Tag: Gold Ring

  • The Whispering Stones of Emberhelm

    The Whispering Stones of Emberhelm

    They say the stones at Emberhelm still whisper when the wind moves right a low murmur that rises from the earth like the breath of something ancient, waiting.

    Farmers avoid the place now. Shepherds drive their flocks wide, and children dare each other to touch the outer ring, laughing until the laughter falters. Only the old remember that once, before Rome, before even the clans, the stones were not dead things.

    Each one bore a mark storm, fire, tide, and light carved by hands that no longer walk the world. Together they formed a circle, a promise between the gods and those who spoke their tongue. The Circle of the Gold Ring.

    When the brothers swore their oaths there, thunder split the air. The eldest spoke of wisdom, the youngest of freedom, and the middle ones of strength, loyalty, and truth. But the sky heard more than words it heard pride. And pride is the chisel that breaks all stone.

    Now, when lightning rolls across Cannock’s high fields, some claim to see figures between the stones. Not ghosts, not living men something between. They say one wears chains that sing when he moves, another bears a sword that hums with the weight of unspoken guilt, and one more walks with his hands clasped behind his back, watching the storm as though it answers to him.

    The villagers leave offerings there still a bowl of salt, a coin, a lock of hair just in case the whispers are not only echoes, but memories listening for their name.

    Because in Emberhelm, even silence remembers.

  • 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.

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    Futher 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