1,230 Years Before Canon — After the Abduction Attempt
Mephisto had miscalculated once.
He would not be allowed to do so twice.
The attempted abduction of the Godlings did not simply provoke retaliation.
It awakened something older.
Not rage.
Not vengeance.
Authority.
When an All-Father chooses not to descend physically, it is not weakness.
It is containment.
Both Conri and Odin understood that a full divine manifestation would fracture the Silence.
So they released something else.
Their Wraiths.
Not spirits.
Not projections.
Wraiths were distilled sovereignty.
Embodiments of divine will without total presence.
Conri's Wraith appeared as a towering silhouette of silver-black light, crowned in lunar fire and edged in predatory calm.
Odin's Wraith burned gold, one-eyed and rune-carved, spear formed from compressed storm law.
They did not announce themselves.
They entered Mephisto's domain uninvited.
Mephisto ruled his realm through manipulation and torment.
He expected reprisal.
He did not expect coordination.
The two Wraiths did not argue.
They did not posture.
They advanced.
Mephisto reshaped his realm instantly:
Mountains of screaming stone.
Rivers of inverted gravity.
Contracts weaponized as chains.
Odin's Wraith shattered the first wave with runic authority.
Conri's Wraith did not attack immediately.
He anchored the realm.
That was the difference.
Odin destroyed.
Conri removed escape.
Mephisto attempted to phase through layered dimensions—
And found them sealed.
The battle was not explosive.
It was surgical.
Odin pierced Mephisto's core manifestation with a spear formed of condensed fate.
Conri's presence destabilized infernal sovereignty itself.
For the first time in ages—
Mephisto felt mortality.
Not theatrical defeat.
Actual risk.
His essence began unraveling.
Hell's hierarchy trembled.
Lower demons fled.
The balance of damnation itself flickered.
Odin would have ended him.
There was no hesitation in the All-Father of Asgard at that moment.
But Conri intervened.
Not to save Mephisto.
To preserve equilibrium.
Killing Mephisto outright would:
Collapse a dimension.
Create a vacuum predators worse than him would fill.
Trigger Celestial inquiry into pantheon escalation.
Conri spoke only once:
"Punishment is required. Extinction is imbalance."
Mephisto, fractured and barely cohesive, understood.
He was not spared out of mercy.
He was spared because he served a function.
Conri placed a binding across Mephisto's dominion:
He would never again directly target the Godlings of Valmythra or Asgard.
Violation would nullify protection of his realm.
A clause older than infernal contracts.
Mephisto accepted.
He had no choice.
After the Wraiths withdrew, Conri and Odin met physically.
Not as projections.
As kings.
Their long-standing tension resurfaced.
The sealing of Hela had fractured trust.
Hela's imprisonment had been necessary—
But Odin had acted unilaterally.
Conri had seen it as pride over prudence.
Odin had seen it as duty over debate.
Their disappointment in each other had lingered for centuries.
This battle forced clarity.
Odin spoke first:
"You thought me reckless."
Conri replied calmly:
"I thought you afraid to admit miscalculation."
Silence followed.
Then acknowledgment.
Both had erred in different ways.
Both had protected their realms imperfectly.
But against Mephisto—
They had functioned flawlessly.
The settlement was not dramatic.
It was simple.
Mutual recognition.
Shared guardianship.
No more hidden grievances regarding Hela.
Future threats would be met jointly.
It was not friendship restored through sentiment.
It was restored through action.
Conri had spared Mephisto.
That did not mean consequences were concluded.
Valmythra mobilized.
Not for annihilation.
For demonstration.
Their assault was precise and overwhelming.
Strike teams composed of:
Lunar phalanxes.
Arcane tacticians.
Echo-bound warriors attuned to Valdaryn's resonance.
They did not invade indiscriminately.
They targeted infrastructure:
Contract archives burned.
Soul-funnels severed.
Demonic supply lines collapsed.
Torture nexuses dismantled.
Hell was not destroyed.
It was humiliated.
Mephisto could not retaliate.
The binding held.
His realm stabilized—but diminished.
The message was unmistakable:
Valmythra does not overextend.
But it does not forgive attacks on it's heir.
The ripple was immediate.
Olympians paused their rivalries.
The Egyptian Ennead recalculated Earth engagement policies.
Lesser demon lords revised targeting hierarchies.
Even abstract dimensional entities adjusted observation patterns.
Because the event revealed something critical:
Conri did not rage.
He calibrated.
And when he acted—
He acted completely.
A saying began circulating among mystic circles and divine courts alike:
"Never attack a wolf protecting its cubs,
for it will bite back beyond imagination."
The metaphor spread across realms.
The Wolf became symbolic of Conri.
Not savage.
Not reckless.
Protective.
Relentless when provoked.
The Godlings' status shifted from potential assets—
To untouchable constants.
Even entities who despised pantheons acknowledged the new boundary.
The Godlings recovered fully over time.
But they felt the ripple of what occurred.
They understood something most immortals learn too late:
Protection is not weakness.
It is strategic patience until lines are crossed.
Rowena's injury healed.
But it deepened her resolve.
Ametheon refined counter-infernal doctrines.
Thor's respect for Conri solidified.
Loki quietly studied the mechanics of Wraith manifestation.
Odin and Conri corresponded more frequently thereafter.
Not socially.
Strategically.
The Celestials observed the event with heightened interest.
Their conclusion:
"Escalation contained.
Balance preserved.
Defensive cohesion exemplary."
Earth's developmental trajectory was upgraded again.
Not because it avoided conflict.
But because it survived conflict without destabilizing cosmic law
Within his diminished throne, Mephisto contemplated a truth he disliked:
He had attacked heirs.
He had faced kings.
He had nearly ceased to exist.
And he now understood—
Conri was not a conqueror.
He was a systems architect.
Destroying him would require dismantling equilibrium itself.
That was far more dangerous than war.
