Tag: Fantasy History

  • Stormwulf’s Legacy: Bloodlines and Battles Reawakened

    Stormwulf’s Legacy: Bloodlines and Battles Reawakened

    (Anglo-Saxon Cycle – c. 431 AD)

    “They say Daddy’s a savage,” James said, peering up at his older brothers and uncles clustered near the hearth.

    “Yeah?” Rægenwine asked, turning from the counter with a half-grin. “So, kids what’s your names, then?”

    The tallest boy straightened, shoulders square. “I’m Harold,” he said. “Mother was from the islands south. Said we had the sea in our blood.”

    “Sea, eh?” Rægenwine nodded. “Explains the loud voices.”

    A shorter lad stepped ahead, freckles bright against soot-streaked skin. “I’m Bram. Da says I take after him.”

    “Then gods help us all,” Rægenwine muttered.

    The youngest, barely more than a child, piped up from behind his brothers. “Name’s Wulfie. Da says I’m the fastest.”

    Thunorric chuckled from his bench, voice rough but proud. “Fastest to eat, more like.”

    The boys laughed; the sound eased something heavy in the room.

    Leofric smiled faintly, setting his quill aside. “Stormwulf’s brood,” he said quietly. “Born from thunder, raised in mischief.”

    “Aye,” Rægenwine said, pouring fresh ale for the older two. “Let’s just hope they grow wiser than their da.”

    Thunorric’s grin widened. “No chance o’ that,” he said. “But they’ve never had to steal, or draw steel and that’s more than I had.”

    Silence followed, soft but full. The fire cracked, throwing gold across their faces. Outside, the crows stirred in the trees and somewhere in the distance, a single horn blew low and long.

    The laughter faded as the horn sounded again. This time closer this time deep, mournful, rolling through the mist like thunder that had lost its way.

    Rægenwine’s hand froze halfway to his cup. “That weren’t no huntin’ horn.”

    Leofric rose, eyes narrowing. “It’s Roman in pitch but the cadence… that’s Saxon.”

    Dægan stepped toward the door, the old Roman discipline returning to his shoulders. “A warning, or a call.”

    Thunorric pushed himself upright, steadying against the bench. “Either way, it’s for us.”

    He looked toward his sons Harold, Bram, Wulfie, and James. But something ancient flickered in his eyes, pride, and fear in equal measure.

    “Rægenwine,” he said. “Get the lads below. If it’s a fight, I’ll not have them caught in it.”

    “Aye,” the innkeeper muttered, already herding them toward the cellar door. “Never peace long in this place.”

    Outside, the horn sounded a third time shorter now, urgent. The rain began again, a thin hiss against the shutters.

    Dægan lifted the bar and stepped into the courtyard. Mist rolled thick as smoke, curling between the trees. Shapes moved beyond the hedge slow, deliberate, too many to count.

    Leofric joined him, clutching a staff instead of his quill. “I’ll not write this one,” he murmured. “I’ll live it.”

    Thunorric followed, sword in hand, cloak dragging through the mud. “Then we stand as Storm-kin once more,” he said, the old fire rising in his voice. “Law, ink, and steel against whatever gods come knockin’.”

    The horn fell silent. Only the rain answered.

    A fourth sound rose from the woods not a horn this time,. But a long, low wail that carried no breath of man or beast. The rain faltered as if listening.

    Leofric’s grip tightened on his staff. “That’s no war cry.”

    Thunorric’s gaze swept the treeline. “Aye. That’s the sound of the barrow waking.”

    Rægenwine froze halfway down the cellar steps. “Don’t jest, lad. Not tonight.”

    But the air had changed. Smoke from the hearth drifted sideways, drawn toward the door, as though something outside was pulling it. The fire hissed then flared blue.

    “Gods preserve us,” Leofric whispered. “The gate’s open.”

    From the fog came shapes first shadows. Then clearer forms: figures in torn cloaks, faces pale as ash, eyes like dim embers. The dead soldiers of Pennocrucium men who’d died beneath Roman banners, left unburied when the empire fell.

    Their armour rattled faintly, not in march but in memory.

    Dægan stepped ahead, voice low but steady. “I buried you myself,” he said. “Why rise now?”

    The lead figure halted, half his face gone to rot, the other still wearing the iron discipline of a centurion. “Because Rome forgot us,” the dead man rasped. “But the storm remembers.”

    Thunorric’s sword gleamed in the blue firelight. “Then you’ve come home, brother,” he said. “And this time, you’ll find your peace.”

    The dead looked at one another, uncertain as if the word peace was one they’d long forgotten.

    Then the horn blew once more a sound from both worlds and the dead advanced.

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

    Thank you for reading.

    Futher Reading

    Rægenwine’s Inn: A Gathering of Legends

    The Law and the Storm

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

    Chronicles of Draven

    The Chronicles of Drax

    Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

  • 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