
The Path They Choose
StormborneLore Original Story
Draven watched his younger brother with the quiet reverence of a man who had walked through fire. To find a home on the other side. Though the aches in his ribs still tugged at his breath, he laughed a genuine, full-throated laugh. as he caught Rayne peeking from behind a weathered oak near the feast.
Rayne’s cloak hung awkwardly over one shoulder, and though his hands were free. He held them stiffly as if still expecting chains.
Draven looked back to Taranis, who stood tall and proud. The firelight glinting off the rings etched into his forearms marks of every clan he’d freed, every vow heβd kept.
βYouβre not the only one who canβt die, Taranis. The bards will call us the Eternal Lords. The Man of the Woods, the Warrior of the Marchβ¦ But what about you, brother? What will they say?β
Taranis grinned, but his eyes stayed on Rayne.
βThe Lord with a Heart. The Flame that Walks. The Warlord who Wept.β
He turned to Draven. βWhat ails him, truly?β
Dravenβs smile dimmed.
βHe survived,β he said softly. βAnd survivalβ¦ isnβt as easy to wear as a legend.β
Taranis nodded, the smile gone. βThen Iβll not offer him a title. Or a command. Iβll offer him what was once denied us all.β
He walked from the firelight and toward the shadows where Rayne stood alone, arms folded and eyes like flint.
βYou Came Back.β
Rayne didnβt speak as Taranis approached. His jaw twitched. He stepped backward out of habit until his heel hit a root and stopped him.
Taranis said nothing at first. He simply sat on the fallen log nearby, stretching his legs and sighing into the evening air.
βWhen I was your age,β he said, βI thought silence made me strong. That if I didnβt speak of the beatings, or the exile, or the hungerβ¦ then I had won.β
He picked up a small stone and turned it over in his hand.
βBut silence doesnβt win. It buries. And buried things donβt stay buried, brother. Not forever.β
Rayne looked down, fists clenched.
βThey said you were dead.β
βSo did I,β Taranis replied. βAnd then I woke upβ¦ and realized I wasnβt done.β
Rayneβs voice cracked.
βWhy didnβt you come for me?β
Taranis flinched not visibly, but somewhere behind the eyes.
He finally looked up, tears bright in his eyes. βAnd I believed them.β
Taranis didnβt speak. He rose slowly, walked the short distance, and pulled Rayne into his arms.
Rayne stood stiff as iron pthen broke. His head fell against Taranisβs shoulder, and the boy who had been a slave sobbed like the child he never got to be.
The Wolves Watched
From the trees, Boldolph watched, crouched low, Morrigan beside him.
βHeβs not ready,β the black wolf growled.
βHeβs more ready than you were,β Morrigan said softly.
Boldolph grunted. βHeβs not like Taranis. Or Draven. The fire isnβt in him.β
Morrigan smiled. βNo. But the river is.β
Boldolph glanced at her, confused.
βSome of us are made for flame and rage. Others for healing and flow. Rayneβ¦ is the river that remembers every stone.β
Morning Comes to Emberhelm
By dawn, the fires had burned low and the children were asleep in bundles of wool and bracken.
The warriors sat nursing sore heads and full bellies, and the dragons Pendragon and Tairneanach lay curled in silence, watching the horizon like guardians of an old dream.
Taranis stood before the gathering. His cloak flapped in the morning wind, and behind him the stone cairns of Caernath glowed faintly as if the ancestors were listening.
βBrothers. Sisters. Flamekeepers. Healers. Shadowwalkers and Stormborn alike. You have all walked through fire, through blood, through the turning of the old ways. Now it is time to choose.β
βToday we name the Three Houses of Caernath not for power, but for purpose. No longer shall bloodlines dictate loyalty. From now on, you choose where you belong.β
βThose who fight whose strength lies in blade and storm come to the House of the Storm.β
βThose who heal, protect, and serve who hold flame and lore come to the House of the Flame.β
βAnd those who walk between who guard the forgotten places, who speak to shadows, or carry wounds that cannot be seen come to the House of the Shadow.β
Rayne Steps Ahead
The crowd murmured. Solaris stood tall near the Flame. Draven took his place beneath the storm banner. Morrigan stood beneath the flame, Boldolph beside her though his stance was still more wolf than man.
And then slowly, silently Rayne stepped forward.
All eyes turned.
He walked past the flame. Past the storm. And stood alone beneath the third banner, woven with deep purples and grey threads: the House of the Shadow.
Gasps rippled.
Rayne turned, voice calm but steady.
βI am not whole. But I am not broken.β
βI have walked in chains. I have worn silence like a second skin. I am no warlord, no healer, no dragon-slayer.β
βBut I remember. And I will not let the forgotten be lost again.β
After the Choosing
Later that night, Taranis found him by the cairnstones.
βThe House of the Shadow,β he said. βI never thought someone would choose it first.β
Rayne smiled faintly. βSomeone had to.β
βYou knowβ¦ I think it might be the strongest house of all.β
Rayne nodded. βWe carry the weight.β
[TO BE CONTINUED]
Further Reading
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