Tag: Found Family

  • Emberhelm: A Night of Brotherhood and Secrets

    Emberhelm: A Night of Brotherhood and Secrets


    By the fire at Emberhelm, the night before the ley lines awakened

    We drank not for glory,
    but for breath.
    For blood that still ran,
    and brothers not yet turned to ash.

    No crown weighed our heads that night.
    No blade hung between us.
    Only silence,
    and the crackle of wood older than war.

    Lore sat still
    eyes on the shadow that never left his side.
    Drax, hands calloused,
    held the storm like a sleeping child.
    Draven, scar-bound, leaned on root and stone.
    Rayne, half-light, watched the stars as if to ask
    if they would wait for him to rise.

    And I,
    I ….
    who had been all things and nothing
    looked at them not as soldiers,
    but as home.

    We did not speak of battles.
    We did not weep for lost years.
    We passed the bread.
    We tore the fish.
    We shared warmth not made of fire.

    And before the parting,
    we carved no words.
    For there are some truths
    that can’t be spoken
    without breaking.

    Thank you for reading

    Futher Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    The Chronicles of Drax

    Chronicles of Draven

    Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

    Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

  • The Houses of Caernath Part 7

    The Houses of Caernath Part 7

    The Fifth Flame

    The stone circle of Emberhelm stood silent under the pale light of morning., five cairnstones glowing faintly in their ancient places. The air shimmered with a stillness that only came before something eternal was spoken.

    Taranis Stormborne, cloaked in black and silver. stepped ahead to the first cairn the one carved with roots and mountains, circled in white ochre. He turned to face the gathered warriors, wolves, and wanderers.

    “Before the dragons flew,” he said, “before the wolves howled, there were five lines of fire. We knew only three. But today, we remember them all.”

    He turned to Draven, who stepped ahead slowly, still favouring his side.

    “Brother you bled for us. You survived what none should have. You guarded the line even when no one knew it was there.”

    Taranis drew a shard of stone from the cairn itself. Then handed it to Draven, and placed a firm hand on his shoulder.

    “By the weight of the earth and the strength of the mountain, I name you Lord of Terra.”

    A cheer rose from the crowd, led by the wolves, then echoed by the dragons above. Draven bowed not to Taranis, but to the people.

    Taranis turned then, slowly, toward the fifth cairn the one none had touched in generations. It bore a sunmark, and a spiral, and a cut across its base. where an old flame once split the stone.

    Beside it stood Rayne, straight-backed now, though his eyes still bore the shadow of the collar. And beside him stood Tirena, a woman of stone and flame, silent and radiant. With one hand resting lightly on the hilt of her sun-marked blade.

    Taranis paused before speaking not as a warlord, but as a brother.

    “Rayne. We lost you once. You were chained, beaten, turned into a whisper. But you came back. And with you came fire not born of wrath, but of forgiveness.”

    “Yet even flame must have form. And no one guards the flame better than the one who sees in silence.”

    He turned to Tirena.

    “Knight of Lumen, daughter of the dawn do you stand beside him of your own will?”

    Tirena gave a single nod, her voice soft and fierce.

    “I do. Not for crown. For cause.”

    Taranis placed his hand on Rayne’s shoulder, and raised his other toward the sun.

    “Then by the fire that remembers and the light that does not burn. I name you Rayne of Lumen, Lord of the Fifth House.”

    The crowd was still for a heartbeat.

    Then a pulse rolled through the cairns. A faint hum, like the deep breath of the land itself, stirred the hair of every person there.

    The ley lines had awakened.

    Five fires, once lost, now stood again.

    Taranis looked out across the gathered faces his brothers. His people, the wolves, the dragons, the flame keepers and shadow walkers who had followed him through storm and silence.

    His voice dropped low, just above a whisper, but the wind carried it to every ear.

    “I know I wasn’t there for you. I’ll always regret that. Father exiled me… and maybe I would’ve run anyway. But that exile taught me many things.”

    He looked to each brother in turn Lore, cloaked in dusk and silence. Drax, ever the storm, hands calloused from war. Draven, grounded like stone. And Rayne, flame rekindled beside the steel gaze of Tirena.

    Taranis smiled, but it was not the smile of a warlord. It was that of a boy who had once been cast out. Now stood at the heart of everything he loved.

    Just then, Draven stepped ahead again, his voice steady.

    “Brother… you were exiled at eight,” he said. “We not protect you then. But we can stand with you now.”

    Taranis’s gaze faltered for the briefest moment not from shame, but from the sudden weight of grace.

    “And I will never walk alone again,” he answered, his voice thick with feeling.

    Around them, the wind stirred the banners of each House. The cairns pulsed faintly, glowing at their roots. Overhead, the wings of dragons cast long shadows across the circle. And for the first time in generations, all five ley lines were whole.

    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

    The Chronicles of Drax

    Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

    Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

  • 100 Tales from the Halls of Emberhelm 🐉

    100 Tales from the Halls of Emberhelm 🐉


    100 posts. 19 days. 6 tales a day.

    From the first howl on the wind to the firelit feasts of Caernath, StormborneLore now stands tall a living archive of myth, memory, and meaning.

    In these past 19 days, you’ve journeyed through:

    ✨ Poems of Spirit and reflections from wolves, dragons, outcasts, and gods
    🔥 Tales of Hardship and Hope, stories born in darkness, rising toward the light
    🍖 Feasts of the Ancients, recipes inspired by the meals of warriors, crones, and storm-born kings.
    ⚖️ Truths of Our Time articles echoing modern struggles: disability, injustice, survival, and healing

    Each post is more than just a page — it’s a voice from the halls of Emberhelm.

    “When all the world forgets us, we will still sing around the fire.” Taranis Stormborne

    To every reader who’s wandered these halls, thank you. To every warrior, wolf, and flamekeeper yet to come welcome home.

    StormborneLore
    Fiction forged in myth. Truth written in fire.

  • The Houses of Caernath Part 6

    The Houses of Caernath Part 6

    The Path They Choose


    StormborneLore Original Story

    Draven watched his younger brother with the quiet reverence of a man who had walked through fire. To find a home on the other side. Though the aches in his ribs still tugged at his breath, he laughed a genuine, full-throated laugh. as he caught Rayne peeking from behind a weathered oak near the feast.

    Rayne’s cloak hung awkwardly over one shoulder, and though his hands were free. He held them stiffly as if still expecting chains.

    Draven looked back to Taranis, who stood tall and proud. The firelight glinting off the rings etched into his forearms marks of every clan he’d freed, every vow he’d kept.

    “You’re not the only one who can’t die, Taranis. The bards will call us the Eternal Lords. The Man of the Woods, the Warrior of the March… But what about you, brother? What will they say?”

    Taranis grinned, but his eyes stayed on Rayne.

    “The Lord with a Heart. The Flame that Walks. The Warlord who Wept.”

    He turned to Draven. “What ails him, truly?”

    Draven’s smile dimmed.

    “He survived,” he said softly. “And survival… isn’t as easy to wear as a legend.”

    Taranis nodded, the smile gone. “Then I’ll not offer him a title. Or a command. I’ll offer him what was once denied us all.”

    He walked from the firelight and toward the shadows where Rayne stood alone, arms folded and eyes like flint.

    “You Came Back.”
    Rayne didn’t speak as Taranis approached. His jaw twitched. He stepped backward out of habit until his heel hit a root and stopped him.

    Taranis said nothing at first. He simply sat on the fallen log nearby, stretching his legs and sighing into the evening air.

    “When I was your age,” he said, “I thought silence made me strong. That if I didn’t speak of the beatings, or the exile, or the hunger… then I had won.”

    He picked up a small stone and turned it over in his hand.

    “But silence doesn’t win. It buries. And buried things don’t stay buried, brother. Not forever.”

    Rayne looked down, fists clenched.

    “They said you were dead.”

    “So did I,” Taranis replied. “And then I woke up… and realized I wasn’t done.”

    Rayne’s voice cracked.

    “Why didn’t you come for me?”

    Taranis flinched not visibly, but somewhere behind the eyes.

    He finally looked up, tears bright in his eyes. “And I believed them.”

    Taranis didn’t speak. He rose slowly, walked the short distance, and pulled Rayne into his arms.

    Rayne stood stiff as iron pthen broke. His head fell against Taranis’s shoulder, and the boy who had been a slave sobbed like the child he never got to be.

    The Wolves Watched
    From the trees, Boldolph watched, crouched low, Morrigan beside him.

    “He’s not ready,” the black wolf growled.

    “He’s more ready than you were,” Morrigan said softly.

    Boldolph grunted. “He’s not like Taranis. Or Draven. The fire isn’t in him.”

    Morrigan smiled. “No. But the river is.”

    Boldolph glanced at her, confused.

    “Some of us are made for flame and rage. Others for healing and flow. Rayne… is the river that remembers every stone.”

    Morning Comes to Emberhelm
    By dawn, the fires had burned low and the children were asleep in bundles of wool and bracken.

    The warriors sat nursing sore heads and full bellies, and the dragons Pendragon and Tairneanach lay curled in silence, watching the horizon like guardians of an old dream.

    Taranis stood before the gathering. His cloak flapped in the morning wind, and behind him the stone cairns of Caernath glowed faintly as if the ancestors were listening.

    “Brothers. Sisters. Flamekeepers. Healers. Shadowwalkers and Stormborn alike. You have all walked through fire, through blood, through the turning of the old ways. Now it is time to choose.”

    “Today we name the Three Houses of Caernath not for power, but for purpose. No longer shall bloodlines dictate loyalty. From now on, you choose where you belong.”

    “Those who fight whose strength lies in blade and storm come to the House of the Storm.”

    “Those who heal, protect, and serve who hold flame and lore come to the House of the Flame.”

    “And those who walk between who guard the forgotten places, who speak to shadows, or carry wounds that cannot be seen come to the House of the Shadow.”

    Rayne Steps Ahead
    The crowd murmured. Solaris stood tall near the Flame. Draven took his place beneath the storm banner. Morrigan stood beneath the flame, Boldolph beside her though his stance was still more wolf than man.

    And then slowly, silently Rayne stepped forward.

    All eyes turned.

    He walked past the flame. Past the storm. And stood alone beneath the third banner, woven with deep purples and grey threads: the House of the Shadow.

    Gasps rippled.

    Rayne turned, voice calm but steady.

    “I am not whole. But I am not broken.”

    “I have walked in chains. I have worn silence like a second skin. I am no warlord, no healer, no dragon-slayer.”

    “But I remember. And I will not let the forgotten be lost again.”

    After the Choosing
    Later that night, Taranis found him by the cairnstones.

    “The House of the Shadow,” he said. “I never thought someone would choose it first.”

    Rayne smiled faintly. “Someone had to.”

    “You know… I think it might be the strongest house of all.”

    Rayne nodded. “We carry the weight.”

    [TO BE CONTINUED]

    Further Reading

  • The Houses of Caernath Part 5

    The Houses of Caernath Part 5

    The Feast of Echoes


    As the feast burned on into the night, the firelight danced on stone and skin. The laughter of children clashed like wooden swords as they played warriors. Dashing between the legs of old veterans now soft with wine and bread.

    From the edge of the great hearth-circle, Boldolph. The ever watchful wolf-man, stood with arms crossed, one eye scanning the shadows beyond the firelight.

    Beside him, the High Warlord of Caernath. Stood wrapped in a dark cloak trimmed with the dragon’s sigil, grinned like a rogue caught in mischief.

    Morrigan, seated nearby with a healer’s grace. But a wolf’s patience, gave Taranis a sharp look one that said plainly: “Behave. Don’t test those who would die for you.”

    Taranis gave a half-bow and a lopsided smile.

    “I know, fair lady. I’m not the cub I once was but has everyone forgotten?” He raised his arms wide, as if to embrace the stars. “I can’t die. I’ve walked out of battles far worse than the ruins of old clans left to rot.”

    At that moment, two small children ran up and collided with his legs, eyes wide with awe. They looked to their fathers for permission then to Taranis as if gazing upon the man behind the myth.

    One boy stepped ahead, voice clear:

    “We’ve heard the tales, sir. Especially of Stormborne how the dragons flew above the ridge and bowed to you. How Boldolph and Morrigan led the wolves into battle. Everyone fought, but only you walked out untouched.”

    Before Taranis answer, Solaris, seated close to the fire, his collar gone but his voice steady, spoke quietly:

    “No… I think he means the Cave of Skulls. One hundred and fifty men, women, and children trapped. Clawclan sealed the tunnels, left their own behind. But you…” Solaris met Taranis’s gaze. “You went back. You left the manor of Rock. You found the torture dens. You should have walked away. Instead, you tried to free us.”

    His voice grew softer.

    “My father cursed your name that day. My mother tried to calm him. But the slave the one who defied the lords had stirred the dead to rise.”

    Taranis looked into the fire.

    “They caught me. Tortured me. Bound my hands in chains of bone. Months passed. They set the date of my execution and buried me beneath the stone the very slab the warlords dined upon.” He paused, the flames reflecting in his eyes. “But they didn’t expect me to climb back out. From under their own table.”

    He turned to the children, his voice gentler now.

    “As long as I draw breath,” he said, “you will not face this world alone. Nor shall horrors befall you while I yet live.”

    A hush fell over the feast, broken only by the crackle of fire. And in that silence, some said they heard it faint but unmistakable:

    The low, mournful howl of a wolf, rising from the northern hills. And then another.

    And another.

    As if the old ghosts, the ones buried in bone and memory, were listening.

    “they’ are howling for you Taranis, a lord they can all trust, a man leading his people to better days.” Morrigan said with a gracious smile

    © 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

    The Chronicles of Drax

    Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

    Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

  • The Houses of Caernath. Part 4

    The Houses of Caernath. Part 4

    The Wolf and His Warlord

    The scent of blood still hung on the morning mist. Mingling with the smoke from the still-burning ridge beyond Emberhelm’s eastern watch.

    The gates had only just been sealed behind the last returning scouts. The courtyard was filled with low murmurs and the clang of steel being resharpened.

    Taranis Stormborne stood alone beneath the stone arch, his shoulders squared but his body streaked in ash and dried blood. The battle had ended. Victory had been claimed.

    And yet, the courtyard was quiet. Too quiet.

    Then came the growl.

    It rumbled low at first, barely more than a whisper on the wind. Before shaping itself into something unmistakable the warning bark of a wolf that knew disappointment far more intimately than fear.

    Boldolph emerged from the shadow of the stables, his half-wolf form towering, claws still sheathed in crusted gore. His red eyes burned with something deeper than rage. Not fury. Not even grief.

    It was wrath tempered by love.

    “You damned fool,” Boldolph snarled, stalking toward the warlord. “You should’ve waited.”

    Taranis didn’t flinch. He met the wolf-man’s gaze with that same infuriating storm-steeled calm. “I had to act.”

    “You had to die?” Boldolph’s snarl cut through the air. “That’s what you wanted? To fall alone so the bards sing about it later?”

    “I had to protect them,” Taranis snapped. “The Black Claw”

    “Were expecting you.” Boldolph’s voice was thunder now, claws clenched at his sides. “They wanted you to come alone. You gave them exactly what they needed — the head of the storm without the wind behind him.”

    Taranis looked away. The silence between them thickened.

    Boldolph stepped closer. “You are the High Warlord now. You bear the storm in your veins and ride the dragon in the sky. But to me, you’re still that cub who couldn’t see the trap until he stepped into it.”

    Taranis said nothing. He couldn’t. Not when he knew Boldolph was right.

    Taranis moved to speak, but Boldolph raised a clawed hand.

    “No,” the wolf-man growled. “You don’t get to explain it away with honor or duty or some poetic rot about sacrifice. You’ve earned your scars, Taranis but so have we. And we didn’t survive hell just to watch you walk back into it alone.”

    The warlord took a breath. His face, still smeared with ash and dried ichor, softened. “I thought”

    “That’s the problem,” Boldolph snapped, “you thought. You didn’t ask. Not me, not Lore, not Drax, not Solaris. You didn’t trust any of us to stand beside you.”

    Taranis’s jaw clenched. “I trust you all with my life.”

    “Then why won’t you trust us with your death?”

    The words struck like a hammer.

    Taranis staggered a step back not from force, but from the weight of truth. Boldolph’s eyes didn’t waver.

    He looked less like a beast and more like a grieving elder. Wearied by a child who couldn’t yet see his own worth beyond the blade.

    “You think being the High Warlord means dying on your feet,” Boldolph said, voice roughening. “But what it really means is living long enough to carry others. That’s what the storm is for. Not just to burn. To shield.”

    The fire pits crackled in the stillness. From the northern walkway, Lore stood quietly, arms folded, having heard the last of it. He said nothing only nodded to Boldolph, and then vanished back into the shadows.

    “You’re not alone anymore,” Boldolph continued, softer now. “You have brothers again. You have warriors, wolves, dragons. And you have people who’d bleed for you, not because you command them but because they love you.”

    Taranis sat slowly on the stone steps beside the training pit. For once, the weight of his own armor seemed too much to bear. “I’ve spent so long fighting to survive,” he said, staring at the sky. “It’s hard to let go of that.”

    “I know,” Boldolph murmured. “But surviving isn’t living. And we didn’t break our curses just to watch you chain yourself to a ghost.”

    The wolf-man crouched beside him, joints creaking.

    “I made a vow to your father when you were exiled. I swore to watch over you even when you didn’t know I was near. I failed once. I won’t again.”

    Taranis turned to him. “You were there… even then?”

    Boldolph nodded. “Always.”

    They sat in silence, the roar of the battlefield replaced by the quiet whistle of wind between towers. In the distance, children’s laughter echoed from the lower courtyard. where Morrigan was teaching younglings to bind wounds with willow bark and song.

    Boldolph sighed. “You need to speak to them. To all of them. Tell them what you’re fighting for. What we’re building.”

    “I don’t know what to say.”

    “Then let your silence be honest. But show them, Taranis. Not the warlord the man. The brother. The one who came back from the brink and built something no storm can wash away.”

    Taranis stood slowly, shoulders still tense, but eyes clearer.

    “You’re right,” he said. “I’ve been leading from the front but I’ve been doing it like I’m still alone. Like that eight-year-old boy who was cast out into the wilds.”

    Boldolph rose beside him, towering and fierce. “Then stop being that boy. And become the storm the world remembers.”

    Taranis gave a faint smile. “You’re more of a father than ours ever was.”

    “I know,” Boldolph grunted. “You lot are exhausting.”

    “Drax I’m sorry please forgive me’ tanaris told his oldest brother “just. ‘ 

    “No I’m not hearing excuses young brother. You know boldolph asked morigan if he eat either you or your dragons ” Drax smirked 

    “that…that is definitely something Boldolph would say. I trust my mother wolf said no” Tanaris grinned. AS he folded his arms with a grin as morigan gave him a cautionary look.

    Further Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    The Chronicles of Drax

    A Journey Through My Poetic Collection

    Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

    Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

  • 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.

  • Exiled at Eight the story of Taranis Stormborne.

    Exiled at Eight the story of Taranis Stormborne.

    Exiled at Eight tells the story of Taranis Stormborne.

    A flicker of life enters a world that is both brutal and beautiful. From the moment chieftain Connor held the little boy wrapped in wolf fur, he knew his son was different.

    The baby’s bright grey eyes sparkled with curiosity and wonder, hinting at future heartache, nightmares, and beauty.Five Years Later

    “He’s alone again, I see, Drax,” Knox said to his best friend and the chieftain’s son.

    “World of his own, father says. He’s different from us,” Drax replied, glancing at his little brother before shielding a strike.

    “Nice try,” Drax smirked.The chieftain and his wife watched Taranis, worry and stress etched on their faces. Neither knew how to handle their youngest son, who paled in comparison to his brothers.

    Taranis was a tall child, standing almost five feet, muscular from birth a blessing many remarked on. His striking grey eyes were like a stormy night. In contrast, his brothers were broad-shouldered and hardened by years of hunting and battle, already warriors in training.

    One cool morning, as the damp scent of earth and pine filled the air, Taranis wandered near the edge of the forest. “Everything you see is ours, my son the woods, the green fields,” he recalled his father’s voice in his mind.

    The more he walked, the louder the birds sang and the more he heard the roar of Pendragon, the king of dragons.

    The howl of Boldolph whistled through the trees as he picked up a stone and threw it in the air. Suddenly, the stone flew from his hand and struck a small black bird.

    It fell silent, wings broken, heart still. Taranis ran to the young bird, tears streaming down his face. Kneeling beside it, he pressed his hands gently on its broken wings, willing them to heal.

    As time seemed to slow; the forest quieted. Miraculously, the bird shuddered and breathed, gradually returning to life. With a flutter, it soared free again.

    The chieftain raised an eyebrow as he looked to his people, then back to his son.

    “What is dead should stay dead,” one man stated.Soon, the entire community murmured in hushed tones.“ENOUGH,” the chieftain said, addressing the council of elders.

    “Sir, we will call a meeting,” Janus stated. A woman with clouded eyes and a trembling voice approached quietly. She gazed deeply at the boy and spoke a chilling prophecy.

    “The boy who mends what death has touched shall walk a path both blessed and cursed, a flame born of feather and storm.”Taranis looked at the old woman with a defiant smirk and his deep grey eyes, as if he wielded a storm at any moment.

    He didn’t understand it, nor did he care.

    “He’s old enough to train as a guide with the spirits,” another man said. “He’s five; he’s a man now.”

    “No, he’s a man who can work, but he must follow his brothers and me as warriors and hunters,” Chieftain Connor stated.

    The year passed quickly, and everyone focused on the warring neighbors while crops failed, turning life upside down. At six years old, the harshness of life hit hard.

    When men and women charged the camp, and the clash of spears echoed.

    Within minutes, the noise stopped abruptly on both sides. With uncanny fierceness, Taranis moved like a whirlwind of rage and grace. His strikes were swift and precise, as if guided by a primal force beyond his age.

    “It’s like he’s a god,” Lore said, while his brothers watched in awe and fear, uncertain of what this meant for their youngest brother.

    Beneath the warrior’s fire, though, was a boy barely understanding the cost of blood and death.

    “I helped protect us, right, father? I’m good?” Taranis asked, but he stopped when Drax pulled him away, aware of how fear could lead people to do stupid things.

    “I’m a warrior, not a seer!” Taranis cried as he was taken away.“Shh, little brother. You’ve seen too much for one day.”

    “From today, my son Taranis will train with his brothers. Should another fight arise, he will be ready,” Chieftain Connor said. Another war came, but this time it was one they wouldn’t win.

    As the years went by, he trained and grew into a skilled fighter. At eight years old, he stood on the hills as his friends developed coughs and fevers like never seen before, while the village was struck by a shadow darker than any blade.

    A sickness crept through the children like a silent predator.Mothers wept, fathers raged, and the once vibrant laughter of youth faded into silence and sorrow. Soon, the people began to whisper, like cold wind slipping through cracks.

    Was this the curse Janus spoke of? Was Taranis’s strange power a blight upon them?

    “Exile Taranis!” one voice boomed. “Execute him!” another shouted. “Sacrifice him to appease the gods!”As time passed, more voices joined in as fear turned to blame, and blame hardened into calls for exile.

    “We find, for the sake of the clan, we must exile Taranis,” Janus said.

    Taranis stepped beyond the only home he had ever known. As he looked back at his brothers and father.

    “I didn’t do it. Please, this isn’t because of me,” Taranis pleaded. But the forest that once whispered secrets now felt endless and cold.

    Alone, he battled with the cruel balance between lost innocence and a destiny forced upon him.Yet beneath the storm of doubt, a fierce flame burned a hope to find meaning, reclaim his place, and someday heal what had been broken.

    written and copyrighted to ELH

    Further Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    written and copyrighted to ELH