Tag: Celtic fantasy

  • 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. The Chronicles of the Gold Ring

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring

        Acrylic painting of a Roman soldier with red shield and spear, artwork by StormborneLore (Emma Hewitt, 2025). Symbolizes the fall of Taranis Stormborne and the transition from Celtic Britain to Roman Britain in The Chronicles of the Gold Ring."

        Chapter Thirteen – The Shattered Circle

        The circle of stones stood under a bruised sky. The thirteenth stone, already cracked from the battle at Emberhelm, seemed to strain against itself as though it knew what was coming. Thirteen seats. Only twelve filled.

        Taranis Storm to his outlaws stood at the centre. His cloak was damp from rain, his wrist still bandaged from the Hill of Ashes. Around him, the brothers of the Ring shifted like wolves uneasy in their own skins.

        Drax spoke first. “The Black Shields raid in your name. The people whisper of you, not of us. The balance is broken.”

        “It was never balanced,” Taranis replied. His voice was low, bitter. “We bled for fields that gave us no bread. Rome takes salt from our earth while we quarrel. If I raid, it is to feed our people, not to wear a crown.”

        Lore’s eyes flicked to the sky. “And yet the crown follows you, brother. The omens have turned. The storm no longer waits.”

        Then Rayne stepped forward, the firelight showing the sly curve of his smile. “No storm lasts forever. Some of us have chosen survival.”

        From the shadows came the tramp of iron boots. The air filled with the rhythm of Rome square shields, horsehair crests, iron blades that gleamed even in the grey. The circle of stones was surrounded.

        Draven’s face went pale. His lips moved as if to speak, but no words came.

        “You led them here,” Taranis said.

        Rayne did not deny it. “Our people will live beneath Rome’s law. Better chains of iron than graves of ash.”

        The thirteenth stone split with a sound like thunder. Dust trickled down its face. The Ring was broken.

        Battle erupted. Drax drew steel, Lore called fire from the runes, Aisin shielded the cradle where Caelum slept. Nessa’s blade sang bright before she was dragged into the fray, her cry lost in the clash.

        Taranis fought like the storm itself blade flashing, shield breaking, each stroke cutting down another soldier. But for every man he felled, three more closed in. Nets weighted with lead tangled his limbs. Chains of iron bit deep.

        He roared once, a sound that shook the stones. Lightning split the sky as if the gods themselves mourned. Then the Romans dragged him down. His black shield shattered under their boots.

        “Take him alive,” the centurion barked. “Rome has use for beasts like this.”

        When the fighting ended, the circle lay in ruin. Smoke curled from broken fires. Brothers lay wounded or scattered. The thirteenth stone was nothing but rubble.

        Taranis, Storm of Emberhelm, was shackled in chains and marched south along the salt road. Behind him, the old world fell silent. Ahead lay the lash, the arena, and the roar of foreign crowds.

        He lifted his head once to the sky and whispered through bloodied lips:

        “If I must fight, let it be as storm, not as slave.”

        The storm rolled east with him, into Rome.

        © StormborneLore Emma Hewitt, 2025. All rights reserved.

        The Library of Caernath

        Stormborne Arts

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Twelve

      2. The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Nine.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Nine.

        Bread for Blood

        The night was raw and sharp with frost, the air thick with the scent of pine and woodsmoke drifting from distant hearths. Taranis rode ahead, the black shield strapped to his back catching what little moonlight broke through the bare branches.

        Behind him, the Black Shields moved like a shadow given form. Seven riders their shields painted black and marked with the storm-sigil in dull grey ash. Among them, Brianna kept pace, her raven-dark hair bound in a warrior’s braid, eyes fixed on the road ahead.

        Their target lay where the old trader’s road bent toward the river. a Roman supply convoy, fat with grain, salted pork, and amphorae of oil. The guards wore the same polished arrogance as all Rome’s men helmets gleaming, spears upright, their march a perfect, disciplined rhythm.

        Taranis raised his fist.
        The forest seemed to hold its breath.
        Then his hand dropped, and the night erupted.

        Arrows hissed from the treeline, felling the lead guard before the others could shout. Brianna’s blade flashed as she rode through the side of the column, cutting down a soldier who tried to raise his horn. Taranis slammed into the rearmost wagon, sending it lurching into the ditch.

        The fight was short, brutal.
        When it ended, the snow was churned with blood and the mules stood trembling, steam curling from their nostrils.

        “Take the lot,” Taranis said. “Every last sack.”

        The Shields loaded what they could onto their own wagons, but instead of retreating into the forest as usual, Taranis turned his horse toward the lowland villages along the marsh. They moved in silence, the wagons creaking under the weight of Rome’s stolen bounty.

        The first door they knocked on belonged to a bent-backed widow with two hungry children. Brianna handed her a sack of grain without a word.


        At the next farmstead, a half-crippled shepherd received a barrel of salted pork. By the time they reached the edge of Emberhelm’s border, half the load was gone.

        The rest, Taranis delivered at dawn to Lore’s men at the southern watch, and to Drax’s quartermaster in the hills.

        When Brianna caught up to him by the river, she frowned.

        “You give more than you keep. That’s not how outlaws survive.”

        Taranis shrugged, eyes on the water.

        “Then I’m not an outlaw. I’m a storm. Storms take, but they leave the earth ready to grow again.”

        She studied him for a long moment before nodding once.

        “Then let’s see how long the earth lets you live.”

        © 2025 Emma Hewitt. All rights reserved.
        This story and all characters within the StormborneLore world are the original creation of Emma Hewitt. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations used in reviews or scholarly works.

        The Library of Caernath

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Four.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Five

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Interlude.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring. Chapter Six

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Seven

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Eight

      3. The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Eight

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Eight

        The Shadow Raid

        The forests north of Emberhelm were not empty. They whispered in the cold leaves rustling without wind, branches creaking as if bearing witness.


        Every step of Taranis’s horse cracked frost from the dead undergrowth, and in the darkness, unseen eyes marked his passage.

        The Black Shields had grown in only a handful of days. Seven now a band stitched together from thieves, deserters, exiled warriors, and one woman with hair like raven feathers whose blade was sharper than her tongue. She called herself Brianna , and unlike the others, she did not flinch when Taranis looked at her.

        They camped in the hollows where no light could reach. They moved before sunrise, leaving only cold ashes behind, and they spoke little, except for the soft murmur of plans and the low hum of old battle songs.

        Their first strike had been for food.
        The second, for vengeance.
        The third would be for a message, not just for them but the starving.

        Bryn Halwyn a hill fort the Romans had claimed but not yet reforged in their own style. Its high earthwork walls crouched like a sleeping beast above the winding road. That road was crawling now with supply wagons, the torchlight of the guards bobbing like fireflies in the mist.

        Taranis’s voice was a low growl “Shields black. Faces darker.”

        The Shields moved as one, melting into the tree line. Arrows hissed from the dark, the first taking a Roman through the throat before his shout could leave his mouth. The second dropped a driver from his cart, spilling barrels into the mud.

        Then came the torches. They arced through the air, their fire licking greedily at wagon covers, rope, and dry straw. Flames climbed fast, reflected in the wide eyes of panicked mules.

        Taranis was already moving.
        A shadow at the edge of the firelight, blade flashing, he cut through the first guard and didn’t stop. The air stank of blood and burning oak. The Romans shouted in their clipped tongue, but their formations shattered in the chaos.

        By dawn, the road was empty but for the smell of wet ash and a single storm-sigil burned deep into the dirt where the wagons had stood.


        When they were gone, the crows came, hopping between the blackened wheels and picking at the dead.

        That night, beside a hidden fire, the Shields feasted on stolen bread and salt pork. Kerris leaned across the flames.


        “What now?” she asked.

        Taranis stared into the heart of the fire until his eyes stung.
        “We keep going until there’s nothing left to take. Or until they come for me.”

        Kerris smirked. “And if they do?”

        He smiled without warmth. “Then they’ll find the storm waiting.” he replied with a grin

        © 2025 Emma Hewitt. All rights reserved.This story and all characters within the StormborneLore world are the original creation of Emma Hewitt. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations used in reviews or scholarly works.

        Futher Reading

        The Library of Caernath

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Four.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Five

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Interlude.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring. Chapter Six

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Seven

      4. The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Seven

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Seven

        Ash on the Bridge


        The morning after the storm was silent, but for the river.


        Its grey water curled slow beneath the bridge, licking at the stones as if to wash them clean of the night before.
        It could not.

        Boldolph lay there still, fur wet, eyes closed in the peace of warriors who never feared death. Morrigan was beside him, her flank pressed against his as though she had refused to fall alone.

        Taranis did not kneel. He stood apart, a horn of bitter mead in one hand, the other wrapped around the haft of his spear. His brothers spoke words over the dead the kind of words that should have meant something but the high warlord’s gaze was elsewhere. Past the pyres, past the valley, toward the ridges where the enemy had come.

        The smell of charred wood and dragon’s breath lingered. Somewhere above the clouds, the great wings of Pendragon and Tairneanach were gone to ash or exile. He could feel the absence as a wound.

        When the flames took the wolves, he drank deep. When the ashes scattered on the wind, he did not look back.

        That night, in the hall of Ignis, Lore spoke of rebuilding. Draven spoke of the Ring’s oaths. Drax spoke of vengeance.
        Taranis said nothing until the room had emptied.

        Then, to the empty benches, he muttered, “The Ring is cracked. And cracks spread.”

        Outside, the moon rode high. In its light, a man in a blackened cloak rode from Emberhelm with no banner and no blessing only a storm sigil scratched into his shield with the point of a knife.

        The Black Shields had begun.

        2025 Emma Hewitt. All rights reserved.
        This story and all characters within the StormborneLore world are the original creation of Emma Hewitt. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations used in reviews or scholarly works.

        The Library of Caernath

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Four.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Five

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring. Chapter Six

      5. The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Interlude.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Interlude.

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      6. The Chronicles of the Gold Ring. Chapter Six

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring. Chapter Six

        The Night the Ring Shattered


        The night smelled of rain and iron.

        From the outer wall, Taranis could taste the storm before it broke sharp on the air, heavy in his bones. The valley below was black save for the faint glint of torchlight far beyond the river. The strangers from the ridge had come at last.

        “They’re not raiders,” Drax said, joining him at the wall. “Too few for a siege. Too disciplined for a skirmish.”

        “Too confident to live,” Taranis replied, though the set of his jaw told another story.

        By the time the first horn blew, the outer gate was already under assault. Not a roar of chaos, but the steady, hammering rhythm of a trained force. Boldolph and Morrigan were first to meet them teeth bared, fur bristling, their snarls rolling over the walls like distant thunder.

        Then the sky tore.

        Pendragon and Tairneanach came from the dark like living fire. Wings swept low, scattering the first wave of attackers into the river. For a heartbeat, the night belonged to Emberhelm.

        But then a cry from the inner courtyard.

        Nessa, blade in hand, burst from the shadows. “Caelum’s chamber is empty!”

        Taranis didn’t think he moved. Past the gate, through the melee, cutting down the enemy commander’s guard one by one until steel rang on steel. The man was quick, his armour unfamiliar banded metal, curved like river reeds, not the crude plates of the hill tribes. A shadow of Rome in the making.

        Behind them, the wolves fought on. Boldolph took a spear to the ribs and kept moving. Morrigan’s howl was the last thing many would hear before the river claimed them.

        Inside the sacred circle, Lore’s voice rose over the clash an old chant to bind the enemy’s will. Draven tried to hold the stones, his hands trembling against the carved runes. Rayne was nowhere to be seen.

        The duel was short and brutal. Taranis drove his blade through the man’s chest, wrenching it free as lightning split the sky. But in that moment, the circle of stones shook. One the thirteenth stone cracked down its face with a sound like the earth breaking.

        Pendragon roared once more, then wheeled away into the storm. Tairneanach followed. Neither would be seen again.

        When the gate finally closed, the field beyond was strewn with the dead ours and theirs. Boldolph lay on the bridge, Morrigan beside him, the river taking their last breath.

        And in the quiet after, Caelum was found untouched, but with a strip of strange iron tied to his crib. A mark, a warning, or a promise.

        Taranis stood in the ruins of Emberhelm, rain running from his cloak, watching the storm move east.

        “I will find who brought them to our gates,” he said.

        From the shadows, Rayne’s voice answered, almost too soft to hear.
        “You won’t have to look far.”

        © 2025 Emma Hewitt. All rights reserved.This story and all characters within the StormborneLore world are the original creation of Emma Hewitt. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations used in reviews or scholarly works.

        Further Reading

        The Library of Caernath

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Four.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Five

      7. The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Five

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Five

        The Weight of the Sky


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


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

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

        “I’m listening.”

        “To what?”

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

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

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

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

        “Could be traders.”

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

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

        The Sacred Grove

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

        The Council Stones

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

        The silence that followed was sharp enough to bleed.

        Rayne’s Quarters

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

        The Outer Gate

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

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

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

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

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

        Final Beat

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

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

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

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

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Four.

      8. The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

        The Fire Between Us


        The truce held barely.

        Smoke still curled above the hills, but for now, the killing had paused. The Ring had demanded silence, and the land obeyed with the uneasy stillness of a wolf watching from the edge of firelight.

        Taranis sat by the river, sharpening a blade he hadn’t drawn in days. The sound was steady, comforting a ritual older than words.

        “You missed your council seat,” Nessa said behind him.

        He didn’t turn. “Let them speak in circles. The wind will tell me what they decide.”

        She stepped closer, arms folded, eyes sharp as ever. Her hair was damp from the river, her scar still raw but healing.

        “You’re their warlord whether you wear a crown or not,” she said. “They listen for your storms.”

        “I’m tired of storms,” he said, standing slowly. “I want peace.”

        She raised an eyebrow. “Peace from war? Or from yourself?”

        That hit deeper than he expected. He turned, finally, and faced her. “Do you ever stop fighting?”

        “Only when I’m sleeping.” A half-smile appeared on her face “And sometimes not even then.”

        He studied her in the fading light the blood on her hands that hadn’t come from mercy, the way she stood like someone expecting betrayal at any moment. And yet, she was still here.

        “They called me cursed,” he said. “Storm-marked. Said I was born to end things, not build them.”

        Nessa’s gaze didn’t waver. “Then build something anyway. Let the curse bite its own tail.”

        He stepped toward her. Close enough to feel her breath, to see the flecks of gold in her eyes.

        “You speak like a seer,” he said.

        “I speak like a woman who’s already lost too much to superstition.”

        He wanted to reach for her but didn’t. Instead, he offered his hand. Just his hand.

        She stared at it like it was a blade, then took it.

        No vows were spoken. No gods were called.

        But something passed between them in that moment not love, not yet.
        Something older.

        Something true.

        Later that Night Emberhelm


        Lore lit the sacred fire at the centre of the stone ring. The flame flared blue for a moment unnatural. Ominous.

        Draven flinched. Rayne smiled.

        “Balance is shifting,” Lore muttered, eyes on the flame. “Something has stirred it.”

        Drax stood at the edge of the circle, arms crossed. “He’s with her again.”

        Rayne’s voice was soft and snake-slick. “Then let him be. Let him forget his duty.”

        Draven shifted uneasily. “If Taranis lets her in, he could let in worse.”

        “Or better,” Lore countered. “She may be a sword that cuts both ways.”

        Rayne’s grin widened. “Then let’s see what she severs first.”

        Outside the circle, a storm began to gather. Quiet, coiled. Watching.

        The Circle of Stones, Emberhelm
        The storm broke slowly, not with thunder, but with footsteps.

        Boots echoed between ancient stones as Taranis stepped into the sacred ring, his cloak still damp from river mist. Nessa walked a pace behind him, her eyes wary, her scar bright under the firelight.

        The brothers stood in silence as he approached. Drax by the child’s cradle, Lore near the flame, Draven wringing his hands in shadow. Rayne stood like a blade left out in the cold smiling, but never warm.

        Taranis’s voice cut through the stillness like flint on steel.

        “I know what you speak when I’m not here. I hear it in the wind. I feel it in the ground. You question my loyalty because I do not sit with you every day. Because a girl now walks beside me.”

        He looked at each of them in turn not as brothers, but as warriors who once bled beside him.

        “Let me be clear. My oath to Caernath stands. I have not broken it. I will not.”

        He turned briefly to Nessa, then back to the Ring, his voice rising with quiet fury.

        “But I am not made of stone. I am not your thunder without end. Like you, I bleed. I grieve. And I deserve gods be damned to feel joy. To be loved.”

        A gust of wind swept through the circle, snuffing one of the smaller fires. The shadows leaned in.

        Taranis stepped closer to the central flame, gaze hard now.

        “One of you will betray me. I don’t know when, or how. But it will be for power, land, and coin. That truth rots in the air. But hear me now.”

        He unsheathed his blade, slowly, and drove it into the earth beside the flame.

        “If you seek to take my crown, then come for me openly. Not with poison. Not with lies.”

        His eyes flicked to Rayne just a heartbeat.

        “Because I will forgive a blade. But I will not forgive a coward.”

        The wind stilled. Even the stones seemed to listen.

        Drax stepped forward first, his voice low and steady.

        “My brother, I believe you. And should the time come I will not stand behind you. I will stand with you.”

        Lore said nothing, but he placed his palm on the stone rune before him the sign of silent accord.

        Draven looked down, unable to meet anyone’s gaze.

        Rayne only smiled, slow and wolfish.

        “You speak of storms and love as if either can save you,” he said softly. “But I wonder, brother… which will break you first?”

        After Taranis walks away from the fire:

        Nessa followed a few paces behind him, silent until they were beyond the edge of the circle. She spoke without looking at him.

        “That wasn’t a warning. That was a reckoning.”

        Taranis’s voice was low.

        “They needed to hear it. And I needed to remember who I am.”

        “And who is that?” she asked.

        He paused, fingers brushing the hilt of the blade still buried in the earth behind them.

        “A man who has been many things. But never loved and still whole.”

        She touched his arm, gently.

        “Then let this be the first time.” she replied

        Further Reading

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

        The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two

      9. The Wolves Remember

        The Wolves Remember

        Told from Morrigan’s point of view. Lyrical, sorrowful, protective.

        They buried him where the roots run deep,
        beneath a sky that would not speak.
        No stone, no name, no parting word
        just silence where the storm once stirred.

        But we are not gods,
        nor men who flee.
        We are wolves,
        and wolves still see.

        I smelled his blood.
        I heard his cry.
        I knew the truth,
        he did not die.

        They called him beast,
        then cast him low
        but ash does not forget the glow.

        So we dug with fang,
        with heart, with howl,
        we marked the traitors, bone and soul.

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