Tag: Stone Age fiction

  • THE WILDERNESS YEARS PART 2

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS PART 2

    By EL Hewitt

    Taranis stood for hours, his injured back pressed against the tree. Two men watched his every move.

    “Hey, stop right there, slave,” one growled, noticing a hand slipping free. He strode over and punched the teen in the stomach, making Taranis grunt in pain. Then he resecured the hand and looped a rope around the boy’s neck.

    “Just move. Go on, make my day, exiled one,” said the stocky, dark-haired guard.

    “I just wanted water. It’s right there. Please, Sorrel,” Taranis pleaded.

    “You know the orders. Two days without,” said the other man, watching closely. “Your commander will come tomorrow. Commander Greal.”

    “Should we secure his head too?” the man added. “No movement at all?”

    “No. He’s got the collar, and the rope’s above it. It should be tight. His hands are secured again. We just follow orders. No food. No water,” Sorrel replied.

    “Commander Greal? That’s who I’m under?” Taranis managed to spit out. The rope around his neck made it hard to breathe or swallow.

    “Yes. He’s coming to train you. You’ll be tethered. Chains, binds ankles, wrists, neck until he says otherwise, cursed exile.”

    Taranis swallowed, almost choking.

    As the sun rose and the shifts changed, a smith appeared.

    “Time to change the collar, but that rope makes it tricky,” he muttered. He carried tools stone and bone hammers, and a strange new collar made of carved deer bone and inlaid stones, blessed by the Seer.

    “No please. I’m sorry,” Taranis whispered, trying to hide his fear.

    “Hey, Tanar, look at me,” Solaris said gently, stepping forward. “You’re the kid who doesn’t fear anything, right? The one who slept with wolves and rides dragons?”

    “Morrigan and Boldolph,” Taranis whispered. “They still howl.”

    “Yes. They cry for you.” Solaris crouched. “I know you’re scared. I asked if you could play after this punishment. But you have to stay in the clan’s sight.”

    “Really?” Taranis asked, making a face as the smith worked.

    The old collar shattered. The Seer stepped forward, chanting softly. The new collar was fitted around his neck tight but precise.

    “This is to contain and restrict what you are believed to be,” the Seer said. “It bears your name in the old tongue. Carved by flame. Blessed in shadow. It does not break unless your master wills it.”

    “Will it grow with him?” Solaris asked.

    “It will last a few years. Then we replace it. But it is a warrior’s collar.”

    “Can we still attach the tether?” a guard asked.

    “Here,” said the smith, tapping the metal hoop. “The restraints remain the same.”

    Everyone in the village looked to the boy some with sorrow, some with fear.

    “Master, I won’t run or hurt anyone. You saved me,” Taranis said softly. But the masters voice remain silent, the boy had been their property 7 years nothing would change it.

    He was removed from the tree. His hands were bound low at the waist. The sinew cords bit deeper with every hour. A leather tether linked the collar to his wrists, forcing him to hunch forward.

    “Walk,” the clan leader commanded.

    Taranis took a few difficult steps.

    “Father, how long is he in this for?” Calor asked.

    “This is punishment. When I see a correction in his behaviour, I’ll allow an alteration.”

    After a few steps, Taranis fell.

    “Get up,” barked a guard.

    The leader grabbed Solaris’s arm. “No. He must do it alone. No one helps him.”

    “Fuck you,” Taranis hissed, losing his temper. He tried to turn his head, but the tether tightened around his throat. He struggled. Slowly, painfully, he managed to rise to his knees.

    “I’ll kill you for this. One day.”

    For that outburst, they dragged him through the camp by the tether. Word spread fast the exile had defied them again.

    They brought him to the sacred stone circle.

    Taranis staggered. Blood dried at the corners of his mouth. The clan watched not with pity, but quiet judgment.

    At the center, the clan leader held a mask.

    It was beast-shaped, stitched hide, with a carved bone bit meant to force the jaw open and silent. Leather straps dangled like tongues.

    “This is what you become when you threaten your own,” he said. “Not man. Not wolf. Not worthy of freedom.”

    He strapped the mask to Taranis’s face. The bone slipped between his teeth. The world became heat, shame, and pressure.

    They paraded him around the circle. No words. No cheers. Only the crackle of fire and the quiet of judgment.

    Then they brought him back to the tree.

    He was secured again tether pulled tight, hands bound low, unable to straighten. A bucket of clean water sat just out of reach.

    Solaris and a friend sat nearby.

    “I get that he hates us,” the friend muttered. “But this? This isn’t helping.”

    “How long’s your dad leaving him like that?”

    “He’s planning a fight. Says the slave goes in bound. As punishment.”

    Later, a group approached the tree. “He’s fighting the hunter who disrespected your father,” one said. “Only this time, he doesn’t get unbound.”

    “That’s death,” Nudge said. “This is a unique slave.”

    They dragged Taranis toward the circle again. Tether at his neck. Hands bound. Mask still biting. His feet scraped the dirt.

    The hunter was waiting older, heavier, armed with a bone club.

    “This one’s half-starved and shackled,” the man jeered. “A gift fight.”

    The Seer raised her hand. “Begin.”

    The club came down fast.

    Taranis dodged. Took the blow on the shoulder. Pain exploded. He dropped. Rolled. Used the tether’s pull to spin and slammed his wrists into the man’s knee.

    A stumble.

    The crowd laughed and jeered .

    He stood barefoot, bleeding, bound and faced his enemy.

    This time, he waited. At the last second, he kicked low behind the knee. The hunter dropped.

    Taranis slammed into him, shoulder first. They hit the ground hard.

    Bound wrists wrapped around the man’s throat.

    “Enough,” said the Seer.

    He didn’t let go.

    “Enough!” she repeated.

    He finally released the man, who gasped for breath.

    Taranis stood. Mask soaked in blood. Breath ragged.

    “He’s not just a slave,” Solaris whispered. “He’s… something else.”

    One of the leader’s sons stepped forward. “Kill him.”

    Taranis hesitated.

    Then the look in his eyes went blank.

    He obeyed.

    He killed with a single motion. Trained. Efficient.

    The camp went still.

    “I didn’t think he’d actually do it,” the son whispered.

    “You made him do it,” Solaris said coldly. “He obeyed your order.”

    The leader stepped forward.

    “I gave no such command. But a command was followed.”

    He turned away.

    “Take him to the Ridge.”

    They dragged him up the mountain path.

    The wind screamed. No songs. No prayers. Just feet against earth.

    The Ridge loomed an old stone, cracked and worn by time.

    They fastened him there. Arms above his head. Rope around his chest. Collar tethered tight. Ankles bound. Spine locked in an arch. The mask stayed on.

    No fire. Only wind. And a wooden bucket of water, just out of reach.

    Night came.

    Time blurred.

    He dreamed of wolves. Of fire in the sky. Of names long forgotten Rayne, Drax, Lore.

    And then Solaris came.

    “I asked my father for leniency,” he said softly. “He said pain teaches obedience.”

    “This isn’t obedience,” his friend muttered. “It’s madness.”

    Solaris crouched.

    “I don’t want you to die,” he whispered. “But I can’t stop this. Not tonight.”

    Before leaving, he placed a carved stone with a sun symbol beside the bucket.

    A promise.

    The night passed.

    Morning came.

    He had not died.

    And that, somehow, was worse.

    When they removed the mask, the clan leader gave him a small sip of water.

    “Why did you kill him?” he asked.

    “Your son told me to,” Taranis said, voice raw. “If I don’t obey, I’m punished. I did what I was told and still, I’m punished.”

    “How long do I stay like this?”

    “One day,” the man said. “You’ll be taken down tonight. Try not to fight the restraints.”

    A boy ran up the path.

    “The general is here. He demands to see the prisoner.”

    A shadow moved at the ridge’s edge.

    And the storm was far from over.

    To be continued

    :

    ©written and created by ELHewitt

    Further Reading

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS Part 1.

  • 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.

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    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 Secrets of the Haunted Chase

    The Secrets of the Haunted Chase

    A Ghostly Encounter

    A round, hand-painted stone depicting a landscape with trees and a sun, resting on a dark fabric surface.
    A hand-painted circular stone depicting a serene landscape, featuring trees and a bright sun, symbolizing a connection to nature.

    They always said the Chase held secrets. Over the years rumors of ghost sightings, lost children, lights that danced just out of reach.

    But Private Callum Hargreaves had grown up nearby. He’d run through these woods with scraped knees and muddy boots, long before he wore the army’s green.

    He used to love the quiet, the peacefulness that the woods brought.

    Tonight, it felt wrong.

    The mist had rolled in fast, blanketing the forest floor. Dusk bled into night like ink in water. Callum’s breath fogged in front of him not from cold, but from the weight in the air.

    His squad had finished training hours ago, but he hadn’t gone back. He couldn’t. Not yet. His thoughts were loud again memories knocking like fists on the inside of his skull.

    “Just walk it off,” he muttered, his voice low. “Like always.” he told himself.

    He followed an old deer track or maybe just instinct into the dense pines. The kind that made their own darkness even before sunset. The ground was soft, smelling of wet leaves and something older.

    He paused.

    There at the base of a gnarled tree was a stone. Half buried, bone coloured. Not shaped by nature. Carved. Faint, but deliberate.

    Callum crouched. A breeze touched his neck, oddly warm.

    “Someone put this here.”

    A round painted stone with abstract designs in purple and yellow on a gray background, encircled by a green rim, resting on a dark fabric surface.
    A mysterious token featuring a swirl design, symbolizing the secrets of the woods.

    He brushed aside the moss. A symbol. A swirl or a horn. Beside it a feather. White. Slightly scorched at the edge. When he reached out to touch it.

    The air twisted.

    Like the world held its breath.

    He blinked. Once.
    The trees around him… changed.

    Taller. Closer. Ancient.

    No wrappers underfoot. No footprints. No signal bars. The forest felt closer, like it was listening.

    Then came the whisper.

    Not from behind him.
    Not from the side.

    From below.

    “He’s returned…”

    The voice wasn’t human but it wasn’t wind either. It filled his ears like rising water. Callum staggered back, instinct flaring.

    The stone was gone.
    The trail behind him, vanished.
    Even the smell was different no exhaust, no cordite, just wood smoke and something sharp: iron? sweat? blood?

    “No. No, no what is this?”

    He turned toward where the training grounds should’ve been.

    Nothing.

    Just trees.
    And silence.
    And the whispering louder now. Familiar. Calling him by name without speaking it.

    And then… a howl.

    Low. Echoing.

    Not quite wolf. Not quite human.

    Callum’s breath caught. He gripped the feather tight in his palm.

    To be continued…

    © written and created by ELHewitt

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  • Taranis and the Wolves: A Tale of Mysticism

    Taranis and the Wolves: A Tale of Mysticism

    Tale of Storms and Shadows

    A stylized tree with multicolored leaves, depicted against a dark background with a yellow moon. The trunk is textured and twisted, and the artwork features vibrant hues like purple, red, and white.
    A vibrant, stylized tree under a dark sky, adorned with colorful leaves and a glowing moon, symbolizing the intertwining of nature and mysticism.

    Taranis had wandered for three days since his exile. Taranis wore no furs now., just the old stag-hide wrap and the necklace his mother had pressed into his palm with shaking fingers.

    He ate roots and river water,. Asheand slept like a fox with one ear open and his back to a tree.

    That night, a full moon watched the world from behind broken cloud. The forest lit with silver veins. Taranis crouched low near a hollow oak, flint blade across his lap. He had not lit a fire. Fire betrayed you. Fire drew eyes.

    But still eyes found him.

    Two pairs.

    One black, one white.

    Both wolves. Both silent. Both watching from the mist beyond the briar.

    He didn’t move. He didn’t breathe.

    The white one larger, its coat matted with burrs stepped ahead. A long scar dragged across its eye, but the eye still burned red. Not the red of rage, but of knowing. Of memory.

    The smaller wolf circled left. Her coat was black as smoke and moved like shadow even under moonlight.

    Still, Taranis did not move. This was not a hunt. Not a threat. This was a test.

    When the white wolf sat, the black one joined him.

    They stared.

    And then they spoke.

    Not aloud not in the way people do but in the marrow of his bones. In the beat of his pulse. In the dreams he hadn’t yet had.

    “You carry the storm. Not all storms destroy.”

    He blinked. He gripped the flint tighter.

    “We are not what we seem. Nor are you.”

    A stylized painting of a black wolf howling against a backdrop of a crescent moon and vibrant blue sky, with hints of purple and pink. The wolf features a decorative symbol around its neck.
    A striking depiction of a black wolf howling at the moon, surrounded by vibrant blues and purples, evoking a sense of mystery and wilderness.

    Then, the black wolf Boldolph moved first. He stepped to the base of the hollow tree and pawed at the ground. When he pulled back, there was something in the soil. A ring of old stones. A feather. A scrap of iron, ancient before iron had names.

    The white wolf Morrigan touched it with her snout.

    And in a moment that split the world like thunder, they changed.

    Two wolves became two people. Not naked, not fully human, but forms caught between part smoke, part bone, part memory. She bore a crow’s wing in her braid. He had a jaw shaped not by age, but by sorrow.

    Taranis did not flinch. The storm inside him had seen worse. Had survived worse.

    Morrigan reached ahead and laid the feather at his feet.

    “Blood forgets. But stone remembers. You are carved already.”

    Boldolph raised his hand, three fingers missing. Still, he gestured not in threat, but in oath.

    “This forest sees you. You are not alone.”

    And just like that, they were wolves again.

    Gone into the mist.

    Only the feather remained.

    And the storm inside Taranis? It no longer howled alone.

    © written and created by ElHewitt

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