Tag: Order of Dawn

  • The Wilderness Years Part 9

    The Wilderness Years Part 9

    The Lost Children

    The fire still smouldered in the trial circle. Ash drifted across the camp like falling snow, silent and strange. But Taranis was already moving.

    “There’s one more thing I need to do.”

    Grael watched him from the shadows. He didn’t speak. He didn’t stop him either.

    Boldolph padded beside Taranis in silence. Solaris followed, clutching a waterskin and a roll of cloth. Morrigan trailed at a distance, her red eyes glowing faintly.

    They passed the old fletcher’s tent, the burned tree where whippings once took place, the bone pits that had once broken men.

    “Where are we going?” Solaris asked quietly.

    Taranis didn’t answer. He was listening not to voices, but to memory. He remembered a cough in the dark. A cry. The scraping of small fingers against stone.

    “There’s a cage,” he said. “Near the quarry. They kept the youngest there. Said they were too small to work.”

    The Pit
    They reached it just after dusk. The trees pressed tight around the stone hollow. At first, it looked abandoned broken boards, a slanted gate, silence.

    Then a sound. A whimper.

    Boldolph’s ears twitched.

    Taranis crouched and pulled aside the brambles. A metal grate, rusted and choked with moss, covered a square hole in the earth.

    “Help me,” he said.

    Solaris held the torch. Boldolph tore at the frame with claws. Morrigan bared her teeth and bit through the last knot of rope.

    Beneath, the darkness shivered.

    A child peered up.

    Eyes too wide. Bones too thin.

    “We’re not guards,” Taranis said gently. “We’ve come to end this.”

    There were eleven in total.

    Some crawled. Some limped. One couldn’t speak. One clutched a half-rotten toy made from bark and wool. They emerged into the night like ghosts made of dirt and silence.

    Taranis knelt before each one and touched their shoulders.

    “No more pits. No more cages. I swear it.”

    The eldest maybe ten looked at the wolves with fear. Then at Taranis.

    “They’ll just chain us again.”

    “Not if I teach you to fight,” he said. “Not if I teach you to speak.”

    He turned to Solaris.

    “They will need warmth. Names. A place.”

    Solaris nodded.

    “We will give them more than that. We will give them stories.”

    A New Fire
    That night, Taranis did not return to his tent. He built a new fire at the edge of the camp. The children gathered near it, cautious, blinking at the light.

    He laid out bowls of stew. He let them sit in silence.

    Then he rose and spoke to the camp.

    “They were buried alive in your shadows. Chained so young they forgot their own names.”

    “This camp lives because of silence. But not anymore.”

    “I will raise them. Feed them. Train them.”

    “And one day, they will raise others.”

    Grael stood from the back. He did not speak, but he gave a slow nod.

    The Seer who had named Taranis walked to the fire and added herbs to it. The scent rose sharp rosemary and root. A symbol of memory.

    “This fire,” she said, “is the first fire of the Order of Dawn.”

    And the children did not cry that night.

    They watched the flames and dreamed of tomorrow.