Tag: chosen one

  • The Wilderness Years Part 6

    The Wilderness Years Part 6

    Embers of Power

    The trial fire still burned in the hearts of the warriors long after the flames had faded.

    They left the stone circle at sunrise, the air thick with silence. Taranis walked unbound now, but still marked the collar firm around his neck, his wrists bruised, the pendant of obsidian pressing warm against his chest beneath the tunic Solaris had given him.

    No one spoke of the dragon.

    They didn’t need to. Its shadow had burned itself into every man’s memory.

    By midday, they reached the edge of a sprawling war camp carved between high ridges and pine forest. Smoke rose from scattered fires. Grael dismounted first and gave the order for rest and supplies. Taranis stood nearby, posture straight, though his limbs ached from the days of trials and visions.

    A hush followed him wherever he moved. Some men nodded. Others turned away.

    One older warrior spat at his feet and muttered, “Dragon-kissed freak.”

    Taranis didn’t respond. But Grael saw and said nothing.

    Inside the central tent, the tension grew.

    “You should exile him,” said Kareth, a clan captain with blood on his hands and ambition in his eyes. “Or bind him again. The men are talking.”

    “They always talk,” Grael replied coolly. “Let them.”

    “This boy walks free after breaking formation, defying orders, and drawing the attention of beasts older than the gods?”

    Grael looked up from the war map.

    “Exactly. He walked through fire and survived. He fought off Clawclan while half my guard bled out in the dirt. He was named by a Seer. You want to leash him again? You do it.”

    Kareth hesitated. “If he leads a rebellion, it’ll be your head.”

    “No,” Grael said. “It’ll be his. If he earns death, he’ll find it. But if he earns something more, I won’t stand in the way.”

    That night, Taranis sat near the outer fire, the pendant warm against his chest again. Solaris approached with a fresh poultice and a torn piece of roasted meat.

    “You look like you haven’t slept in days.”

    “I haven’t,” Taranis murmured. “Something’s changing.”

    Solaris frowned. “You mean in you?”

    “No. In the world.”

    A growl echoed in the hills not wolf, not wind. Something deeper. Some warriors looked up. A few rose to check their weapons.

    A young scout came running from the ridge.

    “Smoke! North side. Something’s burning!”

    They scrambled toward the hill’s edge and saw it.

    A rival clan’s border camp was ash and ruin. No screams, no survivors. Only smoldering black earth and claw marks in the rock.

    “Raiders?” Solaris asked.

    “No,” Taranis said quietly. “It’s a warning.”

    Grael joined them, silent, jaw tight.

    Kareth was already shouting. “This is what he brings! The dragon follows him. Death follows him!”

    “No,” Taranis said. “The dragon doesn’t follow me. It watches.”

    “Same thing.”

    Grael raised a hand. “Enough. We return to Emberhelm. There, the chieftains will decide what happens next.”

    The journey to Emberhelm took two days. The stone fortress carved into the mountains stood stark against the dawn ancient, proud, watching the valley like a sentinel.

    When they entered, the whispers turned to stares.

    Children peeked from behind barrels. Elders crossed their arms. A group of shieldmaidens flanking the gate parted only after Grael rode forward and gave the sign.

    Taranis dismounted, cloak billowing slightly behind him. No chains. No mask. Only the obsidian pendant.

    In the Great Hall, the Five Voices of the War Council sat in a semi-circle.

    Old warriors. Mothers of fallen sons. Leaders of lesser clans.

    One stood Sern, a matriarch with fire in her eyes and silver in her braid.

    “We saw the storm,” she said. “We saw the dragon’s wings. We heard the Seer’s cry.”

    Another voice cut in a young man named Fenric, blood cousin to the boy Taranis had crippled.

    “He’s cursed. He bled our kin, broke our laws, walked with beasts. Now you bring him here unbound?”

    Grael stepped forward. “I bring you a warrior.”

    “Not yet,” Sern said. “Not until the rite is finished.”

    “What rite?” Taranis asked.

    She pointed to the firepit at the centre of the chamber.

    “You were bound by man. Now let the flame judge if you are bound by fate.”

    They handed him a staff and stripped him to the waist. The collar remained. So did the pendant.

    The fire was lit with dried hawthorn, wolf hair, and elder root.

    He stepped into the circle.

    “Do you claim name or no name?” Lady Sern asked.

    Taranis raised his head. “I claim the storm.”

    A gust of wind blew through the open doors behind him.

    “Then speak your vow.”

    Taranis closed his eyes.

    “I was chained as beast. I was broken by man. But I rise not to rule only to walk free. I serve the flame, the wolves, the storm. If I break my word, may the dragon turn from me.”

    He thrust the staff into the fire.

    It did not burn.

    Instead, the flame spiraled into the air and far above, the sky answered with a distant roar.

    The hall went silent.

    Lady Sern bowed her head.

    “Then you are no longer beast. Nor slave. Nor tool.”

    She placed her hand on his collar.

    “From this day, you are Stormborne.”

    She broke the collar with a hammer of bronze.

    The pieces fell to the stone floor like the last chains of a life left behind.

    Does that mean he’s free?” Solaris asked.

    Taranis placed a hand to his neck, fingers brushing the worn ridge where the collar had once pressed deep.

    “Or am I to be exiled?”

    A hush fell again, broken only by the wind rustling through the pine above.

    “Exile him,” came a voice from the gathered crowd, “and I will hunt him myself.”

    All heads turned.

    It was not Grael who spoke, nor one of the regular warband. It was a man cloaked in dark fur, standing apart from the others near the treeline scarred face, sun-dark skin, hair braided with bone. A chieftain from another clan.

    “He bears the storm’s mark. He’s no beast. No slave. And not mine to cast out.” His voice was low, graveled with age and fire. “But if you send him away, don’t expect him to come back.”

    Taranis didn’t flinch. His eyes locked on the stranger’s. He neither bowed nor raised his head. Just… endured.

    Grael stepped forward.

    “He’s not exiled,” the general said. “Nor is he yet free. The trial burned away the mask, but chains leave scars longer than flame.”

    “And what is he now?” Solaris asked.

    Grael looked to the warriors, the gathered villagers, the scouts and wounded men who had seen the dragon descend.

    “He is Stormborne,” he said. “Named not by man, but by thunder. And while I draw breath, that name will be honoured.”

    There was a ripple in the crowd not agreement, not rejection. Just change. Unease becoming belief.

    Taranis turned to Solaris. “Then I stay?”

    Solaris nodded. “If you want to.”

    “I don’t know what I want,” the boy admitted. “I only know I’m still breathing.”

    Beside him, the black scale the one left by the dragon was now strung on a simple leather thong, hanging from his belt like a forgotten relic. He touched it once, gently.

    A woman stepped forward from the watching crowd. She carried no weapons only a clay bowl filled with ash and herbs.

    “I came from the ridge when I heard the trial fire was lit,” she said. “If the dragon marked him, then his wounds must be sealed properly. Not with chains. With earth.”

    She knelt before Taranis and dipped two fingers into the bowl. Ash and sage stained her fingertips. She reached up and slowly touched each side of his jaw where the mask had pressed hardest.

    “You have walked through smoke,” she whispered. “Now rise through flame.”

    Taranis stood, a little taller than before.

    Grael gave a curt nod. “We break camp tomorrow. Clawclan still stirs in the lowlands. But the boy rides his own horse now. No packs. No tether.”

    “And the collar?” Solaris asked.

    Grael glanced at it now lying in the dirt.

    “Leave it where it fell.”

    As the crowd began to scatter, a new chant rose quietly from the younger warriors near the fire.

    Stormborne.

    Not shouted.

    Not demanded.

    Spoken like a secret remembered.

    Like a name the wind had always known.

    © 2025 E.L. Hewitt. All rights reserved.
    This work is part of the StormborneLore series.
    Do not copy, reproduce, or distribute without permission.

    Further Reading

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS Part 1.

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS PART 2

    Taranis The Wilderness Years Part 3.

    The Wilderness Years Part 4

    The Wilderness Years Part 5

    The Iron Voice of Grael.

    One Foot in Two Worlds

    Survival Gruel of the Exile.

  • The Wilderness Years Part 5

    The Wilderness Years Part 5

    The campfire had burned low when Solaris approached the general.

    Taranis knelt nearby, his wrists loosely bound, the bone collar still tight against his throat. The punishment mask lay beside him, waiting.

    “Sir?” Solaris said cautiously. “Are we binding him again?”

    Grael didn’t answer immediately. He watched the boy the blood-crusted bruises, the unspoken tension in his shoulders, the way his eyes never stopped scanning the shadows.

    “He walks beside the horse now,” Grael said. “Not behind it. That’s earned.”

    “But he’s still tethered?” solaris said

    Grael nodded. “Until he earns trust with more than fire.”

    Solaris stepped closer, lowering his voice. “And the food? He eats with us now?”

    “He eats what he earns. No more. No less.” grael said

    Taranis stirred then, lifting his head. His voice cracked as he spoke.

    “Now I’ve got one foot in both worlds… the world of a chosen, and one of an outcast.” He looked at them both. “One move and I could be executed. The other move, and be honoured.”

    Solaris winced as the mask was fitted back over the boy’s face.

    “Why the mask again?” he asked.

    “To remind him,” Grael said. “And to remind us.”

    “Of what?”

    “That chains and power aren’t opposites. They’re a balance.”

    Taranis tried to move from grael and the other warriors tried to move his head so the mask wouldn’t go on as a dragon flew over head

    “Put it on” grael ordered

    “No I’m human just like you”

    Taranis jerked back, blood still dried in the corners of his mouth. The dragon’s shadow passed again overhead, and something ancient stirred in his chest not rage, not fear, but refusal.

    “I said no!” he growled, voice muffled but defiant.

    Solaris stepped between him and the other warriors. “Wait. He’s not”

    Too late.

    One of the guards lunged forward, grabbing the mask. Taranis shoved back, throwing his shoulder into the man’s chest. The warrior stumbled, caught off guard by the boy’s strength.

    Another grabbed his arm but Taranis twisted, slammed his elbow into the man’s face.

    Blood sprayed.

    Chaos erupted.

    Three warriors tried to restrain him now. Grael did not move. He watched.

    Taranis fought like a cornered wolf. Wild. Desperate. Silent.

    The mask hit the ground and cracked in two.

    When they finally wrestled him down, he was bleeding from the nose and lip, panting like an animal. His wrists were raw, eyes wild.

    But he was smiling.

    “You see me now?” he said through gritted teeth. “I’m not yours.”

    Solaris stood frozen. The broken mask lay at his feet.

    Grael finally stepped forward.

    “Enough,” he barked.

    The warriors pulled back.

    Taranis didn’t rise. He waited.

    “Let him up,” Grael ordered. “And don’t touch him again tonight.”

    “But sir” a guard started.

    “I said don’t.”

    Grael looked down at the broken mask, then at the blood on Taranis’s knuckles.

    “You broke it,” he said flatly.

    “I’d break a hundred more,” Taranis spat.

    Grael didn’t respond. Instead, he knelt.

    “You want to be seen? Fine. Then let the clans see what you are.”

    He picked up the shattered halves of the mask.

    “You’ll wear no disguise. No shield. Not until you earn a new one.”

    Taranis met his gaze. “Good.”

    Grael stood.

    “But remember this, boy there’s a cost to being seen. You can’t take it back.”

    Taranis said nothing.

    The dragon roared again in the sky.

    Solaris knelt beside him later, whispering, “You’re going to get yourself killed.”

    Taranis looked at the stars.

    “Or freed.”

    “What will it take for him to be freed?” Solaris asked

    “Freedom for him? He crippled your brother, he killed a farmer, used by the gods themselves, stories say he killed a bird as a child and his village was killed before his exile freedom is a long way off. What do you say grael ?” A warrior asked

    Grael remained silent for a long while. The fire crackled. Embers danced.
    “I say,” he murmured, “we’ve seen men freed for less… and killed for more.”

    He tossed the shattered mask into the flames.


    “If he was sent by the gods, then they’ll test him again. Until then, he walks. He bleeds. He earns.”

    A warrior scoffed. “And when the next village sees that face?”

    “Then let them decide,” Grael said. “Fear him. Pity him. Curse him. But they’ll see him without the mask. And so will we.”

    Taranis didn’t flinch. He stared into the fire, as if daring it to speak.

    Grael remained silent for a long while.

    The fire crackled between them. Sparks drifted upward into the night, like fleeing ghosts. Taranis sat still, blood streaking his jaw, the collar tight around his throat. The broken mask lay shattered near the flames.

    He stepped forward and tossed the mask into the fire. It hissed as it cracked deeper, flames licking the black bone.

    A warrior scoffed. “And when the next village sees that face? He crippled a boy. His own kin say he’s cursed. What do we tell them?”

    “Tell them the truth,” Grael replied. “He wears no mask because he broke it. He walks unchained because I said so. And if that offends them, they can challenge it by trial.”

    Another man spat. “The Seer warned us he carries the fire without flame. You think a prophecy makes him safe?”

    “I think,” Solaris said quietly, “he didn’t run when he could’ve. He fought. He stood. He bled beside us.”

    Silence settled again.

    Then Grael turned to his men, sweeping his eyes across the ring of warriors.

    “Fine,” he said. “Let the clans decide. Those who want him gone, speak now.”

    A few murmurs, but none stepped forward.

    “Those who would test him, not as a slave, but as a warrior raise your blades.”

    One sword lifted. Then another. And another.

    Not all.

    But enough.

    Taranis watched them. His chest rose and fell slowly. The embers reflected in his eyes.

    “So be it,” Grael said. “Tomorrow at first light, he joins the line. No chains. No mask. One trial. If he survives the boy becomes flame.”

    A hush fell across the camp.

    Solaris leaned down beside him. “You’ve got one shot.”

    Taranis looked up, a flicker of defiance in his eyes.


    “Then I’ll make it burn.”

    The company reached the ancient ruins just after dusk.

    Twisted trees clawed at the moonlight, their roots entwined with blackened stones. Smoke drifted from old hearth pits, and torches lined the perimeter of what once had been a stronghold now just skeletal walls and broken pillars.

    They called it the Bones of Fire, where traitors, exiles, and monsters were judged in the old ways.

    Taranis was unshackled but flanked by two guards. His collar still bit into his skin, and dried blood streaked his jaw. He walked unbound, but every step echoed like thunder. Warriors lined the central circle, murmuring. Some remembered his defiance. Others remembered the dragon.

    At the heart of the ruins stood a black stone altar scorched by lightning, older than the clans themselves. Grael waited there, sword at his side, expression unreadable.

    A Seer stood beside him the same woman from the fire, robed in bone and shadow.

    “This place,” Solaris whispered, stepping beside Taranis, “is where they test souls.”

    “I thought I already failed,” Taranis said, not looking at him.

    “No. This is where they see if you can rise.”

    The crowd hushed as Grael raised his hand.

    “Taranis of no clan. Slave by judgment. Exile by blood. Chosen by storm or cursed by fire,” the general said. “You stand here not as a man, but as a question. The people demand an answer.”

    The Seer stepped forward, her voice like wind through hollow bones.

    “You are accused of rebellion, violence, and breaking the old order. But the gods remember your name. So the trial shall be by the elements by Fire, by Bone, and by Storm.”

    Murmurs rippled through the crowd.

    Grael gestured, and three warriors brought forth the tools: a flame bowl carved of obsidian, a bone blade wrapped in cords of sinew, and a weathered spearhead struck once by lightning.

    “You will face each,” the Seer said. “If you fall, your death is justice. If you rise, you walk reborn.”

    Solaris stepped forward. “He saved us. He held the line”

    “And still the trial stands,” Grael said. “This is not for you, Flamekeeper. This is between him and the gods.”

    Taranis stepped into the circle.

    “I’m not afraid,” he said.

    “You should be,” the Seer whispered.

    They began with Fire.

    Taranis knelt before the obsidian bowl. Flames danced without smoke. The Seer extended her hand.

    “Reach into the fire. Take the coal. Speak no sound.”

    He did.

    Pain erupted, white and total, but he did not scream. The coal branded his palm. Smoke curled from his clenched fist but his jaw never broke. When he stood, the mark glowed faintly.

    Next came Bone.

    He was handed the blade and told to carve a single rune into his chest a mark of truth.

    “Only the worthy know which symbol to choose,” the Seer said.

    Taranis hesitated.

    Then slowly, he pressed the blade to his chest and etched a spiral. Not of chaos, but of growth the same symbol the Seer had once placed in his hand. Blood streamed down his ribs. Still, he stood.

    Then came Storm.

    They placed him at the peak of the ruin, where the wind screamed like a thousand dead warriors. He had to face the sky and remain standing until the gods answered or until the storm broke him.

    Lightning gathered. Thunder rolled.

    The dragon came.

    Not with flame, but with presence a black silhouette circling high above.

    Taranis stood. Hands outstretched. Collar glinting.

    And then it happened.

    Lightning struck the spearhead beside him.

    The bolt leapt to his chest to the spiral rune.

    He didn’t fall.

    He screamed, but he stood.

    The Seer’s eyes widened. Warriors dropped to their knees.

    Grael stepped forward as silence returned.

    “He lives,” he said.

    “He is chosen,” the Seer breathed.

    The collar cracked. A seam split down its side. It fell away into the ash.

    And Taranis, gasping, bleeding, burned looked to the sky.

    “I am Stormborne,” he whispered.

    © 2025 E.L. Hewitt. All rights reserved.
    This work is part of the StormborneLore series.
    Do not copy, reproduce, or distribute without permission.

  • Forged from Fire: The Journey of Taranis

    Forged from Fire: The Journey of Taranis


    The campfire had burned low, all golden coals and wind-tossed ash, when Solaris approached the general.

    Taranis knelt nearby, shoulders hunched. His wrists were bound, but not tight just enough to remind. The black collar still pressed against his neck like a verdict carved in bone. His mask, polished smooth and pitiless, lay beside him like a shadow waiting to return.

    “Sir?” Solaris spoke softly. “Are we binding him again tonight?”

    Grael didn’t respond at once. He studied the boy or whatever he was becoming with a gaze that weighed survival against prophecy.

    “He walks beside the horse now,” Grael said. “Not behind it. That’s earned.”

    “But still tethered?”

    “Until trust is more than fire and fury.”

    Solaris hesitated, then asked more plainly, “And the food? He eats with us now?”

    “He eats what he earns,” Grael said. “He trains. He serves. He carries burdens. So we feed him as one of the line half rations until proven otherwise. If he bleeds for us again, the portions grow. But he’s no beggar. He earns it.”

    Taranis stirred. His voice cracked when he spoke.

    “Now I’ve got one foot in both worlds… the world of a chosen, and one of an outcast. One step wrong, and I’m whipped or worse. One step right, and they carve my name into stone.”

    Solaris frowned. “But the mask…”

    Grael stepped closer. He picked it up and turned it over in his hand.

    “We remove it when he fights. When he trains. When he speaks with command. But in towns and camps?” He pressed it gently to the boy’s face. “It reminds him and us of what he was forged from.”

    “Forged?” Solaris echoed. “Or broken?”

    Grael didn’t blink. “Both.”

    “And can he see through it?”

    “Barely. But that’s the point. To teach him to listen more. Feel more. Trust the wind and the wolves.”

    The fire cracked.

    Solaris stepped back, watching as the leather straps were tightened once more.

    “And when does it come off for good?”

    “When the storm calls him by name,” Grael said.

    “And if it never does?”

    Grael didn’t answer.

    The wind howled across the ridge sharp and ancient.

    And far above, in the swirling clouds, something winged and watching passed through the sky without sound.

    By E.L. Hewitt StormborneLore

    Thank you for reading.© 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.

    To read more taranis stories please see The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

  • The Cursed Child: A Tale of Light and Storms

    The Cursed Child: A Tale of Light and Storms

    Born not in shadow,

    but storm-split light.
    With wolves at his side.

    and fire for breath,
    He walks between day and the deepening night,
    A child of healing, a whisper of death.

    They called him cursed, they called him flame,
    Yet none could deny the spark in his palm.
    He bore no weapon, he sought no fame
    But the winds bent low to kiss his calm.

    When Drax lay broken, minds turned black,
    Taranis reached, and thunder wept.
    The fever fled, the soul came back
    And the child collapsed, as the forest slept.

    Now they watch him with fearful eyes,
    This babe who speaks in ancient tongue.


    Yet storms do not ask if the fire should rise…
    They rise because the world’s begun.

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

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    Also if you would like to read more Taranis tales please see.

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

  • A Child’s Destiny Unfolds

    A Child’s Destiny Unfolds

    My uncles and father stood within the sacred ring of fire. The smoke curling into the twilight sky as the elders sat in silence. Each wore the furs of their lineage, feathers braided with bone and bark, their eyes sharpened by decades of judgement. The fire crackled with unease not just heat, but the energy of something unseen, something stirring.

    Father stood tall, one hand resting on the haft of his ceremonial spear. He was prepared not just as a warrior, or chief, but as a father. A father standing between his blood and the storm.

    “Your son broke the sacred law,” spat Elder Bran, his voice like dry bark in winter. “He entered the hut of an ostracised man without escort. That law is older than your title, Chief Conan.”

    “He must be punished,” added Elder Tarn, slamming his staff into the scorched earth. “Compassion does not absolve disobedience. Rules are not bent for favoured blood.”

    A silence fell taut as a bowstring before Drax stepped ahead. Gaunt, but no longer wild, his words rang with clarity.

    “He saved my life.”

    Gasps and murmurs broke across the council. Even those who had long abandoned hope for Drax looked at him now with flickers of wonder, or wariness.

    “I would be dead if not for him,” Drax continued. “I felt it something leave me. A darkness burned away. I am… clear.”

    Lore moved to stand beside our father. “He is barely one year old,” he said. “Yet he speaks in tongues, walks like a hunter, and heals the broken with words no one taught him.”

    “This is what troubles us!” snapped Elder Ysra, rising in her many-layered cloak of ash and iron charms. “Power like this does not come without price. The last child marked by the storm brought famine, flood, and war.”

    “We do not know what mark he carries,” my father replied, eyes level. “But I will not see my son punished for compassion.”

    Ysra stepped ahead, face drawn like flint. “It was not just compassion. It was prophecy in motion. And prophecy unguarded is wildfire in a dry forest.”

    Behind them, Morrigan and Boldolph stood watch just beyond the fire’s reach. The black wolf growled low, a rumble of warning. while Morrigan’s gaze stayed fixed on the chief’s hut where Taranis slept, gripped by fever.

    The fire hissed and popped. Somewhere nearby, a nightbird called.

    Elder Bran raised his staff. “The child shall remain under close watch, isolated from others but housed within the chief’s care. He will be marked not as cursed, but as unknown. No more unsanctioned visits. If he breaches this again”

    “We will not exile a babe,” my father growled.

    “No,” said Ysra coldly. “But we may exile what grows inside him.”

    The flames danced higher, wind tugging at the circle as if the fire spirits themselves had stirred.

    Lore bowed his head slowly. “Then we shall walk the knife’s edge between reverence and fear. But mark my words if you turn on him too soon, you lose more than trust. You lose the only light left.”

    As the council slowly dispersed, dusk settled like a shroud. The camp held its breath. Only the crackle of fire and the quiet steps of retreating warriors broke the silence.

    Later, beneath the stars, young Nyx turned to our father. “So what happens now, Father?”

    “Isolation. No one speaks to him unless permitted. He’ll be watched not as punishment, but out of fear. They don’t understand what he is. And people fear what they do not understand.”

    “If we don’t talk to him… won’t that break him?”

    Conan’s voice was low. “That is what I fear most.”

    Just then, the elders returned with the boy. His fever had broken. Taranis walked unaided into the firelight, eyes drowsy but glowing faintly.

    “What is going on?” Conan asked, rising quickly.

    “He entered the eternal sleep,” Elder Ysra whispered. “But then… he came back.”

    Even the fire seemed to pause.

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    Futher Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

  • Taranis and Boldolph: The Birth of a Chosen One

    Taranis and Boldolph: The Birth of a Chosen One

    The Myth of Taranis and Boldolph.


    The rest of us stepped back.

    Father’s eyes had changed
    flashing a pale shade of red.

    Thunder cracked as he stepped into the cave. Ready to lay eyes on Mother and the newborn she had fought to bring into the world.

    We stood behind him in silence,
    all of us but one.

    One brother, whose eyes held no joy.
    Only fear.
    Only the taste of blood.

    “Thirteenth son of the thirteenth son,” he muttered.
    “Born during a storm… and an eclipse.
    Even the dragons have fallen silent.
    And the wolves, they’ve stopped howling.”

    Just then, as if the forest itself heard hima sound split the trees in two.

    Boldolph.

    His howl rose like thunder turned voice,
    a cry so powerful the very air seemed to flinch.

    A painted representation of a black wolf howling with glowing red eyes, set against a crescent moon, decorated with Celtic patterns. The name 'Boldolph' is written in vibrant colors at the bottom.
    Artistic depiction of Boldolph, the powerful wolf, alongside symbols of mythology and nature.

    At his side stood Morrigan,
    his bonded mate white as new snow.
    She gave a low, haunting cry
    and pressed her head gently against his.

    Then the dragon stirred.

    It lifted its head,
    wings stretching wide like a storm reborn.

    And with a roar that lit the sky,
    it rose.

    Fire molten and blinding
    erupted from its throat,
    painting the clouds in gold and crimson.

    And there, across the eclipsed heavens, the name appeared.

    TARANIS.

    Burning.
    Brilliant.
    Undeniable.

    As if the stars,
    the storm,
    and the breath of the gods themselves
    had spoken as one:

    This child is no curse.
    He is chosen.


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    Further Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded