Tag: fantasy

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

    Chapter II The King’s Hunter Arriveson Christmas Day.

    Dawn never came softly to the Stormborne.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    But they all knew the storm wasn’t willing.

    The storm had come to collect him.

    Outside, steel rang against saddle buckles.

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

    The boys jumped.
    Harold clutched Bram and Rægenwine flinched.

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

    Another horn.
    Closer this time.

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

    The colour drained from his face.

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

    The room froze.

    Dægan muttered, “The hunter.”

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

    Thunorric didn’t move.
    His sons clung harder.

    The door shook.

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

    A voice outside thundered:

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

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

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

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

    Thunorric nodded slowly.
    “Aye. I know.”

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

    Thunorric stood.

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

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

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

    “Da….”

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

    “Promise,” Bram whispered.

    Thunorric pressed his forehead to Bram’s.

    “I promise.”

    The door boomed under a spear-butt.

    “Stormborne! Come out!”

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

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

    Another slam.
    Another roar.

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

    “No.”

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

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

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

    The hunter’s voice cut through the rain.

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

    Wulfie cried out.
    Rægenwine swore and drew his blade.

    Thunorric straightened, jaw set.

    “That’s enough.”

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

    Then he walked toward the door.

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

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

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

    “I do.”

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

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

    Thunorric swallowed hard, lightning in his chest.

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

    He stepped past them.

    Hand on the latch.

    Breath steady.

    Heart pounding.

    He looked back only once.

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

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

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

    The wolf-banner flapped in the storm wind.

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

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

    Thunorric lifted his chin.

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

    The hunter smirked.

    “Not for long.”

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

    But Thunorric did not look back.

    Not once.

    Not ever.

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

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

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

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

    Thunorric didn’t flinch.
    Not even a blink.

    The Hunter Approaches

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

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

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

    A few of the king’s men chuckled nervously.

    The hunter didn’t.

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

    “On your knees,” the hunter ordered.

    Inside the inn, Dægan roared, “NO!”

    Leofric held him back by the cloak.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Then he opened them again.

    Calm.
    Resolved.
    Unyielding.

    He lowered himself to one knee.

    The mud splashed against his cloak like spilled blood.

    The hunter smiled.

    “That’s better.”

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

    The hunter lifted his chain.

    “Bind him.”

    The Stormborne Intervene

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

    “Touch him and I’ll gut you!”

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

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

    “He’s done nothing to earn this.”

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

    “Then so am I,” Leofric hissed.

    Thunorric didn’t look back.

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

    Dægan’s hands shook with pure rage.

    “I won’t watch them take you.”

    “You will,” Thunorric said.

    Rain dripped down his jaw.

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

    Leofric’s throat closed.

    Dægan’s fury bled into heartbreak.

    “Brother…”

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

    Dægan’s chest heaved like a man drowning.

    “I can’t let you”

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

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

    Then Dægan stepped back.

    Leofric caught him as he stumbled.

    The Chains

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

    Thunorric didn’t react.

    The hunter leaned close and whispered:

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

    Thunorric smirked.

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

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

    “Still got that tongue,” he growled.

    Thunorric’s smile faded.

    “Oh, lad… I’ve got worse.”

    The hunter shoved him forward.

    “On your feet.”

    He rose without struggle.

    The Walk Through the Rain

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

    Thunorric walked between them, chained but unbroken.

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

    From the inn doorway:

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

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

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

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

    Thunorric glanced back once.

    Just once.

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

    Then he faced ahead again.

    And kept walking.

    The Hunter’s Judgment

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

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

    Leofric clutched the boys tighter.

    Dægan sagged against the doorframe.

    The rain hammered down harder.

    Thunorric lifted his chin.

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

    “Aye.
    Dusk’ll do fine.”

    The hunter sneered.

    “You’ll die begging.”

    Thunorric’s eyes flashed.

    “You first.”

    The soldiers shoved him ahead.

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

    And the inn behind him broke into sobs.

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

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

    Futher reading :

    Chapter 1: the last night at Raegenwine inn

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

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

    Thank you for reading and happy Christmas or. Yule.

  • 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.”

      Thank you for reading, if you enjoyed the story please like and subscribe.

        For more stories please visit

        Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

        The Chronicles of Drax

        Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

        Chronicles of Draven

        © 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 Enigmatic Black Leaper: A Tale of Freedom and Myth

        The Enigmatic Black Leaper: A Tale of Freedom and Myth

        A dramatic illustration of the Black Leaper, a mythical black horse, leaping above a tranquil lake surrounded by green trees, with a sun shining in the sky above.
        The Black Leaper soaring over the serene lakes of Chistlyn, embodying the spirit of freedom and magic.

        They say that if you stand by the lakes of the Chistlyn at sunrise. Before the mist has fully lifted, before the birds dare to break the quiet you hear it.

        A single, heavy exhale.
        Like the world itself taking a breath.

        From the tree line emerges the Black Leaper. A spirit-steed older than the villages around Cannock Chase, older than the Forest Kings, older even than the Stormborne line.

        Its coat is the colour of midnight after rain, slick and shifting like a storm cloud gathering its strength.

        When it moves, the air warms with the scent of wet grass and pine sap. The ground trembles just enough to remind you that it is real.

        Some say the Leaper was once a war horse belonging to a forgotten chieftain.

        A beast so fiercely loyal that it refused to pass on when its master fell. Others whisper that it is no creature of this world at all. But a guardian born from the lake’s deepest waters, shaped from moonlight, fog, and old magic.

        Whatever the truth, one thing is certain:
        the Black Leaper does not walk. It flies.

        Witnesses speak of the thunder of hooves striking the earth for only a heartbeat. Before the creature rises, soaring over lakes and treetops in a single, impossible leap.

        Many who see it feel a sudden pull in their chest . As if the horse carries every unspoken longing for freedom with it.

        This artwork captures the creature in that moment between worlds.
        When the sun glows warm on its back, the wind twists its mane into wild ribbons. The forest watches in held breath as the guardian crosses the sky.

        Some believe the Leaper appears only to those who feel trapped or lost.
        Others say it is a sign of protection, a reminder that the path ahead is wider than it seems.

        Authors Note : Chistlyn is the Anglo Saxon name for what is now known as Cheslyn Hay.

        For the artists or those interested. The drawing was drawn using Ohuhu Markers on A4 plain paper.

        I wonder if the Black Leaper passed you by, what would it be urging you to run toward. Or away from?

        Thank you for reading, if you have enjoyed this story or like the illustrations. Please support me by liking and follow.

        Further stories can be found at

        Chronicles of Draven

        The Chronicles of Drax

        Unlocking Ancient Powers: Lore Stormborne’s Awakening

        Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

        You can find more art on

        Stormborne Arts

      2. The Black Shields: Guardians of the Stormborne Bloodline

        The Black Shields: Guardians of the Stormborne Bloodline

        Illustration of a Black Shields member in dark layered armor with a crimson collar, holding a shield, representing the secretive militia from the Anglo-Saxon age.
        An illustration of a member of the Black Shields, featuring dark layered armor and a crimson collar of command, symbolizing the secretive militia from the Anglo-Saxon age.

        This illustration depicts a member of the Black Shields, the secretive militia founded by Thunorric Stormwulf in the Anglo-Saxon age. Clad in dark, layered armour and marked by the crimson collar of command, the Black Shields operate beyond the reach of kings, priests, and laws.

        Their purpose is simple: protect the Stormborne bloodline, guide exiles through the hidden roads, and strike from the shadows when the crown turns tyrant.

        Feared across Mercia as ghosts in the woods, the Black Shields were trained as scouts, raiders, and oath-bound guardians.

        Their armour bears no crest of lord or realm only the storm-etched markings that bind them to Thunorric. Where one Shield stands, a hundred unseen allies watch the treeline.

        Art by E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts.

        medium: Ohuhu Markers on A4 paper

        read more about Taranis

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

      3. Stormborne Family: Legacy of the Moon-Star Charm

        Stormborne Family: Legacy of the Moon-Star Charm

        Illustration of the Moon-Star Sigil, featuring a crescent moon, a star, and laurel leaves atop a wooden tablet, representing protection and lineage.
        Illustration of the Moon-Star Sigil, symbolizing protection and lineage for the Stormborne family.

        Item Type: Necklace, cufflinks, or cloak-pin


        Worn By: Every Stormborne sibling, child, or descendant
        Origin: The Ash Grove, c. 410 AD
        Maker: Leofric (then known as Lore)

        Long before kings wrote laws and priests wrote scripture, the Stormborne family carried only one form of protection the Moon-Star Sigil, a small charm worn close to the skin.

        Leofric, the scribe and warlock of the family, carved the first charm from rowan wood, binding it with iron dust and ash from the sacred grove. The design came to him in a dream.

        The crescent moon for memory and foresight.

        The star for protection and the five truths of the Old Ways.

        The laurel leaves for lineage and victory.

        The wooden tablet for the bond of blood and oath.

        It was said that no Stormborne wearing the sigil would fall unnoticed, unavenged, or forgotten.

        Thunorric wore his as a neckpiece, tied with leather from his first wolf pelt.
        Dægan later commissioned iron cufflinks bearing the same sigil when he served the kings of Mercia.
        Eadric’s children carried them as belt tokens, and Rægenwine hung his above the inn d the threshold.

        Every Stormborne generation crafted their own variations, but the meaning never changed:

        “Moon to guide us. Star to guard us. Leaves to bind us. Wood to ground us.
        Stormborne, alway.

        To read the Stormborne stories.

        Chronicles of Draven

        Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

        The Chronicles of Drax

        Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

      4. After the Burning

        After the Burning

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

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

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

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

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

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

        The Hunter in the Trees

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

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

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

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

        As he ate, he watched the woods for soldiers.

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

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

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

        The ache in his chest was sharper than any blade.

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

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

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

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

        The Crossroads

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

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

        Perfect.

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

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

        “Out. Yow get,” he barked.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

        As he rode away, the noble roared:

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

        Thunorric laughed.

        “Tell ’em the devil said vilis.”

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

        The Boy on the Road

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

        “My lord… the storm”

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

        “What do they call him now?”

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

        Whispers spread. Hard men crossed themselves.

        Coenwulf did not.

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

        He nodded to the scribe.

        “Write.”

        The vellum unfurled.

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

        A scarred hunter stepped forward.

        “I’ll bring your demon in chains.”

        Coenwulf nodded once.

        The hunt began.

        The Inn at the Border

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

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


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

        He tied the horse beneath the oak and stepped inside.

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

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

        Rægenwine looked up colour draining from his face.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

        Thunorric’s smile was thin and dangerous.

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

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

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

        Rægenwine hurried, hands trembling.

        Thunorric turned to the Black Shields behind him.

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

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

        Cold air.
        Wet leaves.
        Heavy, familiar footsteps.

        The Brothers Arrive

        Dægan and Leofric stepped inside.

        The inn froze again.

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

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

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

        Leofric’s gaze drifted toward the back tables.

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

        Dægan spotted him with the Black Shields.

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

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

        One Shield swallowed. “Wolf… your brothers”

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

        He finally turned, smirking beneath his hood.

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

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

        Thunorric’s eyes gleamed.

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

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

        Thunorric smiled slow and wolfish.

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

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

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

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

      5. 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

      6. Legends of the Forgotten: The Dark Side of Fate

        Legends of the Forgotten: The Dark Side of Fate

        (Anglo-Saxon Cycle – c. 431 AD)

        Thunorric looked to his youngest a tankard of ale in his hands.


        “Da sees those things a lot and other things.” James said

        Erik frowned. “What things?”

        Harold leaned closer, uneasy. “What’s he mean?”

        “Dad hunts them,” James whispered, eyes wide. “Those spirits and things with sharp teeth. As well as men who turn to wolves.”

        From his chair by the fire, Thunorric let out a rough laugh that carried no humour.
        “More like they hunt me, boy. A lot of those soldiers weren’t what you think.”

        The room fell still. Even the fire seemed to shrink back from his tone.

        Rægenwine set down his mug. “You’re speakin’ of the barrow again?”

        “Aye,” Thunorric said quietly, gaze distant. “Some men die clean. Others… drag the dark with them. The ones from Pennocrucium never left the field. They still walk it, bound to what they swore.”

        James crept closer, voice barely a whisper. “You mean ghosts?”

        “Not ghosts,” Thunorric said. “Storm-bound souls. The kind that never found peace because the gods weren’t done with ’em.”

        Leofric’s quill stilled above the parchment. “And if the gods aren’t done with you?”

        Thunorric smiled, weary but defiant. “Then they can come find me. I’ll be waitin’, same as always.”

        Outside, thunder rolled far off over the hills soft at first, then louder, echoing like a promise.

        He leaned ahead, voice low.
        “Every time I die, something in me dies with it. Another piece of the dark consumes me. I’ve fought beasts like us, monsters from the veil and shadows things most children only have nightmares of.”

        His eyes flickered to the fire.
        “Sure, I take what the rich can spare,” he said with a crooked grin. “But what I really steal is their peace the kind they never earned.”

        Rægenwine shook his head. “And what peace do you earn, Thunorric? Drinkin’ and bleedin’ your way through every century since Rome fell?”

        “Peace?” Thunorric laughed softly. “That’s for men who can die once and be done.”

        The wind howled through the chimney. For a moment, the sound carried a voice low, distant, calling his name.

        Leofric’s ink quivered on the page. “You heard it too,” he said.

        Thunorric nodded slowly. “Aye. It’s them again. The ones I buried beneath the hill.”

        Dægan stepped from the shadows, sword at his side, cloak heavy with rain. “You told me once the dead can’t follow you past the river.”

        “They can if the storm’s strong enough,” Thunorric said. “And this one’s comin’ from the east.”

        Rægenwine crossed himself. “The east wind’s cursed.”

        Thunorric rose, wincing as the old wound in his side flared red. “So am I.”

        The door rattled, the latch lifting though no hand touched it. The fire flared blue, shadows leaping high upon the walls.

        Leofric whispered, “They’ve found you.”

        Thunorric drew his blade, the runes along its spine faintly glowing. “No,” he said, voice steady. “They’ve come to remind me who I am.”

        Outside, lightning split the heavens, and the storm roared in reply.

        Harold hesitated, watching the flicker of firelight dance across his father’s scarred face.

        “So… what are you, then?” he asked quietly.Thunorric’s grin faded. The room seemed to draw in around him, the wind whispering through the cracks in the shutters.

        “Your father,” he said first, voice low. “The man who’d make deals with the dark to save everyone in this room.”He looked down into his cup, the ale trembling faintly.

        “What am I?” he repeated softly. “A man, once. A son of a tribe long gone to dust. An exile. A gladiator. Lupus, they called me. A brother to the storm. Someone who belongs nowhere hunted by the storm, and by the law.” The fire popped, throwing gold across his eyes. He turned to his brothers Dægan, Leofric, and Rægenwine each silent. Each knowing pieces of what he said were true.

        “You remember the early days of the Romans?” he asked, smirking faintly. “When none of you had food? The winters so cold you’d trade your boots for bread?”He leaned back, taking a slow drink.“The mysterious parcels of salt, meat, furs who do you think delivered those gifts?”

        Rægenwine blinked. “That was you?”

        Thunorric’s grin widened. “Aye. Even then, I was the ghost in the woods. The one they cursed by day and prayed for by night.”

        Dægan’s jaw tightened. “And you wonder why the Empire called you outlaw.”

        Thunorric shrugged, raising his cup in mock salute. “Better an outlaw with a conscience than a soldier with none.”

        Outside, the thunder rumbled again closer now, almost beneath their feet.

        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

        Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

        Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

        Chronicles of Draven

        The Chronicles of Drax

      7. The Whispering Barrow

        The Whispering Barrow

        (Anglo-Saxon Cycle – c. 431 AD)

        The mist thickened until the world felt carved from smoke and bone. The barrow rose ahead a mound of earth older than the Chase itself, breathing cold air like a sleeping beast.

        The dead advanced in silence. Rusted armour clinked. The scent of damp soil and iron filled the courtyard.

        Thunorric stepped ahead, sword gleaming blue in the ghost-light. “Back to your rest,” he called. “You’ve no place among the living.”

        The lead revenant paused. Half his face was gone, but the eyes still burned with reason. “And you, Stormwulf when did you last belong to the living?”

        The words struck harder than any blade. Thunorric’s breath caught. He knew that voice.

        “Gaius,” he whispered. “You died at my side on the walls of Pennocrucium.”

        The ghost inclined his head. “Aye. I waited for the trumpet of Rome to call me home. It never came. Only thunder.”

        Dægan moved to Thunorric’s flank, shield raised. “Then hear another command, Centurion stand down.”

        The ghost turned, the faint echo of a smile beneath the ruin. “Still giving orders, Prefect? You never learnt when to stop.”

        A low moan rippled through the barrow. As more shapes clawed through the mist hundreds now, the forgotten dead of every empire.

        Leofric’s voice trembled as he lifted his staff. “They answer to no emperor. The earth itself commands them.”

        Rægenwine’s shout came from the doorway. “Then we’d best make peace with the earth quick!”

        The dead surged ahead. Blades met shadows; sparks hissed like fireflies. Thunorric swung through mist and memory, every strike landing with the weight of centuries.

        Dægan fought beside him, his discipline holding the line. “Hold!” he roared. “By storm and steel!”

        The words caught, spreading through the men living and dead alike. For a heartbeat, even the barrow stilled, listening.

        Thunorric lowered his sword, chest heaving. “We buried you once,” he said softly. “Let me do it right this time.”

        Gaius stepped close, the glow in his eyes dimming. “Then remember us, Stormwulf. That’s all we ever wanted.”

        The ghost faded, one by one the others with him, until only the whisper of the wind remained.

        Leofric fell to his knees, gripping his quill as if it were a blade. “The barrow’s hunger is sated for now.”

        Thunorric wiped the blood from his sword, though none of it was human. “Then we write this night into the bones of the earth,” he murmured. “So it never wakes again.”

        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

        Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

        Chronicles of Draven

        Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

        Chronicles of Drax

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

      8. The Storm and the Dead: A Tale of Ancient Legends

        The Storm and the Dead: A Tale of Ancient Legends

        (Anglo-Saxon Cycle – c. 431 AD)

        The horn had fallen silent, yet the earth still trembled; a low, steady hum rose from beneath the Chase. Mist rolled thick as wool, swallowing the trees and turning the air into a breathless white.

        Thunorric stood at the front, sword low; blood dried dark along the edge. Behind him, Dægan and Leofric formed a narrow line, each facing the shapes that crept from the fog.

        The dead men of Pennocrucium did not walk; they drifted, armor clinking faintly as if echoing battles that had never ended. Some still bore their Roman crests; others had the crude marks of tribes that had long forgotten their names.

        Leofric’s voice broke the silence.

        “They remember their banners, but not their peace.”

        One of the dead stepped forward; a centurion, helm cracked, eyes like dull embers.

        “We marched for empire,” the corpse rasped, “but Rome fell, and the gods turned their faces. The barrow called, and we answered.”

        Thunorric’s grip tightened on his hilt.

        “Then hear me now. You have no master left; not Rome, not the storm, not even death itself. Rest your arms.”

        The ground shuddered. The lead soldier’s skull tilted as though considering the words. “And who commands the storm now?”

        Lightning split the mist; not from the sky, but from the blade itself. It burned white, then blue, throwing every figure into ghostly relief.

        “I do,” Thunorric said.

        The flash tore through the field like a living thing, cutting through bone and rust. When the light faded, the mist began to thin; where the soldiers had stood, only ash remained, stirred by the soft breath of dawn.

        Leofric knelt, pressing his hand to the ground.

        “You’ve bound them.”

        Thunorric sheathed his sword with a quiet rasp.

        “No. I reminded them who they were.”

        The wind rose once more, sweeping through the trees; not in warning this time, but like a sigh of relief.

        Dægan crossed himself, the habit of old Rome still clinging to him. “And if the barrow wakes again?”

        Thunorric turned toward the faint light creeping over the hills.

        “Then we’ll wake with it.”

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

        Read more from the Stormborne Brothers:


        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

        Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

        Chronicles of Draven

        Chronicles of Drax

        Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

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