Tag: fiction

  • The Flame That Counsels.

    The Flame That Counsels.


    A tale from the firekeeper’s hearth.

    By the time the boy was dragged into the fire-circle, Solaris already knew what the verdict would be.

    The child barely ten summers old had stolen from the Emberhelm kitchens three times in as many weeks. This last time, he’d taken smoked venison, enough for three mouths.

    It wasn’t a clever theft either; he’d left claw-marks in the ash like some wild cub. They’d found him crouched behind the root cellar with a bone in one hand. His little sister clutched to his side, shaking from fever.

    Taranis sat high above, throne of blackened oak behind him, his blade resting point-down in the dirt. His eyes storm Grey and quiet met Solaris’s across the fire.

    “Third offence,” the warlord said, not unkindly. “You know the law.”

    Solaris bowed his head.

    He had known it would come to this.

    The fire crackled between them amber light dancing against carved cairnstones. The gathered clan murmured like wind in the pines. Some looked away. Others watched with cold detachment.

    From the shadows near the far cairn, Boldolph crouched in wolf-man form, eyes glowing red in the dusk. Morrigan stood beside him, silent and still, her white fur streaked with soot from an earlier hunt. Neither beast moved.

    The boy trembled, snot running down his nose. His sister was nowhere in sight.

    One of the younger guards bristling with duty dragged the child ahead. “What’s the order, High Warlord?”

    Taranis looked not at the boy, but into the flame. “Three thefts. All marked. The hand goes.”

    A stillness fell. Not outrage. Not shock. Just a silence.

    Solaris stepped ahead.

    He didn’t ask permission. He never had.

    “My lord,” he said softly, “I speak?”

    Taranis’s jaw tightened, but he nodded.

    “Come.”

    Solaris walked slowly into the circle, his linen tunic soot-streaked, hands calloused from tending both fire and blade. He stopped beside the boy who flinched at his nearness then turned to face Taranis directly.

    “You talk of mercy, sir,” Solaris said. “Of giving your people hope. Of forging something better than the clans before us. Yet you would take a child’s hand for hunger?”

    “It’s not the first time,” the warlord said.

    “No,” Solaris agreed. “It’s the third. Which tells me we failed twice already.”

    Murmurs rose again uneasy, uncertain.

    Taranis said nothing.

    Solaris went on.

    “Do you remember when we met, Taranis? You were half-starved. Barefoot. Curled between two wolves like a dying branch in the snow.” His voice cracked, just a little. “You think Morrigan would’ve taken your hand? Or Boldolph watched you bleed?”

    Boldolph’s snarl low, thoughtful rumbled through the circle.

    “Do not compare me to that child,” Taranis said, but the edge was gone from his voice. “I was cast out by my own blood. He broke a law.”

    “So did you,” Solaris said, gently. “You stole from death. You defied exile. You bonded with a dragon.”

    The flames snapped high.

    Behind them, Lore stepped quietly into the circle’s edge, arms crossed. Drax lingered further back, sharpening his axe with deliberate rhythm.

    “The law is clear,” Taranis said, but softer now. “What’s your counsel, Solaris?”

    Solaris exhaled.

    “The hand stays. Cut his rations. He works the ash pits. But let the sister be seen. She’s burning from within.”

    A pause.

    Then: “Do we have a healer who treats the children of thieves?”

    Solaris gave the barest smile. “We have a Flamekeeper who remembers that fire burns all the same.”

    Taranis stood.

    He turned to the guards. “The child’s hand stays. Halve his meals for two moons. The sister—tend her.”

    “And after that?” the guard asked.

    Taranis glanced to Morrigan.

    “We watch,” he said.


    Later that night, Solaris sat by the embers of the great hearth. The kitchens had long since emptied. The scent of root broth clung to the stones. He stirred a mix of wildfire oil and willow sap in a clay bowl, preparing a balm.

    The door creaked. Taranis entered, shoulders still dusted with ash.

    “She’ll live,” Solaris said, not looking up. “The girl. The fever broke at dusk.”

    “You were right,” Taranis murmured.

    “No. I remembered something you forgot.”

    He set the bowl down and finally looked up.

    “You’re not a tyrant, Taranis. But you are tired. Tired men return to old laws.”

    Taranis sat across from him, resting his blade beside the hearth. “They look to me to be strong.”

    “Then be strong enough to bend.”

    They sat in silence a moment.

    Then Taranis said, “What would you have me do? End the slave laws? Free them all?”

    Solaris’s eyes softened.

    “I’d have you start with one.”

    A pause. Fire popped.

    “My children,” Solaris said. “You let them stay with me. You feed them better than the others. You trust me with your fire. But still, by law, I am bound. My collar is light, but it is still iron.”

    Taranis didn’t speak.

    “I do not ask for release,” Solaris said. “I ask for meaning. If I am to be your Flamekeeper, let it not be as your property. Let it be as your kin.”

    Taranis rose slowly.

    He walked to the wall, lifted a flame braided chain from its hook, and placed it at Solaris’s feet.

    “I will ask the cairn council to rewrite the bond,” he said. “You’ll take no collar again.”

    Then, softly: “And neither will your children.”


    Days passed. The fevered girl recovered. The boy, now under Solaris’s quiet supervision, took to the ash pits with a haunted gaze but steady hands.

    At dawn, he brought Solaris firewood without being asked.

    At dusk, he left a hand-carved wolf at the hearth.

    Taranis watched from the upper cairn, Morrigan seated beside him.

    “He’ll never steal again,” Taranis said.

    “No,” Solaris replied, stepping beside him. “Because now he belongs.”

    Taranis looked at his old friend, the man who had once been enemy. Then servant, then brother in all but blood.

    “Thank you, Solaris.”

    The Flamekeeper only smiled and added another log to the fire.

    That evening, Solaris’s eldest son, Nyx, approached. He carried a plate of meat and grain, handing it to his father before setting his own aside.

    “You scorn the meal, boy?” Taranis asked.

    “No, sir,” Nyx said. “But it’s not right I get meat and grain while my father gets broth.”

    Taranis tilted his head. Then smirked.

    “Bring your father a plate from my stores.”

    Then added, almost as an afterthought

    “And Solaris it was never one dragon, was it? Two stood beside me all along.”

    One Week Later Postscript to The Flame That Counsels

    “He’s gone mad. The Highlord’s either broken or possessed.”

    The guard’s words hit like ash in the lungs. Solaris said nothing, hands deep in the roots he was cleaning for poultice. He’d heard rumors all morning that Taranis had dismissed the old slave branders, torn the punishment scrolls in half, and ordered the cairnstones rewritten.

    Another voice joined the first: “They say he talks to the dragons now. Not just rides them talks. Pendragon flew south and turned back. Refused to land in Gaedrix’s old territory.”

    Then came softer steps. Young Nyx, barefoot and breathless, ran across the ash-warmed floor of the kitchen hall.

    “Uncle Solaris!” he grinned, waving a carved wolf bone. “Father says you can visit him. No chains. No guards. Just you. He said it’d be good to see you without your collar.”

    Solaris froze. Slowly, he turned — not to the boy, but to the collar hanging near the forge. Empty. Cold.

    “Why now?” he asked, kneeling.

    Nyx beamed. “He says the laws are wrong. That you helped him remember who he was. That it’s time to make them right.”

    The fire cracked behind him. Solaris closed his eyes.

    Later that dusk, in the central hall of Emberhelm, Taranis stood before his people — not in war-gear, but in storm-black robes, his sword sheathed at his back, Morrigan and Boldolph flanking him like ghosts.

    A hush fell.

    Then he spoke.

    “I was cast out as a child chained not by iron, but by fear. I lived. I burned. I changed.

    So hear me now.

    From this day onward, Stormborne law changes:

    First crime: a warning, carved in cairnstone.
    Second: servitude, no longer than a season’s moon.
    Third: magical judgment the storm or the shadow will decide.
    No child shall ever be born in chains.
    Dragons will not fly over lands where children are enslaved.
    All who labor shall eat. None shall go hungry.
    The broken, the maimed, the soul-wounded they will have a place.
    We are not the Clawclan.
    We are Stormborne.
    The fire will not consume us. It will make us whole.”

    Lore lit the cairnstones behind him. Solaris stepped forward and cast his collar into the flame. Pendragon circled overhead.

    Taranis met his gaze with quiet steel.

    “You are no longer mine,” he said. “But you are still my kin.”

    Solaris bowed low, not as slave but as Flamekeeper.

    And above them, the wolves howled, and the fire did not flicker.

    Taranis turned to Morrigan and Boldolph, who stood unmoving beneath the runestone arch. A chant had begun low in their throats a strange, old language from before the cairns were raised.

    “That is, if you’ll stay, Solaris?” Taranis asked quietly.

    Then to the wolves:

    “Boldolph. Morrigan. You’ll be free of this too. The curse ends with fire and brotherhood. You’ll walk again in human form.”

    The chant rose.

    The fire roared.

    And somewhere in the high wind above Emberhelm, the storm broke not in rage, but in light.

  • The Legacy of Lore Stormborne: Keeper of the Flame

    The Legacy of Lore Stormborne: Keeper of the Flame


    Scribe. Warrior. Flamebearer of Emberhelm.

    “Let others raise the blade. I raise the truth.”
    Lore Stormborne

    🕯️ Keeper of the Flame. Brother of Storm.
    Lore Stormborne is more than a warrior he is the voice of memory, the keeper of names, and the bearer of the fire that binds tribe to tribe, and age to age. Born the youngest of the Stormborne brothers, Lore walks the path between word and weapon, prophecy and pragmatism.

    Where Taranis is storm and Drax is stone, Lore is firelight quiet but searing, patient but unyielding.

    He writes not only with ink, but with action.

    A wise, bearded man in historical attire writes with a quill on parchment, surrounded by ancient scrolls and ink pots in a sunlit room.
    Lore Stormborne, the Flamebearer of Hearthrest, meticulously writing history and preserving knowledge.

    📜 From Shadows to Scrolls
    In childhood, Lore followed in the shadow of his brothers Taranis, the storm-marked exile, and Drax, the hardened shield. But even then, Lore saw what others missed: patterns in myth, warnings in the stars, truth beneath tradition.

    When Taranis was exiled, Lore did not speak but he remembered. When Drax rose through the ranks, Lore was already mapping the past.

    His weapon was never just steel it was knowledge. And it burned just as brightly.

    A powerful figure dressed in ornate armor, wielding flames in both hands, symbolizing strength and magic, with fiery hair and a dramatic backdrop.
    Lore Stormborne, the Flamebearer of Hearthrest, conjures fire in a display of power and wisdom, embodying the essence of his role as the keeper of ancient rites.

    🔥 Flamebearer of Hearthrest
    Lore governs Hearthrest, the wooded sanctuary of sacred stones and old rites. There, within the ancient stone circle, he tends the Eternal Flame of the Stormborne lit only in times of great need. It is said he can hear the voices of ancestors in the fire.

    To the warriors, he is their truthkeeper. To the children, he is the story-weaver. To the Stormborne, he is their lore.

    A powerful warrior with flame-like hair and elaborate armor, holding fire in one hand amidst swirling flames.
    Lore Stormborne, the Flamebearer of Hearthrest, wielding fire magic in a display of power and resolve.

    ⚔️ A Warrior When Needed
    Though often seen as a scholar, Lore is no stranger to battle. In the war against the Clawclan, he stood beside Taranis and Drax at Rykar’s Ridge, calling down the old flame-magic inscribed into cairnstones. His staff of flamewood, carved from lightning-struck ash, is both relic and weapon.

    When dragons fell from the sky, Lore stood firm. When the storm rose, he whispered its name.

    A close-up portrait of a wise-looking elder with long white hair and a beard, adorned with intricate jewelry and a regal crown, exuding an aura of strength and knowledge.
    The Flamebearer of Hearthrest, Lore Stormborne, embodies wisdom and strength, standing as the keeper of ancient stories and the guardian of the Eternal Flame.

    🧠 Mind of Flame
    Measured, articulate, and always listening, Lore speaks less than most but when he does, his words linger. He believes that the world is not saved through strength alone, but through stories preserved, names remembered, and wisdom passed on.

    He is the bridge between storm and silence. And his fire never goes out.

    A figure in a red cloak holds a torch, illuminating the surrounding ancient stone formations in a dark, wooded area. Text reads 'Lore of the Stormborne' above the figure.
    Lore Stormborne, the Flamebearer of Hearthrest, walking through ancient stone circles with a torch to illuminate the path of tradition and memory.

    ✴️ Known As:
    The Flamebearer of Hearthrest

    Keeper of the Cairnstones

    Lore of the Stormborne

    Fire-Walker

    Voice of the Old Flame

    A serene woodland landscape featuring a large stone circle surrounded by smaller stones, labeled 'Hearthrest' at the bottom.
    The sacred grove of Hearthrest, a mystical sanctuary of standing stones and ancient rites.

    🌳 His Realm: Hearthrest, Caernath
    A wooded region of sacred groves and standing stones. Home of the Eternal Flame and ancient rites. Governed not by sword, but by tradition and firelight.

    ✍️ Written by: emma.stormbornelore

  • The Legacy of Taranis Stormborne: Exile and Redemption

    The Legacy of Taranis Stormborne: Exile and Redemption

    Dragon Rider of Emberhelm


    High Warlord of Emberhelm Exile. Survivor. Dragon Rider.

    The storm did not break me. It made me.”
    Taranis Stormborne

    Born of Storm. Forged by Fire.
    Taranis Stormborne was not born to rule. He was born beneath a sky torn open by lightning. Marked by omens the elders feared and prophecies they not control. At just eight years old, he was cast out—exiled for powers no one dared understand.

    But exile did not break him. It shaped him.

    Exile and the Wild Years


    Driven from Emberhelm into the haunted woods of Caernath. The boy who should have died found allies no tribe claim.: the great wolves Boldolph and Morrigan, creatures of fang and flame who walked between spirit and shadow.

    From them, Taranis learned the old truths how to hunt, to command silence, to harness the storm within.

    The Dragon Bond


    Years later, during a blood eclipse at Rykar’s Ridge, Taranis encountered the thunder-dragon Tairneanach, long thought lost to legend. In that moment, lightning met fire. Beast and man did not tame one another they recognized each other.

    The storm had chosen its rider.

    ⚔️ Rise of the Stormborne
    He returned not in vengeance, but in purpose. With brothers Drax and Lore at his side.Taranis united the scattered clans of the highlands and led them against the Clawclan invaders. His victory over the warlord Gaedrix at Rykar’s Ridge lit the flame of rebellion—and rebirth.

    He became not just a warlord, but a symbol. The exile returned. The prophecy fulfilled.

    Who Is He?


    Taranis walks a line between fire and mercy. Towering, scarred, and grey-eyed, he speaks little and strikes hard. But beneath the ash lies a deep loyaltyto his people. To the forgotten, and to those who fight for more than conquest.

    He is not king by blood. He is leader by choice. And the storm, once his curse, now answers his call.

    Known As:


    The Fire-Blooded

    Stormborne Lord

    Malcrone of Emberhelm

    Rider of Tairneanach

    Breaker of Clawclan

    His Realm

    Emberhelm, Caernath
    Set atop the Seven Hills of the Stormborne, Emberhelm is both fortress and flame. From here, Taranis watches the horizon not as ruler, but as guardian of the storm.

    ✍️ Written by: emma.stormbornelore

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

    💬 If this spoke to you, please like, share, and subscribe to support our mythic journey.

    Colorful abstract design featuring layered, wavy patterns in shades of blue, purple, and gray, with the text 'ELHewitt' and 'StormborneArts' prominently displayed.
    Artistic representation inspired by the themes of Taranis Stormborne’s journey in Emberhelm.

    further Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

  • Tale of Two Dragons

    Tale of Two Dragons

    The batte for Stormborne.

    The sky over Rykar’s Ridge cracked with a sound like splitting stone.

    Pendragon rose first wings stretched wide. Vast as storm sails, his bronze and emerald scales catching the last light of day. He circled high above the valley, a gleaming sovereign watching the armies assemble below.

    To the west, the last kin of Stormborne gathered. Taranis stood at the forefront, grey-eyed and grave, flanked by Lore and Drax. The ground at their backs was scorched from the fire of prophecy.

    To the east, under curling black clouds, came the dragon of thunder Tairneanach, black as midnight and crowned with sparks. Lightning licked his flanks. His eyes were coals, ancient and furious.

    He was the dragon of reckoning, storm-forged and prophecy-bound, the one who watched from the shadows of time.

    But this was no duel between beasts alone.

    It was the end of an age. And dragons, it was said, chose sides not by blood — but by truth.

    Taranis looked to the sky. “They’ve returned,” he said softly.

    Drax scoffed. “Or come to see who burns first.”

    “Dragons don’t come for sport,” Lore murmured, hand resting on the carved staff of flamewood. “They come when destiny wavers.”

    The wind shifted.

    Down came Pendragon, his great claws curling into the soil beside Taranis. His gaze fell on the young warlord no longer the exiled child of the woods. But a leader draped in fire-scars and ash-braided hair. Pendragon gave a low, resonant growl. Not a threat. A vow.

    And across the field, Tairneanach descended like a storm himself, cracking trees and stone beneath his wingspan. His breath steamed in the air heavy with ozone. Thunder rolled in his chest.

    They faced each other now: two titans born before men stood upright. Two dragons of the Stormborne prophecy.

    The wind stilled.

    And in that silence, Morrigan lifted her howl to the sky a signal from the ridge behind. Boldolph stood beside her in wolfman form, snarling low.

    The Clawclan were moving.

    “DRAX!” Taranis barked. “Hold the eastern rise!”

    Drax nodded, slamming his axe against his shield. “With pleasure.”

    “LORE!” he turned, voice like thunder. “Prepare the flame line. If the dragons fall—”

    “They won’t,” Lore cut in, eyes glowing faintly. “But I’ll be ready.”

    The Clawclan came screaming from the ridge like hornets. Painted in black and red, bone charms rattling, fire arrows loosed high. The first line met Drax’s warriors in a clash of metal, blood, and grit.

    Behind them, the Stormborne shield-wall held fast. But the pressure built like a coming flood.

    Pendragon roared, rearing high. With one beat of his wings, he swept fire over the Clawclan’s flank .flames so hot they melted shields anoʻd seared the earth itself. Men screamed, scattered, and fell.

    But then, a second roar answered.

    Tairneanach unleashed his storm.

    Lightning struck the centre of the field, ripping through both earth and sky. The power coursed through bones, hearts, even memory. Clawclan warriors staggered but so did some of Stormborne’s own.

    The dragons circled each other, neither striking first.

    Not yet.

    Amid the chaos, a boy barely of age charged toward Taranis blade too large for his arms. Face painted in fear and madness.

    Taranis met him not with fury, but with mercy.

    He turned the blade aside, struck the hilt, and knocked the boy unconscious.

    “There’s no glory in slaying the broken,” he muttered.

    A moment later, Boldolph leapt past him slamming into a Clawclan berserker with enough force to crack ribs. Morrigan followed, her white fur streaked with blood and soot, her teeth finding the throat of another.

    Still the dragons circled.

    Still the battle burned.

    And then..

    Pendragon dipped low. Not toward Tairneanach, but toward the battlefield.

    A new force had emerged from the mists a second wave of Clawclan. armed with net-traps and dragon-piercing spears forged from meteoric ore.

    “Cowards,” Lore hissed. “They seek to slay the sacred.”

    Tairneanach landed with a thunderous quake.

    He did not aid the Clawclan.

    He turned against them.

    His tail swept wide, sending a dozen spearmen flying. His mouth opened — but instead of lightning, he loosed a scream of pure rage.

    Pendragon landed beside him, and for a moment. the two dragons stood back to back defending not sides, but something older.

    Stormborne.
    Balance.
    Prophecy.

    The brothers saw it too.

    Taranis, Lore, Drax covered in blood and smoke turned toward the dragons now defending their people.

    And Taranis whispered, “It was never a battle between them.”

    “No,” said Lore. “It’s a battle for us.”

    “For Stormborne,” Drax added, gripping his weapon.

    Tairneanach raised his head, and with a final, sky-splitting roar, flew straight into the blackened clouds above. Pendragon followed, spiralling upward.

    Together, they vanished into the storm.

    And on the ridge below, the Stormborne warriors stood not victorious, but awakened.

    The sky split again.

    This time, it was not Tairneanach who screamed across the clouds, but Pendragon, rising high and circling above the valley. Beneath him, the Black Clawclan surged ahead like a tide of locusts. War cries rang out. Spears glinted. Shields slammed together in rhythm.

    But at the front of the Stormborne line stood Taranis unmoved, massive, his blade held sideways like it weighed nothing.

    Beside him, Boldolph roared half-man, half-wolf, his red eyes glowing. He slammed the butt of his axe into the ground and bared his teeth.

    Behind them, Lore raised his staff. “Now!” he cried.

    The runes carved into the ancient stones shimmered. The hill beneath the enemy’s feet cracked as though the land itself rejected their presence.

    Drax, bloodied from an earlier clash, stood on a higher ridge, calling the warriors into formation. “Spears up! Hold the line! If we fall today, the fire dies with us!”

    The dragons descended.

    Pendragon spiralled downward, a comet of colour and fury. He opened his mouth and from it came not just fire, but a heat so intense it twisted the air. The Clawclan’s front ranks scattered as tents and timber exploded into flame.

    From the west, Tairneanach swooped low and screamed. a bolt of lightning leapt from his jaws and struck the enemy catapult, reducing it to smouldering splinters.

    “DRAGONS!” a terrified voice cried. “The legends were true!”

    The battlefield was chaos.

    Taranis leapt into the fray, his sword catching fire as Pendragon soared above. With every swing, a foe fell not just cut down, but shattered. It was as if the storm had learned to walk.

    Boldolph tore through the lines like a shadow of vengeance. He moved low and fast, clawing one man across the chest. Slamming another with his shoulder so hard the man flew ten feet.

    The brothers fought in unison, their bond forged through exile and pain.

    Lore, standing at the sacred cairn, whispered ancient words. Roots erupted from the ground, tangling the Clawclan’s feet. A tree burst through the soil like a spear, skewering a line of advancing warriors.

    Still they came.

    From the far end of the field rode their leader a brute named Gaedrix. cloaked in bone armour and wielding twin axes carved from dragon tooth.

    He bellowed a challenge.

    Taranis turned. His sword burned brighter. “This ends now.”

    They met in the centre of the field the High Warlord and the Bone King.

    Steel clashed. Sparks flew. The ground cracked beneath their boots. Gaedrix struck wild, savage, unrelenting. But Taranis moved like wind and thunder blocking, dodging, answering with devastating power.

    One swing he broke Gaedrix’s left axe.

    Another he knocked the warlord to one knee.

    The Bone King snarled, blood spraying from his lips. “You should’ve stayed dead, Stormborne.”

    Taranis drove his blade into the ground beside him, stepped forward, and cracked Gaedrix across the jaw with his gauntlet.

    “I don’t die,” he said.

    Then, as the dragons roared overhead and the warriors of Stormborne shouted in unison. Taranis lifted Gaedrix above his head and hurled him toward the burning ridge.

    He never rose again.

    Silence swept the field.

    The remaining Black Claw warriors, seeing their leader defeated, dropped their weapons. Some fled. Others dropped to their knees.

    The sky cleared.

    Pendragon circled once before landing beside Taranis. The great beast bowed his head, his flank marked by a shallow gash but his eyes burning bright.

    Tairneanach landed beside Boldolph, nudging the wolf-man with a low, throaty growl.

    Drax limped forward, laughing through the pain. “You’ve always been dramatic.”

    Taranis sheathed his sword and looked around at the wreckage, the blood, the fire.

    “We were born of storm,” he said. “But we survive through each other.”

    Lore joined them, hand resting on the cairn stone. “The old ways live.”

    From the cliffs above, children and elders peeked out watching, hoping.

    Taranis turned and called, “We are Stormborne! This is your land. Your fire. Your home!”

    Cheers broke like thunder across the valley.

    Boldolph threw his head back and howled. Morrigan’s answering cry echoed from the woods. The wolves had returned.

    Above them, the two dragons fire and storm crossed paths in the sky.

    A new age had begun. The prophesy come true. Tairneanach landed near Taranis allowing Taranis to climb his back.

    “I’m not the ball I’m the dragon rider ” Taranis smirked chuckling as he swooped up into the sky.

    Thank you for reading.


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

     If this spoke to you, please like, share, and subscribe to support our mythic journey.

    Further Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    A Journey Through My Poetic Collection

    Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

    The Chronicles of Drax

    Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

  • Cursed Love: Themes of Fate and Freedom in Poetry

    Cursed Love: Themes of Fate and Freedom in Poetry


    From Boldolph to Morrigan

    I howled to the moon,

    but it gave me no answer,
    Just the echo of paws in the frost-bitten heather.
    I searched for your scent in the whispering rain,
    Through bones of the hills and the breath of the plain.

    We were fire and fang, you and I,
    Bound by curse, by claw, by sky.
    You ran ahead white flash through trees
    While I remained, dragged down by knees.

    I saw you in dreams where no man treads,
    Where wolves wear crowns and ghosts break bread.
    Morrigan, my moon-heart, do you still roam
    The hollowed-out places we once called home?

    I would trade my strength, my storm-wrought hand,
    For one more touch, for one command.
    To run beside you beneath the stars,
    Free of these chains, these cursed scars.

    But if fate is cruel and time is blind,
    I’ll wait through seasons undefined.
    For love like ours does not decay
    It howls, it hunts, it finds a way.

    Thank you for reading

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

    💬 If this spoke to you, please like, share, and subscribe to support our mythic journey.

    Further Reading

    A Journey Through My Poetic Collection

  • Boldolph the Wolf-Man

    Boldolph the Wolf-Man

    The mists rolled thick across the highland of Staffordshire, curling like ghost fingers over rock and root. Beneath their shifting veil stood a figure that did not belong to the world of men not entirely. He was massive, broad-shouldered, with the raw frame of a warrior and the head of a beast. His fur was obsidian black, streaked with silver scars and ash.

    Red eyes burned beneath his brow. His breath came out in steam as if the forge fire lived in his lungs.

    Boldolph.

    The wolf-man. The cursed one. The guardian of the Stormborne line.

    That morning, he had awoken not as man, nor wholly beast, but as something sacred. Taranis had spoken only two words to him before the sunrise: “It begins.”

    And now he stood at the edge of Rykar’s Field, muscles tensed, waiting for the signal.

    Bronze glinted on the hilltop warriors from the Black Clawclan had gathered in force, armed with spears and teeth alike. Raiders, born of bloodlust, who left villages razed and children buried beneath burnt thatch.

    A low growl rumbled in Boldolph’s throat.

    Today, they would be stopped.

    Below him, the Stormborne forces gathered. Taranis on the ridge with Pendragon and Tairneanach perched behind him.

    , Lore chanting beside a fire that would not die. Drax tightening his bracers, muttering curses and prayers as one. Among the warriors stood farmers, hunters, fire-callers, bone-weavers all who had chosen to rise.

    But none were like Boldolph.

    He crouched low, the carved bronze blade strapped to his back. humming faintly forged by Drax, blessed by Lore, named Ashsplitter. His claws, though not natural, were tipped in obsidian. His howls call Morrigan from the far trees and silence men’s hearts.

    And when the horn blew, he moved like a shadow torn free of the dark.

    He crashed into the enemy line like a storm of fang and bronze. The first man he struck did not even scream just fell, bones splintered beneath the weight of the blow. Boldolph spun, slashed, roared, tore. Blood hit the grass like spilled wine.

    The Black Clawclan were fierce but they were not ready.

    “By the ancestors!” one shouted, staring in horror. “A beast walks!”

    A spear was hurled. Boldolph caught it midair, snapped the shaft, and flung it back. It pierced armor and flesh. The man fell.

    He was not alone.

    From the trees came Morrigan white and wraithlike, her eyes alight with moonfire. Together, they circled the enemy, not as humans, not as animals but as something other. Something older.

    Across the field, Taranis raised his sword high.

    “For every child taken,” he shouted, “for every flame snuffed out WE RISE!”

    The Stormborne charged. Bronze clashed with bronze. Flesh tore. Voices sang the old war cries.

    Boldolph didn’t hear them. He was lost to instinct now the heartbeat of the land pounding in his ears. His claws met bone. His teeth found leather and neck. He leapt and rolled and dove through fire.

    A warrior came at him with twin blades, marked in red clay and hate. Boldolph let him come. At the last second, he dropped low, sprang upward, and slammed both fists into the man’s chest. The impact shattered ribs and silence.

    Then came the Champion.

    Tall, scarred, wrapped in tattoos of wolf skulls. He grinned as he strode ahead, axe glinting.

    “You’re no god,” the Champion sneered. “Just a cursed mutt.”

    Boldolph stood, blood dripping from his chin.

    “I am neither,” he growled, “but you will kneel before this mutt.”

    They clashed.

    Steel to fang. Roar to warcry. The battle stilled around them as the two titans fought. Blades rang. Earth shook. Bones cracked.

    At last, Boldolph caught the Champion’s axe arm, twisted and snapped it. With a howl, he drove the dagger into the man’s chest.

    Silence.

    Then the howl.

    Long. Ancient. Reverberating through stone, marrow, memory.

    After the battle, the field was quiet.

    The dead lay in solemn rows, the fires lit to honor their spirits. Taranis stood at the center, cloak torn, eyes fierce. Lore marked the ground with runes of ash. Drax drank in silence.

    And Boldolph… sat alone beneath a tree.

    His fur was streaked with blood. His eyes no longer burned they watched the stars. Morrigan lay beside him, her white coat stained with battle.

    A small child approached. Her face was smudged with soot. Her eyes, wide with awe.

    “Are you a monster?” she asked.

    Boldolph tilted his head.

    “No,” he said softly. “I am what protects you from monsters.”

    She sat beside him.

    In that moment with the fire crackling, and the dead honored. the Stormborne still alive Boldolph, the cursed wolf-man, found peace.

    For just a while.

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

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  • The Bond Between Taranis and Boldolph.

    The Bond Between Taranis and Boldolph.

    The fire had long gone out, and the cold crept in like a snake through the underbrush. Taranis sat with his back to a stone outcrop, shivering in silence. His breath came in misted gasps, though he dared not build another fire. Fire drew eyes. And eyes mean death.

    He was only nine winters old skin and bones beneath a damp wolf-pelt, alone since exile. Alone… or so he believed.

    Until that night.

    A low growl rolled from the darkness.

    Taranis reached for his stick-spear crude, splintered, tipped with flint and rose to a crouch. The growl came again, closer. Deep. Measured. Not hunger. Not rage. Warning.

    The trees parted.

    A shadow, massive and black, emerged from the mist.

    The wolf.

    Not just any wolf this one had eyes like embered blood. A scar down his left side that caught the moonlight. He have snapped Taranis in two.

    But he didn’t.

    Instead, the wolf circled once, then lay down, his tail wrapping around his legs. He did not blink. He just watched.

    Taranis lowered his spear.

    “You’re not here to eat me,” he said, voice hoarse from days without speech.

    The wolf said nothing, but his ears twitched.

    Taranis crept closer, sat back down beside the dying fire pit. He wrapped the pelt tighter and leaned ahead.

    “I don’t know why they hate me,” he whispered.

    The wolf’s eyes did not move.

    “I saved my brother. I didn’t ask for the fire, or the storm. I just… did what I was told.”

    Still the wolf said nothing, but his breathing was calm, deliberate like he was listening.

    Taranis closed his eyes.

    In the morning, he woke to warmth. Not from a fire, but from the wolf curled around him, sheltering him from the frost.

    From that day onward, Boldolph never left his side.

    He didn’t need to speak. His presence was enough. His strength, a shield. His silence, a vow.

    Taranis never asked him why.

    But deep down, he knew.

    Boldolph had seen something in him not just a boy, not just a fire-starter. Something ancient. Something kin.

    And Taranis, though still just a child, reached out and rested a hand on the wolf’s thick fur.

    “Thank you,” he whispered.

    The wolf let him.

    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 Unsung Heroines of the Welsh Marches: A Historical Perspective

    The Unsung Heroines of the Welsh Marches: A Historical Perspective

    Drax’s Region , StormborneLore

    A colorful drawing depicting a bright blue sky with clouds and a sun, alongside a vibrant green landscape featuring a pond, flowers, and sheep.
    A vibrant child’s drawing depicting a pastoral scene with sheep, flowers, and a pond under a colorful sky.

    Historical Insight Series

    In the shadow of ancient hills and stone-crowned ridges, the Welsh Marches whisper stories long forgotten. Winds race across the Long Mynd.

    Caer Caradoc looms in silent watch. Yet somewhere beneath the earth, fragments of the lives. Once lived by Bronze Age women stay buried in urns, marked in pottery, etched in the soil itself.

    Though no names were written, no songs preserved their deeds in ink. These women shaped the land and its legacy just as surely as their male counterparts.

    In this post, we explore what archaeology reveals about their roles. struggles, and power during a time of shifting tribes, emerging hillforts, and mythic memory.

    Colorful abstract painting featuring a celtic knot border, a bright sun, a stylized tree with multicolored leaves, and a vibrant field of flowers.
    A vibrant, colorful painting featuring a tree with colorful leaves. A stylized sun, and a bright blue sky, embodying a connection to nature and artistic expression.

    Life in the Bronze Age Welsh Marches:

    The Female Thread, settlements and Society.


    Sites like Llanilar, Moel y Gaer, and the Breiddin Hillfort give us glimpses of structured settlements roundhouses. Aswell as storage pits, and hearths.

    While many daily activities stay unrecorded, it’s women who managed food preparation, textile production, tool-making, and child-rearing. Their hands shaped the rhythm of Bronze Age life.

    Burial Practices and Reverence.


    At Allt Y Crib and nearby burial cairns. The remains of women have been discovered alongside grave goods beads, pottery, bronze tools.

    These finds suggest women were not merely laborers. But held positions of respect, spiritual or familial leaders whose deaths warranted ritual care.

    Pottery and Cultural Identity.


    Decorated pots, many found in ritual pits and barrows, often bear feminine associations. Women have been central to their crafting, shaping not only vessels, but cultural identity through art, trade, and tradition.

    Celtic knots, landscape abstract arts

    Stone Circles and Ritual


    Mysterious sites like Cerrig Duon and Y Garn Goch offer insight into ceremonial life. While we can’t say definitively that women led rituals. Their burial proximity and symbolic items hint at possible priestess roles guardians of knowledge, seasons, and ancestral memory.

    Subsistence and Survival

    The Grinding stones, charred grains, and animal remains suggest women were active in agriculture, foraging, and preservation. They ensured continuity passing down wisdom in planting cycles, herbal lore, and the ways of fire and feast.

    Silent Influence, Lasting Echo


    Though no written records survive from the Bronze Age, the archaeology of the Welsh Marches speaks in its own language. Women’s influence is woven into every excavated hearth, every grave good, every pottery shard.

    They were not background figures they were central to survival, culture, and possibly leadership.

    Whether as midwives, weavers, warriors, or spiritual guides. The women of the Welsh Marches helped forge the legacy of the land Drax now calls home in StormborneLore.

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

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

  • Drax the Dragonball.

    Drax the Dragonball.

    A Stormborne Skysport!

    The sun dipped low over the hills, turning the sky the colour of old bronze. A warm wind blew across the half-built hillfort, stirring the campfire embers and the occasional ego.

    Out from the shadow of the forge strutted Drax, shoulders broad, beard wild, and eyes gleaming with mischief.

    “I’m riding Pendragon,” he announced to no one and everyone. “You can’t be the only rider, runt.”

    Taranis, seated by the fire with a hunk of roasted meat in hand, didn’t even flinch. He just raised an eyebrow. “Oh, I’m sure Pendragon will love that.”

    From the ridge above, the mighty dragon shifted. Pendragon, ancient and noble, snorted in what can only be described as pre-emptive disappointment.

    Next to him, Tairneanach. The younger storm dragon, lowered his head as if already bracing for whatever chaos was about to unfold.

    Drax clapped his hands. “Let’s fly, beasts!”

    “Hey Pendragon, Tairneach,” Taranis called, struggling not to laugh. “Drax thinks he’s got wings.”

    With an exaggerated swagger. Drax tried to climb up Pendragon’s massive side promptly slipping and landing flat on his back with a grunt.

    Pendragon groaned like a disgruntled horse and used his wing like a shovel. As he started lifting Drax back onto the saddle with a firm thwap.

    “Thank you!” Drax wheezed, trying to sit upright. “See? We’re bonding!”

    Pendragon gave Tairneanach a long look. The younger dragon’s eyes gleamed. The mischief had begun.

    With a mighty roar, the dragons launched into the sky, wings tearing through the clouds. At first, it was majestic. Drax whooped with delight, arms raised, his braids flying.

    “This is incredible!” he bellowed. “I am one with the storm!”

    And then Pendragon did a barrel roll.

    Drax did not.

    He flew off the saddle like a sack of meat and bellowed curses all the way down.

    “OH YOU BLOODY SCALY!”

    Before he could hit the ground. Tairneanach swooped in like a feathered bolt of lightning. Catching Drax by the back of his tunic with a precise claw.

    “Thanks!” Drax wheezed again, now dangling like a trussed boar over a bonfire.

    But the game wasn’t over.

    Pendragon arced around and opened his claws mid-air. Tairneanach, with a playful screech, tossed Drax into the air like a sack of barley.

    “WHAT IN THE STONE-FORSAKEN” Drax spun mid-air.

    Pendragon caught him.

    Then tossed him again.

    Taranis stood below, hands on hips, watching the two dragons play catch with his brother.

    “This is fine,” he muttered. “Completely normal.”

    The wolves Boldolph and Morrigan lay nearby watching with what only be described as smug amusement. Morrigan even wagged her tail once.

    Up above, Drax was shouting at both dragons.

    “NOT THE EARS! I NEED THOSE! I’M A COMMANDER, DAMMIT!”

    But they didn’t listen.

    Pendragon looped. Tairneanach flipped. Drax flailed.

    Eventually, they deposited him gently but with zero dignity onto a hay bale just outside the fort walls. He rolled off, dizzy, covered in ash, and missing one boot.

    Taranis walked over and offered him a hand.

    “Still think you’re a rider?”

    Drax groaned. “I think… I’ll stick to walking.”

    As Taranis helped him up. Pendragon landed behind them with a smug puff of smoke. while Tairneanach gave a playful chuff and nudged Drax’s remaining boot onto his head.

    “Great,” Drax muttered. “Now they’re comedians too.”

    Taranis grinned. “Just be glad they like you. If they didn’t, you’d be inside a mountain right now.”

    Drax groaned again, then started laughing. “Alright, alright dragons win.”

    And from that day on, the fort echoed not only with the sounds of battle and building but with laughter.

    Because sometimes, even a Bloodbound Commander needs to get tossed around by dragons to stay humble.

    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.

    If you would like to read more Taranis stories please see: The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    If you would like to read more about Drax : The Chronicles of Drax

    If you would like to read more about Rayne: The tales of Rayne

    If you would like to read more about Lore: The Keeper of Cairnstones: Myths and Mysteries Revealed

  • Building the Hillfort: A New Era Begins

    Building the Hillfort: A New Era Begins

    The hillfort rose like a scar upon the earth raw, unfinished, powerful in its promise.

    Stones clattered as men worked shoulder to shoulder. Logs were rolled into place, lashed with thick rope and secured by wedges of bone and bronze. Children ran between the scaffolds, delivering water or watching with wide eyes as their future took shape.

    It was a day like no other.

    The sun hung low over the horizon, casting a golden sheen across the half-built wall. Birds circled above, uneasy. The animals in the nearby woods had gone silent.

    Sir Gael, the oldest warrior among the fort’s guardians, paused to wipe sweat from his brow. His grey-streaked beard was heavy with dust. He glanced upward, his hand stilled mid-motion.

    “Commander Drax,” he said, his voice strangely calm. “Look.”

    Drax turned his shoulders broad, his eyes as sharp as the spear he carried.

    Above them, the sky split.

    A roar echoed across the valley not of wind, nor beast, but something far older. The builders dropped their tools. The children froze. Heads tilted toward the heavens.

    The clouds churned as if afraid. And from them, something vast and terrible descended.

    A dragon.

    Wings wide as the river’s span. Scales that shimmered with green, gold, and a glint of crimson. Pendragon, King of the Sky. A creature from legend — spoken of in firelit whispers and dream-songs passed down by the Flamekeepers.

    And on his back rode a man.

    Tall. Armoured in blackened bronze. A red cloak fluttered behind him like a banner of blood and flame. His grey eyes gleamed with the fury of storms.

    Taranis Stormborne.

    The exiled boy. The returning myth. The High Warlord.

    Sir Gael dropped to one knee. The others followed not out of fear, but reverence.

    “Is it truly him?” someone whispered.

    A small girl tugged at her father’s tunic. “Daddy… is he the one the Seer spoke of?”

    Her father a scarred builder named Halvor looked to Drax for guidance.

    Drax did not speak at first.

    He simply nodded.

    “It’s possible, young one.”

    The dragon roared again. Pendragon spiralled downward, his wings churning the air so fiercely that dust clouds rose from the hilltop. Yet the High Warlord stood unshaken upon his back, one hand on the saddlehorn, the other raised in greeting.

    He did not fall.

    Not once.

    He rode the wind like it was his birthright.

    When Pendragon finally landed upon the high ridge, silence followed. Even the wind dared not move.

    Taranis slid down with the ease of a seasoned warrior. His boots hit the ground with a thud like thunder. Behind him, the dragon crouched, its golden eyes watching all with quiet fire.

    Drax stepped forward.

    “Taranis,” he said, voice cracking. “You’ve returned.”

    Taranis nodded. “And you’ve begun.”

    He looked past his brother to the rising fort, half-finished but brimming with hope.

    “Stone and sweat,” he said. “It’s a good beginning.”

    Lore emerged next from the shadows, staff in hand. “The prophecy breathes,” he said.

    “It was written: When sky and fire meet the hill. The son shall return to shape the land with storm and blood.”

    A murmur passed through the gathering crowd.

    Taranis took a slow breath, then turned to the workers.

    “I am no king,” he said, voice deep and sure. “I do not bring crowns or glory. I bring a future. A place for the broken and the brave. A shield for our young. A fire for our old.”

    He lifted his sword.

    “This land this fort will stand not just for the Stormborne. It will stand for all who remember. For those cast out. For those who bled. We rise not to conquer, but to endure.”

    Cheers broke across the hilltop.

    Some wept. Others simply stared, mouths open, unsure if they stood in a dream or waking world.

    The children gathered near the dragon’s feet, staring up in awe. Pendragon blinked slowly and lowered his head so they touch his scaled snout.

    The girl from before her name was Marla reached out, fingers trembling.

    “He’s warm,” she whispered.

    Sir Gael stood beside Drax, smiling through his years.

    “I thought the stories were just that,” he said. “Stories.”

    “Some stories,” Lore said, “are simply waiting for the right time.”

    That night, fires were lit along the hilltop. The beginnings of the wall gleamed in the torchlight, casting long shadows over the land. Meat was roasted. Bread was broken.

    At the centre sat the brothers Stormborne Taranis, Drax, and Lore their heads bent together, planning the days to come.

    Boldolph and Morrigan, the sacred wolves, lay on either side of the war table. Watchful. Silent.

    Above them, high in the sky, Pendragon remained perched. His wings wrapped around the star-streaked air like a guardian angel of old. Next to the dragon was a black dragon

    “They fought with us and now they returned “

    “I’m staying as long as needed ” taranis knelt to the children “this beast us pendragon and that ones Tiarneach “

    The hillfort was far from finished.

    But something greater had begun.

    Hope.

    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.

    If you would like to read more Taranis stories please see: The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    If you would like to read more about Drax : lThe Chronicles of Drax

    If you would like to read more about Rayne: The tales of Rayne

    If you would like to read more about Lore: The Keeper of Cairnstones: Myths and Mysteries Revealed