Tag: fiction

  • The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Twelve

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Twelve

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

    Rest Beneath the Tree

    At last they came to the tree.

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

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

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

    Storm closed his eyes.

    The world changed.

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Then he walked on.

    © StormborneLore Emma Hewitt, 2025. All rights reserved.

    Colorful circular wooden sign with the message 'Thank you for reading. Please like & subscribe. https://www.stormbornelore.co.uk' painted on it, featuring a bright blue sky and green grass.
    A colorful thank you message inviting readers to like and subscribe, set against a bright blue sky and grassy background.

    Futher Reading

    The Library of Caernath

  • The Tree of Storms

    The Tree of Storms

    A vibrant tree with colorful leaves representing the intertwining of earth, time, and magic.

    Roots in shadow, deep they wind,
    Binding earth to blood and time.
    Branches blaze where sun and moon
    Kiss the sky in red and rune.

    Leaves of gold and leaves of flame,
    Each one whispers Stormborne’s name.
    Wolves lie sleeping at its base,
    Dragons coil through time and space.

    Circle silver, circle stone,
    Mark the heart the gods have sown.
    Life unbroken, death denied,
    Storm’s own oath, the tree provides.

    By Elhewitt

    Further Reading

    The Library of Caernath

  • The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Eleven

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Eleven

    Boldolph the Wolf brother, shield, spirit of the wild. Painted on clear acrylic, one of a kind.
    Part 11 of The Chronicles of the Gold Ring is now live where the wolf walks again in the trees.”

    The Wolf in the Trees

    The rain had not stopped since the hill.
    It drummed on oak leaves, hissed across the ash of the fire, slicked every blade of iron until the men and women of the Black Shields looked like shadows burnished in oil. The night smelled of wet earth and smoke, of wounds bound with linen that would not stay clean.

    Storm slept little. When he closed his eyes, the hammer fell, and the nails drove, and he woke with the sound of iron in his skull. So he stayed upright with his back to the birch, watching the drip of water through branches, listening to foxes bark and owls call, waiting for morning.

    At dawn, a shape lingered beyond the edge of the fire’s reach. Low, black, moving between trunks with the patience of hunger. Storm’s hand went to the haft of his knife before he realised what he saw.

    A wolf.

    Not the lean carrion-pickers that shadowed armies, but broad in the shoulder, thick in the ruff, eyes burning with a colour no dog had ever worn. It did not growl. It did not flee. It stood in the bracken and watched him.

    “Boldolph,” Storm breathed, though he knew the beast before him was no man, no brother, no shieldmate returned. But something in the tilt of the head, in the way it lifted its nose as if to scent not flesh but memory, made his chest tighten.

    The others woke one by one. Cadan saw it first and rose with his knife ready.
    “Leave it,” Storm said. His voice was rough with the weight of command.
    Brianna squinted through the rain. “Is it a sign?”
    Storm shook his head. “It is a wolf. That is enough.”

    But when the wolf turned and padded into the thicket, Storm followed. He did not tell the others to stay; they knew.

    The trail wound between dripping ferns and stones slick with moss. Once, the wolf vanished altogether, and Storm thought he had been chasing a ghost but then the shape appeared again on a rise of ground, waiting. Guiding. Testing.

    At last they came to a hollow ringed with oaks older than any fort or cross. Their roots knotted together like clenched fists. At the centre lay a cairn of stones blackened with age.

    The wolf set its paws upon the mound, lifted its muzzle, and gave one long, shivering call. Not to the pack for there was no pack—but to the world itself. Then it was gone, as if the trees had folded and swallowed it whole.

    Storm touched the cairn. Cold. Wet. His fingers came away with lichen and soil. And something else. A groove cut deep, filled with rain. A mark he knew from chalk scratched on gateposts and painted on stolen shields. A ring.

    The Gold Ring.

    He knelt, pressing his forehead to the stone. For a breath he smelled not wet earth but smoke from a hall long gone, heard not rain but the laughter of those who had died before him. Nessa. Morrigan. Boldolph. Rayne.

    The voices came like wind through hollow wood: Hold fast. The story is not done.

    Storm rose. His wrist throbbed where the nail had kissed bone, but his grip was steady when he returned to the camp.

    Brianna looked at him, sharp-eyed. “What did you find?”
    “A place,” Storm said. “A promise buried under stones.”
    Cadan spat into the fire. “More promises.”
    “Not words,” Storm answered. “A mark. The old ring. It waits for us.”

    The rain eased then. Just enough to let the fire breathe.

    That night, when the Black Shields moved again, they did not march as hunted rebels, but as something else. A rumour clothed in rain, a shadow given teeth. And always at the edge of the path, in the corner of sight, Storm thought he saw the wolf pacing them between the trees.

    © StormborneLore Emma Hewitt, 2025. All rights reserved.

    Futher Reading

    The Library of Caernath

  • Ancient Spirits and Modern Echoes

    Ancient Spirits and Modern Echoes

    Beneath the yew where shadows creep,
    Old gods stir in their ancient sleep.
    Wind through branches, low and deep,
    Carries secrets the earth will keep.

    The raven circles, black wings wide,
    The wolf runs silent by my side.
    The stream remembers, the hills confide,
    That nothing of spirit can truly hide.

    Time bury, kings fall,
    The cross rise, the legions call.
    Yet still the oak, the ash, the hall
    Of memory holds us, one and all.

    So walk the path where twilight sings.
    Where death is end, yet also brings
    The turning wheel, the flight of wings
    The soul reborn in endless rings.

    © StormborneLore Emma Hewitt, 2025. All rights reserved.

  • The Chronicles of the gold ring chapter 10

    The Chronicles of the gold ring chapter 10

    The Hill of Ashes

    They marched him up the salt-hill at Dodderhill, where the Roman timber bites into the skyline like bad teeth. Below, Salinae steams. The brine pits cough a white breath across the roofs, and every back in the town goes still; men with salt-burned hands, women with brined wrists, children with their mouths parted. All of them looking up. All of them waiting to see a lesson.

    Storm’s wrists are raw from the iron. His shirt is torn where they hauled it over his head, the air is cold on old scars and new. There is a cut across his ribs from the morning’s struggle and the dried salt in it stings like sand.

    A centurion with a wine-scarred mouth calls the charge in a language that thinks it is the only one that matters.

    “Rebel. Murderer. Enemy of Rome.” The words land like stones. Men with square shields drag the condemned in a line. Three farmers. A boy who threw a stone. Storm.

    “Use the cross for the big one,” the centurion says. “Make them see.”

    They set the upright in the earth, ramming it with a post-driver until the ground answers. The carpenter’s nails gleam in a little wooden tray, thick as a man’s thumb. The hammer is clean. The executioner’s eyes flick to Storm and away again as if he’s looked at the sun too long.

    Storm keeps his chin up because he will not bend. He smells oak smoke from the town, the sour of men in mail, the resin of fresh-split palings. He tastes brine on his teeth. A gull wheels and screams once, the cry torn thin by the wind.

    A voice from the crowd below: not words, just a keening. Another voice, hoarse, calls his name the way a prayer is called: “Shield!”

    He does not look down. He looks at the sky. Cloud, thin and grey and harmless. For now.

    “Hold him,” the centurion says.

    Four soldiers pin his arms. The fifth takes Storm’s right hand and forces it open against the cross-beam. The leather strap bites his palm. The executioner lifts the first nail. It is cold when it kisses the crease of Storm’s wrist.

    Storm hears the old world in the edges of the day. The ring he once wore feels like a phantom weight on his finger. He sees Nessa’s hair in the corner of his sight when the wind shifts. He hears Boldolph and Morrigan somewhere he can’t walk to anymore. Rayne’s voice is the whisper in the hinge of the jaw: brother, hold still and we will live. Brother, lie down.

    The hammer rises.

    Thunder is far off. Not here, not yet. A single pulse on the horizon like a heart behind a ribcage. The executioner breathes. The hammer falls.

    It meets iron and the iron skids, glancing off the nail head. The blow dents the wood and slams into Storm’s bones. He grunts despite himself. Blood beads. The executioner squints, checks the nail, lifts again.

    The second stroke strikes home. Iron bites meat. The sky pulls tight.

    A woman cries out below. “Enough! He fought for us!”

    “Silence,” the centurion barks, not looking down.

    Storm tastes copper. His vision narrows, then widens until he can see each hair on the executioner’s wrist, each pore, each fleck of sawdust stuck to the hammer’s face. It is the old sight, the red edge. He could go there—into the roar where nothing hurts until after—but he does not. He holds on. He wants to watch.

    “Left,” the centurion says.

    They take his other hand. Fingers spread. The nail’s cold mouth finds the vein. The hammer rises

    and the wind turns.

    Not a gust. A pivot. The kind of turning that changes seasons. Smoke from the brine pans below folds back on itself. Sparrows flatten to the earth. The hairs along Storm’s arms lift.

    The first crack of thunder lands atop the fort like an axe into a block. Every man jolts. A standard topples with a clatter of bronze. The executioner flinches, the nail slips, and instead of flesh he drives it through the softened knot of the beam.

    The shock carries up his arm. He swears. The soldier holding Storm’s elbow looks at the sky. The sky looks back.

    Cloud blooms fast from the western line, rolling in on a bruise-coloured belly. A wolf-long shape seems to run along its edge and is gone. Another crack. Closer.

    “Finish it,” the centurion snaps. But there’s a catch in it now, and he makes a sign with his two fingers as if to pinch off something unseen.

    The hammer lifts for the third time.

    Lightning hits the palisade post a spear’s throw away. Wood screams. Splinters go like hail. Men duck behind shields by training, but training breaks when the sky speaks in a voice older than their gods. A mule rears and snaps its lead. The nail tray overturns; iron skitters like teeth on stone.

    Storm moves then.

    He lets the red edge take him for a heartbeat just enough. He wrenches, twisting his pinned right wrist so the cut tears long and clean instead of deep. The leather strap splits where sweat has rotted it.

    He brings his head forward under the beam, drives his shoulder into the soldier’s throat, hears the wet cough, feels the grip loosen. He kicks back, heel to knee, and the man behind him falls with a scream.

    There is always a moment in a fight when the world decides. This is it.

    He drives the crown of his head into the executioner’s face; the man drops the hammer, hands going to his nose. Storm grabs the hammer with his left hand, blood slicking the haft, and swings the weight into the chain on his left wrist. Once. Twice. The chain holds. The third blow finds the link that was barely peened shut, and it parts with a sweet, bright sound.

    “Hold him!” the centurion bellows, but half his men are looking at the burning post and the other half are looking at the sky.

    Shapes break from the heather below the berm three, five, a dozen men with black-painted shields and hunters’ faces. Brianna’s braid is bound with leather; Cadan’s scar shows white through ash. They come without horns or shouts, all knife and certainty.

    Brianna hits the left flank like a thrown stone, her knife opening a belly before the man knows his shield is gone. Cadan slides under a spear and cuts the hamstring clean, then is up again and laughing because sometimes that is the only way to keep breath inside you.

    “Storm!” Brianna barks.

    He throws the hammer. She catches it by the neck and brings it down on a helmet rim, bending iron into eyebrow and eye. She tosses it back and he takes the chain a second time and frees his right.

    The centurion finds his voice at last and orders the archers, but the bowstrings are wet now, the fletchings torn sideways by the sideways rain that has arrived without crossing the ground between. Arrows go high and crooked. One finds a farmer’s boy in the line of the condemned. The boy sits down as if to rest and does not get up again.

    Storm would carry that if he let himself. Later, he thinks, later, and steps toward the centurion.

    “Stand,” the centurion says, not to him but to what moves in his bones.

    “I do,” Storm says.

    They meet as men meet: iron-toothed and close. The centurion is trained. Storm is made. The first cut is Storm’s forearm across the centurion’s sword-hand, breaking the rhythm, and the second is Storm’s head against the man’s nose—again, because men are made of the same mistakes and the third is Storm’s thumb to the centurion’s eye. The man goes down with a sound nothing like command.

    “Back!” a junior officer yelps. “Back to the fort!”

    They drag their wounded. They leave their dead. They do not look at the cross. The storm does what storms do it eats the edges of everything.

    From the town below, the people cannot see the cut and the grapple, only the outline of men against rain and the lightning that makes ghosts of them. Then those ghosts are gone into the gorse and the broom, and the hill is left with a burning post and an empty beam and a rumour that begins to run faster than hooves.

    They bind Storm’s wrist tight with a strip of his own shirt and the last clean linen any of them have. The bleeding slows. His hands shake after it stops. He sits with his back against a birch, watching steam lift off his skin.

    “Could have died,” Cadan says, not accusing, not gentle.

    “Didn’t,” Storm answers.

    Brianna crouches and studies the wound. “You’ll have two scars for one story,” she says. “The tale-singers will thank you.”

    Storm looks at the knot of linen. He thinks of a nail driven through the heel of a stranger in a land he will never see, of crosses on a hill where a different empire stakes its truth. He thinks of Nessa’s mouth and Rayne’s eyes and of wolves that do not answer. He feels the tremor in himself and wonders if it will ever stop.

    “Was it you?” Cadan asks. “The sky?”

    Storm chews that like gristle and spits it out. “No,” he says. “It was the sky.”

    Brianna huffs once, almost a laugh. “Then the sky is with us.”

    They move as the light fails, cutting north and a little west, keeping to hedges and the backs of fields, avoiding every lane the Romans know.

    The storm rolls away toward the Severn; behind it, the wood drips and the undergrowth smells green and clean as if nothing dies.

    By the time they reach the low, wet ground where the oaks thicken half a day’s walk from the salt town, close enough to smell wood-smoke when the wind is right night has set.

    They choose a place where yew anchors a little rise and an old fallen oak makes a table the size of a man. Cadan lights a small fire that no one will see unless they are meant to. Brianna lays out bread and dried meat and a handful of early wild garlic leaves, because ritual has to start with something you can eat.

    Storm stands, because oaths are made on feet.

    “We were a ring,” he says. “We were a house. We were a promise to people who do not want us anymore. Today I was meant to die to teach them to fear, and I did not. I don’t know if that is luck or the gods or a debt that will come due later.”

    He looks at each of them. There are eleven counting him. Some are men who fought with him when the wolves still ran the ridge. Some are women who learned a knife because no one else would come. One is a boy who was a boy yesterday and is not anymore.

    “I’m done waiting for any man’s mercy,” Storm says. “If you stay with me now, you stay knowing there will be no pardon. No ring to call us home. We will be hunted by chiefs and by Rome and by the stories men tell when they are afraid. We will strike and vanish.

    We will take food from those who hoard it and give it to those who starve. We will cut chains where we find them. We will keep the lanes dangerous for those who would make them safe for empire. We will be the shadow that says not yet.”

    He sets his palm on the fallen oak. Blood from the bandage seeps fresh and red and bright against the old grey wood.

    “I name us,” he says, and the words come easy because they are true before he speaks them. “The Black Shields. Not for hiding” he taps the painted face of Brianna’s board, dull black with ash and pitch “but for what we carry in front of us so the ones behind can live.”

    Brianna puts her hand over his. “Black Shields,” she says.

    Cadan’s hand stacks next. “Black Shields.”

    One by one, the others follow, rough palms and finer, scarred knuckles and bitten nails, hands that have stolen and fed and fought and held.

    When they step back, the tree holds their blood in a dark print that already looks like a sigil.

    A wind runs through the oak leaves though nothing else stirs. Somewhere far off a fox barks and another answers. In the dip of silence after, Storm thinks he hears just for a breath the long, low note of a wolf.

    He looks up into the black roof of the wood and does not ask for a sign. He has had enough signs for one day.

    “Sleep,” he tells them. “We move before light. The salt road will wake angry.”

    Brianna nods, already spreading a cloak for the boy who is not a boy. Cadan checks the edges of the camp, his knife out, his shoulders easy for the first time since the hill.

    Storm sits again with his back to the birch. His wrist throbs in time with his heart. When he closes his eyes, the hammer falls, and falls, and falls, and does not find him.

    Below, the town spreads the story because towns are made to spread stories. By morning it will have a name it did not have yesterday the Hill of Ashes. By night there will be new chalk marks cut into the backs of gateposts that mean leave bread, and others that mean soldiers, and others that mean the Black Shields have passed.

    He lets sleep take him only when the fire dies to a patient red and the rain begins again, soft and fine, washing the last blood from the bark.

    From this moment Taranis Stormborne became known as Storm among his men.

    © StormborneLore Emma Hewitt, 2025. All rights reserved.

    The Library of Caernath

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Four.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Five

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Interlude.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring. Chapter Six

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Seven

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Eight

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Nine.

  • The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Nine.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Nine.

    Bread for Blood

    The night was raw and sharp with frost, the air thick with the scent of pine and woodsmoke drifting from distant hearths. Taranis rode ahead, the black shield strapped to his back catching what little moonlight broke through the bare branches.

    Behind him, the Black Shields moved like a shadow given form. Seven riders their shields painted black and marked with the storm-sigil in dull grey ash. Among them, Brianna kept pace, her raven-dark hair bound in a warrior’s braid, eyes fixed on the road ahead.

    Their target lay where the old trader’s road bent toward the river. a Roman supply convoy, fat with grain, salted pork, and amphorae of oil. The guards wore the same polished arrogance as all Rome’s men helmets gleaming, spears upright, their march a perfect, disciplined rhythm.

    Taranis raised his fist.
    The forest seemed to hold its breath.
    Then his hand dropped, and the night erupted.

    Arrows hissed from the treeline, felling the lead guard before the others could shout. Brianna’s blade flashed as she rode through the side of the column, cutting down a soldier who tried to raise his horn. Taranis slammed into the rearmost wagon, sending it lurching into the ditch.

    The fight was short, brutal.
    When it ended, the snow was churned with blood and the mules stood trembling, steam curling from their nostrils.

    “Take the lot,” Taranis said. “Every last sack.”

    The Shields loaded what they could onto their own wagons, but instead of retreating into the forest as usual, Taranis turned his horse toward the lowland villages along the marsh. They moved in silence, the wagons creaking under the weight of Rome’s stolen bounty.

    The first door they knocked on belonged to a bent-backed widow with two hungry children. Brianna handed her a sack of grain without a word.


    At the next farmstead, a half-crippled shepherd received a barrel of salted pork. By the time they reached the edge of Emberhelm’s border, half the load was gone.

    The rest, Taranis delivered at dawn to Lore’s men at the southern watch, and to Drax’s quartermaster in the hills.

    When Brianna caught up to him by the river, she frowned.

    “You give more than you keep. That’s not how outlaws survive.”

    Taranis shrugged, eyes on the water.

    “Then I’m not an outlaw. I’m a storm. Storms take, but they leave the earth ready to grow again.”

    She studied him for a long moment before nodding once.

    “Then let’s see how long the earth lets you live.”

    © 2025 Emma Hewitt. All rights reserved.
    This story and all characters within the StormborneLore world are the original creation of Emma Hewitt. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations used in reviews or scholarly works.

    The Library of Caernath

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Four.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Five

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Interlude.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring. Chapter Six

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Seven

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Eight

  • The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Seven

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Seven

    Ash on the Bridge


    The morning after the storm was silent, but for the river.


    Its grey water curled slow beneath the bridge, licking at the stones as if to wash them clean of the night before.
    It could not.

    Boldolph lay there still, fur wet, eyes closed in the peace of warriors who never feared death. Morrigan was beside him, her flank pressed against his as though she had refused to fall alone.

    Taranis did not kneel. He stood apart, a horn of bitter mead in one hand, the other wrapped around the haft of his spear. His brothers spoke words over the dead the kind of words that should have meant something but the high warlord’s gaze was elsewhere. Past the pyres, past the valley, toward the ridges where the enemy had come.

    The smell of charred wood and dragon’s breath lingered. Somewhere above the clouds, the great wings of Pendragon and Tairneanach were gone to ash or exile. He could feel the absence as a wound.

    When the flames took the wolves, he drank deep. When the ashes scattered on the wind, he did not look back.

    That night, in the hall of Ignis, Lore spoke of rebuilding. Draven spoke of the Ring’s oaths. Drax spoke of vengeance.
    Taranis said nothing until the room had emptied.

    Then, to the empty benches, he muttered, “The Ring is cracked. And cracks spread.”

    Outside, the moon rode high. In its light, a man in a blackened cloak rode from Emberhelm with no banner and no blessing only a storm sigil scratched into his shield with the point of a knife.

    The Black Shields had begun.

    2025 Emma Hewitt. All rights reserved.
    This story and all characters within the StormborneLore world are the original creation of Emma Hewitt. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations used in reviews or scholarly works.

    The Library of Caernath

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Four.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Five

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring. Chapter Six

  • The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Interlude.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Interlude.

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  • The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Four.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Four.

    The Storm Beneath the Cradle

    A vibrant artwork depicting a colorful tree with heart-shaped leaves under a bright blue sky, adorned with a large sun and intricate designs.
    An artistic representation featuring a vibrant blue sky, a radiant sun, and a colorful tree, embodying the themes of nature and rebirth.

    The fires of the Ring had long since burned low. Smoke and judgment still clung to the stones, but the voices were gone scattered into the dark like leaves. The echoes of debate, of accusations half-spoken and oaths half-broken, were swallowed by wind.

    Only Taranis remained.

    He stood at the centre of the stone circle, not as a warlord or seer or storm-marked legend, but as a man uncertain of what to do next.

    At his feet, a small crib newly carved, rough-edged but lovingly made sat in the shadow of an ancient standing stone.

    Runes spiralled along its frame like protective thorns. Inside, the child slept, his breath barely stirring the wolfhide blanket that covered him.

    Taranis stared. Watched. Listened to nothing but the sound of his son’s heartbeat soft, fragile, real.

    “He’s mine,” he whispered.

    The words fell like an oath.

    He hadn’t spoken them aloud until now. Not to the Ring. Not even to himself. But the moment he looked into the child’s eyes, he had known.

    There in that small, storm-dark gaze was the same flicker that had burned in his own since birth. A fire that would not die, even when beaten. Even when left in chains.

    “I wasn’t sure,” he said, as if the child could hear him. “But now I am.”

    Footsteps approached quiet but familiar. He didn’t turn.

    Drax entered the ring with Aisin beside him. Her dark braid caught what little moonlight remained. She wore no armor, no crown but her presence always arrived like both.

    They stood silently for a while, watching him.

    “We thought you’d already gone,” Aisin said gently.

    “I couldn’t,” Taranis replied. “Not yet.”

    He gestured toward the crib, voice taut.

    “I know what you’re thinking. That I’m out of character. That I’ve gone soft.”

    He turned toward them now. His eyes were storm-lit, ringed with exhaustion. But beneath that a rawness neither of them had ever seen.

    “He’s mine,” Taranis repeated. “There’s no denying it now.”

    Aisin moved to the crib. She looked down at the child with the quiet reverence of a priestess before a sacred flame. One hand reached out, slow and certain, to brush the boy’s brow.

    “He’s strong,” she said. “But quiet. Like he already knows too much.”

    Taranis exhaled hard. His voice wavered a rare thing.

    “If it’s too much… if he’s too much to carry…”
    “We’re not strangers to raising children,” Drax said.
    “This one isn’t just any child,” Taranis replied. “He’s my child. And I was no angel.”

    He looked to Aisin, then Drax his oldest brother, his iron pillar.

    “I can take him elsewhere. To a quiet place. Far from the weight of prophecy. Far from the Ring. Just say the word.”

    Drax frowned.

    “You’d give him up?”

    “I’d shield him,” Taranis corrected. “From this. From me.”

    Aisin turned to him, calm and sharp all at once.

    “You fear yourself more than your enemies?”

    “Yes,” he said. “Because I dream of betrayal, but never the face. I wake with my hand on my blade. I feel hunted in my own mind.”

    He swallowed.

    “I don’t trust myself near him. Not like this.”

    Drax stepped forward and gripped his brother’s arm.

    “Then trust us.”

    Aisin nodded. “He stays. He is blood. That’s enough.”

    Taranis closed his eyes. A moment of stillness passed between them.

    Then he whispered, “His name is Caelum.”

    The name rang like truth in the circle.

    Drax smiled faintly. “Sky-born. Storm-blessed.”

    “Let’s hope he lives to become more than that,” Taranis murmured.

    Later – The Grove Beyond Emberhelm


    Rayne stood in the dark, half-shrouded by the charred remnants of an old grove. Draven hovered nearby, shoulders hunched.

    “So. He’s claimed him,” Rayne said, not asking.

    “He named him Caelum,” Draven replied.

    Rayne smiled thin, sharp.

    “That’s dangerous. Naming something is binding it to fate.”

    “He’s a child, Rayne.”

    “No,” Rayne said. “He’s a threat. A future. A soft spot waiting to be pierced.”

    Draven said nothing. He looked at the ash, not the stars.

    “You said we’d only observe,” he whispered.

    Rayne stepped closer, boots silent against the earth.

    “And we are. But sometimes watching is how you choose the moment. Let the warlord get sentimental. Let him love.”

    He leaned in, voice silk-wrapped iron.

    “Love makes good men hesitate. And hesitation… kills kings.”

    © 2025 EL Hewitt. All rights reserved.This story and all characters within the StormborneLore world are the original creation of EL Hewitt. Do not copy, repost, or adapt without permission.

    Further Reading

    The Library of Caernath

  • The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

    The Fire Between Us


    The truce held barely.

    Smoke still curled above the hills, but for now, the killing had paused. The Ring had demanded silence, and the land obeyed with the uneasy stillness of a wolf watching from the edge of firelight.

    Taranis sat by the river, sharpening a blade he hadn’t drawn in days. The sound was steady, comforting a ritual older than words.

    “You missed your council seat,” Nessa said behind him.

    He didn’t turn. “Let them speak in circles. The wind will tell me what they decide.”

    She stepped closer, arms folded, eyes sharp as ever. Her hair was damp from the river, her scar still raw but healing.

    “You’re their warlord whether you wear a crown or not,” she said. “They listen for your storms.”

    “I’m tired of storms,” he said, standing slowly. “I want peace.”

    She raised an eyebrow. “Peace from war? Or from yourself?”

    That hit deeper than he expected. He turned, finally, and faced her. “Do you ever stop fighting?”

    “Only when I’m sleeping.” A half-smile appeared on her face “And sometimes not even then.”

    He studied her in the fading light the blood on her hands that hadn’t come from mercy, the way she stood like someone expecting betrayal at any moment. And yet, she was still here.

    “They called me cursed,” he said. “Storm-marked. Said I was born to end things, not build them.”

    Nessa’s gaze didn’t waver. “Then build something anyway. Let the curse bite its own tail.”

    He stepped toward her. Close enough to feel her breath, to see the flecks of gold in her eyes.

    “You speak like a seer,” he said.

    “I speak like a woman who’s already lost too much to superstition.”

    He wanted to reach for her but didn’t. Instead, he offered his hand. Just his hand.

    She stared at it like it was a blade, then took it.

    No vows were spoken. No gods were called.

    But something passed between them in that moment not love, not yet.
    Something older.

    Something true.

    Later that Night Emberhelm


    Lore lit the sacred fire at the centre of the stone ring. The flame flared blue for a moment unnatural. Ominous.

    Draven flinched. Rayne smiled.

    “Balance is shifting,” Lore muttered, eyes on the flame. “Something has stirred it.”

    Drax stood at the edge of the circle, arms crossed. “He’s with her again.”

    Rayne’s voice was soft and snake-slick. “Then let him be. Let him forget his duty.”

    Draven shifted uneasily. “If Taranis lets her in, he could let in worse.”

    “Or better,” Lore countered. “She may be a sword that cuts both ways.”

    Rayne’s grin widened. “Then let’s see what she severs first.”

    Outside the circle, a storm began to gather. Quiet, coiled. Watching.

    The Circle of Stones, Emberhelm
    The storm broke slowly, not with thunder, but with footsteps.

    Boots echoed between ancient stones as Taranis stepped into the sacred ring, his cloak still damp from river mist. Nessa walked a pace behind him, her eyes wary, her scar bright under the firelight.

    The brothers stood in silence as he approached. Drax by the child’s cradle, Lore near the flame, Draven wringing his hands in shadow. Rayne stood like a blade left out in the cold smiling, but never warm.

    Taranis’s voice cut through the stillness like flint on steel.

    “I know what you speak when I’m not here. I hear it in the wind. I feel it in the ground. You question my loyalty because I do not sit with you every day. Because a girl now walks beside me.”

    He looked at each of them in turn not as brothers, but as warriors who once bled beside him.

    “Let me be clear. My oath to Caernath stands. I have not broken it. I will not.”

    He turned briefly to Nessa, then back to the Ring, his voice rising with quiet fury.

    “But I am not made of stone. I am not your thunder without end. Like you, I bleed. I grieve. And I deserve gods be damned to feel joy. To be loved.”

    A gust of wind swept through the circle, snuffing one of the smaller fires. The shadows leaned in.

    Taranis stepped closer to the central flame, gaze hard now.

    “One of you will betray me. I don’t know when, or how. But it will be for power, land, and coin. That truth rots in the air. But hear me now.”

    He unsheathed his blade, slowly, and drove it into the earth beside the flame.

    “If you seek to take my crown, then come for me openly. Not with poison. Not with lies.”

    His eyes flicked to Rayne just a heartbeat.

    “Because I will forgive a blade. But I will not forgive a coward.”

    The wind stilled. Even the stones seemed to listen.

    Drax stepped forward first, his voice low and steady.

    “My brother, I believe you. And should the time come I will not stand behind you. I will stand with you.”

    Lore said nothing, but he placed his palm on the stone rune before him the sign of silent accord.

    Draven looked down, unable to meet anyone’s gaze.

    Rayne only smiled, slow and wolfish.

    “You speak of storms and love as if either can save you,” he said softly. “But I wonder, brother… which will break you first?”

    After Taranis walks away from the fire:

    Nessa followed a few paces behind him, silent until they were beyond the edge of the circle. She spoke without looking at him.

    “That wasn’t a warning. That was a reckoning.”

    Taranis’s voice was low.

    “They needed to hear it. And I needed to remember who I am.”

    “And who is that?” she asked.

    He paused, fingers brushing the hilt of the blade still buried in the earth behind them.

    “A man who has been many things. But never loved and still whole.”

    She touched his arm, gently.

    “Then let this be the first time.” she replied

    Further Reading

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two