How Thor got his hammer - Scott A. Mellor
 Loki the mischief-maker, was writhing
 uncomfortably in Thor’s iron grip.
  The previous night, while the rest of the
 gods slept, he’d snuck up on Thor’s wife
  Sif and shorn off her beautiful hair.
  It’d seemed like a funny 
 prank at the time,
  but now Thor was about to
 break every bone in his body.
  Loki had to think of some
 way to fix what he’d done.
  Yet who could replace Sif’s matchless
 hair, golden like a field of summer wheat?
  The dwarves! – their legendary
 smiths could make anything.
  So Loki rushed to their realm, 
 deep within the mountains of the earth.
  Even before he arrived, the wily Loki was
 already scheming
  how he would get the
 dwarves to do his bidding.
  He decided that his best bet was to pit
 two families against each other.
  He first visited the masterful
 sons of Ivaldi. 
  He told them that their rivals,
 a pair of brothers named Brokk and Eitri,
  had claimed that they were the best
 craftsmen in the world
  and were determined to prove
 it in a competition.
  The rules were that each family had to 
 create three gifts for the gods,
  including, for the Ivaldis, golden hair.
  Then Loki visited Brokk and Eitri,
 and told them the same thing, 
  only now claiming that the sons
 of Ivaldi had issued the challenge.
  But Brokk and Eitri couldn’t 
 be fooled so easily,
  and only agreed to participate
 if Loki put his own head on the line.
  Literally—if Brokk and Eitri won, 
 Loki would forfeit his head to them.
  Loki had no choice but to agree,
 and to save himself had to find a way
  to make sure the sons of
 Ivaldi emerged victorious.
  Both sets of dwarves got to work.
  Eitri set Brokk to man the bellows and
 told him not to stop for any reason,
  or the treasures would be ruined.
  Soon a strange black fly
 flew into the room.
  As a piece of pigskin was placed in the
 forge, the fly stung Brokk’s hand,
  but he didn’t flinch.
  Next, while Eitri worked a block of gold,
 the fly bit Brokk on the neck.
  The dwarf carried on.
  Finally, Eitri placed a piece
 of iron in the furnace.
  This time the fly landed right on Brokk’s
 eyelid and bit as hard as it could.
  And for just a split second,
 Brokk’s hand left the bellows.
  That’s all it took; their final treasure
 hadn’t stayed in the fire long enough.
  Loki now reappeared in his normal form,
 overjoyed by their failure,
  and accompanied the dwarves to present
 their treasures to the gods.
  First, Loki presented the treasures
 from the sons of Ivaldi.
  Their golden hair bound to Sif’s
 head and continued to grow,
  leaving her even more radiant than before.
  Next, for Odin the all-father,
  a magnificent spear that could
 pierce through anything.
  And finally a small cloth that unfolded
 into a mighty ship built for Freyr,
  god of the harvest.
  Then Brokk presented the treasures
 made by him and his brother.
  For Freyr they’d forged 
 a golden-bristled boar
  who’d pull Freyr’s chariot across
 the sky faster than any mount.
  For Odin, a golden arm ring which would
 make eight more identical rings
  on every ninth night.
  And for Thor, a hammer called Mjolnir.
  Its handle was too short,
 and Loki smirked at the obvious defect.
  But then Brokk revealed its abilities.
  Mjolnir would never shatter, 
 never miss its mark
  and always return
 to Thor’s hand when thrown.
  Despite the short handle, the gods all 
 agreed this was the finest gift of all.
  Remembering what was at stake, Loki tried 
 to flee, but Thor reached him first.
  But before the dwarves could have their due,
  clever Loki pointed out that they had won
 the rights to his head, but not his neck,
  and thus had no right to cut it.
  All begrudgingly admitted the truth in that,
 but Brokk would have the last laugh.
  Taking his brother’s awl,
 he pierced it through Loki’s lips
  and sewed his mouth shut,
  so the trickster god could no longer
 spread his malicious deceit.
  Yet the irony was not lost on the gods.
  For it was Loki’s deceit that had brought
 them these fine treasures
  and given Thor the hammer
 for which he’s still known today.