Category: StormborneLore

  • Chapter II  The King’s Hunter Arriveson Christmas Day.

    Chapter II The King’s Hunter Arriveson Christmas Day.

    Dawn never came softly to the Stormborne.

    Grey light seeped through the shutters in thin, trembling lines.
    Rain whispered against the roof.
    The inn, which had felt too small the night before, now felt like a burial chamber.

    Rægenwine was already awak7e, cloak drawn tight, eyes on the door.

    Dægan and Leofric stood over a rough map of the road. They had not been planning escape anymore, but counting the minutes until hooves thundered up the lane.

    Thunorric sat at the end of the table, cloak around his shoulders, wet hair falling near his face. His sons pressed against him, refusing to let go.

    “Da… stay,” Wulfie whispered for the tenth time.

    Thunorric placed a hand on the boy’s head, fingers trembling only slightly.

    “I’ll try,” he murmured. “Storm willing.”

    But they all knew the storm wasn’t willing.

    The storm had come to collect him.

    Outside, steel rang against saddle buckles.

    The first horn sounded low, mournful, a beast calling across the marshes.

    The boys jumped.
    Harold clutched Bram and Rægenwine flinched.

    Dægan’s jaw tightened.
    “They’re here.”

    Another horn.
    Closer this time.

    Leofric stepped to the window, lifting the shutter an inch.

    The colour drained from his face.

    “Thirty men… at least. Spears. Shields. One rider with a wolf-banner.”

    The room froze.

    Dægan muttered, “The hunter.”

    Footsteps pounded on the floorboards above them. Black Shields rushed to the windows, faces pale beneath their tattoos. Even the bard dropped his harp.

    Thunorric didn’t move.
    His sons clung harder.

    The door shook.

    Not from a knock but from the weight of horses circling the inn like wolves around a trapped stag.

    A voice outside thundered:

    “By the order of Coenwulf, King of Mercia! Surrender Thunorric Stormborne, outlaw and oathbreaker!”

    Harold whimpered.
    Bram pressed his forehead to his father’s arm.

    Thunorric inhaled slow, steady.
    That same deadly calm from the night before.

    Rægenwine whispered, “If you run… they’ll burn the inn.”

    Thunorric nodded slowly.
    “Aye. I know.”

    Wulfie’s voice cracked.
    “Da… don’t go.”

    Thunorric stood.

    Every man in the room held his breath.
    Even the storm paused.

    He knelt before his sons and cupped their faces, one by one.

    “You lads listen to me. You stay with your uncles. You stay together. You don’t look back.”

    “Da….”

    “Look at me.” His voice trembled. “I’ll come back if there’s breath in me. I swear it.”

    “Promise,” Bram whispered.

    Thunorric pressed his forehead to Bram’s.

    “I promise.”

    The door boomed under a spear-butt.

    “Stormborne! Come out!”

    Dægan stepped in front of him.
    “No. I won’t let you do this.”

    Leofric’s voice was a ghost.
    “Brother… their orders aren’t to take him alive.”

    Another slam.
    Another roar.

    Thunorric placed a hand on Dægan’s shoulder.
    “Stormwulf… let me go.”

    “No.”

    “Brother,” Thunorric said softly, “you once told me… the world needs less war.”

    “And you think dying helps that?” Dægan’s eyes blurred.

    “No. But I won’t have my lads grow up hunted.” Thunorric smiled sadly.

    The hunter’s voice cut through the rain.

    “Thunorric!
    Come out now, or we take the children!”

    Wulfie cried out.
    Rægenwine swore and drew his blade.

    Thunorric straightened, jaw set.

    “That’s enough.”

    He kissed each of his sons’ foreheads, one last time.

    Then he walked toward the door.

    Dægan grabbed him not hard but as if trying to hold on to a dying star.

    “You don’t have to do this,” Dægan whispered.

    Thunorric leaned in, pressing his brow to his brother’s.

    “I do.”

    Leofric placed a hand on both their shoulders, voice breaking.

    “If you walk out now… we will not see you again.”

    Thunorric swallowed hard, lightning in his chest.

    “Aye,” he whispered. “But if I don’t… they’ll kill everyone here.”

    He stepped past them.

    Hand on the latch.

    Breath steady.

    Heart pounding.

    He looked back only once.

    At his family.
    At the boys.
    At the life he would never have again.

    Then he opened the door the rain hit him like cold fire.

    The hunters aimed spears.
    Horses stamped and snorted.
    Shields glinted like teeth.

    The wolf-banner flapped in the storm wind.

    And the king’s hunter tall, hooded, voice like gravel leaned ahead in his saddle.

    “So,” he growled. “The Stormwulf’s shadow finally steps into the light.”

    Thunorric lifted his chin.

    “No shadow,” he said. “Just a man.”

    The hunter smirked.

    “Not for long.”

    His hand rose thirty spears lowered instantly as Dægan shouted inside the inn. Brother Leofric cried out a warning to anyone who listened. The young ones huddled scared confused and upset together crying.

    But Thunorric did not look back.

    Not once.

    Not ever.

    Rain hammered the earth as if trying to drown the dawn itself.

    Thunorric stood in the mud, cloak heavy with water, as thirty spears formed a wall of iron before him. The king’s hunter dismounted slowly, boots sinking deep into the wet ground.

    The wolf-banner snapped above them, its black shape cutting the storm-grey sky.

    Inside the inn, Wulfie screamed his father’s name.

    Thunorric didn’t flinch.
    Not even a blink.

    The Hunter Approaches

    The hunter circled him once, appraising him like a butcher measuring a stag.

    “You came willingly,” he said, voice low and dangerous. “Unexpected.”

    Thunorric smirked faintly.
    “I’ve been full o’ surprises since before your father had teeth.”

    A few of the king’s men chuckled nervously.

    The hunter didn’t.

    He stepped closer, close enough that Thunorric smell iron. , leather, and the bitterness of a man who enjoyed his work too much.

    “On your knees,” the hunter ordered.

    Inside the inn, Dægan roared, “NO!”

    Leofric held him back by the cloak.

    Thunorric lifted his chin.
    “Not until my sons are taken inside and the door shut.”

    The hunter frowned, annoyed by the demand but he motioned to his soldiers.

    A few men approached the doorway.
    Rægenwine snarled at them, blade raised, but Leofric spoke sharply:

    “Let them take the boys. It’s what he wants.”

    Wulfie, Bram, Harold, and James were pulled back into the shadows of the inn, crying, reaching out.

    “DA!”
    “Da, don’t go!”
    “DA!”

    Thunorric closed his eyes at the sound just for one heartbeat.

    Then he opened them again.

    Calm.
    Resolved.
    Unyielding.

    He lowered himself to one knee.

    The mud splashed against his cloak like spilled blood.

    The hunter smiled.

    “That’s better.”

    He stepped behind Thunorric and ripped the cloak from his shoulders. Rain soaked through the clean shirt beneath, running along scars old and new. Some were pale. Some were angry red. Roman brands. Whip marks. Blade lines from men long dead.

    The hunter lifted his chain.

    “Bind him.”

    The Stormborne Intervene

    Dægan burst through the doorway like a wolf breaking a trap.

    “Touch him and I’ll gut you!”

    Half the king’s men moved instantly, spears lowered toward Dægan’s chest.

    Leofric shoved through after him, staff in hand, fury burning in his usually calm eyes.

    “He’s done nothing to earn this.”

    “Silence,” one soldier snapped. “He’s an outlaw.”

    “Then so am I,” Leofric hissed.

    Thunorric didn’t look back.

    “Dægan. Lore.”
    His voice was soft, but the brothers froze at once.
    “Stand down.”

    Dægan’s hands shook with pure rage.

    “I won’t watch them take you.”

    “You will,” Thunorric said.

    Rain dripped down his jaw.

    “Because my lads need you alive more than they need me free.”

    Leofric’s throat closed.

    Dægan’s fury bled into heartbreak.

    “Brother…”

    “Go inside,” Thunorric said. “See to the boys.”

    Dægan’s chest heaved like a man drowning.

    “I can’t let you”

    “You can,” Thunorric whispered. “And you will.”

    A moment of silence.
    A lifetime of pain held in one breath.

    Then Dægan stepped back.

    Leofric caught him as he stumbled.

    The Chains

    The hunter fastened shackles around Thunorric’s wrists with unnecessary force. The iron bit into old scars.

    Thunorric didn’t react.

    The hunter leaned close and whispered:

    “You’ve no idea how long I’ve waited for this.”

    Thunorric smirked.

    “Aye. But you should always be careful what you wish for.”

    The hunter’s hand tightened on his hair, yanking his head back.

    “Still got that tongue,” he growled.

    Thunorric’s smile faded.

    “Oh, lad… I’ve got worse.”

    The hunter shoved him forward.

    “On your feet.”

    He rose without struggle.

    The Walk Through the Rain

    The king’s men parted, forming a corridor of steel.

    Thunorric walked between them, chained but unbroken.

    Every man stared.
    Some in awe.
    Some in hatred.
    Some in fear because even bound, Thunorric radiated the quiet, terrifying presence of a storm about to break.

    From the inn doorway:

    Dægan leaned against the frame, eyes red, hands gripping the wood until it cracked.

    Leofric held the boys tight, all four crying into him.

    Raegenwine stood beside them, jaw clenched, sword lowered but still in hand.

    Even the Black Shields watched in stricken silence, heads bowed.

    Thunorric glanced back once.

    Just once.

    At them.
    At the inn.
    At the life he would not keep.

    Then he faced ahead again.

    And kept walking.

    The Hunter’s Judgment

    At the road’s edge, the hunter raised his voice.

    “Thunorric of the Stormborne!
    By decree of Coenwulf, King of Mercia
    You will be tried at dawn and executed at dusk!”

    Leofric clutched the boys tighter.

    Dægan sagged against the doorframe.

    The rain hammered down harder.

    Thunorric lifted his chin.

    “Dusk, is it?” he murmured.
    His voice was steady.
    Almost amused.

    “Aye.
    Dusk’ll do fine.”

    The hunter sneered.

    “You’ll die begging.”

    Thunorric’s eyes flashed.

    “You first.”

    The soldiers shoved him ahead.

    The chains rattled as the last Stormborne walked into the storm.

    And the inn behind him broke into sobs.

    © 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.

    Futher reading :

    Chapter 1: the last night at Raegenwine inn

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    IF you have enjoyed this please hit like and subscribe/follow. This is the best way to let me know if you have enjoyed my work.

    Thank you for reading and happy Christmas or. Yule.

  • Rægenwine’s Inn: A Gathering of Legends

    Rægenwine’s Inn: A Gathering of Legends

    (Anglo-Saxon Cycle – c. 430 AD)

    Rain hammered the shutters of Rægenwine’s inn until the boards shuddered. Smoke coiled in the rafters, thick with the scent of peat, wet wool, and spilled ale. Outside, the Chase moaned beneath the wind; the storm had teeth tonight.

    Rægenwine wiped the counter with a rag that smelled of salt and hops.

    “Ay,” he muttered, “always storms when old ghosts come knockin’.”

    The door blew open without a knock. A tall man stepped in, cloak dripping, eyes hard as river-iron Dægan. Once Prefect of Pennocrucium, now a lawman in a land with no emperor to serve.

    He crossed to the hearth, boots leaving muddy scars on the floor.

    “Ale,” he said.
    His voice still carried Rome’s cadence command given as fact, not asking.

    “Tha’ll have it,” Rægenwine answered, pouring dark froth into a cup. “Never thought I’d serve one o’ Rome’s men again.”

    Before Dægan replied, another gust tore the door wide. Smoke and rain flooded the room and through it came Stormwulf, the outlaw the peasants called Thunorric. The fire flared white as he passed, throwing lightning on the walls.

    “Salve, frater. Iam diu est,” he said with a half-smile that was never quite humour. Greetings, brother. It’s been a long time.

    Dægan’s hand went to the hilt at his belt.

    “You’ve no right to that tongue.”

    “Quomodo te appello?” Stormwulf asked softly How shall I name you now?

    Before Dægan answered, a voice from the benches called out,

    “He’s a lawman, that one.”

    Stormwulf’s grin sharpened.

    “Aye. He was the Prefect. The Romans handed their slaves to the invaders”

    He stepped closer, rain dripping from his hair, thunder answering outside.

    “so what are you goin’ to do, Dægan? Arrest me?”

    The two stared, silence vibrating between them like drawn wire.

    “Peace, brothers,” said Leofric, the scribe, descending from the loft with a candle and a roll of parchment. Ink stained his fingers; wax flecks dotted his sleeves.


    “Wyrd wendað geara-wælceare,” he murmured. “Fate turns the years of slaughter. It turns again tonight.”

    Dægan’s eyes flicked toward him.

    “You sent the summons?”

    Leofric shook his head.

    “No man did. The seal was older than any of us.”

    A chair scraped. Eadric, rings glinting on every finger, rose from the shadows.

    “Does it matter who called us? Trade dies, war comes, the Saxons push east. If the Storm-kin don’t stand together, we’ll all be dust by spring.”

    Rægenwine set fresh cups on the table.

    “Stand together, fight together, die together. Same as ever. You lot never learn.” He said it lightly, but his hands trembled.

    Lightning cracked overhead. For an instant the five faces glowed judge, scribe, merchant, keeper, outlaw the bloodline reborn into another dying age.

    Stormwulf lifted his drink.

    “Then here’s to what’s left of us. The law’s gone, the kings are blind, an’ the wolves are hungry. Let’s give the world somethin’ to remember.”

    They drank. The fire roared as if an unseen god breathed through it. Thunder rolled away toward the hills, leaving only rain whispering on the thatch.

    For a heartbeat it felt like peace.

    Then the door creaked again.
    A small figure stood in the threshold a boy, ten, slim and flame-haired, his tunic soaked to the knees. His wide eyes caught every glint of the fire.

    “Papà… who are these men?” he asked, looking straight at Stormwulf.

    The outlaw froze. The cup slipped in his hand; ale hissed on the hearth.

    Rægenwine raised his brows.

    “By the saints, the wolf’s got a cub.”

    Leofric’s candle wavered.

    “Stormwulf has a son.”

    The boy straightened, chin lifting with pride.

    “Yam son thirteen,” he said, the Chase thick in his voice.

    Dægan exhaled slowly.

    “You hide a child through war and outlawry? What future do you think you give him?”

    Stormwulf met his brother’s gaze.

    “The same future Rome gave us only this time he’ll choose his chains.”

    Eadric leaned forward, eyes narrowing.

    “Then he’s the legacy. That’s why we were called.”

    Leofric touched the parchment to his heart.

    “The blood renews itself. The storm passes from father to son.”

    Rægenwine poured the boy a sip of watered ale and pushed it across the counter.

    “Ay, lad, welcome to the trouble. Name’s Rægenwine. Don’t worry we only bite when cornered.”

    The boy smiled, uncertain but brave. Thunder rolled again, softer now, echoing deep in the forest.

    Stormwulf placed a hand on the child’s shoulder.

    “Whatever comes, we stand together. Storm-kin, by storm or steel.”

    Dægan gave a curt nod.

    “Then let it be written.”

    Leofric’s quill scratched across the parchment, capturing the words before they fade.

    When the last ember dimmed, a faint spiral. Had burned itself into the table’s grain the mark of the Stormborne glowing like lightning caught in wood.

    Leofric broke the silence.

    “You said son thirteen, Stormwulf. So you’ve others?”

    The outlaw’s mouth twisted into a grin.

    “Give or take fifty not all born to the same mother. Some Roman, some Saxon.”

    Eadric laughed low.

    “You’ve turned legacy into a trade.”

    Stormwulf raised his cup.

    “The world burns fast, brother. Someone’s got to leave a few sparks behind. Don’t act innocent, Dægan lawmen breed as quick as wolves. And Draven aye, you’ve your share.”

    His gaze slid to Rægenwine.

    “What of you, innkeeper?”

    Rægenwine shrugged.

    “My children’re these four walls, and the fools they shelter. That’s enough family for me.”

    The fire sighed. Outside, the rain softened to mist over the Chase

    Copyright Note© 2025 E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts. All rights reserved.Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this artwork and text is prohibited.Thank you for reading.

    Futher Reading

    The Chronicles of Drax

    Chronicles of Draven

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

    Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

    Author’s Note The Names of the Storm-kin

    Every age reshapes its heroes.
    When Rome fell and Britain fractured into the wild patchwork of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. The tongues of the land changed too. Latin softened into Old English; titles faded into kin-names; family names hadn’t yet been born.
    To keep the story true to its time. The Stormborne brothers now wear the names their world would have given them.

    Earlier Name Anglo-Saxon Form Meaning / Role

    Drax changed to Dægan which means “Daylight.” The lawman who still carries Rome’s order into a darker age.

    Lore changed to Leofric the meaning of thid name is “Beloved ruler.” The scribe whose ink preserves the old magic and the new faith.

    Draven was changed to Eadric which means “Wealth-ruler.” The freeman-merchant who keeps the Storm-kin fed when kings fail.

    Rayne Rægenwine “Counsel-friend.” The innkeeper who shelters all sides when storms rise.

    Taranis Stormwulf / Thunorric “Storm-wolf / Thunder-ruler.” The outlaw lord, half legend, half warning.

    Surnames did not yet exist. So “Stormborne” becomes a title rather than a family name a mark carried in blood and story.

    The people call them the Storm-kin, those who walk beneath thunder and never yield.These changes let the saga move naturally into the fifth century. without losing the heart of the brothers or the world they built.

  • Taranis Stormborne: The Gathering Storm

    Taranis Stormborne: The Gathering Storm

    The rain hadn’t stopped for three days. It came in thin veils that clung to the heather and the men’s cloaks. whispering through the birch like ghosts that had never left the Chase.

    Taranis knelt by the dying fire, sharpening the edge of his blade with slow, deliberate strokes. Each scrape of the stone was a prayer, though no priest would have known the words.

    “Water’s risin’, lord,” said Caedric, glancing toward the ford. “River’s near burstin’. We’ll not cross ‘fore dark.”

    Taranis looked up, eyes catching the faint shimmer of dawn through the fog. “Then we hold. The storm waits for no man, but we’ll not feed it needlessly.”

    A murmur ran through the men tired, hungry, but loyal. They’d followed him from the salt marshes to the high woods, and not one had broken yet.

    Byrin crouched beside him, rubbing at the scar along his jaw. “Word from the south. Roman riders out o’ Pennocrucium. A full cohort, maybe more. Marchin’ for the hill road.”

    Taranis’ mouth twitched at the name Pennocrucium,. The Roman word for Penkridge, though no Stormborne had spoken it without spitting since the fort was raised.

    “Let ‘em come,” he said quietly. “They’ll find nowt but mud, ghosts, and trees that whisper their names to the wind.”

    Caedric chuckled darkly. “Aye, an’ if the trees don’t get ‘em, we will.”

    They waited through the day as the rain thickened. Ravens wheeled low over the clearing, black against the iron sky.

    By nightfall, fires burned low and bellies growled. But Taranis was restless the unease that came before the breaking of something old.

    He walked to the ridge alone, where the land dipped toward the flooded ford. The air stank of wet earth and smoke from distant hearths.

    He spoke softly, almost to himself. “Once, this road ran to Rome. Now it runs to ruin.”

    A flash of lightning tore the sky open white veins across black clouds. In its light, he saw them: Roman scouts, three of them, creeping along the far bank, cloaks slick with rain.

    Taranis smiled grimly. “So, the eagle still claws at the storm.”

    By the time the thunder rolled, the first spear had already struck.

    The fight was over quick steel on steel, mud and breath, the hiss of rain on blood.

    When it was done, two Romans lay dead. The third crawling back toward the ford with half a helm and a broken arm.

    Taranis knelt beside him. “Tell your centurion,” he said, voice low, “Pennocrucium belongs to the storm now.”

    He rose, letting the rain wash his hands clean.

    Behind him, Byrin and Caedric watched, silent.

    “Yow reckon they’ll send more, lord?” Byrin asked.

    Taranis turned toward the woods. Where torches burned faint between the trees his men gathering, more arriving from the north and the marshes.

    “Aye,” he said, voice steady. “Let ‘em all come. Rome’ll find no peace ‘ere. Not while the storm still breathes.”

    The thunder rolled again, closer now, echoing through the Chase like an oath renewed. Somewhere in the distance, the old road cracked underfoot stone splitting where the spiral mark had been carved.

    The storm had woken.

    © 2025 E.L. Hewitt / StormborneLore. All rights reserved.

    Author’s Note:


    This chapter draws from the old Roman site of Pennocrucium (modern Penkridge), a key post along Watling Street. Local dialect echoes through “yow,” “nowt,” “lord” the living voice of the Black Country and Staffordshire’s borderlands. These stories honour the land itself where history and myth still meet in the rain.

    Formorestories on Taranis please see http://The prophecies and tales of Taranis

  • Blood and Oath

    Blood and Oath

    The sun stood high as Praefect Drax Stormborne lingered beside the fire, cloak folded tight against a thin breeze.

    “Hello, brother,” a teen voice said, and Drax’s hand went to the hilt of his sword before he turned.

    “Taranis, show yourself now,” he said, keeping his tone even.

    “Why? So you can look at me and scowl?” Taranis’s voice came from the trees. “I’m fine here, where you can’t see me but I can see you. I see you have children now, and you look smart in the Roman uniform of their law-men.”

    “You acknowledge that, brother?” Drax asked, eyes narrowing.

    “I acknowledge,” Taranis replied, stepping from the shade with a faint smile. “but I do not bow not to you, my liege, nor to your Roman overlords. We all do what we must to survive.” He paused, then added, quieter, “But try anything and I’ll snap your men like twigs.”

    A small boy tugged at Drax’s sleeve. “Father, who is he?” the child asked.

    “Is he a barbarian, father?” another eight-year-old whispered, peering toward the tree-line.

    “Julius that’s our uncle Taranis?” a smirking boy offered. “The legendary gladiator Lupus… wasn’t he exiled?”

    Drax let the questions run off him like rain. He studied Taranis as if measuring a blade. Blood and oath pulled between them one brother in Roman order, the other a storm wearing man’s skin.

    The campfire crackled, throwing sparks into the brittle afternoon air. For a heartbeat, the world held its breath two brothers standing on opposite shores of the same river.

    Taranis tilted his head slightly, the ghost of a smile curving his lips.
    “Exiled, yes,” he said softly. “But storms don’t vanish, brother. They wait for the right sky.”

    Drax said nothing. His men shifted uneasily, hands brushing spear shafts, glancing between the prefect and the outlaw.

    “You shouldn’t have come,” Drax murmured finally. “Rome watches even the wind that bends near me.”

    “I’m not here for Rome,” Taranis replied,. his gaze flicking toward the boys proud, uncertain, wearing their father’s steel in miniature. “I came to see what became of the man I once followed into the fire.”

    “You followed because you had no choice,” Drax snapped, voice sharp enough to cut the air.
    “And you bowed because you wanted one,” Taranis countered.

    Silence fell again. The forest around them seemed to lean closer, listening.

    Julius, the youngest, tugged at Drax’s sleeve.

    “Father… he doesn’t look like a villain,” the boy whispered.
    “No,” said Drax quietly, eyes still locked on Taranis. “That’s what makes him dangerous.”

    Taranis laughed then, low and bitter. “Dangerous? I bled for this land before Rome knew its name. If danger is survival, then yes I am a danger.”

    A faint roll of thunder trembled beyond the horizon. Both men turned toward it, instinctively.

    “Storm’s coming,” said one of Drax’s soldiers.

    Taranis met his brother’s eyes one last time.
    “No, soldier,” he said, voice like wind through iron. “The storm’s already here.”

    He vanished into the trees before anyone move. leaving only the fading echo of his words and the scent of rain.

    Drax stood long after he was gone, until his eldest spoke softly:
    “Will we see him again, Father?”

    Drax’s jaw tightened. “If the gods have mercy or none at all.”

    The thunder answered for him.

    Julius started to run after his uncle.

    “No, child,” Drax called, voice tight.

    Taranis turned, the stormlight catching on the scars that crossed his jaw. He knelt so his eyes met the boy’s.
    “Your place is with your father,” he said softly. “He’s a good, honourable man.”

    Julius frowned. “How did you get off the island?”

    Taranis’s mouth twitched into a smirk. “I built a boat.”

    He rose, cloak stirring in the wind as thunder growled again in the distance.
    “Remember that, boy when the world cages you, build your own way out.”

    Then he was gone once more, the forest swallowing him whole.

    Drax stood in silence, watching the trees sway. His men busied themselves with meaningless tasks tightening straps, banking the fire anything to avoid the weight in the air.

    The prefect’s eyes lingered on the path his brother had taken.
    “Stormborne,” he murmured, the name a curse and a prayer all at once.

    Above them, the first drops of rain began to fall.

    Thank you for reading if you enjoyed this story. Please like subscribe and follow for more.

    Futher reading

    The Chronicles of Drax

    The tales of Rayne

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    The Keeper of Cairnstones: Myths and Mysteries Revealed

  • The Island of Ash and Iron: A Tale of Resilience

    The Island of Ash and Iron: A Tale of Resilience

    The Island of Ash and Iron

    Written by
    emma.stormbornelore

    The island steamed beneath a blood-orange dawn. Black sand hissed as the tide pulled back, revealing fragments of broken shields and driftwood charred by lightning.

    Taranis Stormborne stood among the wreckage, cloak torn, hair slick with salt. Around him, the Black Shields gathered the fallen in silence.

    No victory songs were sung only the slow rhythm of men. Who understood the cost of silence and the weight of patience.

    “Bury them high,” Taranis said at last. “Let the wind speak their names.”

    He turned his gaze inland, where the volcanic ridges rose like the spines of sleeping beasts. Smoke drifted from fissures in the rock, thick with the scent of iron and ash.

    Beneath those ridges lay the forge a secret his men had built in defiance of empire.

    As the storm’s light faded behind the clouds, a scout approached, breath ragged.

    “Lupus… Rome has sent word north. They know a fleet was lost, but not how. They think it was a storm.”

    Taranis’s mouth curved into a faint, weary smile.

    “Then let the lie live. Storms are easier to fear than men.”

    He knelt beside a shattered shield half-buried in sand. Its surface was scorched black, the emblem of the wolf barely visible beneath the soot. With slow care, he traced the mark with his thumb, leaving a streak of silver ash.

    “This island is no longer exile,” he murmured. “It’s the forge of the next age. And when Rome’s thunder fades, ours will remain.”

    Above him, a distant rumble rolled through the clouds not thunder, but the awakening of something older.

    The storm had learned to wait.

    Thank you for reading.

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  • The Resilient Sea: Taranis’s Defiance Against Rome

    The Resilient Sea: Taranis’s Defiance Against Rome

    The sea was restless that night, black as iron and twice as cold. Taranis Stormborne stood at the prow of the ship, his cloak heavy with salt and rain. Behind him, the Black Shields moved in silence, their faces hidden, their oars cutting through the water with a rhythm older than empire.

    Rome’s ships had been sighted near Carthage a patrol too far from home, too confident. This voyage was not conquest, but message.

    Lightning split the horizon. Taranis lifted his gaze toward the thunderclouds, their light catching the gold in his eyes.

    “Do you fear the storm?” one of the younger soldiers whispered.

    Taranis’s answer was soft, almost drowned by the wind.
    “I am the storm.”

    The first Roman galley loomed ahead, torches guttering in the wind. The Black Shields struck swift and silent, grappling hooks biting wood, blades flashing in the rain. No horns, no cries only the sound of waves breaking and chains rattling as old fears were unmade.

    By dawn, the sea was calm again. The Roman ship burned behind them, its mast sinking like a dying pillar of the old world.

    Taranis watched the smoke fade into the clouds. “Let them think it was lightning,” he said. “Let them think the gods themselves strike against their arrogance.”

    He turned back toward the island, where fire and training awaited. The storm had passed but the Empire would wake to the scent of rain and know its name.

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    .

  • Secrets of the Western Marches: A Tale of War and Loyalty

    Secrets of the Western Marches: A Tale of War and Loyalty

    The dawn broke pale and brittle over the Western Marches. Mist clung to the hillsides like the remnants of a long-forgotten battle. The scent of wet earth hung thick in the air.

    Drax Stormborne rode alone, the wolf badge at his breast glinting faintly in the weak light. Each hoof beat a steady rhythm against the quiet of the land.

    Reports had come from the southern villages. Whispers of movement along the coast, smuggled supplies disappearing into the night, and the black shields stirring in secret. Rome called it rebellion. Drax called it preparation.

    He paused at the ridge, scanning the valley below. The smoke curled from chimneys, thin and innocent. Yet he saw in it the same threads of tension that had always followed his family. Every glance, every movement, was a calculation an unspoken war between loyalty, law, and blood.

    A courier approached, riding hard across the hill track. Drax reined in his horse. The rider’s eyes were wide with urgency, breath steaming in the cold morning.

    “High Sheriff,” the courier gasped, bowing slightly. “The exiles… they’ve moved. South, toward the old Roman fort. But there are… signs. Traps, and sentries placed where none should be.”

    Drax’s jaw tightened. He dismounted slowly, brushing mud from his cloak. “And our men?”

    “Silent,” the rider said. “They wait, as you instructed. Patient. Watching.”

    Drax nodded, feeling the familiar weight of responsibility press upon him. Patience, observation, action the long game. His thoughts flickered to Taranis, chained in distant Rome. Memories of the oath that bound him not just to the Empire, but to family. To storm.

    He turned to the courier. “See to it that no one moves without my signal. Keep the villages safe. Let Rome believe all is still. But let our shadow fall across the fort when the time is right. The storm will not wait forever.”

    Lightning fractured across the distant sky, a whisper of thunder rolling over the hills. Drax lifted his gaze and felt it stir through him, golden and alive. The storm was patient, and so would he be.

    For when the winds finally tore through the land, nothing not even Rome would withstand it.

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  • Volcanic Echoes: The Forgotten Island’s Tale

    Volcanic Echoes: The Forgotten Island’s Tale

    The Fire of the Forgotten

    The island smoldered beneath a grey dawn, volcanic ash drifting in spirals that mirrored the labyrinth of the Black Shields’ training paths. Taranis Stormborne stood atop a jagged cliff, chains long gone, his shadow cast over the men who moved like echoes of his command.

    “Strength is patience,” he reminded them, voice low but unyielding. “Silence is more than absence; it is a weapon.”

    The men obeyed, their movements precise, their eyes alert to every change in wind or light. Exiles, criminals, and freed soldiers had become something else entirely a force of quiet purpose. In the flickering smoke of the island’s vents, Taranis traced lines in the sand, marking the future with symbols only they understood.

    A scout returned, breathless and wide-eyed. “Rumors, Lupus… Rome speaks of shadows in the hills, whispers of an army unknown.”

    Taranis nodded, the storm within him mirrored in the sky above. Lightning tore across the horizon. “Let them whisper,” he said. “Every shadow will remind them: the storm bends, but it never breaks.”

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  • Rayne: Master of Shadows and Discord

    Rayne: Master of Shadows and Discord

    They call him the storm, the unbroken one, but they do not see the cracks beneath the surface. I do. I have always seen.

    From the shadows of Rome’s streets to the secret alleys where whispers become currency, I move like a shadow with purpose. The Black Shields rise under Taranis, but they are not invincible and I am patient. One misstep, one flicker of hesitation, and the scales will tip.

    My brothers do not trust me nor should they. Loyalty is a chain, and I have never been bound. Drax enforces law. Lore watches omens. Taranis commands storms. And I… I navigate the spaces in between, sowing discord where it will serve me best, testing their strength, and waiting for the moment the tide shifts in my favor.

    Rome believes in its security, its arenas, its chains. Let them. I move unseen, the quiet question mark, the shadow that unsettles even the bravest hearts.

    “Every storm has a fissure. Every chain a weak link. And I will find them.”

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  • Echoes of War: Secrets of the Ash-Strewn Shore

    Echoes of War: Secrets of the Ash-Strewn Shore

    Whispers Across the Sea

    The night hung low, thick with ash and the faint glow of molten rivers. Taranis Stormborne stood at the cliff’s edge, listening to the pulse of the waves. Each roar of the sea carried a story, a whisper of what the Empire thought it can ignore.

    The Black Shields moved silently across the ash-strewn plateau. Training not for spectacle, but for the unseen for strikes in shadows, patience, and loyalty forged in fire.

    Exiles and criminals who had once bent to fear now moved with precision. Their eyes carrying the memory of chains and the promise of freedom.

    A messenger arrived under the cloak of darkness, bringing news from beyond the sea. A small port town had whispered rumors of a golden-eyed warrior training men in secret. Shaping them into something Rome would not understand. Taranis did not smile. Rumors were the first arrows of war silent, deadly, and everywhere.

    “Send scouts,” he instructed, his voice low, like distant thunder. “Learn what they fear, what they ignore. Rome has grown fat on ignorance, and we shall remind them of storms.”

    In the volcanic caves, he spoke to the leaders of his order. Tracing the map of the Mediterranean with ash from the fire. Each mark represented a seed smuggled weapons, loyal exiles, slaves freed and sworn to secrecy. Each note in the symphony of rebellion.

    Above, lightning split the sky. Taranis lifted his face, feeling the electric pulse in his veins, the same storm that had followed him from Britannia. “Soon,” he whispered, “the whispers will become cries, and the cries will echo through the Empire. Let them fear the shadow that bends, but never breaks.”

    Far across the sea, Marcus and a handful of loyal men tracked the tales. Every report of a shadow in the hills, of soldiers who moved with impossible skill, brought unease to their hearts.

    They did not yet know the full force of Taranis’ plan. But they sensed it, like the first stirrings of a hurricane, unseen but unstoppable.

    On the island, fire and stone were the teachers, patience the tutor, and loyalty the currency. The Black Shields were no longer mere survivors; they were an omen, a promise carried in whispers across the waves.

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    further Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded