too was beyond my reach. “The hell is this, a car for giants?” I muttered, planting my palms on the leather seat instead.
I’d just gotten a knee up onto the step when Saga’s shadow fell over me from behind.
“I gotcha,” he said, and, not waiting for my response, clamped two dinner-plate sized hands tight around my hips.
I yelped when he dug his fingers into my hips and pushed me up, tossing me into the passenger seat just as nonchalantly as he had disposed of my luggage. I whipped around to stare at him, only to find myself at eye level. Good Christ, he was tall.
He wet his lips before speaking, and I absolutely hated it—that slow slide of his tongue like he was tasting my breath on his face. “Should I buckle you in too, sweetling?”
“Are you always like this?” I hissed, furious at how at ease he seemed, at how his exquisite scent thickened in the air between us when I had nowhere to hide from it. His arms blocked my exit, his body an obstacle I could never hope to surmount. God, how I hated alphas.
Another low, insistent pulse rippled through me, all the way into my tailbone this time. The muscles in my hips tightened like a cramp, only I wasn’t due for my period. When I grimaced, Saga smirked.
“No,” he purred. “You bring it out of me.”
He shut my door and I flinched, so quickly cut off from his scent it made me dizzy. Or maybe that was the weird way my muscles were spasming. It crept into my lower back now, a sensation of stretching and thinning that made sitting like this uncomfortable, so much so that when Saga slid easily into the driver’s seat, started the engine, and turned on the seat warmers, I was forced to be grateful.
“Thank you,” I mumbled as he closed his door.
“Anything you want, just ask,” he purred, the rasp in his throat shooting pangs through my abdomen. Damn alpha. But he could bait me as much as he wanted—it wouldn’t get him anywhere.
I was completely in control.
2
Annabel
I stared up at the complex of buildings before me, jaw sagging and eyes wide. “You told me this was a farm.”
“It is a farm,” Saga said, parking his truck inside of a detached carport with a turf roof. “We have animals.”
“You have a compound!” I replied, laughing in disbelief. “There must be… what, six, seven buildings here?”
“Eight,” he corrected, then shrugged. “It’s a big farm. Come. We will take your things inside.”
He killed the engine and the seat warmers suffered a slow death with it. I missed them immediately, but as they waned, I found the ache in my pelvis and back had passed, and I breathed a sigh of relief. Maybe something I’d eaten on the plane hadn’t agreed with me. In-flight meals weren’t exactly known for their quality. Or it could have been all that time I spent sitting there. First-class seating was pretty comfortable, but it definitely wasn’t ergonomic.
Whatever the case, I got out of Saga’s truck feeling way more at ease than I had when I’d climbed into it. The drive out here had taken a while, around two hours and forty-five minutes, but it was pretty pleasant in that the scenery was gorgeous and Saga didn’t talk much. He was way less annoying when words weren’t coming out of his mouth and his hands were occupied on the wheel. He was nice to look at, though, and admittedly I’d spent a good portion of our ride committing his features to memory. Maybe I’d write about him in my dissertation. Just... leaving out all the aggravating parts.
That wouldn’t leave me with much material, though.
“Do you know much about your genealogy?” I asked him as I walked around the back of the truck. He was unloading my bags, the wind tearing locks of his blond hair free from his ponytail.
“Less than some, more than others.” He hopped down from the bed and shut the tailgate. “Why?”
I shrugged, looking out over the hill we’d driven up to get here. The Lokissons’ farm was insanely isolated, even more so than I would have expected for the Icelandic countryside. Besides grassy plains interrupted by the occasional hill or knoll, there wasn’t much out this way. The landscape was breathtaking, though.
“I know a lot of Norsemen came here originally. I was curious if your family was related to any of them. If y
ou had some kind of history here on the island.”
One corner of his mouth twitched into a lopsided smirk. “And here I thought you were interested in my pedigree. That you might want tall, blond babies someday.”
I sighed, rolling my eyes as I followed him up the stone walk toward the main house. “I’ll just ask Magga or Arni. Or your brothers, if any of them know.”
As we rounded a bend, the earth gave way into a man-made pond. The portion of the property I’d thought was built on stilts actually sat atop an entire story comprised of floor-to-ceiling windows. Much of them sat below the level of the water, offering what must have been one hell of a view of the pond’s contents.
“You have fish here?” I asked him, momentarily distracted.
“Yes,” Saga answered. “But Magga and Arni are not.”
I snapped my head around to stare at him. “What? Why?”
He paused, glancing at the pond, then at me. “It’s heated. So they don’t get cold and die.”
“Not the fish!” I huffed. “Your parents. Where are they? I thought….”
“You thought they’d be here to guard your virtue from their big, bad alpha sons?” he teased.
Great. So they were all alphas.
This was not the first time I’d glared at him since we met, but every time I did, it only amused him. His nostrils flared as he blew a laugh through his nose. “They’ll be back. You have nothing to fear.”