Tag: epic saga

  • The Storm’s Justice: A Mercenary’s Journey

    The Storm’s Justice: A Mercenary’s Journey

    When the legions withdrew, law went with them.


    Britain splintered into a hundred petty crowns, each clawing for the ruins of Rome.


    Forts became keeps, temples turned to halls. The roads grew haunted by men who had once marched in order and now wandered for coin.

    Among them rode one they called Stormwulf a hunter without master, born of lightning and exile.


    His eyes still carried the reflection of fires older than the Empire, and wherever he went, the rain followed.

    He took work others would not. Guarding merchants through the wild country, driving raiders from villages, hunting beasts the new priests called devils.


    He never stayed long; gold burned his hands, and gratitude never lasted past sunrise. Those who hired him learned quickly the storm served no king, only itself.

    When asked his name, he gave none.
    When pressed, he said, “Names are for men. I am only what the thunder leaves behind.”

    He rode the dead roads west, through forests where Roman stones still stood like broken teeth.


    Sometimes, in the glint of his sword, he saw the ghost of his own reflection . Not the god he had been, nor the man he pretended to be, but something caught between both.


    He wondered which would die first his memory of the divine, or the world’s memory of him.

    At night, when the fire sank to coals, he spoke softly to the empty dark.
    Not prayers he had no god left to pray to but old words, in a tongue the wind still understood.
    The forest listened. The rain replied.

    By dawn, the storm would be gone, and so would he.
    Only the hoofprints remained, filling slowly with water as the day began again, lawless and unbroken.

    The rain drove him south into the forests of Mercia, where no king’s banner reached.


    For seven days he followed the scent of smoke and wet earth. Until he found a clearing rimmed with ancient ash trees.
    There, beneath branches silvered by moonlight. Men and women waited deserters, thieves, freed slaves, and one witch whose eyes gleamed like stormlight on iron.

    They had heard the stories of Stormwulf the mercenary who rode alone, the one lightning never struck.
    They had lost homes and names, but not hunger.


    When he asked why they waited for him, the witch said. “Because the world has forgotten justice, and you remember what it sounds like.”

    That night, by firelight, he drew a blade across his palm and bled into the roots of the largest ash.
    The others followed, one by one, their blood mingling with his in the cold soil.


    They swore no oath to king or god, only to the storm itself. That they would strike against cruelty wherever it ruled, and share the spoils until the world ended or they did.

    The ash grove became their hall, their altar, their hiding place.
    They raided the tax caravans that bled the villages dry. He burned the grain stores of greedy thanes, and gave food to those who had nothing left but prayers.
    To some they were outlaws; to others, saints.

    Villagers said rain followed their path. That thunder rolled when they rode, and that the lightning spared any roof that had offered them bread.
    In taverns, men cursed them.
    At hearths, women whispered their names with hope.

    Thunorric though few dared call him that. As they sat by the fire one night and watched the sparks rise into the branches.


    For the first time in centuries, he thought the storm is more than destruction.
    In this grove of ash and blood and ruin, it be reborn as mercy.

    But storms are not made for peace.
    And in the darkness beyond the grove, men with silver promises already waited to break what they did not understand.

    It began with a rumour and ended with a corpse.

    A messenger came to the Ash Grove at dusk, bearing word of a bounty.


    A relic had been stolen from the Thane of Wednesbury. a silver cross, heirloom of his son, taken in a raid along the border road.


    The thief was said to be dangerous, armed, and protected by outlaws.
    The Thane’s men offered coin enough to feed the band for a season.

    Stormwulf listened in silence.
    Silver was always a warning, but hunger speaks louder than caution.
    Rægenwine urged him to take it a simple job, he said, quick and clean.
    Thunorric agreed, though the rain that night had an edge to it he did not like.

    He tracked the thief for two nights through tangled wood and flooded fields. The trail led north, where the road curved past a fallen Roman wall and into the low marsh.

    There he found the boy no older than fifteen. mud-streaked, clutching a silver cross so tightly the metal cut his palm.

    “Give it to me,” Thunorric said, sword drawn but voice calm. The boy shook his head. “It was my father’s. He’ll kill me if I go back.”

    Lightning cracked overhead.
    For a heartbeat, the world turned white, and the storm spoke only in instinct.
    When the light faded, the boy lay still, the cross gleaming in his open hand.

    By dawn the Thane’s riders came.
    They found the mercenary kneeling beside the body, soaked to the bone, blood running down his arm.
    The silver lay on the ground between them like a sentence.

    His companion the man who had brought the message was gone.
    So was the promised coin.

    The riders bound him in chains and dragged him through the mud toward Wednesbury.


    The villagers hid behind their doors as thunder followed the procession.


    Some swore the sky darkened as he passed. Others that the rain hissed like boiling water when it struck his skin.

    At the gates, the Thane himself waited, eyes hollow from grief and pride.
    He looked at the prisoner and said only, “The devil has many faces. Today it wears yours.”

    They threw Thunorric into the stockade beneath the old Roman wall.


    The guards whispered that the thunder outside matched the beating of his heart.


    None dared sleep that night.
    By morning, the storm had not moved.

    And in the east, where the sky bruised toward dawn, lightning traced the shape of chains across the clouds.

    The chains tasted of rust and rain.
    They had bound him with iron cold enough to sting the bone. Nailed the ends to the stone floor, and left him beneath the abbey where the damp never slept.


    Outside, thunder prowled the hills; inside, men whispered prayers to keep it from coming closer.

    At dawn they brought him to the hall.
    The abbot waited beneath a carving of the Crucifixion, the air thick with incense and candle smoke.
    Around the edges of the room, monks muttered as if their breath smother a storm.

    “You are to be tried by the Church,” said the abbot. “For murder and blasphemy. You will answer for the blood on your hands.”

    Thunorric laughed, a low crack of thunder in his throat.
    “You caught me, monk. When’s trial? Trial of my peers? Trial by ordeal? You going to make me eat blessed bread? Or make me hold hot iron? Because pray your prisons hold me.”


    He leaned ahead, the chains grating like thunderheads shifting.
    “I will see the fall of your Church like I saw the fall of Rome.”

    A shiver passed through the monks.
    The abbot’s face stayed stone, but his fingers trembled on the rosary.
    “Then pray you are wrong, creature,” he said. “For even storms must break against the rock of faith.”

    They dragged him back to the cell.
    Light seeped in through a single slit, thin and grey as mercy.
    He counted the hours by the sound of bells and the slow drip of water through the ceiling.

    That night a young monk came with bread and a bowl of water.
    He hesitated before sliding them through the bars.
    “You should not mock the abbot,” he said. “God listens.”

    Thunorric looked up, eyes catching what little light remained.
    “Then let Him listen,” he said softly. “Let Him hear what men do in His name.”

    The monk flinched but did not run. “You killed a child,” he whispered.

    “I killed a thief,” Thunorric answered. “A thief my master set before me. The sin is his, not mine.”

    “Sin can’t be passed like silver.”

    “Then tell your god that mortals have made it currency.”

    The monk said nothing more. He left the bread, untouched.

    Days bled together. The storm outside circled but did not strike.
    When the monks prayed, the sound reached him like waves breaking on distant rocks.


    He slept little, dreaming of the ash grove. Of blood sinking into the roots, of brothers who had once shared his fire.

    On the seventh night lightning struck the abbey’s bell tower.
    The sound tore through stone and sleep alike.


    Dust rained from the ceiling; iron shook against iron.


    In the flash that followed, he saw his own shadow stretch enormous across the wall wolf-shaped, man-shaped, god-shaped.

    When silence returned, he smiled.
    “The storm remembers,” he said.

    No one answered. Only the rain, steady and patient, tapping the bars like a drumbeat waiting to start.

    The rain did not stop when they chained him below the abbey.
    It hammered the roof as if trying to find a way in.


    Every drop that slipped through the cracks struck stone with the sound of distant drums.

    Thunorric lay on straw that smelled of salt and mould.


    The chains pulled at his wrists and ankles, ringing faintly whenever he breathed.


    They had been forged from iron scavenged out of a fallen star, the monks said.


    Iron from the sky to hold a thing born of the sky.

    The abbey above thrummed with activity bells, chanting, the scurry of fearful feet.
    They prayed louder each time thunder rolled, as though voices out-shout the storm.


    He listened to them and thought of armies he had seen crumble. Of kings who believed walls stand against weather.

    By the second night, he knew every sound of the place.
    The monk who snored near the stairs, the one who coughed through his prayers.


    The drip of rain that found its way through the ceiling and landed exactly on the scar across his collarbone.

    When the door finally opened, light spilled in thin and uncertain.
    A young monk stepped inside carrying a jug of water and a bowl of barley.
    His robe hung too big on him; his courage fit even worse.

    “You should eat,” the monk said.

    “I should be free,” Thunorric answered.

    The monk hesitated. “You blaspheme without fear.”

    “I fear nothing made by men,” Thunorric said.
    He lifted his chains and let them fall again, the sound echoing through the stone like thunder’s laugh.
    “What is your name?”

    “Eadwine.”

    “Then remember it, Eadwine. Names are the only thing that keep you whole when the world starts to drown.”

    The boy swallowed. “They say the iron that binds you fell from the heavens.”

    “It did,” Thunorric said. “Once I called such iron home.”

    Eadwine’s eyes widened, but curiosity outweighed fear. “Are you a demon?”

    “No. Just older than the words you use to name your demons.”

    For a moment neither spoke. The rain filled the silence.
    Eadwine set the bowl down, stepped back toward the door, and whispered,. “If you are not a demon, pray for forgiveness.”

    Thunorric smiled, slow and sharp. “I do not pray. I remember.”

    When the door closed, the cell grew dark again.
    He flexed his hands; the iron hummed softly, as though recognising him.
    Above, the bells began another hymn.
    He mouthed the words he still knew from older tongues,
    and somewhere far beyond the walls, thunder rolled an answer.

    Days slid past like rain over stone.
    The monks said nothing of trial or mercy, only came and went with bowls of barley and water. leaving prayers behind them like footprints in mud.
    Thunorric counted time by thunder.

    When none came, he marked it by the drips that fell from the ceiling. a rhythm that never stopped and never changed.

    Sometimes he thought the walls breathed.


    At night, when the chants above faded to murmurs, the stones seemed to whisper in languages long forgotten.
    They spoke in the hiss of water, in the slow groan of the beams.

    In the heartbeat of iron cooling after lightning. He almost hear his brothers’ names in the noise Dægan, Leofric, Eadric, Rægenwine. Spoken like fragments of an unfinished prayer.

    The young monk, Eadwine, came often.
    He brought bread now, softer than before, and a thin blanket that smelled of smoke.


    He said it was charity; Thunorric said it was guilt.


    They talked in low voices, wary of echoes.

    “Why do you listen to the storm?” Eadwine asked one evening.

    “Because it remembers,” Thunorric said. “Everything else forgets.”

    The monk glanced at the ceiling, where the rain whispered against the roof. “What does it remember of me?”

    “That you are small and afraid, but still you open the door. That is enough.”

    Eadwine left quickly after that, though he bowed before closing the latch.
    Thunorric watched his shadow vanish up the stairs and listened to the faint sound of bells above.


    The iron around his wrists felt warm. The links hummed, soft as bees in a summer field.

    That night lightning struck the bell tower.


    The sound rolled through the stones, shaking dust from the ceiling and waking every soul in the abbey.
    The bells screamed once, then went silent.

    In the darkness after, the whispering returned clearer now, closer.
    The walls no longer murmured in strange tongues. But in words he knew: old words of the storm, promises made under skies that no longer existed.


    He closed his eyes and breathed the damp air, feeling the thunder build somewhere beyond the hills.

    The storm was not done with him.
    It waited, patient as the sea, outside his cage of stone.

    “When will you let me out for air?” Thunorric asked.
    The words rolled through the cell like a low growl.

    Brother Eadwine stood on the other side of the bars, the torchlight painting his face in trembling gold.
    “The abbot says the storm has not passed,” he answered. “Until it does, you stay below.”

    Thunorric smiled without warmth. “Then I will die of your caution before I die of your judgment.”

    “You still think yourself beyond it,” the monk said.

    “I have outlived every law you worship,” Thunorric replied. “But the air here stinks of fear. Even gods choke on fear.”

    Eadwine looked away. He had grown thinner since the first day pale from fasting and from the whispers that haunted the abbey halls.


    Each night the brothers spoke of signs: candles that guttered without wind. Prayers lost mid-word, dreams of wolves pacing the cloister.

    The young monk reached through the bars with the key. “I can take you to the cloister walk. Only a moment. You’ll be bound.”

    Chains clinked; the iron groaned as if warning them both. Eadwine’s hands shook, but he fastened the cuffs and led the prisoner up the narrow stair.

    Outside, dawn pressed pale and heavy through the mist. The cloister garden was all wet grass and gravestones.
    Thunorric inhaled deeply, the scent of rain and ash thick in his lungs.

    “This is mercy?” he asked.

    “It is all we can give.”

    He laughed softly. “Then your god is a miser.”

    They stood in silence until the bells called the monks to Prime.
    From the far end of the yard came the sound of hooves pack horses bringing supplies from the village.


    Among the drivers was a man with a hood drawn low. Thunorric knew the gait, the way the man favoured one knee.

    “Rægenwine,” he said, voice quiet but certain.

    Eadwine turned. “You know him?”

    “I knew him before he learned the price of betrayal.”

    The hooded man looked up then, eyes meeting Thunorric’s across the wet garden.


    For a heartbeat neither moved. Then Rægenwine tipped his head as if in apology and went inside with the brothers to deliver his goods.

    Eadwine frowned. “A friend?”

    “Once.” Thunorric tugged lightly at the chain between his wrists. “Now a man who carries guilt heavier than this iron.”

    Rain began to fall again, slow and deliberate. The storm that had circled for days was gathering its breath.

    Eadwine guided him back below. “If you would pray”

    “I told you,” Thunorric said, descending into the dark. “I do not pray. I remember.”

    The door closed, the bolts dropped, and the world shrank to the smell of rust and damp stone.


    Thunorric looked up at the ceiling and added, his voice flat but not unkind.


    “Tell your abbot I will not convert. The Romans tried and failed. I will not give him satisfaction.”
    He glanced toward the untouched bowl on the floor. “And you, monk eat before the storm does.”

    The abbey smelled of rain and fear.For three nights thunder had stalked the hills without striking, and sleep had fled every cell.When the door to Thunorric’s chamber burst open, the storm followed in behind it like breath drawn through broken teeth.

    Two monks entered carrying rope and holy water . Their orders were to bind the prisoner for purification. The abbot had declared that only prayer and pain scourge the darkness from him.

    Neither expected the darkness to strike back.Thunorric rose before they touched him.Even in chains he moved like a wolf shaking off a snare.

    The first monk’s bowl shattered against the wall, scattering water that hissed where it landed on the iron. The second swung a cudgel. Thunorric caught it in both hands and wrenched it free, the links of his shackles screaming in protest.

    “Orare potes,” he said, his voice steady and low, eyes bright as lightning.“Sed animas tuas non servabit cum tenebrae se explicabunt.” You pray, but your prayers will not save your souls when the darkness unfolds.

    The monks froze, terror whitening their faces.The torches guttered. Shadows crawled up the walls as if the stone itself had learned to move.One monk fled; the other fell to his knees, clutching the crucifix at his throat.

    Thunorric only smiled, slow and dangerous. “You brought chains to the storm,” he said. “Now you’ll learn what storms do to chains.”

    Outside, the wind rose.The bells began to toll of their own accord, a wild, discordant peal that no hand guided.

    Brother Eadwine appeared at the top of the stair, face pale, torch shaking.

    “Enough!” he cried. “You’ll kill them!”

    Thunorric turned his gaze upward. “No, little monk. The storm will.” Lightning struck somewhere above, shaking dust from the ceiling and splitting the air with light.

    For an instant the cell burned white, and every shadow in the abbey seemed to reach toward him.

    When the thunder rolled away, only silence remained deep, electric, waiting.The air in the corridor shimmered, alive with the scent of rain and iron.The storm had found its way inside, and it was listening.

    “Secure him!” one of the monks shouted, his voice cracking over the storm’s roar.

    Thunorric fought like something born of the tempest itself even in chains, he struck faster than they could move. A smirk cut across his face as two of them slammed him back against the wall. the iron biting deep into his wrists.

    “Make the irons short,” another commanded. “No outside time. No food until he yields.”

    The torches flickered, casting wild shadows that danced across the damp stone.

    “Did you two come in for a specific reason?” a third monk muttered from the doorway, “or just to feed the devil’s pride?”

    No one answered. The rain outside hit harder, drumming against the roof like distant hooves.

    Thunorric looked up through the bars of light that fell across his face. “If I am the devil you fear,” he said quietly, “then you built his temple yourselves.”

    The youngest monk hesitated Eadwine. He looked between his brothers and the man in chains, then down at the key trembling in his hand.

    Lightning struck again, the sound rolling through the walls like the breath of a god. The oldest monk crossed himself. “He’s calling it down,” he whispered. “He’s calling it here!”

    “Get back!” Eadwine shouted but the warning came too late. The bell tower exploded in white fire.

    Stone screamed. The floor shuddered. The iron that bound Thunorric snapped with a sound like thunder tearing through bone.


    He rose from the shattered floor as the storm poured in through the cracks. wind, rain, and lightning chasing one another in a single violent breath.

    The monks fell to their knees, covering their heads. Some prayed. Some screamed.


    Only Eadwine stood frozen, staring through the smoke as the prisoner walked past him unbound, eyes bright with stormlight.

    “Run,” Thunorric said.

    Eadwine did.

    When the roof gave way, fire met rain in a clash that split the night. By dawn, only blackened stones remained.
    Villagers who came to pray found the cross shaft split and scorched. The abbey gone as if it had never been.

    They said a wolf’s shape was seen walking from the ruins, lightning dancing in its wake.


    They said the storm that took Wednesbury never touched the same ground again.

    Eadwine lived, though his hair turned white that night.


    He wandered south for years, barefoot and silent, until he reached the ruins of the Roman road at Pennocrucium.


    There he built a small chapel from the stones he carried. One for each brother who had died that night.
    Some say when he prayed, the wind changed direction, as if listening.

    And always, there were travellers on the road who spoke of a hooded man watching from the trees.
    Sometimes he offered bread. Sometimes nothing but silence.
    When asked his name, he gave none.
    When pressed, he said.

    “Names are for men. I am only what the thunder leaves behind.”

    By then the story had changed no longer a prisoner, but a judgment.
    Some called him Saint, others called him Stormwulf.
    Both names fit the weather that followed him.

    The monks rebuilt, but their new walls never stood for long.
    Every year, on the night of the storm’s return. The bells rang without hands, and the rain whispered one name across the stones
    Thunorric.

    And so the legend endured, whispered between churches and barrows, carried by rain across the ages.


    Not as a warning, but a reminder: that faith built on fear will always fall to the storm.

    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.

    Read more from the Stormborne Brothers:

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

  • The Aftermath

    The Aftermath

    (Anglo-Saxon Cycle – c. 430 AD)

    The rain had softened to a whisper by the time they carried Thunorric back to Rægenwine’s Inn.

    Mud clung to their boots, streaked dark with blood and ash. Behind them, the Chase lay heavy and silent, as if the forest itself were holding its breath.

    Rægenwine threw open the door.
    “Get him to the hearth,” he ordered. “And mind that floor it’s new.”

    They laid Thunorric on a bench near the fire. The outlaw was pale beneath the soot, breath rasping shallow. His cloak was soaked through, half-torn, the linen beneath blackened where blood had seeped through the binding.

    Leofric crouched beside him, his right hand bound where the Saxons had taken the quill fingers. He tried to help but winced when his wrist trembled.
    “Hold still,” he said quietly, voice cracking.

    “Always tellin’ me that,” Thunorric muttered, managing a faint smirk.

    Dægan pressed a cloth to the wound, jaw tight.
    “You should’ve let me handle it.”

    “You’d have talked ’em to death,” the outlaw rasped.

    “Better than bleeding for it.”

    “Maybe,” Thunorric whispered, eyes flicking toward the fire, “but the world don’t change through words, brother. It changes when someone dares to move first.”

    Leofric looked between them, the candlelight trembling in his hand.
    “And yet without words, no one remembers why it mattered.”

    The silence that followed was heavy thicker than smoke.

    Rægenwine broke it with a sigh.
    “Gods save me, you two’ll argue even when one of you’s dyin’.”

    Thunorric laughed once a short, broken sound that still carried warmth.
    “Not dyin’, just tired.”

    Outside, the storm grumbled one last time before fading into the hills.
    Eadric stood at the door, watching the mist roll through the trees.
    “They’ll be back,” he said. “Saxons don’t like losin’.”

    “Then they’ll find us waitin’,” Dægan said.

    Leofric met his gaze.
    “How many storms can we survive?”

    “As many as it takes,” the lawman replied.

    James sat by the wall, knees tucked to his chest, eyes wide in the flicker of the fire. He’d seen battles in stories, never in flesh.


    His father looked smaller now, human, but somehow more powerful for it . Not because he couldn’t die, but because he refused to.

    Leofric reached across the table with his left hand, placing a quill beside the parchment.
    “Rest,” he said softly. “The story will keep till morning.”

    Thunorric closed his eyes, and for a moment, it was quiet enough to believe him.

    James stirred from his place by the hearth, rubbing sleep from his eyes.
    “Will Da be well?” he asked, voice small but steady.

    Thunorric’s eyes flickered open, a tired grin crossing his face.
    “Ah’m awlroight,” he rasped. “Takes more’n a Saxon spear to stop your old man.”

    James nodded, though his lip trembled. He reached for his father’s hand, small fingers curling around calloused ones.
    For a moment, even the fire seemed to soften its crackle.

    Rægenwine watched from behind the counter, muttering,
    “Ain’t nothin’ that’ll kill a Storm-kin not till the world’s ready.”

    The boy smiled at that, and the brothers exchanged a glance that said more than words ever.

    Author’s Note

    After the chaos of The Law and the Storm. This quiet chapter shows what comes after the fight. When strength gives way to silence and survival becomes its own courage. The Storm-kin endure not because they can’t die, but because they refuse to fade.

    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.

    Further Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    The Chronicles of Drax

    Chronicles of Draven

    Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

    Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

  • The Chains that Speak

    The Chains that Speak

    The clang of steel echoed across the Roman training yard. The sun was still low, its pale light glinting off helmets and polished shields. Taranis moved like shadow and storm, his chains rattling as he fought against three centurions in succession.

    Every strike he gave was measured, precise but every parry cost him pain. The iron bindings cut into his wrists, leaving a thin red line that deepened with each movement. He refused to yield.

    Caelum stood at the edge of the sand pit. His tunic far too fine for this place a youth of maybe sixteen, bright-eyed and restless. His gaze never left Taranis.


    “uncle Marcos,” he said quietly, turning to the older man beside him. “Can those chains come off him?”

    Marcos didn’t answer at once. His face was lined from years in service, his eyes as sharp as the swords he trained with. “Chains are the only reason he’s still alive, Caelum,” he said finally. “Without them, some fool would call it fear instead of discipline.”

    “But he’s fighting for us now.” Caelum’s voice carried, defiant.
    “For Rome, at least.”

    Marcos’s jaw tightened. “For survival. That’s different.”

    In the pit, Taranis struck low, sweeping a soldier’s legs out from under him. Before turning the momentum into a twist that sent the next centurion stumbling backward.

    The last one hesitated, shield raised, watching the way. Taranis breathed steady, like a man waiting for the storm to break.

    The chain coiled once, twice then snapped out, wrapping the shield edge and dragging it down. The sound of the soldier hitting the ground was followed by silence.

    Caelum took a step ahead. “He’s more Roman than half your men.”

    Marcos shot him a warning look. “Careful, boy. You sound like your mother.”

    The youth smirked faintly. “She says the same.”

    When the training was done, the soldiers dispersed, muttering under their breath half respect, half fear. Taranis knelt in the dust, hands bound before him. Marcos approached, tossing him a canteen.

    “You could have killed them,” Marcos said.

    Taranis drank, the water streaking through the dust on his face. “You didn’t tell me to.”

    Marcos grunted, half a laugh, half frustration. “One day, that mouth of yours will get you killed.”

    “Maybe,” Taranis replied. “But not today.”

    Caelum stepped closer, watching the bruised wrists, the marks the chains left behind. “You’re not like the others. You don’t fight for their gods.”

    Taranis looked at him not unkindly. “No. Mine are older. And they don’t care who wears the crown.”

    The boy tilted his head. “If I asked you to fight for me instead of Rome?”

    Marcos snapped, “Enough!” But Taranis only smiled slow, deliberate, dangerous.

    “Then, little wolf,” he said softly, “you’d better be ready to pay the price.”

    Above them, thunder rolled faintly in the distance, though the sky was still clear.

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

    Further Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

  • The Breaking of the Circle

    The Breaking of the Circle

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Drax came first.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    “Taranis…” he began.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Further Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

  • The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Twelve

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Twelve

    A colorful painting depicting a vibrant tree with multicolored leaves, under a bright blue sky decorated with a sun and abstract patterns. The foreground features lush green grass and stylized flowers, conveying a whimsical and enchanting atmosphere.
    A vibrant painting depicting a colorful tree beneath a bright blue sky, symbolizing life and renewal.

    Rest Beneath the Tree

    At last they came to the tree.

    It rose from the earth as though the hill itself had forced it skyward roots tangled deep, bark silvered with age, branches spread wide like the arms of a giant blessing or warning all who passed beneath. The ground around it was hushed, as if even the wind dared not trespass too loudly here.

    Storm staggered to its shade and lowered himself to the roots. The weight of his wounds and weariness pressed him down, yet the tree seemed to hold him as gently as a cradle. He breathed slow, leaning against the trunk, and for the first time since the hill of ashes he felt his heart’s trembling ease.

    The others made camp nearby, but left him undisturbed. Brianna spread her cloak by the fire, her eyes flicking often toward where he lay. Cadan tended the embers, muttering half-prayers, half-jests. The boy slept curled by the packs, his face still wet with the salt of grief.

    Storm closed his eyes.

    The world changed.

    The tree shone with light, its roots glowing as though molten, its crown alive with whispering voices. Wolves circled him in the half-dark Boldolph and Morrigan among them, their eyes like coals, their howls joining others long gone. Above the branches wheeled Pendragon and Tairneanach, wings stirring thunder in a sky that was not a sky.

    The gold ring gleamed on his finger once more. Its weight was not a burden but a bond. And the tree’s voice, deep as the earth itself, rolled through his marrow:

    Rest, child of storm. The road is not ended.
    Every root remembers.
    Every leaf bears witness.
    You are bound to us, as we are bound to you.

    Storm reached out and pressed his palm to the bark. He felt its strength answer, steadying his own. When his eyes opened, dawn was breaking.

    Brianna stood ready with her blade. Cadan was already packing. The boy stirred from sleep.

    Storm rose slowly, his body aching but his spirit steadier, and gave the tree one last look. The mark of his hand remained upon the trunk, a faint glow where blood and dream had mingled.

    Then he walked on.

    © StormborneLore Emma Hewitt, 2025. All rights reserved.

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    Futher Reading

    The Library of Caernath

  • Beneath the Storm-Crown

    Beneath the Storm-Crown

    I stood where thunder carved the sky,
    Where old oaths broke, and none asked why.
    The staff I raised was not for war,
    But for the ghosts I still fight for.

    Boldolph’s eyes were iron flame,
    They spoke of love, not seeking fame.
    His growl a warning, not a threat
    A brother’s bond I won’t forget.

    The wolves still watch. The dragons wake.
    Each vow we make, each path we take
    A storm-born soul must never stray
    From fire-wrought truth or shadowed way.

    Let others rule with golden tongue,
    I lead where pain and praise are sung.
    For every scar upon my frame
    Is carved from love, not just from flame.

  • The Halls of Emberhelm

    The Halls of Emberhelm

    Court Beneath the Storm


    A tale from the Chronicles of Taranis Stormborne

    The stone halls of Emberhelm still held the breath of thunder. The storm had passed, but the scent of damp earth and smoke clung to every crack and carving.

    Outside, the banners of the three Houses shifted gently in the wind. Flame, Shadow, and Storm. Inside, the High Warlord of Caernath sat upon the seat of judgment, the storm-carved throne of his ancestors.

    Taranis wore no crown. His only adornment was the silver cuff upon his wrist, the one shaped like twisted flame. Around him stood those who had fought beside him, bled for him, defied death with him.

    Lore stood silent to the left, hands folded into his long dark sleeves. Boldolph crouched at the side of the hall like a black statue, eyes ever scanning. Draven leaned near the great hearth, murmuring with a war-priest. Rayne stood furthest back, half-shadowed, watching everything.

    The court was full.

    Farmers. Warriors. Mothers. Messengers. Petitioners. Accusers.

    This was the burden of the Stormborne to listen.

    The first voice was a child’s.

    “My brother did not steal,” she said, eyes red from the wind. She clutched a doll made of grass and thread. “He only took what the wolves left. We were hungry.”

    Her mother knelt beside her, face pale, silent with shame.

    Taranis rose. “Where is the boy now?”

    A man stepped forward. Greying, armed, not unkind. “In the cells, my lord. The bread he took belonged to House Umbra’s stores.”

    Lore turned his head slowly. “Bread unused for days. Moulding in a bin.”

    “Aye,” said the man. “But rules are rules.”

    Taranis stepped down from the dais. He did not look at the guards. He knelt to the girl.

    “What is your name?”

    “Aella,” she whispered.

    “Aella,” he said, “your brother is no thief. He is a survivor. And from this day, your family eats under the protection of Emberhelm.”

    He turned to the court. “Let the stores be opened to those in hunger. Starvation is not a crime. And those who would hoard while others suffer will answer to me.”

    The next petition was colder.

    Two men from the borderlands bowed stiffly. One bore a jagged scar along his scalp.

    “My lord, Black Claw banners were seen near the Witherwood. We ask permission to hunt them down.”

    A murmur rose. Boldolph straightened.

    Taranis narrowed his eyes. “How many?”

    “A dozen. More. Hiding in the ruins.”

    Rayne shifted, his hand brushing the old collar scar on his neck.

    “No,” said Taranis.

    Gasps.

    “We do not chase ghosts and bleed men for vengeance. Not now. Not today. Fortify the border. Send scouts. But no hunt.”

    The men looked uneasy.

    Draven raised his voice. “What if they attack?”

    “Then we crush them,” said Taranis, steel in his voice. “But we do not start the fire.”

    Boldolph gave a faint growl of approval.

    Later, as the court thinned, an old woman with clouded eyes was led forward.

    “I was once a healer,” she said. “Cast out in the time before. I seek no pardon, only a place.”

    Morrigan stepped ahead from the shadows.

    “I know her,” she said. “She taught me names of plants I still use.”

    Taranis looked to the court. “Is there any who speak against her?”

    Silence.

    “Then let her be welcomed to Hearthrest,” he said. “Let her wisdom serve again.”

    The old woman wept.

    As the hall emptied, Lore remained behind.

    “You did well,” he said.

    “I did what had to be done.”

    “Which is often the hardest thing.”

    Taranis sat again upon the throne. He looked to the high carved beams, where the banners of the Stormborne rustled gently.

    “The war will come again,” he said.

    “It always does.”

    “Then let this peace be something worth protecting.”

    Lore nodded. “So we fight, not for power. But for dignity.”

    Taranis gave a half smile.

    “For bread. For brothers. For those who can’t fight. That’s what this court is for.”

    And above them all, in the rafters where the light touched the carvings of wolves and dragons, the storm winds whispered through the stone:

    © StormborneLore. Written by Emma for StormborneLore. Not for reproduction. All rights reserved.

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  • After the Duel

    After the Duel

    A Fireside Conversation

    The courtyard had long emptied. The ash of the fire pits still glowed faintly, casting soft light on stone walls and weary limbs.

    Taranis sat alone, legs stretched, a jug of broth in one hand,. the other flexing and sore from the clash with Boldolph.

    The crack of staffs still echoed in his bones.

    Footsteps approached not boots, but clawed paws. Heavy, padded, unmistakable.

    Boldolph.

    Without a word, the old wolf-man knelt beside him, a strip of clean linen in hand. He took Taranis’s wrist and began to bind the bruises, slow and methodical, like a ritual done a hundred times.

    “You didn’t hold back,” Taranis said after a moment.

    “You didn’t ask me to.”

    The silence between them was old, familiar. Like the stillness before a storm. Or the hush before a boy became a warlord.

    “I needed them to see I bleed too,” Taranis muttered, wincing as the linen tightened. “That I fall. That I get back up.”

    Boldolph grunted.

    “They already know you bleed,” he said. “They just needed to see you still feel it.”

    Taranis looked toward the sky. Smoke trailed like threads into the blackness. One dragon circled high above, a quiet sentinel.

    “I keep thinking,” he said, “about when I was exiled. Alone in the wilds. All I had was that storm inside me and the promise that no one was coming.”

    He looked down at the staff beside him.

    “And now… now there’s you. Solaris. Lore. Drax. Rayne. Even Draven. I have everything I never thought I would. And I don’t know how to hold it without crushing it.”

    Boldolph didn’t speak at first. Just poured a second jug of broth and handed it to him.

    Then he said, low and hoarse:
    “Every beast that’s ever bared teeth knows fear. Not of pain. Of losing what it’s fought to protect.”

    He paused, eyes distant.

    “I was exiled once too. Long before you were born. I clawed through snow and silence, not knowing if I was cursed or chosen. I still don’t.”

    Taranis turned to him.

    “You stayed. Even cursed. Even as a wolf.”

    Boldolph nodded.

    “Because someone had to. And because I believed that one day, the one I guarded would understand the weight of the fire he carried.”

    The flames crackled beside them. Taranis took a slow sip of broth.

    “I understand it now.”

    Boldolph gave a grunt soft, almost approving. Then he stood, stretched, and turned toward the shadows.

    “You’re not alone anymore, High Warlord,” he said. “Stop trying to fight like you are.”

    Then he was gone, back into the night, tail flicking behind him like a whisper of old magic.

    Taranis sat a while longer.

    Then he smiled.

    Not like a warlord. Not like a weapon.

    Like a man who had bled, fallen, and been lifted again by the hand of a wolf.

    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.

  • The Road to Umbra Written from Lore’s perspective

    The Road to Umbra Written from Lore’s perspective

    An abstract illustration featuring a colorful design with intertwined patterns, prominently displaying the words 'LORE STORMBORNE' and 'ELH' at the center.
    A vibrant artwork reflecting the themes of struggle and resilience in the narrative of StormborneLore.

    House of Shadow

    I do not speak of heroes.
    I speak of those who walked in silence.
    Of boots torn at the sole,
    and breath taken with care
    lest the wind betray them.

    I walked the road to Umbra alone,
    but never unmarked.
    Each tree knew my name,
    each stone held a memory,
    and the crows whispered
    what the living dared not say.

    My brothers called it exile.
    The warlords called it treason.
    The wolves knew better.
    They call it the long return.

    I did not carry banners.
    I carried wounds.

    I did not seek the throne.
    I sought peace and found shadows
    that bled like I did.

    And when the night fell thick with frost,
    and even the stars looked away,
    I did not pray for light.

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  • Training Day at Ignis

    Training Day at Ignis

    A tale from the halls of Emberhelm

    The morning mist clung to the valley like a second skin. Emberhelm’s courtyard steamed with breath and sweat, the scent of stone, ash, and boiled roots heavy in the air. Around the inner circle, newly chosen warriors waited nervous, eager, some barely out of boyhood. Others bore scars older than Taranis himself.

    At the centre stood the High Warlord of Caernath. His cloak cast aside, sleeves rolled, storm-grey eyes fixed on the line before him.

    “No blades today,” he said. “Not until your hands know what weight feels like.”

    He tossed a staff to the first in line. Then another. And another. Each warrior caught their weapon or fumbled it those who dropped theirs were told, simply, “Again.” And made to run.

    On the other side of the training ground, beneath the shadow of the stone wolf banner, Boldolph paced in silence.

    His pack half-men, half-beasts, with eyes like old moons watched him without blinking. He spoke low, but his voice carried like thunder over ice.

    “You are not pets. Not soldiers. You are guardians.”
    A pause.
    “You see a child in harm’s way, you do not wait for orders. You act. That is the law of the wolf.”

    One of the younger wolves whimpered. Boldolph turned sharply.
    “Fear is not failure. Freezing is. Move even if it hurts.”

    Across the field, Taranis raised his voice again.

    “This is Ignis. This is fire. You’re not here to impress me. You’re here to withstand the storm, and stand through it.”

    He glanced at Boldolph.

    “Or do you want to spar with his lot instead?”

    A low growl rippled from the wolf-warriors.

    The chosen laughed nervously until Boldolph nodded. One of his warriors, a massive figure with a half-healed burn across his chest. stepped ahead, gripping a staff as thick as a child’s leg.

    Taranis smiled. “Right then. Let’s see who learned to dance.”

    The wolf-warrior advanced, silent but for the low crunch of earth beneath padded feet. His height matched any war-chief. His eyes amber, slit like a blade of dusk fixed on the line of young recruits now stepping back.

    Taranis caught Boldolph’s eye.

    The old wolf-man crossed his arms, his growl half amusement, half challenge.

    “Too much for them?” Taranis asked.

    “They need to know pain has teeth. And that not all enemies snarl first.”

    The recruits shifted nervously. One tried to step ahead, but Taranis raised a hand.

    “No,” he said. “Not yet.”

    Then, slowly, he removed the silver cuff from his wrist. The one shaped like twisted flame and dropped it into the dust.

    The courtyard hushed.

    Boldolph straightened, his expression unreadable.

    “You mean to fight me?” he said, stepping ahead, voice low.

    Taranis rolled his shoulder and took a training staff from the rack.
    “Not to wound,” he replied. “To remind.”

    Boldolph took his own heavier, gnarled like a branch torn from an ancient tree.

    They circled.

    The recruits, wolf-men, and even dragons above watched in stillness.

    Then Boldolph struck fast, low, aiming to knock out Taranis’s legs. But the warlord leapt, twisting mid-air, landing in a crouch with a grin. He swept his staff up, tapping Boldolph’s ribs before stepping back.

    “Sloppy,” he said. “You’re slower in your old age.”

    Boldolph snarled, but it wasn’t anger. It was the old dance.
    The rhythm of claw and command.

    He lunged again this time a full force blow. Their staffs cracked like thunder as they met. Sparks flew from the impact. Recruits flinched. One dragon above rumbled softly, folding its wings to watch closer.

    They moved like storm and shadow:

    Taranis fluid, forged in battlefields and flame.

    Boldolph grounded, brutal, unshakable like the old hills.

    Neither aimed to kill.
    But neither held back.

    A final clash and both stopped, locked staff to staff, breathing heavy, eyes locked.

    “You’ve grown,” Boldolph said, finally. “Not just in size.”

    “And you’ve not changed,” Taranis replied, sweat on his brow. “Still the rock I lean on.”

    He broke the hold, stepped back, and offered a hand.

    Boldolph took it without hesitation. The courtyard erupted in cheers both from humans and wolves alike.

    Taranis turned to the watching recruits.
    “This,” he said, gesturing between them, “is how you lead. Not with fear. But with fire, with honour, and with those who would bite your enemies long before they betray your trust.”

    Boldolph gave a rare smile.

    “And don’t forget,” he growled to the recruits, “the wolves are watching.”

    Further Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded