The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Five

The Weight of the Sky


The sky over Emberhelm was the colour of old iron, restless with the promise of rain.


Drax stood on the outer wall, eyes on the valley below, where the last of the summer haze clung to the river. Beside him, Taranis rested both hands on the stone, watching the horizon as though it might bite.

“You’re quieter than usual,” Drax said.

“I’m listening.”

“To what?”

“The wind,” Taranis murmured. “It changes when something’s coming.”

A raven cut the sky, wings beating hard against the weather. It landed on the wall, a thin strip of leather tied to its leg. Drax caught it, untied the strip, and read the message aloud:

Strangers on the ridge. Armed. Not raiders. Moving slow.

Taranis’s jaw flexed. “Slow means they know we’re watching.”

“Could be traders.”

“Could be worse.” His gaze didn’t leave the valley. “Tell the scouts to shadow them. No contact. Not yet.”

Drax nodded, but his eyes caught something else his brother’s hand, hovering near the hilt of his sword even now, when there was no battle to fight.

The Sacred Grove

The grove smelled of damp earth and crushed mint where the rains had touched the leaves. Nessa sat with Caelum in the shadow of an ancient oak, rocking the carved crib gently with her boot.

“You were born into a dangerous world,” she whispered to the child. “But so was I.”

The voice came from behind her, thin as wind through reeds. “Danger shapes the strong, girl.”

Nessa turned. An old woman stood between two leaning yews, her green cloak patched and frayed, her hair a braid of white and ash. Her eyes were the pale grey of morning frost.

She stepped forward without asking, bent low over the crib, and traced the runes with a fingertip.

“Sky-born,” she murmured. “Storm-blessed. He will outlive his father’s crown… but not his father’s shadow.”

Nessa’s hand closed over the dagger at her belt. “What does that mean?”

The woman only smiled a sad, knowing curve of the mouth and stepped back into the trees. By the time Nessa reached the grove’s edge, she was gone.

The Council Stones

The gold circle gleamed beneath a bruised sky. Thirteen seats. Twelve filled.

Rayne’s voice carried first. “We should send the child away. Somewhere safe.”

“Safe?” Drax’s tone was a low growl. “You mean hidden.”

“Hidden is alive,” Rayne countered. “And alive is better than lying in the earth when prophecy catches him.”

Draven shifted in his seat, eyes down. “He’s a spark in dry grass. If the wrong hands reach him”

Lore’s voice cut through. “If fear writes the next chapter for us, we lose the right to call ourselves the Ring. Better we strengthen our walls than scatter our own blood to the winds.”

“You speak like someone who’s never buried a child,” Rayne said flatly.

Drax’s hand tightened on the stone armrest. “And you speak like someone who’d rather be rid of a burden than bear it.”

The silence that followed was sharp enough to bleed.

Rayne’s Quarters

Taranis didn’t knock. The door slammed against the wall as he stepped inside.

“You think I won’t hear what you say about my son?”

Rayne looked up from his table, unbothered. “Your son? Or your weakness?”

Taranis’s hand hit the table hard enough to rattle the cups. “If you move against him”

“If I wanted him gone,” Rayne interrupted, “he would be gone. I don’t need the Ring’s blessing for that.”

Taranis’s eyes narrowed. “Then you’re waiting.”

Rayne leaned back, smiling without warmth. “You’ve already faltered, brother. All I have to do is let the sky finish the work.”

The Outer Gate

The scouts returned at nightfall, mud on their boots and rain in their hair.

“They’ve reached the lower valley,” one said. “Twenty of them. And they’re asking for the Stormborne child by name.”

The Ring gathered in the torchlit hall, arguments sparking like flint. Some called for parley, others for steel.

Taranis stood apart, Caelum in his arms, the boy’s small hand gripping the edge of his father’s cloak.

“They will not take him while I breathe,” he said, and there was no room for doubt in his voice.

Final Beat

As orders rang through Emberhelm, Rayne stood in the shadows of the hall, Draven at his side.

“The warlord has chosen love over reason,” Rayne murmured. “Now we wait for the sky to fall.”

Outside, lightning flashed over the valley once, twice before the rain came.

© 2025 Emma Hewitt. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations used in reviews or scholarly works.

The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two

The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Four.


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