The Houses of Caernath. Part 4

The Wolf and His Warlord

The scent of blood still hung on the morning mist. Mingling with the smoke from the still-burning ridge beyond Emberhelm’s eastern watch.

The gates had only just been sealed behind the last returning scouts. The courtyard was filled with low murmurs and the clang of steel being resharpened.

Taranis Stormborne stood alone beneath the stone arch, his shoulders squared but his body streaked in ash and dried blood. The battle had ended. Victory had been claimed.

And yet, the courtyard was quiet. Too quiet.

Then came the growl.

It rumbled low at first, barely more than a whisper on the wind. Before shaping itself into something unmistakable the warning bark of a wolf that knew disappointment far more intimately than fear.

Boldolph emerged from the shadow of the stables, his half-wolf form towering, claws still sheathed in crusted gore. His red eyes burned with something deeper than rage. Not fury. Not even grief.

It was wrath tempered by love.

“You damned fool,” Boldolph snarled, stalking toward the warlord. “You should’ve waited.”

Taranis didn’t flinch. He met the wolf-man’s gaze with that same infuriating storm-steeled calm. “I had to act.”

“You had to die?” Boldolph’s snarl cut through the air. “That’s what you wanted? To fall alone so the bards sing about it later?”

“I had to protect them,” Taranis snapped. “The Black Claw”

“Were expecting you.” Boldolph’s voice was thunder now, claws clenched at his sides. “They wanted you to come alone. You gave them exactly what they needed — the head of the storm without the wind behind him.”

Taranis looked away. The silence between them thickened.

Boldolph stepped closer. “You are the High Warlord now. You bear the storm in your veins and ride the dragon in the sky. But to me, you’re still that cub who couldn’t see the trap until he stepped into it.”

Taranis said nothing. He couldn’t. Not when he knew Boldolph was right.

Taranis moved to speak, but Boldolph raised a clawed hand.

“No,” the wolf-man growled. “You don’t get to explain it away with honor or duty or some poetic rot about sacrifice. You’ve earned your scars, Taranis but so have we. And we didn’t survive hell just to watch you walk back into it alone.”

The warlord took a breath. His face, still smeared with ash and dried ichor, softened. “I thought”

“That’s the problem,” Boldolph snapped, “you thought. You didn’t ask. Not me, not Lore, not Drax, not Solaris. You didn’t trust any of us to stand beside you.”

Taranis’s jaw clenched. “I trust you all with my life.”

“Then why won’t you trust us with your death?”

The words struck like a hammer.

Taranis staggered a step back not from force, but from the weight of truth. Boldolph’s eyes didn’t waver.

He looked less like a beast and more like a grieving elder. Wearied by a child who couldn’t yet see his own worth beyond the blade.

“You think being the High Warlord means dying on your feet,” Boldolph said, voice roughening. “But what it really means is living long enough to carry others. That’s what the storm is for. Not just to burn. To shield.”

The fire pits crackled in the stillness. From the northern walkway, Lore stood quietly, arms folded, having heard the last of it. He said nothing only nodded to Boldolph, and then vanished back into the shadows.

“You’re not alone anymore,” Boldolph continued, softer now. “You have brothers again. You have warriors, wolves, dragons. And you have people who’d bleed for you, not because you command them but because they love you.”

Taranis sat slowly on the stone steps beside the training pit. For once, the weight of his own armor seemed too much to bear. “I’ve spent so long fighting to survive,” he said, staring at the sky. “It’s hard to let go of that.”

“I know,” Boldolph murmured. “But surviving isn’t living. And we didn’t break our curses just to watch you chain yourself to a ghost.”

The wolf-man crouched beside him, joints creaking.

“I made a vow to your father when you were exiled. I swore to watch over you even when you didn’t know I was near. I failed once. I won’t again.”

Taranis turned to him. “You were there… even then?”

Boldolph nodded. “Always.”

They sat in silence, the roar of the battlefield replaced by the quiet whistle of wind between towers. In the distance, children’s laughter echoed from the lower courtyard. where Morrigan was teaching younglings to bind wounds with willow bark and song.

Boldolph sighed. “You need to speak to them. To all of them. Tell them what you’re fighting for. What we’re building.”

“I don’t know what to say.”

“Then let your silence be honest. But show them, Taranis. Not the warlord the man. The brother. The one who came back from the brink and built something no storm can wash away.”

Taranis stood slowly, shoulders still tense, but eyes clearer.

“You’re right,” he said. “I’ve been leading from the front but I’ve been doing it like I’m still alone. Like that eight-year-old boy who was cast out into the wilds.”

Boldolph rose beside him, towering and fierce. “Then stop being that boy. And become the storm the world remembers.”

Taranis gave a faint smile. “You’re more of a father than ours ever was.”

“I know,” Boldolph grunted. “You lot are exhausting.”

“Drax I’m sorry please forgive me’ tanaris told his oldest brother “just. ‘ 

“No I’m not hearing excuses young brother. You know boldolph asked morigan if he eat either you or your dragons ” Drax smirked 

“that…that is definitely something Boldolph would say. I trust my mother wolf said no” Tanaris grinned. AS he folded his arms with a grin as morigan gave him a cautionary look.

Further Reading

The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

The Chronicles of Drax

A Journey Through My Poetic Collection

Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne


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