Tag: Stormborne Brothers

  • The last night at Raegenwine’s inn

    The last night at Raegenwine’s inn

    Chapter I Stormborne Escape

    Thunorric leaned one arm on the table, firelight cutting sharp lines across his scarred face. The Black Shields had fallen silent around him. Even the bard held his breath.

    He looked at Dægan not as the Stormwulf, nor the outlaw. But as the tired, blood-soaked brother who had outrun every storm except the one inside himself.

    “Brother,” he said quietly, low enough only the three Stormborne hear. “I’ll be honest with you.”

    He inhaled, slow and heavy.

    “I’ll be gone by morning.”

    Dægan’s jaw tightened.
    Leofric’s quill stilled.

    Thunorric’s gaze drifted to the shuttered window where rain tapped a relentless rhythm.

    “I’m not sure where. Hispania… France… or the Italian lands.”
    He shrugged a gesture heavier than armour.
    “Wherever the wind throws me.”

    He looked back at Dægan. There was no smirk and no bravado. It was just the raw truth of a man who had lived too long with ghosts.

    “But if you asked me to stay…” His voice dropped to a whisper. “I would.”

    The fire cracked.

    Dægan stepped closer, boots sinking into the rushes. His eyes were a storm pride, anger, fear, love all fighting for ground.

    “Thunorric,” he said, voice a blade sheathed in grief, “if you stay, the king will take your head.”

    “Aye,” Thunorric muttered. “He’s welcome to try.”

    Leofric set down his staff. “Staying is death,” he whispered. “Leaving is exile. Neither path is mercy.”

    Thunorric chuckled without humour.
    “Mercy and I haven’t spoken in years.”

    Behind them, Harold peeked from the cellar door. Bram stood beside him, fists clenched. Wulfie clutched a wooden wolf to his chest. They listened to every word.

    Dægan saw them and something in him cracked.

    “I won’t ask you to stay,” he said softly. “Because if I do… you’ll die for my sake.”

    Thunorric froze as if struck.

    For a moment, the brothers were boys again. They stood shoulder to shoulder in the ashes of Rome. This was before kingdoms, before war. It was before death learned their names.

    Leofric placed a hand on them both, grounding them like roots.

    “You leave before dawn,” he said. “But tonight? Tonight you sit with your family.”

    Thunorric nodded.
    “One night.”

    He looked at his sons.
    “One night more.”

    Outside, the wind shifted.
    The storm was already changing course.

    The last night at Raegenwine’s inn

    The inn felt too small.

    Rægenwine moved with shaking hands, setting out bread, roasted rabbit, and thick barley stew. The Black Shields ate in silence. Rain steamed off Dægan’s and Leofric’s cloaks.

    Thunorric lowered himself onto the bench with a battle-worn groan. His sons slipped from the cellar to sit beside him.

    “Eat,” Rægenwine murmured. “Storm or no storm, a man rides better on a full belly.”

    Thunorric smirked, then winced at his ribs.
    “Aye. Though most storms ride on empty.”

    For a moment, life felt ordinary stew bubbling, fire crackling, rain whispering at the window.

    Wulfie leaned against his father.
    Bram gnawed a bone like a wolf-cub.
    Harold watched every shadow.
    James pushed barley around his bowl.

    Dægan finally broke the silence.

    “What will you do when you leave?”

    “Live,” Thunorric said. “Or try to.”

    Leofric murmured, “Spain, Gaul, the Italian kingdoms… you’ve survived worse.”

    “Aye,” Thunorric said. “But leaving isn’t what frightens me.”

    Dægan frowned. “Then what does?”

    Thunorric hesitated.
    His sons stared.
    The inn held its breath.

    Finally, he whispered:

    “If you asked me to surrender…”

    His voice cracked something it had never done, not even under Roman whips.

    “…I would.”

    Silence collapsed over the room.

    The Stormwulf the terror of the marches offering his life at his brother’s word.

    Leofric whispered, “Thunorric… no.”

    “I mean it,” he said, eyes fixed on Dægan. “For you two… for the lads… I’d walk into chains.”

    Bram slammed his fist on the table. “Da, NO!”

    Thunorric raised a calming hand but never looked away from Dægan.

    Dægan’s voice broke.
    “Brother… if I ask you to surrender, I’m killing you myself.”

    “Aye,” Thunorric whispered. “But I’d go willing.”

    “No.” Dægan stood abruptly, fists trembling. “I won’t damn you.”

    Thunorric looked suddenly old.
    Defeated.

    Leofric exhaled shakily.
    “Then eat. This is your last quiet night.”

    But outside, something howled a prophecy forming in the dark.

    The last night at Raegenwine’s inn

    The fire burned low. Shadows stretched long across the walls.

    Bram tugged Thunorric’s sleeve.
    “Da… will we ever see you again?”

    Thunorric froze.

    Wulfie grabbed his cloak.
    Harold tried to look brave.
    James trembled.

    Thunorric cupped Bram’s cheek.

    “Ah, lad… don’t ask a man somethin’ he can’t promise.”

    “But we want you home,” Wulfie said, lip wobbling.

    Harold whispered, “Tell us truth.”

    The room fell silent.

    Thunorric drew a shaking breath.

    “I’ll try my damned hardest to come back to you. Thunder willing, storm willing… I’ll find a path home.”

    “You swear it?” Bram whispered.

    “Aye,” he said, touching his forehead to his son’s. “On every storm I’ve ever walked.”

    The boys sagged with relief.

    But a figure stood in the doorway.
    A cousin.
    A boy loyal to the king.

    His voice trembled.
    “They know you’re here.”

    Dægan shot to his feet.
    Leofric gripped his staff.

    Thunorric pushed his sons behind him.
    “How many riders?”

    “…twenty. Maybe more. They’ll be here before first light.”

    Thunorric breathed out slowly a calm before a killing storm.

    “Get the lads ready. This night ain’t over.”

    The Condemned Man’s Choice

    “They’ll punish everyone here,” the boy warned. “Even the little ones.”

    Thunorric nodded.
    “I know.”

    He sat, tore a piece of bread, and spoke with fatal calm.

    “But we’ve time for a condemned man’s meal.”

    Then he drew out a small vial dark liquid swirling like blood.

    Leofric’s eyes widened.
    “Thunorric… no.”

    “It’s insurance,” he murmured.

    “For what?” Harold whispered.

    “In case the king wants a spectacle. In case they try to take me alive.”

    Wulfie grabbed his arm.
    “Don’t drink it!”

    “I won’t,” Thunorric soothed. “Not unless I have to.”

    Dægan leaned ahead, voice low and dangerous.

    “If you take that poison now, I’ll drag you back from Hel myself.”

    Thunorric smirked faintly.
    “That’s the spirit.”

    But the boy in the doorway whispered:

    “They brought the king’s hunter.”

    Silence.
    True silence.

    Leofric paled. “The one with the wolf-banner?”

    “Aye.”

    Thunorric stood, rolling his shoulders.

    “So,” he said softly. “The king wants a show.”

    He looked at his sons their fear, their love, their desperate hope.

    He nodded once.

    “Right then,” he said. “Meal’s over.”

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        Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

        The Chronicles of Drax

        Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

        Chronicles of Draven

        © 2025 Emma Hewitt StormborneLore. The characters, stories, names, and world-building elements of the Stormborne Saga are original works.

        This includes Thunorric, Dægan, Leofric, the Black Shields, and all associated lore. They are owned exclusively by the author. Unauthorised copying, reposting, distribution, or adaptation of this content is strictly prohibited without written permission.

      1. After the Burning

        After the Burning

        Chronicles of Taranis / Thunorric Stormwulf
        © 2025 E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts

        The burning of the church was a sunrise to everyone who saw it. But to Thunorric, it was the opportunity he needed.
        In the confusion, he slipped the chains placed on him by the Sheriff of Tamworth. Then rode straight toward the shire of his birth. He was fully aware that he would now be hunted by the king’s riders. The Church, and any thief who wanted coin badly enough.

        His only hope for shelter was Rægenwine’s inn though even family can not be trusted. He never thought he would rely again on the man who betrayed him to the Romans. Then the man also betrayed him to the sheriff.

        He halted his horse on a green hilltop. Morning light poured through the trees, bathing the grass in gold.

        “War,” he murmured to the black stallion he’d stolen from a lord near Tettenhall Wood. “It’s going to be a wonderful day.”

        He urged the horse into Cannock Woods and vanished beneath the canopy.

        The Hunter in the Trees

        “Where there’s war, riot, and discord,” he muttered, “I’ll be front flank for all to see.”

        He found a small nook between the trees and dismounted, letting the stallion graze. The soft tread of his boots calmed him. A thin stream whispered nearby.

        He picked up a thick branch and began carving it into a weapon sharpening one end. Crossing another and moved quietly through the autumn leaves. When he spotted a deer drinking at the stream, a few swift blows brought the animal down. Soon a fire crackled beneath a great oak, and he began preparing the meat.

        “Cooked venison for now,” he said to himself, “and dried meat for days.”

        As he ate, he watched the woods for soldiers.

        His mind drifted to his brothers Dægan, Leofric, Eadric, and Rægenwine and to the nobles of Mercia and Wessex. All of whom would now curse his name. Demon. Devil. Stormwulf. Escaped again.

        He pictured the sheriff: a man of fifty, muscular and loud, barking orders with more anger than sense. Thunorric chuckled at the thought.

        But when he thought of his thirteen sons, his smile faded.
        The oldest five were old enough to serve. He’d given them his blessing.
        But the younger ones… they would have questions. Questions his brothers might not answer.

        The ache in his chest was sharper than any blade.

        Yet he was a wanted man a demon to the Church, a criminal to the king. After years of taking from the rich to feed villages starved by unfair taxes. He had earned little but their fear.

        The Black Shields his hidden movement would continue without him. They always had.

        He breathed in the scent of sweet leaves, wet earth, fungi, and old wood. All of which was fresher than the damp stinking cell the monks had held him in.

        He slept for a few hours. When he woke, dusk pressed against the trees.

        The Crossroads

        He mounted the stallion, wrapped a cloth over his face, and rode toward the crossroads. Where he had robbed the king’s carriages many times before.

        He spotted one now four horses, armed guards, and a noble family inside.

        Perfect.

        Thunorric burst from the treeline like a wolf, blade ready.
        The drivers panicked. One tried to lift a horn, but Thunorric struck first.

        He stabbed the driver in the arm and seized the reins, forcing the horses to halt.

        “Out. Yow get,” he barked.

        A beautiful lady froze as he pressed his blade to her neck.

        “Everything you’ve got. Hurry, or she dies.”

        “You can’t do this!” the older man shouted. “Do you know who I am?!”

        “Aye,” Thunorric said calmly. “But I don’t care. Give me what I want and live or I take it off your corpse.”

        “It’s him,” whispered one of the sons. “The demon.”

        In minutes, Thunorric had their clothes, weapons, and coin. He tied one of their horses to his saddle.

        “I’ll be kind,” he said with a smirk. “I’m only taking one.”

        As he rode away, the noble roared:

        “The king and the sheriff will hear of this!”

        Thunorric laughed.

        “Tell ’em the devil said vilis.”

        He galloped toward Moel-Bryn, changed into the stolen clothes, burned his old rags, cooked fresh meat. Then travelled through wind and rain toward Worcester.

        The Boy on the Road

        Just outside the city, a young man leapt from the shadows tall, muscular, dark-skinned, no more than sixteen winters old.

        “No one else here,” Thunorric said. “Just the Wolf of Rome. Alaric. Good to see your face. Any news?”

        “Plenty.” The boy’s Yorkshire accent was thick. “Your reward’s huge now. You’re declared outlaw.”

        “So?” Thunorric shifted his stance. “You going to take me down?”

        “Oh hell no.” Alaric snorted. “You’re the demon now. Staffordshire demon, some say Mercia demon. Others say death won’t let you rest. And besides I owe you my life. Figured if I warned you, debt’s paid?”

        Thunorric nodded once. “Debt paid. Thank you.”

        “May the gods be on your side,” Alaric called as Thunorric rode on.

        He reached his old home, washed, rested briefly, then rode west toward the Welsh border. Enough coin in his pocket to reach Spain if needed.

        Meanwhile at court, the half-naked noble boy from the robbed carriage arrived with his family. Guards tried not to chuckle.

        “Well then,” the king said, approaching, “dare I ask what happened?”

        “The demon,” the lord spat. “He stole everything and killed our driver.”

        Tamworth’s great hall echoed with uproar long before sunrise. Smoke curled along the rafters. The sheriff knelt before King Coenwulf, mud on his boots, throat bandaged.

        “The creature escaped your custody,” the king growled. “You let him burn an abbey and now he humiliates one of my lords.”

        “My lord… the storm”

        “The storm does not shatter bell towers,” Coenwulf snapped. “Men do.”

        “What do they call him now?”

        “Stormwulf, sire. Some say the Staffordshire demon. The Mercia demon.”

        Whispers spread. Hard men crossed themselves.

        Coenwulf did not.

        “Then let him be hunted,” he said. “Anyone who shelters him dies beside him. Anyone who brings me his head receives land, silver, and title.”

        He nodded to the scribe.

        “Write.”

        The vellum unfurled.

        “Let it be known throughout Mercia and the borderlands that Thunorric, called Stormwulf. outlaw and murderer, stands beyond the law of crown and Church.
        Taken dead or alive.
        Reward: one purse of gold for his body, two for his head.”

        A scarred hunter stepped forward.

        “I’ll bring your demon in chains.”

        Coenwulf nodded once.

        The hunt began.

        The Inn at the Border

        Thunorric crossed the last ridge before the Welsh border as dusk bled into the trees. The air tasted of rain and smoke.

        He approached the inn wedged between two standing stones. His brother Rægenwine’s inn the same man who had betrayed him twice.


        But Thunorric couldn’t blame him. The man had believed he was protecting the children.

        He tied the horse beneath the oak and stepped inside.

        Every sound died instantly.
        Tankards stopped in mid-air. Dice froze. The bard’s string snapped.

        “I’m not here for trouble,” Thunorric said, walking to the bar.

        Rægenwine looked up colour draining from his face.

        Thunorric lifted his hood just enough for the firelight to catch his eyes.

        “Rægenwine,” he said softly. “You’re forgiven.”

        “I… I didn’t expect that,” Rægenwine whispered.

        “Aye, well.” Thunorric stepped closer. “Don’t mistake forgiveness for trust.”

        “You have every right to hate me,” Rægenwine murmured.

        “I don’t hate you,” Thunorric said. “You did what you thought was right. Rome tricked you. They tricked many. But betrayal has a weight and you’ve paid more of it than you know.”

        Rægenwine swallowed. “You came back. That must mean something.”

        “It means the roads are crawling with hunters,” Thunorric said. “King’s men. Church men. Thieves hungry for silver. And I needed shelter only for an hour.”

        “You’ll have it,” Rægenwine promised. “I’ll turn away anyone who asks.”

        Thunorric’s smile was thin and dangerous.

        “If I wanted you dead, brother… you wouldn’t hear the door open.”

        Rægenwine bowed his head. “I’m sorry. I was only trying to keep the children safe.”

        Thunorric exhaled. “Good. Now pour me a drink. The storm’s on my heels.”

        Rægenwine hurried, hands trembling.

        Thunorric turned to the Black Shields behind him.

        “Look after this inn,” he murmured. “And his family in my absence.”

        Just as the ale touched his hand, the door opened.

        Cold air.
        Wet leaves.
        Heavy, familiar footsteps.

        The Brothers Arrive

        Dægan and Leofric stepped inside.

        The inn froze again.

        Dægan tall, broad-shouldered, cloak the colour of storm-clouds, bearing the king’s mark.
        Leofric leaner, ink-stained hands, eyes like old winter, a scribe and warlock whose words carried as much weight as steel.

        Rægenwine bowed. “My lords… I didn’t know you were coming.”

        “You didn’t need to,” Dægan said calmly. “Where is he?”

        Leofric’s gaze drifted toward the back tables.

        “No need,” he murmured. “He’s here.”

        Dægan spotted him with the Black Shields.

        Thunorric didn’t turn.
        Didn’t flinch.
        Didn’t pause.

        “…and if you reach the ford by nightfall,” he said to the Shields, “light no fire. The hunters have dogs.”

        One Shield swallowed. “Wolf… your brothers”

        “I know,” Thunorric said. “I heard them the moment they stepped in.”

        He finally turned, smirking beneath his hood.

        “Well then,” he drawled, “if it ain’t the golden sons of Mercia.”

        Dægan stepped forward. “Brother, we need to talk.”

        Thunorric’s eyes gleamed.

        “About which part? The abbey burning? The king’s writ? Or the price on my head?”

        Leofric’s jaw tightened. “All of it. You’ve started a storm bigger than you realise.”

        Thunorric smiled slow and wolfish.

        “I didn’t start the darkest of storms,” he said.
        “I am the darkest of storms. Devourer of souls. Destruction at the end. Death and resurrection.”

        And the inn went silent the silence that comes before something breaks.

        ©2025 E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts. All Rights Reserved.This work, including all characters, settings, lore, concepts, and text, is the original creation of E. L. Hewitt. No portion of this material may be reproduced, shared, reposted, copied, adapted, or distributed in any form. without prior written permission from the author.Unauthorized use, including AI reproduction of this text, is strictly prohibited.

        To read more on Taranis /Thunoric please see The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

      2. Drax Stormborne The Iron Law

        Drax Stormborne The Iron Law

        Where Taranis is the storm,
        Drax is the stone that stands against it.

        He is the brother who holds the line,
        who builds the wall. Who refuses to bend even when the world does.

        Drax does not raise his voice.
        He does not need to.

        Order gathers around him.
        People follow him without understanding why.
        He is the structure that holds chaos back from devouring everything.

        Identity & Role

        Archetype: The Law / The Shield / The Foundation

        What he symbolizes: Structure and justice

        His purpose: To keep balance when the world fractures

        His burden: To stay steady, even when it costs him his heart

        Drax is not the hero in stories.
        He is the reason stories do not end in ruin.

        Strengths

        Unshakeable discipline

        Sharp strategic mind

        The ability to command through presence alone

        A deep instinct for justice, fairness, and responsibility

        When battles break, men look for Taranis.
        When kingdoms break, they look for Drax.

        Wound

        There is a weight to being the one who holds everything together.

        Drax watches people he protects:

        Betray themselves

        Destroy what they’ve built

        Choose chaos over peace

        He sees the worst of human nature and still stands guard.

        His tragedy is simple:

        He can’t save everyone.
        But he tries anyway.

        This is why he does not smile often.

        Whispers Across History

        Drax is not remembered in songs.
        He is remembered in:

        Law codes no one knows the author of

        Fortified walls that should not have held

        Villages that somehow survived raids untouched

        Court records where a “quiet advisor” influenced kings

        He has stood as:

        A commander of Roman cohorts

        A border warden in the Dark Ages

        An advisor to English lords

        A sheriff, judge, and peacekeeper

        A detective in the early industrial cities

        And later, a founder of something hidden

        Where order needed restoring, Drax appeared.
        Then vanished when the work was done.

        How Others Speak of Him

        “He is not kind, but he is fair.”

        “If you are innocent, stand behind him.
        If you are guilty, run.”

        “The world holds because he holds it.”

        This Is Only the Beginning

        Drax’s path crosses:

        Crowns

        Courts

        Armies

        Rebellions

        And the silent spaces between wars

        His story is not written in history books.
        It is etched into the way the world still works.

        But the full tale is not told here.

        © 2025 E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts. All rights reserved.
        Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this artwork and text is prohibited.

        Thank you for reading.

        If you enjoyed this story, like, share, or leave a comment. Your support keeps the storm alive and the chronicles continuing.

        To read more about Drax see The Chronicles of Drax

        To learn about his brothers Character Profiles

      3. Taranis Stormborne The Storm

        Taranis Stormborne The Storm

        There are some men who are born to stand with kings. There are some who are born to stand against them.

        Taranis Stormborne was born to be the storm that breaks empires.

        He is the brother who takes the front line, who holds the shield, who rises when others fall.


        He carries the old fire of the tribes the wild courage of a world that refuses to surrender.

        He has walked through ages of blood and frost. He has seen kingdoms rise and collapse into dust. He has fought under a hundred banners, yet swears loyalty to none.

        Because Taranis does not protect rulers.

        He protects people.

        Identity & Role

        Archetype: The Blade / The Storm / The Protector

        What he stands for: Courage, defiance, resistance

        His purpose: To stand where others can’t

        His burden: He feels every loss. Even after centuries, he remembers every face.

        Taranis is not a hero — he is the cost of heroism.

        Strengths

        Unbreakable will

        Fierce loyalty to those who can’t defend themselves

        Instinctive battlefield intuition

        The ability to endure and return when others would break

        Wound

        He can save many but never enough.
        He carries grief the way others carry scars.

        No matter what age he walks through, war finds him. Or, he is what war is searching for.

        Whispers Across History

        Taranis is never officially recorded but his shadow is.

        There are stories of:

        The lone warrior who held a bridge against an army and vanished into the woods.

        The man in the Perry Woods who supplied gunpowder to rebels and walked away unseen.

        The shieldwall breaker whose roar turned battles.

        The wandering guardian who frees the enslaved and disappears before dawn.

        The soldier who dies, and then is seen again years later unchanged.

        Sometimes he is called a king.
        Sometimes a demon.
        Sometimes a ghost.

        But he is always Stormborne.

        How Others Speak of Him

        “When the world is burning, look for the thunder.
        He will be there.”

        “He does not lead armies.
        He ignites them.”

        “If you hear the storm, it is already too late to run.”

        This Is Only the Beginning

        Taranis’s story is not told in a single lifetime.
        or a single kingdom
        or a single war.

        His path crosses:

        empires,

        rebellions,

        oceans,

        and centuries.

        But those stories are not kept here.

        They are found in the fragments
        the tales, the memories, the scars, the songs,
        scattered across StormborneLore.

        Piece by piece.
        Age by age.
        Storm by storm.

        © 2025 E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts. All rights reserved.
        Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this artwork and text is prohibited.

        Thank you for reading.

        If you enjoyed this story, like, share, or leave a comment. Your support keeps the storm alive and the chronicles continuing.

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

      4. Blood and Oath

        Blood and Oath

        The sun stood high as Praefect Drax Stormborne lingered beside the fire, cloak folded tight against a thin breeze.

        “Hello, brother,” a teen voice said, and Drax’s hand went to the hilt of his sword before he turned.

        “Taranis, show yourself now,” he said, keeping his tone even.

        “Why? So you can look at me and scowl?” Taranis’s voice came from the trees. “I’m fine here, where you can’t see me but I can see you. I see you have children now, and you look smart in the Roman uniform of their law-men.”

        “You acknowledge that, brother?” Drax asked, eyes narrowing.

        “I acknowledge,” Taranis replied, stepping from the shade with a faint smile. “but I do not bow not to you, my liege, nor to your Roman overlords. We all do what we must to survive.” He paused, then added, quieter, “But try anything and I’ll snap your men like twigs.”

        A small boy tugged at Drax’s sleeve. “Father, who is he?” the child asked.

        “Is he a barbarian, father?” another eight-year-old whispered, peering toward the tree-line.

        “Julius that’s our uncle Taranis?” a smirking boy offered. “The legendary gladiator Lupus… wasn’t he exiled?”

        Drax let the questions run off him like rain. He studied Taranis as if measuring a blade. Blood and oath pulled between them one brother in Roman order, the other a storm wearing man’s skin.

        The campfire crackled, throwing sparks into the brittle afternoon air. For a heartbeat, the world held its breath two brothers standing on opposite shores of the same river.

        Taranis tilted his head slightly, the ghost of a smile curving his lips.
        “Exiled, yes,” he said softly. “But storms don’t vanish, brother. They wait for the right sky.”

        Drax said nothing. His men shifted uneasily, hands brushing spear shafts, glancing between the prefect and the outlaw.

        “You shouldn’t have come,” Drax murmured finally. “Rome watches even the wind that bends near me.”

        “I’m not here for Rome,” Taranis replied,. his gaze flicking toward the boys proud, uncertain, wearing their father’s steel in miniature. “I came to see what became of the man I once followed into the fire.”

        “You followed because you had no choice,” Drax snapped, voice sharp enough to cut the air.
        “And you bowed because you wanted one,” Taranis countered.

        Silence fell again. The forest around them seemed to lean closer, listening.

        Julius, the youngest, tugged at Drax’s sleeve.

        “Father… he doesn’t look like a villain,” the boy whispered.
        “No,” said Drax quietly, eyes still locked on Taranis. “That’s what makes him dangerous.”

        Taranis laughed then, low and bitter. “Dangerous? I bled for this land before Rome knew its name. If danger is survival, then yes I am a danger.”

        A faint roll of thunder trembled beyond the horizon. Both men turned toward it, instinctively.

        “Storm’s coming,” said one of Drax’s soldiers.

        Taranis met his brother’s eyes one last time.
        “No, soldier,” he said, voice like wind through iron. “The storm’s already here.”

        He vanished into the trees before anyone move. leaving only the fading echo of his words and the scent of rain.

        Drax stood long after he was gone, until his eldest spoke softly:
        “Will we see him again, Father?”

        Drax’s jaw tightened. “If the gods have mercy or none at all.”

        The thunder answered for him.

        Julius started to run after his uncle.

        “No, child,” Drax called, voice tight.

        Taranis turned, the stormlight catching on the scars that crossed his jaw. He knelt so his eyes met the boy’s.
        “Your place is with your father,” he said softly. “He’s a good, honourable man.”

        Julius frowned. “How did you get off the island?”

        Taranis’s mouth twitched into a smirk. “I built a boat.”

        He rose, cloak stirring in the wind as thunder growled again in the distance.
        “Remember that, boy when the world cages you, build your own way out.”

        Then he was gone once more, the forest swallowing him whole.

        Drax stood in silence, watching the trees sway. His men busied themselves with meaningless tasks tightening straps, banking the fire anything to avoid the weight in the air.

        The prefect’s eyes lingered on the path his brother had taken.
        “Stormborne,” he murmured, the name a curse and a prayer all at once.

        Above them, the first drops of rain began to fall.

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        Futher reading

        The Chronicles of Drax

        The tales of Rayne

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

        The Keeper of Cairnstones: Myths and Mysteries Revealed

      5. The Chains of Emberhelm

        The Chains of Emberhelm

        The dawn was cold, a thin veil of mist curling over the ramparts of the Roman fort. Taranis awoke to the metallic tang of iron and the distant clang of the blacksmith’s hammer.

        His chains clinked softly as he shifted. The cold biting into bruised wrists, but the fire in his chest remained unbroken. He had learned to sleep with storms in his mind; the thunder never ceased, even when the sky cleared.

        The sentries passed with measured steps, their eyes avoiding his. Even in chains, Taranis carried the weight of warning: a storm was bound, not broken.

        Marcos stirred beside him, shoulders tense with age and pain.
        “They move you today,” he muttered, voice low. “Legionaries say they march prisoners to the amphitheatre. Another show… or training for others. Rome’s curiosity is insatiable.”

        Taranis flexed his wrists against the iron, listening to the rhythm of the camp. The clatter of swords, the measured steps of patrols. The faint murmur of Latin all part of the pulse of this cage. He did not fear. He calculated.

        The centurion arrived just as the morning sun began to pierce the mist. A figure of red and bronze framed against the wooden palisade.


        “Stormborne,” he said, voice sharp, “prepare to march. Rome watches, and your survival is… optional.”

        Taranis rose slowly, chains rattling in protest.

        “Optional,” he echoed, smirk tugging at his lips, “like the wind choosing which trees to break.”

        The march was silent, the prisoners lined in pairs, shields clinking and armor scraping. Taranis felt the eyes of the Romans on him, not all hostile.

        The Curiosity and caution blended in the same gaze. Word had spread of his defiance surviving crucifixion. But unyielding under whip and sword and whispers of the “Storm of Emberhelm” made even hardened legionaries pause.

        They crossed the outer hills and entered the amphitheatre grounds. Dust rose from the packed earth, carrying the scent of sweat, straw, and fear. The arena awaited not yet for combat, but for demonstration, for Rome’s fascination with endurance.

        Taranis’ chains were secured to a central post. Around him, other prisoners fidgeted and whispered. He noticed the boy from the march days ago. A little child of six years old hiding behind a stack of crates, pale fingers gripping a fragment of bread. Their eyes met, and Taranis gave a faint nod not reassurance, not command, just acknowledgment.

        A guard stepped forward, coiling a whip in his hand. “Today, we measure the storm,” he said in Latin, the words sharp as steel. “Let us see if the barbarian bends to Rome.”

        Taranis let the chains pull taut, shoulders braced. “Storms bend only to themselves,” he whispered, almost to the wind.

        The first demonstration began. Spears and short swords were thrust toward him, each movement designed to test, to gauge. Taranis shifted with the grace of the hunted and the hunter intertwined. As he continues deflecting, twisting, and using the very pull of the chains to redirect momentum.

        Every strike met resistance, every thrust was countered. The audience of soldiers murmured in disbelief.

        Marcos watched from the side, leaning heavily on his staff. “Still untamed,” he muttered. “Still Emberhelm.”

        The sun climbed, and with it, Taranis’ endurance was tested further. Roman instructors pressed harder, pushing his limits, yet he remained unmoved, his grey eyes sharp as lightning.

        When at last the centurion called an end, sweat streaming and blood staining the mud, Taranis did not collapse.

        He simply lowered his gaze, catching a brief glimpse of the distant hills beyond the fort. Freedom waited there, somewhere beyond chains and Roman order.

        As the prisoners were herded back to their quarters, Taranis’ mind raced. Rome could cage him, whip him, measure his endurance, but it could not touch the storm in his heart. The pulse of Emberhelm beat in every step, every breath, every thought of revenge, strategy, and survival.

        That night, as firelight danced across the walls of the fort and the whistle of wind through battlements echoed like distant thunder, Taranis sat, chained but unbroken, and whispered to himself:

        “Let Rome watch. Let them wait. Storms do not obey. Storms endure. And storms return.”

        Night in the Roman fort was never truly silent. Even beneath the canopy of stars, there was always the creak of timber. The shuffle of soldiers on watch, the hiss of oil lamps dying in the cold wind. Yet somewhere beyond that human rhythm, another sound pulsed faint, rhythmic, like the heartbeat of the land itself.

        Taranis listened.

        He had learned to hear through walls of stone and iron. The whispers of chains, the breath of the wind through narrow slits.All were messages if one knew how to listen.

        Marcos stirred nearby, groaning as he rolled against the rough bedding. “You hear it again,” he murmured, voice barely a rasp. “The storm that waits?”

        Taranis’ eyes were half-shut, the dim firelight carving hollows beneath his cheekbones. “The storm doesn’t wait,” he said softly. “It watches.”

        He turned the small iron shackle at his wrist, feeling for the weak link not yet ready, but close. Every night he tested it. Every day, he marked the rhythm of the guards, the rotation of their watch. Patience, he reminded himself. Storms struck only when the wind was right.

        Beyond the barracks, the faint roar of the sea carried inland. Somewhere past those black waters lay the route to Gaul and beyond that, Rome. The thought of being caged beneath marble arches made his blood run colder than the chains.

        The door creaked open.
        A shadow slipped inside small, quick, hesitant. The boy from the arena. He carried a satchel and a half-broken torch.

        “They’ll see you,” Marcos hissed.

        The boy shook his head. “The north wall guard sleeps. He drinks too much. I brought you this.” From the satchel, he pulled a narrow blade no longer than a hand, its edge dulled but serviceable.

        Taranis took it without a word, his fingers brushing the boy’s for a heartbeat. “Why?” he asked.

        The boy’s voice trembled. “Because you didn’t kill me when they told you to. Because the others they say you were a king once.”

        Taranis looked up then, eyes grey as frost. “A king?” He almost smiled. “No. A storm given form. And Rome can chain storms, but it can not make them serve.”

        The boy swallowed, uncertain whether to fear or believe him. “Then what will you do?”

        Taranis turned the blade in his hand, the firelight glinting off the iron. “Wait,” he said. “And remember.”

        He hid the weapon within the straw bedding, marking its place with a small twist of rope. Then he looked toward the sliver of moonlight cutting across the dirt floor. A thought of home of the high ridges above Emberhelm, of his brothers’ faces fading in memory. Rayne’s eyes full of guilt. Drax’s silence. Draven’s quiet grief.

        He did not hate them. Not yet. But the distance between them had become as sharp as any blade.

        When dawn came, the fort stirred again the horns of the morning watch echoing across the fields. The centurion approached, flanked by two guards.


        “Stormborne,” he said, voice cold. “The governor himself has taken interest. You are to be moved south to Londinium within a fortnight.”

        Taranis met his gaze. “To be paraded, then? Or displayed?”

        The centurion smiled faintly. “Displayed, perhaps. Studied, certainly. Rome values curiosities.”

        Taranis’ jaw tightened, but his eyes betrayed nothing. Inside, the storm turned once more.

        He whispered beneath his breath, too low for the Romans to hear:

        As the guards led him from the barracks. He caught a glimpse of the horizon low clouds gathering over the hills, rolling in from the west. It was almost poetic.

        “Emberhelm still breathes.”

        That night, the chains whispered again not with fear, but with promise. The weak link shuddered beneath his fingers.
        And when the next storm broke over Viroconium, it would not be made of rain.

        It would be made of iron.

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        FURTHER READING

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

      6. The Iron Silence

        The Iron Silence

        The march south had stripped the world of meaning.
        Days blurred into rain and dust, dawn into dusk, until even time seemed shackled beside him.


        By the time they reached the Roman fort near Corinium, Taranis Storm no longer knew how many nights had passed.

        Only the rhythm of iron and boots. The murmur of Latin commands, and the distant echo of thunder in his bones.

        The fort loomed ahead stone and order built upon the bones of chaos.
        Walls cut sharp against the grey horizon, guarded by rows of pikes and men who moved like clockwork.
        To Taranis, it felt wrong. A place without wind, without life.

        Every sound was contained, controlled, sterile.
        Even the air smelled of discipline oil, smoke, and iron.

        The storm in him recoiled.

        They dragged him through the gates in chains. Soldiers gathered, curious and cautious. Some spat, others stared.
        Whispers followed him like ghosts daemon, barbarus, filius tempestatis.
        Son of the storm.

        He smiled faintly. They weren’t wrong.

        The cell they threw him into was little more than a pit of stone and shadow. The walls sweated damp, the floor slick with moss.


        Above, a slit of light cut through the dark too narrow to touch the ground.
        He sat in the half-dark, wrists raw and heavy with iron. The silence of Rome pressed close, cold and absolute.

        He did not pray.
        He waited.

        When the footsteps came, they came as they always did measured, deliberate, Roman.
        The door creaked open, spilling lamplight like a wound across the floor.

        Three entered.

        A centurion, broad and cold-eyed, his crimson cloak pristine even in the grime.
        A scribe, pale and thin, clutching a wax tablet as if it were a shield.


        And a woman cloaked, silent, her gaze as sharp as a blade. Her presence was wrong for this place; too poised, too knowing.

        “Taranis of the Stormborne,” the centurion began, voice clipped and ceremonial.

        “You stand accused of rebellion against Rome. The murder of imperial soldiers, and the disruption of trade along the Salt Road. Do you understand these charges?”

        Taranis raised his head. His hair hung in dark, tangled strands, but his eyes were steady the colour of gathering thunder.


        “I understand,” he said. “You’re afraid.”

        The scribe faltered mid-stroke. The centurion’s jaw tensed.
        Only the woman’s expression remained still.

        “You will answer with respect,” the Roman said.

        “I already have.”

        The blow came fast a strike across the face that turned his head with the sound of split skin.


        Taranis straightened slowly, blood sliding from the corner of his mouth.
        His stare did not break.

        The silence that followed was heavier than the hit.

        The woman stepped forward. When she spoke, her accent carried the soft inflection of the East Greek, or something older.


        “You fought well,” she said. “Even Rome admits that. There are ways to survive this. Serve us. Lead men under our banner. Take Roman land, a Roman name. You need only kneel.”

        Taranis smiled faintly, the expression more weary than cruel.


        “Rome offers gold to every man it fears. But my kind do not kneel. We weather.”

        She tilted her head slightly. “Weather breaks.”

        He met her eyes. “Only if it stops moving.”

        For the first time, something flickered in her expression curiosity, maybe even a trace of respect.


        The centurion, however, had no such patience. “Enough. He will be moved south to Londinium in three days. If he refuses Rome’s mercy, he will die as a slave.”

        The woman’s gaze lingered on him a moment longer before she turned away. “He won’t bend,” she said quietly. “Not yet.”

        They left him in the dark once more. The door slammed shut. The iron bolts fell into place.

        Taranis exhaled slowly. The air was thick with the scent of blood and damp stone.


        He tasted iron on his tongue metal, blood, defiance.


        The light from above had shifted again, sliding across the wall like the movement of time itself.

        He whispered, barely a sound.
        Not to gods, nor ghosts, but to the storm that still lived within his chest.
        It was quiet now, resting waiting.
        But it would come again.
        It always did.

        When the night settled deep, the sound of rain returned, gentle against the stones.


        In that rhythm, he found memory of his brothers’ faces in the torchlight. Drax’s steady eyes, Rayne’s trembling defiance, Draven’s silence.
        He had told them he would return.
        He intended to keep that promise.

        The fort around him slept in its illusion of control.


        But beyond the walls, clouds were gathering over the hills slow, patient, inevitable.

        The storm was not gone.
        Only waiting.

        © 2025 Emma Hewitt / StormborneLore. All rights reserved.Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this content is prohibited.

        If you enjoyed this story, like, share, or leave a comment. Your support keeps the storm alive and the chronicles continuing.

        Further Reading

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

      7. The Breaking of the Circle

        The Breaking of the Circle

        The rain had thinned to a whisper, though the earth still drank its memory. The camp at Viroconium lay beneath a pall of grey the banners limp. The fires low, the air thick with the scent of wet iron and trampled earth.

        From the timber walls came the faint murmur of Latin, measured and precise, a language of order wrapped around conquest.

        Taranis Storm knelt in the mud outside the command tent, wrists chained, head bowed. The iron bit deep, the skin at his wrists raw and darkened with rust and blood.

        The mark of the Stormborne ring had already been scrubbed from his armour. He was no longer heir, no longer rebel merely a trophy of Rome.

        But even stripped bare, even silent, there was something in his stillness that unsettled the soldiers. Some swore the air shifted around him, that the faint tremor of thunder haunted the edges of his breath.

        Others avoided his gaze altogether, crossing themselves as they passed. A man broken should not look like that unyielding even in ruin.

        Inside the tent, the light was dim, filtered through canvas streaked with rain. The scent of oil lamps mingled with the metallic tang of blood. He had been made to wait hours, until the flap stirred, and three shadows crossed the threshold.

        Drax came first.

        Older now, heavier in both body and soul. The broad shoulders that had once carried their people’s trust. Now bore the eagle of Rome, its gold thread dull in the half-light. He paused by the entrance, rain dripping from his cloak, his eyes lingering on Taranis longer than words fill.

        Behind him, Rayne entered, slower. His face was pale with sleeplessness, the hollows beneath his eyes deepening the cold fire in his gaze. He did not meet Taranis’s eyes. The torchlight caught the edges of his features sharp, beautiful, worn.

        Draven followed last. He moved like a shadow quiet, deliberate, almost ghost like. His cloak brushed the ground, damp from the mist outside. When his eyes lifted, they carried both sorrow and warning.

        No one spoke at first. The silence was a living thing, heavy and raw, pressing between them like the weight of the storm itself.

        Then, slowly, Taranis lifted his head. The light touched his face. Revealing the dark bruises along his jaw. The faint smear of dried blood across his temple and eyes. Eyes that still burned with the calm fury of the storm.

        “Brother,” he rasped, voice rough but steady. “Have you come to finish what Rome began?”

        Rayne’s jaw tightened. “I came to make sure you lived.”

        “Lived?” A hollow laugh escaped him no warmth, no humour. “They’ll march me south in chains, Rayne. You traded the Circle for a collar. Don’t pretend it was mercy.”

        Drax’s tone was even, but heavy. “Enough. You both know what’s done can’t be undone. I took the oath so the rest of us survive. So that our kin would not hang from Roman walls.”

        “And what of honour?” Taranis’s gaze snapped to him. “Or do we trade that too for a few more winters of peace and a Roman coin to buy it?”

        Draven shifted in the corner. “Peace doesn’t last, brother. It only changes its face.”

        Rayne’s voice cracked through the air, sharp as the wind. “You think I wanted this? You think I didn’t bleed the same as you when the Circle broke? I saw no victory left to take I chose survival!”

        “You chose fear,” Taranis said softly. “And fear has a longer memory than Rome. It will rot what’s left of you.”

        Rayne turned away, jaw clenched, the lamplight trembling against his cheek. “You’d have doomed us all for pride.”

        “And you’d damn us for obedience,” Taranis countered.

        The space between them trembled with tension brothers bound by blood and broken by choice.

        Drax broke it first, his breath slow, his tone heavy with command. “They take you south tomorrow. I can do nothing more without risking every name tied to ours. Whatever happens after this live. Find your chance.”

        Taranis’s lips curved, a ghost of the old stormborn grin. “I will. And when I do…” His eyes rose, burning through the gloom. “I’ll remember who stood, and who knelt.”

        For a heartbeat, no one moved. Only the rain, soft and relentless, filled the quiet between them.

        Draven looked away first, eyes glinting with something close to grief. Drax’s shoulders sagged, his silence an admission. Rayne lingered his hand hovering at the tent’s edge, uncertain, trembling.

        “Taranis…” he began.

        “Go,” came the answer, quiet but final. “Before you remember what it means to be one of us.”

        But as Rayne turned to leave, Taranis’s voice cut through the rain again lower, heavier, carrying the weight of prophecy.
        “You know what you’ve done, brother. You’ve condemned the poor those I sheltered, the villages I defended. Rome will use your choice to bleed them dry.”

        His gaze flicked to Drax, then Draven. “Do what you must to live in my absence. Keep them safe if you can. But remember this the storm doesn’t die. It only learns patience.”

        The words hung in the air like thunder before the break.

        Rayne hesitated, his throat tight with something between guilt and defiance. “If you live to see freedom, Taranis… will you forgive me?”

        Taranis met his eyes grey meeting grey — and said nothing.

        Outside, a trumpet sounded the signal for the night watch. The guards were coming.

        The brothers turned, one by one, each carrying their silence like a wound.

        Drax’s heavy boots faded first. Draven followed, his steps ghost like. Rayne lingered, then vanished into the rain.

        Alone again, Taranis knelt in the mud and closed his eyes. The iron dug deep, but his breath was steady. The storm was not gone merely waiting beyond the hills, patient and unseen.

        And somewhere, far to the south, Rome’s banners rippled in the wind ready to claim the storm for themselves.

        © 2025 Emma Hewitt / StormborneLore. All rights reserved.Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this content is prohibited.If you enjoyed this story, like, share, or leave a comment. Your support keeps the storm alive and the chronicles continuing.

        Further Reading

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

      8. Emberhelm: A Night of Brotherhood and Secrets

        Emberhelm: A Night of Brotherhood and Secrets


        By the fire at Emberhelm, the night before the ley lines awakened

        We drank not for glory,
        but for breath.
        For blood that still ran,
        and brothers not yet turned to ash.

        No crown weighed our heads that night.
        No blade hung between us.
        Only silence,
        and the crackle of wood older than war.

        Lore sat still
        eyes on the shadow that never left his side.
        Drax, hands calloused,
        held the storm like a sleeping child.
        Draven, scar-bound, leaned on root and stone.
        Rayne, half-light, watched the stars as if to ask
        if they would wait for him to rise.

        And I,
        I ….
        who had been all things and nothing
        looked at them not as soldiers,
        but as home.

        We did not speak of battles.
        We did not weep for lost years.
        We passed the bread.
        We tore the fish.
        We shared warmth not made of fire.

        And before the parting,
        we carved no words.
        For there are some truths
        that can’t be spoken
        without breaking.

        Thank you for reading

        Futher Reading

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

        The Chronicles of Drax

        Chronicles of Draven

        Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

        Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

      9. The Houses of Caernath Part 7

        The Houses of Caernath Part 7

        The Fifth Flame

        The stone circle of Emberhelm stood silent under the pale light of morning., five cairnstones glowing faintly in their ancient places. The air shimmered with a stillness that only came before something eternal was spoken.

        Taranis Stormborne, cloaked in black and silver. stepped ahead to the first cairn the one carved with roots and mountains, circled in white ochre. He turned to face the gathered warriors, wolves, and wanderers.

        “Before the dragons flew,” he said, “before the wolves howled, there were five lines of fire. We knew only three. But today, we remember them all.”

        He turned to Draven, who stepped ahead slowly, still favouring his side.

        “Brother you bled for us. You survived what none should have. You guarded the line even when no one knew it was there.”

        Taranis drew a shard of stone from the cairn itself. Then handed it to Draven, and placed a firm hand on his shoulder.

        “By the weight of the earth and the strength of the mountain, I name you Lord of Terra.”

        A cheer rose from the crowd, led by the wolves, then echoed by the dragons above. Draven bowed not to Taranis, but to the people.

        Taranis turned then, slowly, toward the fifth cairn the one none had touched in generations. It bore a sunmark, and a spiral, and a cut across its base. where an old flame once split the stone.

        Beside it stood Rayne, straight-backed now, though his eyes still bore the shadow of the collar. And beside him stood Tirena, a woman of stone and flame, silent and radiant. With one hand resting lightly on the hilt of her sun-marked blade.

        Taranis paused before speaking not as a warlord, but as a brother.

        “Rayne. We lost you once. You were chained, beaten, turned into a whisper. But you came back. And with you came fire not born of wrath, but of forgiveness.”

        “Yet even flame must have form. And no one guards the flame better than the one who sees in silence.”

        He turned to Tirena.

        “Knight of Lumen, daughter of the dawn do you stand beside him of your own will?”

        Tirena gave a single nod, her voice soft and fierce.

        “I do. Not for crown. For cause.”

        Taranis placed his hand on Rayne’s shoulder, and raised his other toward the sun.

        “Then by the fire that remembers and the light that does not burn. I name you Rayne of Lumen, Lord of the Fifth House.”

        The crowd was still for a heartbeat.

        Then a pulse rolled through the cairns. A faint hum, like the deep breath of the land itself, stirred the hair of every person there.

        The ley lines had awakened.

        Five fires, once lost, now stood again.

        Taranis looked out across the gathered faces his brothers. His people, the wolves, the dragons, the flame keepers and shadow walkers who had followed him through storm and silence.

        His voice dropped low, just above a whisper, but the wind carried it to every ear.

        “I know I wasn’t there for you. I’ll always regret that. Father exiled me… and maybe I would’ve run anyway. But that exile taught me many things.”

        He looked to each brother in turn Lore, cloaked in dusk and silence. Drax, ever the storm, hands calloused from war. Draven, grounded like stone. And Rayne, flame rekindled beside the steel gaze of Tirena.

        Taranis smiled, but it was not the smile of a warlord. It was that of a boy who had once been cast out. Now stood at the heart of everything he loved.

        Just then, Draven stepped ahead again, his voice steady.

        “Brother… you were exiled at eight,” he said. “We not protect you then. But we can stand with you now.”

        Taranis’s gaze faltered for the briefest moment not from shame, but from the sudden weight of grace.

        “And I will never walk alone again,” he answered, his voice thick with feeling.

        Around them, the wind stirred the banners of each House. The cairns pulsed faintly, glowing at their roots. Overhead, the wings of dragons cast long shadows across the circle. And for the first time in generations, all five ley lines were whole.

        Thank you for reading

        © 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