
“Mother, Father,” Caelum said quietly, his small hands trembling as he stepped into the firelight. “I saw him. My uncle chained in every way. I gave him the bowl of food.”
The words fell like stones into still water. Even the fire’s crackle softened, as if the hearth itself held its breath.
Lady Maerin rose from her chair, skirts whispering against the flagstones. “You saw him?” she whispered. “How, Caelum? How did they let a child so near?”
Caelum swallowed hard. “The guards… they didn’t care. Uncle Marcos said it would ‘toughen me.’ He said I should learn what happens to men who defy Rome.” His gaze darted to Drax. “But Uncle Taranis he wasn’t broken, Father. Not like they said.”
Drax’s jaw tightened. His hands curled into fists against the edge of the table. “Go on,” he said, voice low.
Caelum’s eyes glistened in the glow of the fire. “He was hurt… bleeding. But he looked at me and smiled. He told me not to cry. He said” the boy’s voice faltered, “he said you’d come for him. That you’d want to. But he warned me… he said if you launch a rescue, they’ll make everyone suffer. If he escapes, they’ll make us all suffer. He said” Caelum’s voice broke. “He said to play the long game.”
A silence followed that seemed to swallow the world.
Lady Maerin’s breath hitched. “He’s thinking of us, even now,” she whispered. “Even in chains.”
Drax rose slowly, the fire casting bronze and gold across his face. He moved to the window, where the mist pressed thick against the glass. Outside, thunder murmured faintly across the hills. He stared toward the south toward the Roman fort where his brother sat in chains.
“The long game,” Drax repeated, the words rasping like steel drawn from a scabbard. “He means patience. Observation. Wait… and strike when the empire’s eyes are elsewhere.”
Caelum nodded, wiping his nose on his sleeve. “He said storms don’t break, Father. They change the sky.”
A small, aching smile ghosted across Drax’s lips. “Aye,” he murmured. “That sounds like him.”
Behind him, Maerin’s voice was brittle as frost. “And what will you do, my lord? Wait… while they bleed him dry?”
Drax turned, shadows shifting across his face. “I’ll do what he asks. For now.” His eyes hardened. “But when the storm comes when it truly comes not even Rome will stand in its path.”
Lightning flashed through the mist. Illuminating the valley below and for a heartbeat, the clouds took the shape of wings unfurling above Emberhelm.
Caelum hesitated before speaking again. “Father… are they poisoning Uncle Taranis?”
Drax turned sharply. “What?”
Caelum’s voice dropped to a whisper. “He’s not eating what they give him. He said the food tastes wrong.”
The fire crackled louder then, as if stirred by an unseen wind. Drax’s gaze darkened.
“Then Rome has already begun its slow killing,” he said softly. “But storms, Caelum…”
He looked toward the thunder rolling in the distance.
“…storms have a way of purging poison from the earth.”
