Category: Staffordshire

  • The last night at Raegenwine’s inn

    The last night at Raegenwine’s inn

    Chapter I Stormborne Escape

    Thunorric leaned one arm on the table, firelight cutting sharp lines across his scarred face. The Black Shields had fallen silent around him. Even the bard held his breath.

    He looked at Dægan not as the Stormwulf, nor the outlaw. But as the tired, blood-soaked brother who had outrun every storm except the one inside himself.

    “Brother,” he said quietly, low enough only the three Stormborne hear. “I’ll be honest with you.”

    He inhaled, slow and heavy.

    “I’ll be gone by morning.”

    Dægan’s jaw tightened.
    Leofric’s quill stilled.

    Thunorric’s gaze drifted to the shuttered window where rain tapped a relentless rhythm.

    “I’m not sure where. Hispania… France… or the Italian lands.”
    He shrugged a gesture heavier than armour.
    “Wherever the wind throws me.”

    He looked back at Dægan. There was no smirk and no bravado. It was just the raw truth of a man who had lived too long with ghosts.

    “But if you asked me to stay…” His voice dropped to a whisper. “I would.”

    The fire cracked.

    Dægan stepped closer, boots sinking into the rushes. His eyes were a storm pride, anger, fear, love all fighting for ground.

    “Thunorric,” he said, voice a blade sheathed in grief, “if you stay, the king will take your head.”

    “Aye,” Thunorric muttered. “He’s welcome to try.”

    Leofric set down his staff. “Staying is death,” he whispered. “Leaving is exile. Neither path is mercy.”

    Thunorric chuckled without humour.
    “Mercy and I haven’t spoken in years.”

    Behind them, Harold peeked from the cellar door. Bram stood beside him, fists clenched. Wulfie clutched a wooden wolf to his chest. They listened to every word.

    Dægan saw them and something in him cracked.

    “I won’t ask you to stay,” he said softly. “Because if I do… you’ll die for my sake.”

    Thunorric froze as if struck.

    For a moment, the brothers were boys again. They stood shoulder to shoulder in the ashes of Rome. This was before kingdoms, before war. It was before death learned their names.

    Leofric placed a hand on them both, grounding them like roots.

    “You leave before dawn,” he said. “But tonight? Tonight you sit with your family.”

    Thunorric nodded.
    “One night.”

    He looked at his sons.
    “One night more.”

    Outside, the wind shifted.
    The storm was already changing course.

    The last night at Raegenwine’s inn

    The inn felt too small.

    Rægenwine moved with shaking hands, setting out bread, roasted rabbit, and thick barley stew. The Black Shields ate in silence. Rain steamed off Dægan’s and Leofric’s cloaks.

    Thunorric lowered himself onto the bench with a battle-worn groan. His sons slipped from the cellar to sit beside him.

    “Eat,” Rægenwine murmured. “Storm or no storm, a man rides better on a full belly.”

    Thunorric smirked, then winced at his ribs.
    “Aye. Though most storms ride on empty.”

    For a moment, life felt ordinary stew bubbling, fire crackling, rain whispering at the window.

    Wulfie leaned against his father.
    Bram gnawed a bone like a wolf-cub.
    Harold watched every shadow.
    James pushed barley around his bowl.

    Dægan finally broke the silence.

    “What will you do when you leave?”

    “Live,” Thunorric said. “Or try to.”

    Leofric murmured, “Spain, Gaul, the Italian kingdoms… you’ve survived worse.”

    “Aye,” Thunorric said. “But leaving isn’t what frightens me.”

    Dægan frowned. “Then what does?”

    Thunorric hesitated.
    His sons stared.
    The inn held its breath.

    Finally, he whispered:

    “If you asked me to surrender…”

    His voice cracked something it had never done, not even under Roman whips.

    “…I would.”

    Silence collapsed over the room.

    The Stormwulf the terror of the marches offering his life at his brother’s word.

    Leofric whispered, “Thunorric… no.”

    “I mean it,” he said, eyes fixed on Dægan. “For you two… for the lads… I’d walk into chains.”

    Bram slammed his fist on the table. “Da, NO!”

    Thunorric raised a calming hand but never looked away from Dægan.

    Dægan’s voice broke.
    “Brother… if I ask you to surrender, I’m killing you myself.”

    “Aye,” Thunorric whispered. “But I’d go willing.”

    “No.” Dægan stood abruptly, fists trembling. “I won’t damn you.”

    Thunorric looked suddenly old.
    Defeated.

    Leofric exhaled shakily.
    “Then eat. This is your last quiet night.”

    But outside, something howled a prophecy forming in the dark.

    The last night at Raegenwine’s inn

    The fire burned low. Shadows stretched long across the walls.

    Bram tugged Thunorric’s sleeve.
    “Da… will we ever see you again?”

    Thunorric froze.

    Wulfie grabbed his cloak.
    Harold tried to look brave.
    James trembled.

    Thunorric cupped Bram’s cheek.

    “Ah, lad… don’t ask a man somethin’ he can’t promise.”

    “But we want you home,” Wulfie said, lip wobbling.

    Harold whispered, “Tell us truth.”

    The room fell silent.

    Thunorric drew a shaking breath.

    “I’ll try my damned hardest to come back to you. Thunder willing, storm willing… I’ll find a path home.”

    “You swear it?” Bram whispered.

    “Aye,” he said, touching his forehead to his son’s. “On every storm I’ve ever walked.”

    The boys sagged with relief.

    But a figure stood in the doorway.
    A cousin.
    A boy loyal to the king.

    His voice trembled.
    “They know you’re here.”

    Dægan shot to his feet.
    Leofric gripped his staff.

    Thunorric pushed his sons behind him.
    “How many riders?”

    “…twenty. Maybe more. They’ll be here before first light.”

    Thunorric breathed out slowly a calm before a killing storm.

    “Get the lads ready. This night ain’t over.”

    The Condemned Man’s Choice

    “They’ll punish everyone here,” the boy warned. “Even the little ones.”

    Thunorric nodded.
    “I know.”

    He sat, tore a piece of bread, and spoke with fatal calm.

    “But we’ve time for a condemned man’s meal.”

    Then he drew out a small vial dark liquid swirling like blood.

    Leofric’s eyes widened.
    “Thunorric… no.”

    “It’s insurance,” he murmured.

    “For what?” Harold whispered.

    “In case the king wants a spectacle. In case they try to take me alive.”

    Wulfie grabbed his arm.
    “Don’t drink it!”

    “I won’t,” Thunorric soothed. “Not unless I have to.”

    Dægan leaned ahead, voice low and dangerous.

    “If you take that poison now, I’ll drag you back from Hel myself.”

    Thunorric smirked faintly.
    “That’s the spirit.”

    But the boy in the doorway whispered:

    “They brought the king’s hunter.”

    Silence.
    True silence.

    Leofric paled. “The one with the wolf-banner?”

    “Aye.”

    Thunorric stood, rolling his shoulders.

    “So,” he said softly. “The king wants a show.”

    He looked at his sons their fear, their love, their desperate hope.

    He nodded once.

    “Right then,” he said. “Meal’s over.”

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        © 2025 Emma Hewitt StormborneLore. The characters, stories, names, and world-building elements of the Stormborne Saga are original works.

        This includes Thunorric, Dægan, Leofric, the Black Shields, and all associated lore. They are owned exclusively by the author. Unauthorised copying, reposting, distribution, or adaptation of this content is strictly prohibited without written permission.

      1. After the Burning

        After the Burning

        Chronicles of Taranis / Thunorric Stormwulf
        © 2025 E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts

        The burning of the church was a sunrise to everyone who saw it. But to Thunorric, it was the opportunity he needed.
        In the confusion, he slipped the chains placed on him by the Sheriff of Tamworth. Then rode straight toward the shire of his birth. He was fully aware that he would now be hunted by the king’s riders. The Church, and any thief who wanted coin badly enough.

        His only hope for shelter was Rægenwine’s inn though even family can not be trusted. He never thought he would rely again on the man who betrayed him to the Romans. Then the man also betrayed him to the sheriff.

        He halted his horse on a green hilltop. Morning light poured through the trees, bathing the grass in gold.

        “War,” he murmured to the black stallion he’d stolen from a lord near Tettenhall Wood. “It’s going to be a wonderful day.”

        He urged the horse into Cannock Woods and vanished beneath the canopy.

        The Hunter in the Trees

        “Where there’s war, riot, and discord,” he muttered, “I’ll be front flank for all to see.”

        He found a small nook between the trees and dismounted, letting the stallion graze. The soft tread of his boots calmed him. A thin stream whispered nearby.

        He picked up a thick branch and began carving it into a weapon sharpening one end. Crossing another and moved quietly through the autumn leaves. When he spotted a deer drinking at the stream, a few swift blows brought the animal down. Soon a fire crackled beneath a great oak, and he began preparing the meat.

        “Cooked venison for now,” he said to himself, “and dried meat for days.”

        As he ate, he watched the woods for soldiers.

        His mind drifted to his brothers Dægan, Leofric, Eadric, and Rægenwine and to the nobles of Mercia and Wessex. All of whom would now curse his name. Demon. Devil. Stormwulf. Escaped again.

        He pictured the sheriff: a man of fifty, muscular and loud, barking orders with more anger than sense. Thunorric chuckled at the thought.

        But when he thought of his thirteen sons, his smile faded.
        The oldest five were old enough to serve. He’d given them his blessing.
        But the younger ones… they would have questions. Questions his brothers might not answer.

        The ache in his chest was sharper than any blade.

        Yet he was a wanted man a demon to the Church, a criminal to the king. After years of taking from the rich to feed villages starved by unfair taxes. He had earned little but their fear.

        The Black Shields his hidden movement would continue without him. They always had.

        He breathed in the scent of sweet leaves, wet earth, fungi, and old wood. All of which was fresher than the damp stinking cell the monks had held him in.

        He slept for a few hours. When he woke, dusk pressed against the trees.

        The Crossroads

        He mounted the stallion, wrapped a cloth over his face, and rode toward the crossroads. Where he had robbed the king’s carriages many times before.

        He spotted one now four horses, armed guards, and a noble family inside.

        Perfect.

        Thunorric burst from the treeline like a wolf, blade ready.
        The drivers panicked. One tried to lift a horn, but Thunorric struck first.

        He stabbed the driver in the arm and seized the reins, forcing the horses to halt.

        “Out. Yow get,” he barked.

        A beautiful lady froze as he pressed his blade to her neck.

        “Everything you’ve got. Hurry, or she dies.”

        “You can’t do this!” the older man shouted. “Do you know who I am?!”

        “Aye,” Thunorric said calmly. “But I don’t care. Give me what I want and live or I take it off your corpse.”

        “It’s him,” whispered one of the sons. “The demon.”

        In minutes, Thunorric had their clothes, weapons, and coin. He tied one of their horses to his saddle.

        “I’ll be kind,” he said with a smirk. “I’m only taking one.”

        As he rode away, the noble roared:

        “The king and the sheriff will hear of this!”

        Thunorric laughed.

        “Tell ’em the devil said vilis.”

        He galloped toward Moel-Bryn, changed into the stolen clothes, burned his old rags, cooked fresh meat. Then travelled through wind and rain toward Worcester.

        The Boy on the Road

        Just outside the city, a young man leapt from the shadows tall, muscular, dark-skinned, no more than sixteen winters old.

        “No one else here,” Thunorric said. “Just the Wolf of Rome. Alaric. Good to see your face. Any news?”

        “Plenty.” The boy’s Yorkshire accent was thick. “Your reward’s huge now. You’re declared outlaw.”

        “So?” Thunorric shifted his stance. “You going to take me down?”

        “Oh hell no.” Alaric snorted. “You’re the demon now. Staffordshire demon, some say Mercia demon. Others say death won’t let you rest. And besides I owe you my life. Figured if I warned you, debt’s paid?”

        Thunorric nodded once. “Debt paid. Thank you.”

        “May the gods be on your side,” Alaric called as Thunorric rode on.

        He reached his old home, washed, rested briefly, then rode west toward the Welsh border. Enough coin in his pocket to reach Spain if needed.

        Meanwhile at court, the half-naked noble boy from the robbed carriage arrived with his family. Guards tried not to chuckle.

        “Well then,” the king said, approaching, “dare I ask what happened?”

        “The demon,” the lord spat. “He stole everything and killed our driver.”

        Tamworth’s great hall echoed with uproar long before sunrise. Smoke curled along the rafters. The sheriff knelt before King Coenwulf, mud on his boots, throat bandaged.

        “The creature escaped your custody,” the king growled. “You let him burn an abbey and now he humiliates one of my lords.”

        “My lord… the storm”

        “The storm does not shatter bell towers,” Coenwulf snapped. “Men do.”

        “What do they call him now?”

        “Stormwulf, sire. Some say the Staffordshire demon. The Mercia demon.”

        Whispers spread. Hard men crossed themselves.

        Coenwulf did not.

        “Then let him be hunted,” he said. “Anyone who shelters him dies beside him. Anyone who brings me his head receives land, silver, and title.”

        He nodded to the scribe.

        “Write.”

        The vellum unfurled.

        “Let it be known throughout Mercia and the borderlands that Thunorric, called Stormwulf. outlaw and murderer, stands beyond the law of crown and Church.
        Taken dead or alive.
        Reward: one purse of gold for his body, two for his head.”

        A scarred hunter stepped forward.

        “I’ll bring your demon in chains.”

        Coenwulf nodded once.

        The hunt began.

        The Inn at the Border

        Thunorric crossed the last ridge before the Welsh border as dusk bled into the trees. The air tasted of rain and smoke.

        He approached the inn wedged between two standing stones. His brother Rægenwine’s inn the same man who had betrayed him twice.


        But Thunorric couldn’t blame him. The man had believed he was protecting the children.

        He tied the horse beneath the oak and stepped inside.

        Every sound died instantly.
        Tankards stopped in mid-air. Dice froze. The bard’s string snapped.

        “I’m not here for trouble,” Thunorric said, walking to the bar.

        Rægenwine looked up colour draining from his face.

        Thunorric lifted his hood just enough for the firelight to catch his eyes.

        “Rægenwine,” he said softly. “You’re forgiven.”

        “I… I didn’t expect that,” Rægenwine whispered.

        “Aye, well.” Thunorric stepped closer. “Don’t mistake forgiveness for trust.”

        “You have every right to hate me,” Rægenwine murmured.

        “I don’t hate you,” Thunorric said. “You did what you thought was right. Rome tricked you. They tricked many. But betrayal has a weight and you’ve paid more of it than you know.”

        Rægenwine swallowed. “You came back. That must mean something.”

        “It means the roads are crawling with hunters,” Thunorric said. “King’s men. Church men. Thieves hungry for silver. And I needed shelter only for an hour.”

        “You’ll have it,” Rægenwine promised. “I’ll turn away anyone who asks.”

        Thunorric’s smile was thin and dangerous.

        “If I wanted you dead, brother… you wouldn’t hear the door open.”

        Rægenwine bowed his head. “I’m sorry. I was only trying to keep the children safe.”

        Thunorric exhaled. “Good. Now pour me a drink. The storm’s on my heels.”

        Rægenwine hurried, hands trembling.

        Thunorric turned to the Black Shields behind him.

        “Look after this inn,” he murmured. “And his family in my absence.”

        Just as the ale touched his hand, the door opened.

        Cold air.
        Wet leaves.
        Heavy, familiar footsteps.

        The Brothers Arrive

        Dægan and Leofric stepped inside.

        The inn froze again.

        Dægan tall, broad-shouldered, cloak the colour of storm-clouds, bearing the king’s mark.
        Leofric leaner, ink-stained hands, eyes like old winter, a scribe and warlock whose words carried as much weight as steel.

        Rægenwine bowed. “My lords… I didn’t know you were coming.”

        “You didn’t need to,” Dægan said calmly. “Where is he?”

        Leofric’s gaze drifted toward the back tables.

        “No need,” he murmured. “He’s here.”

        Dægan spotted him with the Black Shields.

        Thunorric didn’t turn.
        Didn’t flinch.
        Didn’t pause.

        “…and if you reach the ford by nightfall,” he said to the Shields, “light no fire. The hunters have dogs.”

        One Shield swallowed. “Wolf… your brothers”

        “I know,” Thunorric said. “I heard them the moment they stepped in.”

        He finally turned, smirking beneath his hood.

        “Well then,” he drawled, “if it ain’t the golden sons of Mercia.”

        Dægan stepped forward. “Brother, we need to talk.”

        Thunorric’s eyes gleamed.

        “About which part? The abbey burning? The king’s writ? Or the price on my head?”

        Leofric’s jaw tightened. “All of it. You’ve started a storm bigger than you realise.”

        Thunorric smiled slow and wolfish.

        “I didn’t start the darkest of storms,” he said.
        “I am the darkest of storms. Devourer of souls. Destruction at the end. Death and resurrection.”

        And the inn went silent the silence that comes before something breaks.

        ©2025 E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts. All Rights Reserved.This work, including all characters, settings, lore, concepts, and text, is the original creation of E. L. Hewitt. No portion of this material may be reproduced, shared, reposted, copied, adapted, or distributed in any form. without prior written permission from the author.Unauthorized use, including AI reproduction of this text, is strictly prohibited.

        To read more on Taranis /Thunoric please see The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

      2. Galan Gaeaf Celebrations: History and Superstitions

        Galan Gaeaf Celebrations: History and Superstitions

        Nos Galan Gaeaf Hapus

        During Roman Britain, people celebrated a festival very like Samhain it was called Galan Gaeaf.


        When the Romans invaded England, they began to see its celebrations blend with their own traditions:

        Feralia a Roman festival to honour the dead, sharing the same reverence for ancestors.

        Pomona a Roman celebration for the goddess of fruit and trees. which gave rise to the tradition of bobbing for apples.

        Galan Gaeaf is an Ysbrydnos a spirit night. when the veil between worlds thins and spirits walk the earth.
        The term first appears in literature as Kalan Gayaf. In the laws of Hywel Dda, and is related to Kalan Gwav.


        In Christian tradition, it became All Saints’ Day, but for those who still celebrate Calan Gaeaf. It remains the first day of winter a time of endings, beginnings, and remembrance.

        Let us not forget our past our warriors, our farmers, and the land itself that gives us life.

        Ancient Traditions

        As a harvest festival, farmers would leave a patch of uncut straw. Then race to see who can cut it fastest. The stalks were twisted into a mare, the Caseg Fedi.


        One man would try to sneak it out in his clothes. If successful, he was rewarded; if caught, he was mocked.

        Another tradition, Coelcerth, saw a great fire built. Each person placed a stone marked with their name into the flames. If any name-stone was missing by morning, it was said that person would die within the year.


        Imagine the chill of dawn as people searched the ashes for their stones!

        Then there was the terror of Y Hwch Ddu Gwta. The black sow without a tail and her companion, a headless woman who roamed the countryside. The only safe place on Galan Gaeaf night was by a roaring hearth indoors.

        Superstitions were everywhere:
        Touching or smelling ground ivy was said to make you see witches in your dreams.


        Boys would cut ten ivy leaves, discard one, and sleep with the rest beneath their pillows to glimpse the future.


        Girls grew a rose around a hoop, slipped through it three times. cut the bloom, and placed it under their pillow to dream of their future husband.

        It was also said that if a woman darkened her room on Hallowe’en night and looked into a mirror. Her future husband’s face would behind her.
        But if she saw a skull, it meant she would die before the year’s end.

        In Staffordshire, a local variation involved lighting a bonfire and throwing in white stones . If the stones burned away, it was said to foretell death within a year.

        Food and Feasting

        Food is central to the celebration. While I don’t make the traditional Stwmp Naw Rhyw. a dish of nine vegetables I make my own variation using mixed vegetables and meat.

        There’s little real difference between the Irish Gaelic Samhain and the Welsh Calan Gaeaf.


        Each marks the turn of the year the death of one cycle and the birth of another.


        Over time, every culture left its mark: the Anglo-Saxons with Blōdmonath (“blood month”). Later Christian festivals layered upon the old ones.

        The Borderlands of Cheslyn Hay

        I was born in a small village called Cheslyn Hay, in South Staffordshire. WHhich I think is about five miles from what the Norse called the Danelaw, the frontier lands.


        Before the Romans came, much of Staffordshire and indeed much of England was part of ancient Welsh territory.
        Though little is known of this period, imagination helps fill the gaps between the facts.

        The Danelaw was established after the Treaty of Wedmore (878 CE). Between King Alfred of Wessex and the Viking leader Guthrum.

        It divided England roughly from London northwards, trailing the Thames, through Bedfordshire, along Watling Street (A5), and up toward Chester.

        Watling Street the old Roman road that passes through Wall (near Lichfield). Gailey was often described as the de facto border between Mercia (to the west) and the Danelaw (to the east).

        Cheslyn Hay lies just west of Watling Street, near Cannock and Walsall. Placing it right on the edge of Mercian territory within sight of Danelaw lands.
        Because of that proximity, the area would have been influenced by both sides.


        Norse trade routes and settlers passed nearby, along Watling Street and the River Trent.


        Villages like Wyrley, Penkridge, and Landywood show both Old English and Celtic/Norse roots.

        It’s easy to imagine that my ancestors have traded or farmed alongside Norse settlers. after all, many Vikings were farmers too.


        Part of my family came from Compton and Tettenhall Wood. Where a local battle is still spoken of today; the other side from Walsall.


        Archaeological finds near Stafford and Lichfield suggest Viking artefacts and burial mounds, linking the landscape to that history.

        So while Cheslyn Hay wasn’t technically within the Danelaw. It stood upon the Mercian frontier what I like to call “the Border of the Ring” . where Saxon, Norse, and Brythonic traditions once met and mingled.

        My Celebration Tonight

        As I live in a flat, I’ll light a single candle instead of a bonfire. Cook a small feast vegetables and pork with a potato topping.


        For pudding, I’ll have blueberries, strawberries, and banana with an oat topping and warm custard.


        I’ll raise a glass to my ancestors and set a place at the table for any who wish to join.

        Thank you for reading.
        Nos Galan Gaeaf Hapus

      3. Harvesting Nature’s Gifts: The Journey of Lore

        Harvesting Nature’s Gifts: The Journey of Lore

        A stylized tree with colorful leaves against a dark background, featuring a sun in the upper corner.
        A vibrant, artistic depiction of a tree with colorful leaves set against a dark background, symbolizing the mystical elements of nature.

        By E.L. Hewitt — StormborneLore

        Dawn came slow over Cannock Chase, the sky still holding tight to the colours of night.


        Mist clung to the ground, pale as breath on cold glass. The trees stood quiet as watchers in old cloaks.

        Lore walked barefoot through the wet grass, collecting what the earth offered.

        Yarrow first pale and feathery, growing in shy clusters where the sunlight would later reach. Good for blood and fever, and for protection against spirits that lingered too close.

        He cut it gently, whispering, “For the ones who yet breathe.”

        Rowan bark next, peeling in thin curls beneath his knife. The tree shivered, though no wind touched it.

        Rowan remembers, the old women used to say and Lore believed them.

        Last came the resin pine tears hardened in the bark of a fallen giant, still sweet, still golden.

        He held it to his nose, breathing in the scent of memory.
        Smoke. Rain. Home.

        Above him, the crows gathered.

        Three at first.
        Then five.
        Then a dozen, their wings murmuring like pages turning.

        They did not caw.
        They simply watched.

        Lore did not fear them.
        The crows of the Chase were older than any Druid’s words.
        Older than Rome’s roads.
        Older even than the songs of the first tribes.

        They followed him as he walked between the birches. Their trunks ghost-white, rising from the mist like bones of giants sleeping beneath the soil.

        The air felt listening.

        The trees breathed slow.

        The old gods waited.

        Lore spoke softly, almost too low to hear:
        “Stormfather. Bound-Brother. Wild King. I hear you.”

        The leaves stirred, though the air was still.

        And then

        A whisper.
        Not with sound, but with bone and blood.

        He rises.

        Lore’s heart tightened.
        No fear only certainty.

        The crows took flight at once, black wings cutting the dawn sky. They flew south, toward the marsh track near Landywood, toward the low birches where the Black Shields rested.

        Toward Taranis.

        Lore closed his fist around the resin.

        “The storm remembers,” he murmured.

        And he followed the crows.

        © 2025 E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts. All rights reserved.
        Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this artwork and text is prohibited.

        Thank you for reading.

        If you enjoyed this story, like, share, or leave a comment. Your support keeps the storm alive and the chronicles continuing.

        If you want to read more about Lore please see Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

        To follow Tarans The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

      4. The Crone

        The Crone

        Written by

        emma.stormbornelore
        in

        The moon shone in the darkest of nights as I gathered the herbs.Around my cave herbs of healing yarrow and nettle being the most used by our clan.

        Only eight winters ago the leader of claw clan approached me. My son in custody I see him a bone chain around his neck.

        “What do you want Clun?” I asked the small balding man dressed in simple furs .

        “We promise no harm to the children,” said the tall man wrapped in makeshift coats. He thrust a small vial towards me “You’ll have your son by sunrise. Just brew a sleeping draft. Put Camp Utthar to sleep.”

        I hesitated. The chief of Utthar had been good to us took my family in when no one else would. But River was my son. My blood. My only hope my future what else I do?

        I nodded slowly but looked to my boy a sadness stirred in me. Ad i gathered berries, roots, sacred herbs and stirred them into the pot by firelight. That night, the warriors, the women, the children… all fell into deep, enchanted sleep.

        So deep was the sleep that no one stirred when the men of Clun entered the encampment. As The Clun men crept in silent as shadow, savage as flame.

        I watched from the trees as my eldest, Ryn, was dragged into camp forced to witness the massacre. His voice was broken when he turned to me:

        “What did you do, Mother?!”Ryn cried

        A silent attack killing women children and men who remained within the camp. Fifty men died that night warriors hunters their wives and children.

        “You promised you’d leave the children” I cried

        I was aware that utther wife had been taken to a local cave. A safe place where she would give birth when the time was right.

        “Foolish old lady, why would we leave our enemies children? When they will grow to seek vengeance” Clun smirked riding away

        I was left staring at the devastation . The next days passed and the Chief returned from battle, his warriors behind them. The chiefs horn was heard and his sons replied with the wolfs howl. But they ran with newborns in their arms Boldolph leading the charge.

        Time froze the wind stilled as boldolph approached his father

        “They came in the still of night no one would wake up. The claw killed all of then father and she helped” boldolph replied as if giving his report

        Suddenly the screams came

        “Take her! Bind her!” Raven shouted.
        “She betrayed the family! Everyone’s dead! Mother’s alive but in labour!”

        One of the wounded men pointed at me with blood on his chest.

        “We heard her whispering with the Clun.
        She brewed the sleeping draft… then brought death upon us.”

        I turned and ran wishing for cover ducking from branches and jumping over roots from trees. The sound of hounds barking after me my heart racing beating like the drums. The hounds found me first. The men were not far behind.

        They bound me in ropes and dragged me back to camp, fear pounding through my veins like war drums. Then he came…

        Boldolph stood at seven feet tall.
        “Let me have her,” he growled but his eyes softened when they found Morrigan, his wife, weeping with in a cave

        “Lox is dead she did it” morrigan said

        “We have her,” a man spat, dragging me by the hair.i screamed trying to fight against the men holding me

        The chieftain stood tall.

        “Whitehair, you have betrayed your tribe. Look around you. This is your doing you butchered them in their sleep.” The cheiftan said “Take her to the rocks. Strip her name. Cut her nose and tongue. Then bind her and take her far from here.”

        The punishment was swift.

        The curse came faster.

        Before they dragged me away, my final spell shattered the night:

        “May your line suffer,
        May your form twist,
        Until one born cursed by storms,
        Breaks the wheel with mercy and fire.”

        And then, the transformation.

        As I was dragged out I could hear the howls of pain and anguish from boldolph and his mate morrigan. as Boldolph the giant, and Morrigan the gentle, were torn from flesh and given fur. Wolves. Forever cursed.

        Later, bound and broken, I was dragged to the sacred stone. They beat me. Stripped me of sound. My nose. My tongue. My name.

        Blindfolded, I was taken to lands unknown far beyond the reach of kin or mercy.

        But my magic remains.
        So does the curse.
        And the storm is not yet done.

        I could still taste blood.

        The salt of my torn tongue. The copper of betrayal. The earth where they left me bound, blindfolded. my hands lashed with nettles so tightly i still bear scars decades later.

        They called it mercy.

        But mercy would have been death.

        Instead, they gave me exile: cast beyond the sacred stones with only the breath in my lungs. The curse they feared more than her voice.

        Ad i crawled for days dragging my broken body through marsh and thorn. Wolves circled but did not bite. Ravens flew overhead but did not cry. And the spirits… the spirits walked with me.
        I did not die i became something else.

        Something older than their laws.

        As i found shelter in the hollow of a tree once used by midwives. A place where blood had been spilled in both birth and death. There, pressed my palms to the bark, and for the first time in weeks, i did not feel pain.

        Only power.

        It rose from the roots. From the bones buried deep the old ones, the forgotten, the nameless. Their stories rushed into me like a storm tide.

        And over time i remembered my own name.

        Not the one they spat when they cursed me. Not the one the elders tore from the village scrolls.

        But the one my mother gave me beneath the silvery moon.

        “Cceridwyn,” whispered, mouth bleeding, lips cracked.

        As the Years passed more people feared me. As i walked among the bones now, barefoot and veiled. My form barely seen except by those on the edge of death or madness. Her tongue never healed. Her voice never returned. But her curse… her curse remained intact.

        And more potent than ever.

        For every 13th child born of her bloodline, a sign would come:
        A sickness no healer cure.
        Eyes the colour of stormlight.
        A voice that spoke truths no one taught.

        The 13th of the 13th would be the end or the beginning.

        She waits still.
        Her bones lighter now, her spirit heavier.
        Watching as the stories repeat,
        as her great-grandson walks into the same woods where she once crawled.

        Taranis.
        The boy with the storm in his chest.

        The one they tried to exile, like her.

        But this time…
        the storm remembers.

        © written and created by ELHewitt

      5. The Chains of Blood and Brotherhood

        The Chains of Blood and Brotherhood

        The storm had not yet left his veins. Even in exhaustion, Taranis’s breath came sharp as lightning through rain. The iron on his wrists bit deeper with each movement, the weight of Rome’s victory heavy, but not finished.

        He heard them before he saw them the measured tread of Caelum and Marcos. The murmur of soldiers giving way as they entered the cell yard. The torches flared against the damp walls, shadows stretching long like reaching fingers.

        “Uncle Marcos,” Caelum’s voice was quiet but edged with fear. “Can those chains come off him?”

        Marcos paused beside the centurion who held the keys. His gaze lingered on Taranis, bloodstained and silent, the faint curl of defiance still etched into his mouth. “They can,” Marcos said slowly. “But they won’t. Not yet.”

        Caelum’s jaw tightened. “He’s bleeding. If he dies”

        “He won’t,” Marcos interrupted, eyes never leaving Taranis. “He’s too stubborn to die.”

        Taranis lifted his head then, a slow, deliberate motion. “You sound almost proud, Marcos.” His voice was hoarse, roughened by sand and roar, but steady. “Tell me how does it feel, watching Rome chain another son of the storm?”

        Marcos stepped closer, the metal of his own armour glinting in the firelight. “It feels like survival,” he said quietly. “A lesson you still refuse to learn.”

        “Survival,” Taranis repeated, the word tasting like ash. “You call it that. I call it submission.”

        The centurion moved between them, keys jangling. “Enough talk.” But Marcos lifted a hand not to command, but to stay him.

        “Let him speak,” Marcos said. “Words weigh less than chains.”

        Caelum’s eyes flicked between them, confusion and pain warring in his young face. “He fought lions, Uncle. Bears. He lived through what no man should. Why must you treat him like this?”

        “Because,” Marcos

        “You know they say deaths the final lesson?” Taranis grinned…Marcos’s eyes hardened, but not with anger with something closer to grief.

        “Death teaches nothing,” he said. “It only silences the unteachable.”

        Taranis laughed then a low, ragged sound that echoed off the stone like distant thunder. “Then maybe silence is what Rome fears most. A man who dies still defiant who doesn’t give them their spectacle.”

        The centurion stepped ahead impatiently. “Enough of this.” He seized Taranis by the shoulder, but the bound warrior’s gaze did not waver.

        “Do you see it, Caelum?” Taranis rasped. “Chains don’t make a man loyal. They only show who fears him most.”

        Caelum swallowed hard, torn between the authority of his uncle and the raw conviction before him. “Uncle… he’s right. Rome fears him.”

        Marcos turned sharply. “Rome fears no man.” Yet even as he said it, his voice faltered, as if the walls themselves disagreed.

        A moment of silence fell the kind that breathes between lightning and thunder.

        Then Taranis whispered, “You once said the blood of the storm can’t be trained. You were right. It can only be bound… for a while.”

        The torches flickered, shadows dancing like spirits around the three men the Roman, the youth, and the storm-bound prisoner.

        Marcos finally turned away. “Clean his wounds,” he said curtly to the centurion. “He fights again at dawn.”

        As they left, Caelum lingered by the gate, his eyes locked on Taranis’s. “I’ll come back,” he said softly.

        Taranis’s faint grin returned. “Then bring thunder, boy. Rome hasn’t heard enough of it yet.”

        The cell door slammed shut, iron against stone but somewhere, deep beneath the fortress, thunder rolled.

        © 2025 Emma Hewitt / StormborneLore. All rights reserved.Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this content is prohibited.

        If you enjoyed this story, like, share, or leave a comment. Your support keeps the storm alive and the chronicles continuing.

        Futher Reading

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

      6. The Silent Rebellion

        The Silent Rebellion

        “Taranis is our baby brother, no matter what some think,” Drax growled, his voice low and edged with iron. His gaze locked on Rain across the firelight, sharp enough to cut stone. “You betrayed him when he was a child and you betray him now.”

        Rain’s jaw tightened, but he did not speak. The silence stretched between them, thick with memory and regret.

        The old priest, Maeron, lifted his hand gently. “He forgives you, Rain,” he said, his tone weary yet steady. “He wanted Drax, Draven, and Lore to know he will endure what they give him. So that you three will survive. He says to make choices that will keep you all safe and your people.”

        Drax’s expression did not soften, though his eyes flickered with something that have been pain. “He forgives far too easily.”

        Maeron inclined his head. “Forgiveness is not weakness, my lord. It is the weapon of those who can’t be broken. The Romans won’t rule forever. Prepare for what comes next.”

        At the edge of the fire, Caelum shifted uneasily, his young face caught between fear and pride. “But what about my uncle’s meals?” he asked suddenly. “Uncle was exiled from the Circle years before they caught him. I was a baby then. Now I’m fourteen he shouldn’t be forgotten again.”

        The words silenced the hall. Even Rain, for all his bitterness, not meet the boy’s gaze.

        Drax rose slowly, the firelight glinting off his scars. “He will not be forgotten,” he said at last. “Not while the storm still bears our name.”

        “But won’t they strip him of his name?” Caelum pressed, voice trembling now. “If Rome erases it, how will anyone know he lived?”

        Drax looked down at his son the fire’s glow. Reflected in the boy’s wide eyes and placed a steady hand on his shoulder.

        “Names can be taken,” he said quietly. “But legacies can’t. The Romans think power is carved in stone. Ours is carved in memory.”

        He turned back to Maeron. “Tell him that. Tell him Emberhelm remembers.”

        The priest nodded, rising to leave. But before he turned, his gaze swept the circle of men gathered in the hall. “When the storm returns,” he said softly, “I hope you are ready to stand beneath it.”

        When Maeron’s footsteps faded into the night, the hall remained silent. The storm outside broke, rain hammering against the shutters like the echo of distant drums.

        Drax stood by the window long after the others had gone. He could not see the fort from here, but he could feel it the iron cage that held his brother. The empire pressing closer each season. Yet as lightning flashed over the valley, he smiled grimly.

        Because storms, no matter how long they’re caged, always find their way home.

        The road to Viroconium was slick with rain. Drax rode beneath a low sky, his cloak heavy with water, the wind biting at his face. Beside him, Maeron’s hood was drawn deep, the priest’s silence carrying the weight of things better left unspoken.

        When they reached the outskirts of the Roman fort, the air stank of smoke and iron. The rhythmic clash of hammers and the cries of soldiers echoed through the mist. But above it all, there was another sound low, strained, human.

        Drax reined his horse sharply, his eyes narrowing.

        At the edge of the square, raised above the mud and the murmuring crowd. Hung a man bound to a crude wooden cross. Blood streaked his arms, his body marked by lashes and bruises. His hair clung to his face in the rain. But the set of his jaw the defiant lift of his head was unmistakable.

        Taranis.

        Drax’s heart clenched as the legionnaire stepped forward, spear in hand. “He struck a guard and tried to run,” the man said stiffly. “By Roman law, the punishment is public display.”

        “Law,” Drax echoed, his voice quiet, almost a whisper but Maeron flinched at the tone. “You call this law?”

        The soldier hesitated, but before he could respond, Maeron laid a hand on Drax’s arm. “Careful,” he murmured. “The walls have ears.”

        Drax dismounted, boots sinking into the mud. He walked forward until he stood before the cross, rain washing the grime from his face. Taranis raised his head slowly, eyes bloodshot but burning with that same inner fire that no empire could snuff out.

        “Brother,” Drax whispered.

        Taranis gave a faint, broken smile. “You shouldn’t have come.”

        “And leave you to the crows?” Drax’s voice cracked like thunder. “Never.”

        Maeron stepped forward, murmuring Latin prayers under his breath for the watching soldiers. Though his words were laced with druidic meaning ancient phrases meant to shield, not to save. His fingers brushed the iron nails that bound Taranis’s wrists. “These are not deep,” he said quietly. “They did not mean to kill him. Only to shame.”

        Taranis’s laugh was hoarse. “They can’t shame what they don’t understand.”

        The centurion appeared, cloak heavy with rain. “This man belongs to Rome,” he declared. “You will step back, Lord of Emberhelm.”

        Drax turned slowly, the weight of centuries in his gaze. “And yet Rome forgets whose land it stands upon.”

        The centurion stiffened. “Do you threaten?”

        “No.” Drax’s tone softened to a dangerous calm. “I remind.”

        The priest raised his hands quickly. “My lord only seeks mercy,” Maeron said. “Let him pray with his brother before the gods.”

        After a pause, the centurion gestured sharply. “You have one hour.”

        When the soldiers withdrew to the gatehouse, Drax knelt beside the cross. The rain had turned to sleet, stinging against his skin. “Hold on,” he murmured. “We’ll get you down when the watch changes.”

        Taranis shook his head weakly. “No. Not yet. If you cut me down, they’ll know you came. They’ll burn Emberhelm.”

        “Then let them come,” Drax growled.

        But Taranis only smiled faintly. “Storms must wait for the right sky, brother.”

        Maeron placed a hand on Drax’s shoulder. “He’s right. Endurance, not rage. That is his rebellion.”

        Drax bowed his head, jaw clenched. He hated the wisdom in those words. He hated that Taranis could still smile through chains and nails.

        As dusk fell, lightning cracked beyond the hills, white and wild. The storm gathered again over Viroconium.

        And though Rome saw only a prisoner’s suffering. Those who remembered the old ways knew the truth:
        A storm had been crucified and still, it did not die.

        Further Reading

        The Chronicles of Drax

      7. The Breaking of the Circle

        The Breaking of the Circle

        The rain had thinned to a whisper, though the earth still drank its memory. The camp at Viroconium lay beneath a pall of grey the banners limp. The fires low, the air thick with the scent of wet iron and trampled earth.

        From the timber walls came the faint murmur of Latin, measured and precise, a language of order wrapped around conquest.

        Taranis Storm knelt in the mud outside the command tent, wrists chained, head bowed. The iron bit deep, the skin at his wrists raw and darkened with rust and blood.

        The mark of the Stormborne ring had already been scrubbed from his armour. He was no longer heir, no longer rebel merely a trophy of Rome.

        But even stripped bare, even silent, there was something in his stillness that unsettled the soldiers. Some swore the air shifted around him, that the faint tremor of thunder haunted the edges of his breath.

        Others avoided his gaze altogether, crossing themselves as they passed. A man broken should not look like that unyielding even in ruin.

        Inside the tent, the light was dim, filtered through canvas streaked with rain. The scent of oil lamps mingled with the metallic tang of blood. He had been made to wait hours, until the flap stirred, and three shadows crossed the threshold.

        Drax came first.

        Older now, heavier in both body and soul. The broad shoulders that had once carried their people’s trust. Now bore the eagle of Rome, its gold thread dull in the half-light. He paused by the entrance, rain dripping from his cloak, his eyes lingering on Taranis longer than words fill.

        Behind him, Rayne entered, slower. His face was pale with sleeplessness, the hollows beneath his eyes deepening the cold fire in his gaze. He did not meet Taranis’s eyes. The torchlight caught the edges of his features sharp, beautiful, worn.

        Draven followed last. He moved like a shadow quiet, deliberate, almost ghost like. His cloak brushed the ground, damp from the mist outside. When his eyes lifted, they carried both sorrow and warning.

        No one spoke at first. The silence was a living thing, heavy and raw, pressing between them like the weight of the storm itself.

        Then, slowly, Taranis lifted his head. The light touched his face. Revealing the dark bruises along his jaw. The faint smear of dried blood across his temple and eyes. Eyes that still burned with the calm fury of the storm.

        “Brother,” he rasped, voice rough but steady. “Have you come to finish what Rome began?”

        Rayne’s jaw tightened. “I came to make sure you lived.”

        “Lived?” A hollow laugh escaped him no warmth, no humour. “They’ll march me south in chains, Rayne. You traded the Circle for a collar. Don’t pretend it was mercy.”

        Drax’s tone was even, but heavy. “Enough. You both know what’s done can’t be undone. I took the oath so the rest of us survive. So that our kin would not hang from Roman walls.”

        “And what of honour?” Taranis’s gaze snapped to him. “Or do we trade that too for a few more winters of peace and a Roman coin to buy it?”

        Draven shifted in the corner. “Peace doesn’t last, brother. It only changes its face.”

        Rayne’s voice cracked through the air, sharp as the wind. “You think I wanted this? You think I didn’t bleed the same as you when the Circle broke? I saw no victory left to take I chose survival!”

        “You chose fear,” Taranis said softly. “And fear has a longer memory than Rome. It will rot what’s left of you.”

        Rayne turned away, jaw clenched, the lamplight trembling against his cheek. “You’d have doomed us all for pride.”

        “And you’d damn us for obedience,” Taranis countered.

        The space between them trembled with tension brothers bound by blood and broken by choice.

        Drax broke it first, his breath slow, his tone heavy with command. “They take you south tomorrow. I can do nothing more without risking every name tied to ours. Whatever happens after this live. Find your chance.”

        Taranis’s lips curved, a ghost of the old stormborn grin. “I will. And when I do…” His eyes rose, burning through the gloom. “I’ll remember who stood, and who knelt.”

        For a heartbeat, no one moved. Only the rain, soft and relentless, filled the quiet between them.

        Draven looked away first, eyes glinting with something close to grief. Drax’s shoulders sagged, his silence an admission. Rayne lingered his hand hovering at the tent’s edge, uncertain, trembling.

        “Taranis…” he began.

        “Go,” came the answer, quiet but final. “Before you remember what it means to be one of us.”

        But as Rayne turned to leave, Taranis’s voice cut through the rain again lower, heavier, carrying the weight of prophecy.
        “You know what you’ve done, brother. You’ve condemned the poor those I sheltered, the villages I defended. Rome will use your choice to bleed them dry.”

        His gaze flicked to Drax, then Draven. “Do what you must to live in my absence. Keep them safe if you can. But remember this the storm doesn’t die. It only learns patience.”

        The words hung in the air like thunder before the break.

        Rayne hesitated, his throat tight with something between guilt and defiance. “If you live to see freedom, Taranis… will you forgive me?”

        Taranis met his eyes grey meeting grey — and said nothing.

        Outside, a trumpet sounded the signal for the night watch. The guards were coming.

        The brothers turned, one by one, each carrying their silence like a wound.

        Drax’s heavy boots faded first. Draven followed, his steps ghost like. Rayne lingered, then vanished into the rain.

        Alone again, Taranis knelt in the mud and closed his eyes. The iron dug deep, but his breath was steady. The storm was not gone merely waiting beyond the hills, patient and unseen.

        And somewhere, far to the south, Rome’s banners rippled in the wind ready to claim the storm for themselves.

        © 2025 Emma Hewitt / StormborneLore. All rights reserved.Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this content is prohibited.If you enjoyed this story, like, share, or leave a comment. Your support keeps the storm alive and the chronicles continuing.

        Further Reading

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

      8. Chains and Storms

        Chains and Storms

        Dawn broke over the Roman camp like a blade drawn through fog.
        Grey light pooled across churned mud and sharpened stakes, catching on helmets and spearheads lined in perfect order.

        The night’s rain had thinned to mist, and every droplet clinging to the leather tents shimmered like glass. The smell of smoke, sweat, and iron hung heavy in the air the scent of empire.

        Taranis stirred. His back ached where the whip had bitten, skin raw beneath crusted blood. Yet the fire inside him burned brighter than pain the storm had not passed. It gathered.

        Across from him, Marcos watched with his one good eye. The old fighter’s face a map of old wars and fading loyalties. “Rome wants to see storms broken,” he murmured, voice gravel-deep. “They’ll test you again today. But storms… storms don’t break. They shift. They wait.”

        Taranis tilted his head, a faint smirk cutting through exhaustion.
        “And if they try?”

        Marcos shrugged, rough amusement in his tone. “Then you show them the wind can cut as deep as the sword.”

        Trumpets blared as the camp came alive in a heartbeat. Orders barked in Latin, armor clattered, horses stamped restlessly against their ropes. Two guards approached, eyes cold, hands twitching near the whips at their belts.

        “On your feet,” one barked.

        Taranis rose slowly. Chains clinked. His shoulders squared, each movement deliberate. The iron at his wrists and ankles was heavy a reminder that for now, he belonged to Rome.

        Yet even bound, he carried the air of something untamed. The guards kept their distance, as though the storm in his eyes strike.

        They led him toward a cleared space at the edge of the camp.
        A makeshift ring had been marked out with stakes and rope a place for training, punishment, or testing.

        The centurion stood nearby, expression carved from granite. The boy from last night watched from behind a cart, pale fingers gripping the wood. He didn’t dare speak.

        The centurion’s voice carried over the murmurs. “The barbarian survived crucifixion,” he said in clipped Latin. “He has killed Roman soldiers with sword, axe, and bow. Let us see if his storm can be harnessed or if it dies in the mud.”

        Taranis met his gaze.


        “Let him watch,” he murmured in Brythonic the tone sharp, almost ceremonial. The centurion frowned, not understanding, but the words left a chill in the air.

        A guard offered him a practice axe, a short sword, and a small round shield. The weapons were worn, dulled, mockeries of what he once wielded but they would do.

        He ran a thumb along the axe’s handle, testing the balance.
        The first bout began.

        Two legionaries stepped into the ring, boots sinking into wet earth. They grinned, confident, soldiers against a chained barbarian.
        Taranis didn’t move until they struck.

        The first swing came from the right clean, practiced.


        He stepped aside, caught the motion with the rim of his shield, and turned it aside. The counter came low and fast a backhand with the axe that cracked into the soldier’s guard, splintering the wood. Mud sprayed. Gasps followed.

        The second soldier lunged from behind. But Taranis ducked, dragging his chain taut to trip him, then drove an elbow into his ribs.


        He rose without looking back. Breathing steady. Eyes cold.

        He didn’t grin.
        He didn’t boast.
        He simply waited.

        The crowd quieted. Even the centurion lowered his stylus for a moment.

        “Again,” he said.

        Another pair entered. Then another.
        By the third round, Taranis’s arms burned and his wrists bled where the chains bit into skin. Yet his movements only grew sharper measured, adaptive, each strike like thunder rolling closer.

        Marcos leaned toward a watching soldier. “That’s no wild man,” he muttered. “That’s a storm that learned to fight back.”

        By midday, silence had fallen across the ring. The spectators no longer laughed. They watched uneasy, enthralled, afraid.

        The centurion finally raised a hand. “Enough,” he ordered. “Feed him. Let him rest. He will fight again tomorrow with steel.”

        Taranis tilted his head, the faintest smirk touching his mouth.
        “Feed the storm,” he murmured, “and see what it grows into.”

        The boy crept closer, slipping a crust of bread from his tunic and setting it by his side.


        Taranis nodded once not gratitude, but recognition. A gesture between survivors.

        As they led him away, one of the younger guards spoke quietly, incapable of concealing his curiosity. “They say you fought crucifixion itself and lived. What man survives that?”

        Taranis turned his head slightly. The grey in his eyes caught the light.
        “Not a man,” he said. “A storm that forgot to die.”

        Marcos barked a laugh, shaking his head. “Gods help Rome,” he said. “They’ve chained lightning and think it’ll sit still.”

        When they finally removed his restraints for cleaning, Taranis flexed his wrists, skin bruised and torn. He studied the marks, then smirked.

        “At least they removed the restraints,” he said quietly. “I grew up fighting in them.”

        The centurion said nothing.
        The sky grumbled overhead thunder rolling distant but deliberate.

        Then, softly, as if remembering something half-buried in blood and rain, Taranis spoke again.

        “They put me up,” he said, eyes fixed north. “Nailed me in on the hill at Salinae”

        Marcos frowned. “And yet here you are.”

        Taranis flexed his fingers, old scars catching the light.
        “I ripped myself off,” he said simply.

        Silence cracked through the camp. Guards shifted. Somewhere, a dog began to howl.

        “Rome thinks it crucified me,” he murmured.
        “But the dead don’t stay nailed not when the gods still have use for them.”

        Thunder answered. Closer this time.

        Rome had not yet learned that storms do not serve.
        They return.

        Futher Reading

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

      9. Rayne’s Path: Navigating Fate and Change

        Rayne’s Path: Navigating Fate and Change

        The smoke of Emberhelm still clung to the hills when I rode east, following the path we had carved in blood and ash. Behind me, the storm of Taranis’s fury faded, replaced by the steady march of Rome’s legions.

        My heart did not leap at his capture only a calm, cold certainty. Survival, I had told myself. Survival for the people, for the line of the Ring.

        They would call me traitor. They would whisper my name with venom. Let them. History is written by those who endure, not by those who fall screaming in the mud.

        I thought of the thirteenth stone, split and silent, and of my brothers, scattered like crows in a gale.

        Drax’s eyes had burned with anger. Lore’s had flashed with prophecy. Even Draven had known, in the briefest flicker of fear, that the world had shifted. And yet… no fire of regret touched me. Only the quiet pulse of inevitability.

        Taranis would survive, I knew that. He always did. But survival alone was not enough. Rome would temper him, break him, and in that forging, perhaps he would learn that not all storms are born to rage. Some are meant to settle, to bring change unseen.

        I rode on, keeping my gaze forward. The wind carried the salt from the sea, the same salt that Rome coveted. Every step away from the shattered circle was a step into the future I had chosen. And in that future, perhaps the people would live.

        I was no hero. I was no villain. I was Rayne, and the Ring was broken.