Tag: fate

  • From Chains to Legends: The Rise of the Black Shields

    From Chains to Legends: The Rise of the Black Shields

    The Storm Returns

    The tide was retreating when they found the broken chains. The sight of melted iron through as if struck by lightning.

    “Gods preserve us,” whispered one of the guards, stepping back. “No blade have done that.”

    Tiberius knelt beside the scorched links. “He didn’t break free,” he muttered. “He shed them.”

    The centurion barked orders.,Sending riders to the northern watch and ships to sweep the channel. But even as they moved, the sky began to darken. The wind shifted, dragging the scent of iron and rain across the water.

    “He’s gone home,” Tiberius said at last. “Back to the place Rome never tamed.”

    “To Britannia?” asked the young guard again, voice shaking.

    “Aye,” said the older legionary. “And if the stories are true, every storm between here and there will answer his call.”

    From the cliffs, they can see the faint shimmer of the sea calm for now, but seething beneath.


    The Emperor’s standard flapped once, hard enough to snap its pole.

    “Should we tell the mainland?” the centurion asked.

    Tiberius stood slowly, eyes on the horizon. “Tell them nothing. Let them think he drowned. If the gods favour us, maybe they’ll believe it.”

    But none of them truly did.
    Even as the orders went out, the men felt the pressure in the air, that strange stillness before thunder. Somewhere far to the north, in the heart of Britannia, the wind began to rise.

    “What if he’s caught out there commander?”

    Tiberius didn’t answer at first. His eyes stayed on the sea, the horizon split between light and shadow.

    “If he’s caught,” he said finally, “then the sea itself will break first.”

    The young guard frowned. “You speak as if he’s a god.”

    Tiberius turned to him, his face hard. “You weren’t here when they brought him in chains. You didn’t see the storm that followed. The ships burned before they reached the harbour. No oil, no fire arrows, just lightning, and him standing in the rain, laughing.”

    The guard swallowed, his knuckles white around his spear.

    Another soldier older, scarred, voice low spat into the dirt. “Men like that ain’t gods. They’re reminders. Rome builds, Rome burns, and the earth keeps its own count.”

    Thunder rolled far out to sea, deep and slow.

    “Get word to the docks,” Tiberius ordered. “Seal the forges. Lock down the armoury. And if the Emperor asks…”
    He paused, eyes narrowing.
    “…tell him the storm never left the island.”

    The men scattered to obey, but above them, the gulls were already fleeing inland.


    The wind picked up again not from the west, but the north.
    And on the water, beneath a bruised sky, something vast and dark moved with purpose.

    Taranis stood at the prow of the small boat, the sea hissing beneath its hull as if warning him back.
    He only smiled.

    The wind carried the scent of earth his earth and beyond the mist. The cliffs of Britannia rose like the bones of old gods. Behind him, the island of exile vanished into shadow. Before him lay vengeance, memory, and the ghosts of his kin.

    “Home,” he murmured. “Or what’s left of it.”

    His brothers would be the first. Drax, bound by Rome’s gold and law; Rayne, lost between loyalty and freedom. Then the old comrades, the broken men who once bore the wolf upon their shields.
    The Black Shields would rise again not as soldiers. But as something Rome can not name and never kill.

    He shifted his weight, watching the distant shoreline of Letocetum take shape through the fog.

    Beyond that lay the salt pits of Salinae. The forests near Vertis, the villages that still whispered his name like a curse and a prayer.

    “Word travels faster than ships,” he said to the empty wind. “By the time I step ashore, they’ll already know.”

    Lightning rippled across the far horizon, faint but deliberate, as though the heavens themselves answered.

    He gripped the tiller and laughed quietly to himself not with joy. But with the fierce certainty of a man who had waited too long to be mortal anymore.

    When the first gulls circled overhead and the shore drew near, Taranis whispered the words that had haunted his exile.


    “Rome fears the storm. Now it will remember why.”

    The tide carried him in. Somewhere in the fort at Rutupiae Drax Stormborne turned toward the sea. With a feeling of dread, without knowing, that the storm had come home.

    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 Island of Ash and Iron: A Tale of Resilience

    The Island of Ash and Iron: A Tale of Resilience

    The Island of Ash and Iron

    Written by
    emma.stormbornelore

    The island steamed beneath a blood-orange dawn. Black sand hissed as the tide pulled back, revealing fragments of broken shields and driftwood charred by lightning.

    Taranis Stormborne stood among the wreckage, cloak torn, hair slick with salt. Around him, the Black Shields gathered the fallen in silence.

    No victory songs were sung only the slow rhythm of men. Who understood the cost of silence and the weight of patience.

    “Bury them high,” Taranis said at last. “Let the wind speak their names.”

    He turned his gaze inland, where the volcanic ridges rose like the spines of sleeping beasts. Smoke drifted from fissures in the rock, thick with the scent of iron and ash.

    Beneath those ridges lay the forge a secret his men had built in defiance of empire.

    As the storm’s light faded behind the clouds, a scout approached, breath ragged.

    “Lupus… Rome has sent word north. They know a fleet was lost, but not how. They think it was a storm.”

    Taranis’s mouth curved into a faint, weary smile.

    “Then let the lie live. Storms are easier to fear than men.”

    He knelt beside a shattered shield half-buried in sand. Its surface was scorched black, the emblem of the wolf barely visible beneath the soot. With slow care, he traced the mark with his thumb, leaving a streak of silver ash.

    “This island is no longer exile,” he murmured. “It’s the forge of the next age. And when Rome’s thunder fades, ours will remain.”

    Above him, a distant rumble rolled through the clouds not thunder, but the awakening of something older.

    The storm had learned to wait.

    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 Iron Silence

    The Iron Silence

    The march south had stripped the world of meaning.
    Days blurred into rain and dust, dawn into dusk, until even time seemed shackled beside him.


    By the time they reached the Roman fort near Corinium, Taranis Storm no longer knew how many nights had passed.

    Only the rhythm of iron and boots. The murmur of Latin commands, and the distant echo of thunder in his bones.

    The fort loomed ahead stone and order built upon the bones of chaos.
    Walls cut sharp against the grey horizon, guarded by rows of pikes and men who moved like clockwork.
    To Taranis, it felt wrong. A place without wind, without life.

    Every sound was contained, controlled, sterile.
    Even the air smelled of discipline oil, smoke, and iron.

    The storm in him recoiled.

    They dragged him through the gates in chains. Soldiers gathered, curious and cautious. Some spat, others stared.
    Whispers followed him like ghosts daemon, barbarus, filius tempestatis.
    Son of the storm.

    He smiled faintly. They weren’t wrong.

    The cell they threw him into was little more than a pit of stone and shadow. The walls sweated damp, the floor slick with moss.


    Above, a slit of light cut through the dark too narrow to touch the ground.
    He sat in the half-dark, wrists raw and heavy with iron. The silence of Rome pressed close, cold and absolute.

    He did not pray.
    He waited.

    When the footsteps came, they came as they always did measured, deliberate, Roman.
    The door creaked open, spilling lamplight like a wound across the floor.

    Three entered.

    A centurion, broad and cold-eyed, his crimson cloak pristine even in the grime.
    A scribe, pale and thin, clutching a wax tablet as if it were a shield.


    And a woman cloaked, silent, her gaze as sharp as a blade. Her presence was wrong for this place; too poised, too knowing.

    “Taranis of the Stormborne,” the centurion began, voice clipped and ceremonial.

    “You stand accused of rebellion against Rome. The murder of imperial soldiers, and the disruption of trade along the Salt Road. Do you understand these charges?”

    Taranis raised his head. His hair hung in dark, tangled strands, but his eyes were steady the colour of gathering thunder.


    “I understand,” he said. “You’re afraid.”

    The scribe faltered mid-stroke. The centurion’s jaw tensed.
    Only the woman’s expression remained still.

    “You will answer with respect,” the Roman said.

    “I already have.”

    The blow came fast a strike across the face that turned his head with the sound of split skin.


    Taranis straightened slowly, blood sliding from the corner of his mouth.
    His stare did not break.

    The silence that followed was heavier than the hit.

    The woman stepped forward. When she spoke, her accent carried the soft inflection of the East Greek, or something older.


    “You fought well,” she said. “Even Rome admits that. There are ways to survive this. Serve us. Lead men under our banner. Take Roman land, a Roman name. You need only kneel.”

    Taranis smiled faintly, the expression more weary than cruel.


    “Rome offers gold to every man it fears. But my kind do not kneel. We weather.”

    She tilted her head slightly. “Weather breaks.”

    He met her eyes. “Only if it stops moving.”

    For the first time, something flickered in her expression curiosity, maybe even a trace of respect.


    The centurion, however, had no such patience. “Enough. He will be moved south to Londinium in three days. If he refuses Rome’s mercy, he will die as a slave.”

    The woman’s gaze lingered on him a moment longer before she turned away. “He won’t bend,” she said quietly. “Not yet.”

    They left him in the dark once more. The door slammed shut. The iron bolts fell into place.

    Taranis exhaled slowly. The air was thick with the scent of blood and damp stone.


    He tasted iron on his tongue metal, blood, defiance.


    The light from above had shifted again, sliding across the wall like the movement of time itself.

    He whispered, barely a sound.
    Not to gods, nor ghosts, but to the storm that still lived within his chest.
    It was quiet now, resting waiting.
    But it would come again.
    It always did.

    When the night settled deep, the sound of rain returned, gentle against the stones.


    In that rhythm, he found memory of his brothers’ faces in the torchlight. Drax’s steady eyes, Rayne’s trembling defiance, Draven’s silence.
    He had told them he would return.
    He intended to keep that promise.

    The fort around him slept in its illusion of control.


    But beyond the walls, clouds were gathering over the hills slow, patient, inevitable.

    The storm was not gone.
    Only waiting.

    © 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