The Seer sat hunched before the fire, his breath slow and shallow, each exhale stirring the flickering flames. Though blind, his mind was filled with images more vivid than any mortal could comprehend. He saw through the eyes of those touched by fate, their dreams woven into a single tapestry of prophecy.
In the smoke that curled above the fire, he saw it—the dream. It came to him in fragments, carried by the gods themselves. A white raven, gliding effortlessly through the sky, its wings wide and luminous. Below it, the waves crashed violently, the sea dark and foreboding. Circling the white raven, a black raven, its feathers gleaming like obsidian, its presence heavy with shadows.
The ravens moved in tandem, bound by some force neither could resist. Around the neck of the white raven hung a jewel—a brilliant blue stone encased in a delicate collar, entwining the symbols of Freya and Thor. The hammer and the sun, one with the other, together yet opposite. Power and beauty. Strength and light.
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As the ravens danced above the storm-tossed sea, the Seer felt the tug of their fates, intertwined and inseparable. He could sense the weight of their destinies drawing nearer, two paths converging, two souls bound by something far greater than themselves.
“Freya watches over her,” the Seer whispered to the flames. “But Thor’s hammer guides him. The gods’ hands are in this. They spin the threads tighter, pulling them together, toward something vast, something unstoppable.”
The vision pulsed in his mind, merging Ragnar and Teaghen’s dreams into one unified truth. The ravens, the sea, the jewel—all of it swirled together in a cosmic dance, dictated by forces beyond human control.
And as the vision faded, leaving only the soft crackle of the fire and the damp earth beneath his feet, the Seer breathed out a final prophecy, his voice heavy with the weight of what was to come:
“And so the universe turns, as the will of the gods flow and they draw closer.”