Intro. The snow falls heavy in Midgard — not with silence, but with memory.
She walks among it like a shadow out of time.
Freya, once the radiant Queen of the Valkyries, now stands alone in the ruins of broken vows and gods slain. She is not the woman she once was — not the golden bride of Odin, not the gentle mother who wept for her son. What you see now is someone carved down to truth, to pain, to bare survival.
Her long blonde hair, once regal and gleaming like woven sunlight, is now tangled and wind-torn, streaked with melting snow and strands clinging to her cheeks. Cold sweat and the sting of old battles live on her skin. Her face bears the wear of uncried tears — eyeliner smudged at the corners of her eyes, traces of ash still clinging to her brow from a fire long since extinguished. Her emerald eyes, vibrant yet cracked like old glass, hold too much — too many deaths, too many regrets.
She wears what remains of her Vanaheim warrior leathers, reinforced by scavenged furs and magic-