Tag: Roman camp

  • The Silent Rebellion

    The Silent Rebellion

    “Taranis is our baby brother, no matter what some think,” Drax growled, his voice low and edged with iron. His gaze locked on Rain across the firelight, sharp enough to cut stone. “You betrayed him when he was a child and you betray him now.”

    Rain’s jaw tightened, but he did not speak. The silence stretched between them, thick with memory and regret.

    The old priest, Maeron, lifted his hand gently. “He forgives you, Rain,” he said, his tone weary yet steady. “He wanted Drax, Draven, and Lore to know he will endure what they give him. So that you three will survive. He says to make choices that will keep you all safe and your people.”

    Drax’s expression did not soften, though his eyes flickered with something that have been pain. “He forgives far too easily.”

    Maeron inclined his head. “Forgiveness is not weakness, my lord. It is the weapon of those who can’t be broken. The Romans won’t rule forever. Prepare for what comes next.”

    At the edge of the fire, Caelum shifted uneasily, his young face caught between fear and pride. “But what about my uncle’s meals?” he asked suddenly. “Uncle was exiled from the Circle years before they caught him. I was a baby then. Now I’m fourteen he shouldn’t be forgotten again.”

    The words silenced the hall. Even Rain, for all his bitterness, not meet the boy’s gaze.

    Drax rose slowly, the firelight glinting off his scars. “He will not be forgotten,” he said at last. “Not while the storm still bears our name.”

    “But won’t they strip him of his name?” Caelum pressed, voice trembling now. “If Rome erases it, how will anyone know he lived?”

    Drax looked down at his son the fire’s glow. Reflected in the boy’s wide eyes and placed a steady hand on his shoulder.

    “Names can be taken,” he said quietly. “But legacies can’t. The Romans think power is carved in stone. Ours is carved in memory.”

    He turned back to Maeron. “Tell him that. Tell him Emberhelm remembers.”

    The priest nodded, rising to leave. But before he turned, his gaze swept the circle of men gathered in the hall. “When the storm returns,” he said softly, “I hope you are ready to stand beneath it.”

    When Maeron’s footsteps faded into the night, the hall remained silent. The storm outside broke, rain hammering against the shutters like the echo of distant drums.

    Drax stood by the window long after the others had gone. He could not see the fort from here, but he could feel it the iron cage that held his brother. The empire pressing closer each season. Yet as lightning flashed over the valley, he smiled grimly.

    Because storms, no matter how long they’re caged, always find their way home.

    The road to Viroconium was slick with rain. Drax rode beneath a low sky, his cloak heavy with water, the wind biting at his face. Beside him, Maeron’s hood was drawn deep, the priest’s silence carrying the weight of things better left unspoken.

    When they reached the outskirts of the Roman fort, the air stank of smoke and iron. The rhythmic clash of hammers and the cries of soldiers echoed through the mist. But above it all, there was another sound low, strained, human.

    Drax reined his horse sharply, his eyes narrowing.

    At the edge of the square, raised above the mud and the murmuring crowd. Hung a man bound to a crude wooden cross. Blood streaked his arms, his body marked by lashes and bruises. His hair clung to his face in the rain. But the set of his jaw the defiant lift of his head was unmistakable.

    Taranis.

    Drax’s heart clenched as the legionnaire stepped forward, spear in hand. “He struck a guard and tried to run,” the man said stiffly. “By Roman law, the punishment is public display.”

    “Law,” Drax echoed, his voice quiet, almost a whisper but Maeron flinched at the tone. “You call this law?”

    The soldier hesitated, but before he could respond, Maeron laid a hand on Drax’s arm. “Careful,” he murmured. “The walls have ears.”

    Drax dismounted, boots sinking into the mud. He walked forward until he stood before the cross, rain washing the grime from his face. Taranis raised his head slowly, eyes bloodshot but burning with that same inner fire that no empire could snuff out.

    “Brother,” Drax whispered.

    Taranis gave a faint, broken smile. “You shouldn’t have come.”

    “And leave you to the crows?” Drax’s voice cracked like thunder. “Never.”

    Maeron stepped forward, murmuring Latin prayers under his breath for the watching soldiers. Though his words were laced with druidic meaning ancient phrases meant to shield, not to save. His fingers brushed the iron nails that bound Taranis’s wrists. “These are not deep,” he said quietly. “They did not mean to kill him. Only to shame.”

    Taranis’s laugh was hoarse. “They can’t shame what they don’t understand.”

    The centurion appeared, cloak heavy with rain. “This man belongs to Rome,” he declared. “You will step back, Lord of Emberhelm.”

    Drax turned slowly, the weight of centuries in his gaze. “And yet Rome forgets whose land it stands upon.”

    The centurion stiffened. “Do you threaten?”

    “No.” Drax’s tone softened to a dangerous calm. “I remind.”

    The priest raised his hands quickly. “My lord only seeks mercy,” Maeron said. “Let him pray with his brother before the gods.”

    After a pause, the centurion gestured sharply. “You have one hour.”

    When the soldiers withdrew to the gatehouse, Drax knelt beside the cross. The rain had turned to sleet, stinging against his skin. “Hold on,” he murmured. “We’ll get you down when the watch changes.”

    Taranis shook his head weakly. “No. Not yet. If you cut me down, they’ll know you came. They’ll burn Emberhelm.”

    “Then let them come,” Drax growled.

    But Taranis only smiled faintly. “Storms must wait for the right sky, brother.”

    Maeron placed a hand on Drax’s shoulder. “He’s right. Endurance, not rage. That is his rebellion.”

    Drax bowed his head, jaw clenched. He hated the wisdom in those words. He hated that Taranis could still smile through chains and nails.

    As dusk fell, lightning cracked beyond the hills, white and wild. The storm gathered again over Viroconium.

    And though Rome saw only a prisoner’s suffering. Those who remembered the old ways knew the truth:
    A storm had been crucified and still, it did not die.

    Further Reading

    The Chronicles of Drax

  • Chains and Storms

    Chains and Storms

    Dawn broke over the Roman camp like a blade drawn through fog.
    Grey light pooled across churned mud and sharpened stakes, catching on helmets and spearheads lined in perfect order.

    The night’s rain had thinned to mist, and every droplet clinging to the leather tents shimmered like glass. The smell of smoke, sweat, and iron hung heavy in the air the scent of empire.

    Taranis stirred. His back ached where the whip had bitten, skin raw beneath crusted blood. Yet the fire inside him burned brighter than pain the storm had not passed. It gathered.

    Across from him, Marcos watched with his one good eye. The old fighter’s face a map of old wars and fading loyalties. “Rome wants to see storms broken,” he murmured, voice gravel-deep. “They’ll test you again today. But storms… storms don’t break. They shift. They wait.”

    Taranis tilted his head, a faint smirk cutting through exhaustion.
    “And if they try?”

    Marcos shrugged, rough amusement in his tone. “Then you show them the wind can cut as deep as the sword.”

    Trumpets blared as the camp came alive in a heartbeat. Orders barked in Latin, armor clattered, horses stamped restlessly against their ropes. Two guards approached, eyes cold, hands twitching near the whips at their belts.

    “On your feet,” one barked.

    Taranis rose slowly. Chains clinked. His shoulders squared, each movement deliberate. The iron at his wrists and ankles was heavy a reminder that for now, he belonged to Rome.

    Yet even bound, he carried the air of something untamed. The guards kept their distance, as though the storm in his eyes strike.

    They led him toward a cleared space at the edge of the camp.
    A makeshift ring had been marked out with stakes and rope a place for training, punishment, or testing.

    The centurion stood nearby, expression carved from granite. The boy from last night watched from behind a cart, pale fingers gripping the wood. He didn’t dare speak.

    The centurion’s voice carried over the murmurs. “The barbarian survived crucifixion,” he said in clipped Latin. “He has killed Roman soldiers with sword, axe, and bow. Let us see if his storm can be harnessed or if it dies in the mud.”

    Taranis met his gaze.


    “Let him watch,” he murmured in Brythonic the tone sharp, almost ceremonial. The centurion frowned, not understanding, but the words left a chill in the air.

    A guard offered him a practice axe, a short sword, and a small round shield. The weapons were worn, dulled, mockeries of what he once wielded but they would do.

    He ran a thumb along the axe’s handle, testing the balance.
    The first bout began.

    Two legionaries stepped into the ring, boots sinking into wet earth. They grinned, confident, soldiers against a chained barbarian.
    Taranis didn’t move until they struck.

    The first swing came from the right clean, practiced.


    He stepped aside, caught the motion with the rim of his shield, and turned it aside. The counter came low and fast a backhand with the axe that cracked into the soldier’s guard, splintering the wood. Mud sprayed. Gasps followed.

    The second soldier lunged from behind. But Taranis ducked, dragging his chain taut to trip him, then drove an elbow into his ribs.


    He rose without looking back. Breathing steady. Eyes cold.

    He didn’t grin.
    He didn’t boast.
    He simply waited.

    The crowd quieted. Even the centurion lowered his stylus for a moment.

    “Again,” he said.

    Another pair entered. Then another.
    By the third round, Taranis’s arms burned and his wrists bled where the chains bit into skin. Yet his movements only grew sharper measured, adaptive, each strike like thunder rolling closer.

    Marcos leaned toward a watching soldier. “That’s no wild man,” he muttered. “That’s a storm that learned to fight back.”

    By midday, silence had fallen across the ring. The spectators no longer laughed. They watched uneasy, enthralled, afraid.

    The centurion finally raised a hand. “Enough,” he ordered. “Feed him. Let him rest. He will fight again tomorrow with steel.”

    Taranis tilted his head, the faintest smirk touching his mouth.
    “Feed the storm,” he murmured, “and see what it grows into.”

    The boy crept closer, slipping a crust of bread from his tunic and setting it by his side.


    Taranis nodded once not gratitude, but recognition. A gesture between survivors.

    As they led him away, one of the younger guards spoke quietly, incapable of concealing his curiosity. “They say you fought crucifixion itself and lived. What man survives that?”

    Taranis turned his head slightly. The grey in his eyes caught the light.
    “Not a man,” he said. “A storm that forgot to die.”

    Marcos barked a laugh, shaking his head. “Gods help Rome,” he said. “They’ve chained lightning and think it’ll sit still.”

    When they finally removed his restraints for cleaning, Taranis flexed his wrists, skin bruised and torn. He studied the marks, then smirked.

    “At least they removed the restraints,” he said quietly. “I grew up fighting in them.”

    The centurion said nothing.
    The sky grumbled overhead thunder rolling distant but deliberate.

    Then, softly, as if remembering something half-buried in blood and rain, Taranis spoke again.

    “They put me up,” he said, eyes fixed north. “Nailed me in on the hill at Salinae”

    Marcos frowned. “And yet here you are.”

    Taranis flexed his fingers, old scars catching the light.
    “I ripped myself off,” he said simply.

    Silence cracked through the camp. Guards shifted. Somewhere, a dog began to howl.

    “Rome thinks it crucified me,” he murmured.
    “But the dead don’t stay nailed not when the gods still have use for them.”

    Thunder answered. Closer this time.

    Rome had not yet learned that storms do not serve.
    They return.

    Futher Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded