Tag: Stormborne Lore

  • Stormborne Family: Legacy of the Moon-Star Charm

    Stormborne Family: Legacy of the Moon-Star Charm

    Illustration of the Moon-Star Sigil, featuring a crescent moon, a star, and laurel leaves atop a wooden tablet, representing protection and lineage.
    Illustration of the Moon-Star Sigil, symbolizing protection and lineage for the Stormborne family.

    Item Type: Necklace, cufflinks, or cloak-pin


    Worn By: Every Stormborne sibling, child, or descendant
    Origin: The Ash Grove, c. 410 AD
    Maker: Leofric (then known as Lore)

    Long before kings wrote laws and priests wrote scripture, the Stormborne family carried only one form of protection the Moon-Star Sigil, a small charm worn close to the skin.

    Leofric, the scribe and warlock of the family, carved the first charm from rowan wood, binding it with iron dust and ash from the sacred grove. The design came to him in a dream.

    The crescent moon for memory and foresight.

    The star for protection and the five truths of the Old Ways.

    The laurel leaves for lineage and victory.

    The wooden tablet for the bond of blood and oath.

    It was said that no Stormborne wearing the sigil would fall unnoticed, unavenged, or forgotten.

    Thunorric wore his as a neckpiece, tied with leather from his first wolf pelt.
    Dægan later commissioned iron cufflinks bearing the same sigil when he served the kings of Mercia.
    Eadric’s children carried them as belt tokens, and Rægenwine hung his above the inn d the threshold.

    Every Stormborne generation crafted their own variations, but the meaning never changed:

    “Moon to guide us. Star to guard us. Leaves to bind us. Wood to ground us.
    Stormborne, alway.

    To read the Stormborne stories.

    Chronicles of Draven

    Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    The Chronicles of Drax

    Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

  • The Whisper of Old Magic: A Journey Through Emberhelm

    The Whisper of Old Magic: A Journey Through Emberhelm

    A vibrant artwork featuring a stylized ice cream cone with intricate patterns and bright colors, surrounded by bold concentric rings.
    A vibrant artistic depiction of a stylized object, blending intricate designs with bright colors, invoking themes of lore and magic.

    The Quiet Flame


    The wind that swept over Emberhelm carried no warmth, only the ghost of fire long spent. I stood where the circle had once been whole, where twelve stones still defied the weight of empire, and one lay split a wound upon the land.

    The others had gone. Drax to fury, Draven to silence, Rayne to his choices, and Taranis to chains. I remained, bound not by steel but by memory. It was not courage that kept me here; it was knowing that something sacred had been broken and that it was not yet done with us.

    The Romans called this valley conquered. They built their roads and forts as if they could hammer meaning from earth and stone. But meaning does not bow to empire. It whispers, it lingers, it waits. And I have learned to listen.

    I knelt beside the thirteenth stone, tracing the crack with my fingers. The split hummed faintly, as though it still remembered the storm that birthed it. I could almost hear Taranis’s voice beneath the wind, a murmur of thunder too distant to strike.

    “Brother,” I whispered, “if the storm is caged, does the sky mourn its silence?”

    A shadow passed across the ridge perhaps a hawk, perhaps a sign. In the old days, I would have asked the druids for meaning, but now I was the only one left to ask.

    Rayne’s betrayal still cut deep, though part of me understood it. He had always been the one to see the long game, the patient serpent coiled beneath the waves. I did not forgive him, but neither could I condemn him fully. Perhaps this is how the gods feel when they look upon men weary, knowing, endlessly disappointed.

    Night crept over the hills. I lit no fire; the Romans watched for smoke. Instead, I watched the stars, the same constellations our ancestors had trusted when the world was still young. Somewhere beyond those lights, I felt the pulse of something waking old magic, stirring beneath stone and soil, called forth by blood and betrayal alike.

    The Circle was broken, yes. But its power had not vanished; it had merely changed shape. The storm that once lived in Taranis’s heart now whispered through the bones of the earth. I could feel it gathering, quiet but sure, as if the land itself prepared to rise.

    In that silence, I spoke the old words not prayer, not spell, but remembrance. A promise carved into breath:

    “When the storm returns, it will not ask who was loyal. It will ask who remains.”

    The air stilled. Even the night seemed to listen.

    And somewhere, far to the west, thunder answered.

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  • The Arena of the Bound Storm

    The Arena of the Bound Storm

    The morning mist hung thick over the Roman fort, curling around the walls and the sentries like ghostly serpents.

    Taranis Storm’s wrists ached where iron had bitten into bruised flesh, his ankles raw from chains. Yet the fire inside him refused to be tamed. Marcos had warned him that this day would test more than his body. It would probe the limits of fear, endurance, and wit.

    The centurion led him across the courtyard. Other prisoners lined the path, eyes wide with terror or jealousy. Weak men, broken men, some shaking in expectation of death. None dared speak.

    “Today, you fight for Rome’s amusement,” the centurion barked, voice carrying over the square. “The arena awaits. Survive, or die beneath their eyes.”

    Taranis allowed a faint smirk, almost imperceptible. Chains or no chains, sword, axe, or spear he had survived worse. The storm was within him, and storms do not break.

    The first trial: Damnatio ad Bestias.

    Lions, their muscles rippling beneath tawny manes, were released into the sand. Their growls rolled like thunder, a sound meant to unnerve men and mark the end of hope. Taranis was pushed forward, unarmed, the chains clinking with each step. The crowd leaned forward, eager for carnage.

    The first lion lunged. Taranis dropped low, letting its momentum carry it past him. Spinning the chain to trip the beast, a subtle but devastating movement learned in the wilds of Staffordshire. Another lunged, jaws snapping, claws tearing sand.

    He moved like the wind low, sharp, unpredictable. He stood baiting, dodging, spinning chains like whips, forcing the predators into missteps against one another.

    Blood rose in clouds around him, yet he remained untouched. When the final lion recoiled and the centurion’s mouth twitched a mix of disbelief and begrudging respect. Taranis exhaled slowly, chains clinking, storm-controlled and silent.

    The second trial: Gladiatorial combat.

    He was given crude weapons a short sword nicked from years of use. A small round shield marred by countless hits, a spear bent at the tip. Combatants approached with mockery, expecting an untrained barbarian to stumble, falter, and bleed.

    Taranis did not falter. He did not rush. Each movement was a calculation, using the terrain, his chains, the enemies’ weight and momentum against them. The first pair charged together, one with sword, one with shield.

    Taranis pivoted, letting the chains tighten around their legs. As he ducked beneath the sword, delivering a clean strike to the opponent’s flank.

    The second soldier hesitated, startled by the unexpected precision. Taranis did not smile he simply waited for the next assault, reading, predicting, exploiting every weakness.

    A guard whispered to another, “He’s no ordinary man… he fights like the storm itself.”

    By midday, the arena was a battlefield of skill, endurance, and cunning. A third pair entered, wielding axes. Taranis dodged and parried, chains tangling in the sand and catching his enemies off-balance. His movements were fluid, almost artistic — a storm in motion, controlled yet deadly.

    Between bouts, he observed fellow prisoners some cowering, some quietly strategizing, watching him with awe. He nodded subtly, acknowledging their respect without breaking focus. Alliances were unnecessary here; survival was enough.

    Two massive bears were released simultaneously, roaring, claws digging into the arena floor. Taranis analyzed their pattern one slower, one feinting left before striking right. He baited them, using his chains to trip and distract, pushing one into the other’s path. The crowd gasped as claws met flesh, teeth snapping on fur instead of his own body. His footwork was precise; his breathing measured; his mind sharpened like a blade.

    When the bears finally withdrew, exhausted or bested by circumstance, Taranis stood alone in the sand. Sweat streaked with blood and mud clung to his skin. He raised his head, grey eyes surveying the watching centurion. There was no fear in him. Only storm.

    The centurion approached cautiously, expression unreadable. “Enough. You will live… for now. But know this: Rome does not forgive defiance. Your survival is theirs, not yours.”

    Taranis’s gaze swept over the spectators and fellow prisoners alike. Some bowed in awe, some averted their eyes in fear. Marcos leaned against the wall, one eye glinting with pride. Even in chains, Taranis Storm had not been broken.

    That night, in the darkness of the cell barracks, he traced patterns in the dirt beneath his chains. The arena had been a spectacle for Rome, yes, but also a proving ground for him. Every movement, every dodge, every strike had been a lesson in patience and precision. Each enemy, each beast, each whisper of fear from the crowd had been data to be remembered, stored, and used.

    The storm waited. It always waited. Taranis knew the chains bind him. swords scratch his skin, lions and bears roar, but they could not break him.

    He smiled faintly to himself, letting the chains clink softly. Rome had given him a stage, a spectacle, and a lesson. And when the right moment came, the storm would strike and it would not be for their amusement.

    Further Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

  • The Broken Circle: Rayne’s Fight for Survival

    The Broken Circle: Rayne’s Fight for Survival

    The Shattered Path

    The roads ahead were quiet, the wind carrying the scent of burnt heather and distant sea. Each hoofbeat of my mount reminded me that the choice I had made was mine alone, and yet its echo stretched far beyond my chest.

    Whispers followed me like shadows. Some were real the wary eyes of villagers, the wary glances of traveling merchants. Others were imagined, the scornful voices of my brothers, of Taranis, of the Ring itself. I did not flinch. Survival was colder than fear, sharper than guilt.

    The circle was gone, fractured beneath my hand, yet its memory clung to the land. I felt it in every hollow, every mound, every stone left untouched, as if the earth itself remembered the covenant we had sworn. I had broken it not for power, not for spite, but for a chance to bend fate toward life.

    Rome was patient. I knew that. And I knew too that the storm I had once sought to command in Taranis’s fury could now rise in me, subtle, quiet, lethal if misjudged. The choice of the traitor is never simple. It is measured in survival, in timing, in knowing the cost before the world dares to demand it.

    Ahead, a ridge cut the horizon, the pale sun glinting over the salt flats. I pulled my cloak tighter, letting the chill remind me that I was still breathing, still moving, still in control of this shattered path.

    The Ring was broken. But perhaps, in that fracture, a new pattern could emerge. One I alone might trace.

    I rode past the remnants of burned villages and overturned carts, careful to keep to the high ground. From this distance, nothing looked alive; yet every shadow could be a scout, every rustle a whisper of accusation. I had betrayed the circle, but I had not betrayed survival. That distinction, razor-thin, I carried like a blade at my side.

    Even so, the memory of Taranis lingered. I imagined him, bound in chains, his eyes storm-grey beneath a sky that mirrored his wrath. Some part of me hoped he hated me. Another part the part I refused to acknowledge wished he would understand.

    I reached the edge of a woodland and dismounted. The quiet crackle of dead leaves underfoot reminded me of my childhood in Compton, of paths once walked under open skies, where choice had been play, not consequence. Here, choice was survival. Choice was betrayal.

    A messenger approached, a thin man with a letter sealed in the eagle of Rome. I took it with careful fingers, breaking the seal only when I was certain no eyes watched. The words were simple, direct, and chilling:

    “Keep the Ring moving. Keep the pieces apart. Rome watches, and the storm will be rewarded or crushed at our discretion.”

    I folded the letter slowly, feeling its weight far heavier than the paper it was written on. Rome had not forgotten, and neither had the Circle though I was its only witness now.

    I paused at a stream, letting my mount drink, listening to the water whisper over stones. I thought of my brothers, of Drax, of Lore, of Draven. Each had reacted differently to Taranis’s capture, to my choice. Some with anger, some with fear, some with silent, unspoken questions. And some… had already begun to take paths I could not predict.

    Even here, on the open road, I felt the pull of power, subtle and insidious. The Ring had been broken, yes, but its legacy endured. That legacy could guide me—or consume me.

    As night fell, I made camp beneath a lone oak, its twisted branches scratching the dark sky like fingers of fate. I allowed myself a single, quiet thought before sleep claimed me:

    The storm does not always strike. Sometimes it waits, gathers, watches… and then it returns, quiet, inevitable, unstoppable.

    The following morning, I rode again, the mist curling around the trees like living breath. Villagers had begun to recognize me, whispers trailing my passage. Traitor. Survivor. Coward. Protector. All names carried weight, none carried comfort. I ignored them. Survival required more than comfort; it required cold calculation.

    By mid-morning, I encountered a small party of mercenaries scouts from a northern lord, curious about the broken Circle. They eyed me cautiously, their hands brushing the hilts of swords. I allowed a faint smile, enough to disarm suspicion. Words were sharper than steel when wielded carefully.

    “I go where the path leads,” I said, voice steady. “I am alone. None should follow.”

    They studied me, hesitated, then nodded, scattering into the woods. Even in my isolation, the choices of others shifted around me. Allies, enemies sometimes the line blurred, sometimes it vanished entirely.

    Hours later, I made camp near a ruined chapel, overgrown with ivy and stones worn smooth by centuries. Flames licked at damp wood as I pondered the Circle, Taranis, and the pieces of the Ring now scattered across Britain. I could feel their influence, subtle, almost like a heartbeat beneath the earth. The storm of Emberhelm was not gone. It only waited.

    A shadow moved near the edge of the firelight. I tensed, hand brushing the hilt of my dagger. The figure emerged: an old acquaintance, one of the scouts I had trained alongside in youth. His face betrayed both awe and fear.

    “You broke the Circle,” he whispered, voice shaking. “And yet… you ride on.”

    “I did what was necessary,” I said simply. “The Circle survives only in memory if we all fall. I intend to endure.”

    He nodded, unease clinging to his gaze. “And Taranis?”

    The name struck like a lance, but my expression remained calm. “He lives. That is enough for now. The storm is his. And perhaps it will return to me when I need it most.”

    Night deepened. I lay beneath the ivy-draped stones, listening to the forest breathe. Each rustle, each call of distant creatures reminded me that life persisted, even when the world was fractured.

    Survival, I reminded myself again, was not glory. It was endurance, patience, and the quiet shaping of what must come next.

    And somewhere, far beyond the reach of my sight, the echoes of Emberhelm stirred, waiting for the right moment to rise again.

  • The Shadows of an Empire

    The Shadows of an Empire

    The rain had followed them south. Turning the clay of Staffordshire into a sucking mire that clung to boots and hooves alike.

    The Romans marched as though it were paved stone beneath them, shields squared, helmets gleaming dull beneath the Grey sky. Between their ranks, chained at wrists and neck, walked Taranis Storm.

    Every step tore at his ankles where the iron bit into flesh. Every breath was smoke and ash and memory. Behind him lay the broken circle of stones, the Black Shields scattered or slain. Ahead, only Rome.

    The villagers came out to see. From hedges and low doors they watched the prisoner dragged past their fields, whispers coming like crows. The Stormborne, Ring-bearer. Betrayed. Some spat into the mud, others lowered their eyes.

    A few, bold enough to remember, lifted hands in the old sign of the ring. when the soldiers were not looking.

    At the front of the column the standard rose a square of blue cloth. That had been painted with a face in iron helm, cheeks daubed red with victory.

    The mask grinned as though in mockery. The Romans called it their mark of order. To Taranis it was something else: the face of the empire that had swallowed his people.

    He fixed his gaze on it as they dragged him past the rise where the heath opened wide. He thought of Boldolph and Nessa, of the wolf in the trees. He remembered the cairn and the promise beneath the oak. The chain jerked and he stumbled, but he did not fall. Not yet.

    The centurion rode beside him, face shadowed beneath his crest.

    “You see the banner, barbarian? Rome wears a smile even when it breaks you.”

    Taranis lifted his head, eyes dark as storm clouds. “Smiles fade. Storms do not.”

    The soldiers laughed, but unease rippled through their ranks all the same. For the wind carried his words across the heath, and even bound in chains, Taranis Storm did not sound broken.

    By dusk the column reached the ridge where the woods thinned and the land opened to heath. Smoke already rose ahead straight, disciplined pillars from square fires. The marching camp of Rome.

    The soldiers moved with the same precision as their shields: digging trenches, raising palisades, planting stakes.

    Every camp was a fortress, stamped into the soil like a brand. The ground of Cheslyn Hay, once quiet pasture, now bristled with iron.

    Taranis was dragged through the gate cut into the new rampart. The ditch still stank of wet clay, the sharpened stakes gleamed with fresh sap.

    Inside, order reigned the tents in perfect rows, fires burning with measured rations, horses tethered and groomed. No laughter. No chaos. Just Rome.

    The banner with the painted helm was planted at the camp’s centre. Beneath it the centurion dismounted, barking orders in clipped Latin. Slaves scurried to fetch water and oil for the men.

    A scribe scratched notes into a wax tablet, not once looking up at the prisoner he recorded.

    Taranis stood, wrists bound, staring at the banner. Its painted grin leered back at him, mockery frozen in blue and black.

    Around him the soldiers muttered in their tongue some calling him beast, others trophy.

    A soldier shoved him down beside the fire trench, close enough to feel its heat on his raw wrists.

    “Sit, storm-man. Tomorrow the legate will decide whether you march to Wroxeter or Luguvalium. Either way, Rome will bleed you for sport.”

    The word spread through the camp: arena.

    Taranis lowered his head, though not in submission. He closed his eyes and listened. Beyond the walls of the camp, the wind still carried the smell of rain-soaked earth.

    The whisper of fox and owl. And beneath that, deeper still, a memory: wolves circling, dragons wheeling, the voice of the tree.

    Rest, child of storm. The road is not ended.

    When he opened his eyes again, the firelight caught the glint of iron. Not on the chains, but in his gaze.

    Even in Rome’s order, storm can find a crack. And cracks spread.

    The fire burned low, and the camp settled into its rhythm. As guards pacing in pairs, dice rattling in the barracks-tents, the low cough of horses in their lines. The rain had eased, leaving the air damp, heavy with smoke.

    Taranis sat in silence until he felt movement beside him. A figure shuffled forward, ankles hobbled, wrists bound with rope rather than iron. The man lowered himself onto the earth with a grunt.

    “Storm of Emberhelm,” he rasped in Brythonic, his accent from the northern hills. “I thought the tales were lies. Yet here you sit, same chains as me.”

    Taranis turned his head. The prisoner was older, his beard streaked white, his face cut with old scars. One eye clouded, blind. The other burned sharp as flint.

    “And who are you,” Taranis asked, “that Rome keeps alive?”

    The man chuckled, though it ended in a wheeze. “They call me Marcos now. Once, I was Maccus of the Ordovices. I led men against the Eagles before your birth.

    Rome does not waste good meat. They break us, bind us, and sell us to the sands. I’ve fought in two arenas. Survived them both.”

    Taranis studied him. The weight of years hung from his shoulders, yet there was steel still. “Then you know what waits.”

    “Aye.” Marcos lifted his bound hands, showing knotted scars across his forearms. “The crowd roars for blood. Some fight once and die. Some fight a hundred times and die slower. But all die.”

    The fire popped. Sparks leapt into the dark.

    Taranis leaned closer, his voice low. “Not all. The storm endures.”

    Marcos’s eye narrowed. “You think to outlast Rome?”

    “No.” Taranis’s mouth twisted into something not quite a smile. “I think to break it.”

    For the first time, the older man was silent. He searched Taranis’s face, weighing his words. Then he gave a slow nod.

    “If you mean what you say, Storm of Emberhelm, then I’ll stand at your side when the time comes. Better to die tearing the eagle’s wings than caged beneath them.”

    Chains clinked as they shifted nearer the fire. Around them the camp slept, unaware that in its shadow two sparks had met. Sparks that yet become flame.

    The guards had thrown scraps of barley bread to the captives, little more than crusts softened with rain. Most fell on them like dogs, clutching and hiding their share as if it were treasure.

    But when the boy, thin as a willow switch, glanced to where Storm sat, his brow furrowed. The man beside him Marcos noticed at once.

    “What’s wrong, lad?” the old warrior asked, shifting his chains.

    The boy’s voice was a whisper. “Why haven’t they fed him?” His gaze fixed on Taranis, who had taken nothing. His hands still resting on his knees, his eyes far away. as if listening to some thunder only he hear.

    Marcos gave a grunt. “Rome plays its games. They starve the strong first. Weak men die quick, but a beast like him…” He lowered his voice. “They want to see how long he lasts. How much fury stays in him when his belly is empty.”

    The boy clutched his crust but then held it out with trembling fingers. “He should eat.”

    Taranis turned his head at last. His eyes, Grey as storm clouds, fell on the offering. He did not take it. Instead, he placed his bound hand gently over the boy’s.

    “Keep it,” he said. His voice was rough, hollow from thirst, yet steady. “Storms do not starve. But you” he pressed the bread back into the boy’s palm, “you must grow.”

    For a moment, silence hung around them. The boy swallowed hard, then nodded, biting into the bread with tears in his eyes.

    Marcos watched, the ghost of a smile tugging at his scarred face. “A storm, indeed,” he muttered.

    Above the camp, thunder rumbled faintly though the sky was clear.

    “I’m fine ” Taranis smirked seeing a whip in someone’s hand and wood

    “What’s going on?” The boy asked

    The guard with the whip dragged a stake of green wood across the mud, planting it near the fire trench. Two soldiers followed, uncoiling rope and hammering pegs into the ground.

    The boy’s eyes widened. “What’s going on?” he whispered, clutching what remained of his bread.

    Marcos’s face hardened. “Discipline.” His single eye slid to Taranis. “Or rather a spectacle.”

    One of the soldiers smirked. “The barbarian thinks himself storm. Tonight, he learns Rome is thunder.”

    They hauled Storm to his feet. Chains clattered, mud spattered across his bare shins. The whip cracked once in the air, sharp as lightning.

    The boy tried to rise, but Marcos gripped his arm and pulled him back down. “Don’t,” he hissed. “They’ll flay you too. Watch, and remember.”

    Taranis did not resist when they bound him to the post. His wrists were raw, but he set his shoulders square. lifting his chin to meet the eyes of the gathered legionaries. The smirk never left his mouth.

    The centurion stepped ahead, whip coiled in his hand, iron studs gleaming wet in the firelight. He spoke in Latin, slow and deliberate, for the advantage of his men:

    “This is Rome’s law. Defiance is answered with the lash.”

    The first strike fell. Leather snapped against flesh. The soldiers cheered.

    Storm did not cry out. His lips moved, barely more than breath: words in the old tongue, prayer or curse, the guards could not tell.

    The boy’s knuckles went white around his crust of bread. Marcos leaned close, his voice low. “Look at him, lad. That is what Rome fears most. A man who will not break.”

    The whip cracked again. Blood ran down his back.

    And yet, when the centurion paused, Taranis raised his head and laughed. a rough, hoarse sound, but laughter all the same.

    “You call this thunder?” he spat. “I’ve stood in storms that would drown your gods.”

    The camp fell uneasy. The centurion snarled and drew back the whip again. But already some of the soldiers shifted, unsettled by the chained man’s defiance.

    The guard sneered as he coiled the whip in his hand, the wood of the handle slick with rain. He pointed it at Taranis.


    “On your feet, barbarian. Let’s see if your tongue is sharper than your back.”

    Taranis smirked, rising slowly, the chains clinking as he straightened to his full height. The firelight threw shadows across his scarred face, making him seem larger than life.

    “Screw you,” he said, the words spat like iron nails.

    The boy gasped, his hands clutching the crust of bread. “What’s going on?” he whispered to Marcos.

    The old warrior’s one good eye didn’t leave Taranis. “Rome’s testing him,” Marcos said quietly. “They want to see if he breaks before the whip… or after.”

    The guard cracked the lash across the ground, sparks leaping from the wet earth. Soldiers nearby turned to watch, eager for the show.

    But Taranis only tilted his head, the faintest grin tugging his lips.
    “Go on,” he said. “Try.”

    And in the silence that followed, the storm seemed to shift, waiting.

    Taranis straightened, chains rattling as he rolled his shoulders. His eyes met the guard’s without a flicker of fear.

    “Screw you, ass,” he growled, voice steady. “I’ve dealt with worse.”

    The words landed like a stone in still water. A few soldiers chuckled uneasily, but others muttered, shifting in place. The boy’s eyes went wide, his crust of bread forgotten in his hands.

    Marcos gave a dry, wheezing laugh. “Storm’s got teeth. Rome should be careful putting its hand too close.”

    The guard snarled and snapped the whip through the air once, twice before bringing it down toward Taranis’s back.

    But Taranis didn’t flinch. He stood, broad shoulders braced, chains biting his wrists, and took the first strike in silence.

    Only the fire cracked. Only the boy whimpered.

    To be continued

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

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    Further Reading

    Chains and Storms

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

  • The Compass of Storms

    The Compass of Storms

    A colorful painting featuring ancient Norse-inspired runes and the Vegvísir symbol, surrounded by layered storm-colored rings, representing guidance through journeys and exile.
    A vibrant painting featuring Norse-inspired runes and layered storm-colored rings, symbolizing the guidance of the Vegvísir.


    This painting blends ancient Norse-inspired runes with layered storm-coloured rings, echoing the guidance of the Vegvísir the wayfinder. In the StormborneLore world, it speaks of journeys through shadow and exile, always guided by unseen forces

    © StormborneLore – Emma Hewitt 2025.

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  • The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Twelve

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Twelve

    A colorful painting depicting a vibrant tree with multicolored leaves, under a bright blue sky decorated with a sun and abstract patterns. The foreground features lush green grass and stylized flowers, conveying a whimsical and enchanting atmosphere.
    A vibrant painting depicting a colorful tree beneath a bright blue sky, symbolizing life and renewal.

    Rest Beneath the Tree

    At last they came to the tree.

    It rose from the earth as though the hill itself had forced it skyward roots tangled deep, bark silvered with age, branches spread wide like the arms of a giant blessing or warning all who passed beneath. The ground around it was hushed, as if even the wind dared not trespass too loudly here.

    Storm staggered to its shade and lowered himself to the roots. The weight of his wounds and weariness pressed him down, yet the tree seemed to hold him as gently as a cradle. He breathed slow, leaning against the trunk, and for the first time since the hill of ashes he felt his heart’s trembling ease.

    The others made camp nearby, but left him undisturbed. Brianna spread her cloak by the fire, her eyes flicking often toward where he lay. Cadan tended the embers, muttering half-prayers, half-jests. The boy slept curled by the packs, his face still wet with the salt of grief.

    Storm closed his eyes.

    The world changed.

    The tree shone with light, its roots glowing as though molten, its crown alive with whispering voices. Wolves circled him in the half-dark Boldolph and Morrigan among them, their eyes like coals, their howls joining others long gone. Above the branches wheeled Pendragon and Tairneanach, wings stirring thunder in a sky that was not a sky.

    The gold ring gleamed on his finger once more. Its weight was not a burden but a bond. And the tree’s voice, deep as the earth itself, rolled through his marrow:

    Rest, child of storm. The road is not ended.
    Every root remembers.
    Every leaf bears witness.
    You are bound to us, as we are bound to you.

    Storm reached out and pressed his palm to the bark. He felt its strength answer, steadying his own. When his eyes opened, dawn was breaking.

    Brianna stood ready with her blade. Cadan was already packing. The boy stirred from sleep.

    Storm rose slowly, his body aching but his spirit steadier, and gave the tree one last look. The mark of his hand remained upon the trunk, a faint glow where blood and dream had mingled.

    Then he walked on.

    © StormborneLore Emma Hewitt, 2025. All rights reserved.

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    Futher Reading

    The Library of Caernath

  • The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Three.

    The Fire Between Us


    The truce held barely.

    Smoke still curled above the hills, but for now, the killing had paused. The Ring had demanded silence, and the land obeyed with the uneasy stillness of a wolf watching from the edge of firelight.

    Taranis sat by the river, sharpening a blade he hadn’t drawn in days. The sound was steady, comforting a ritual older than words.

    “You missed your council seat,” Nessa said behind him.

    He didn’t turn. “Let them speak in circles. The wind will tell me what they decide.”

    She stepped closer, arms folded, eyes sharp as ever. Her hair was damp from the river, her scar still raw but healing.

    “You’re their warlord whether you wear a crown or not,” she said. “They listen for your storms.”

    “I’m tired of storms,” he said, standing slowly. “I want peace.”

    She raised an eyebrow. “Peace from war? Or from yourself?”

    That hit deeper than he expected. He turned, finally, and faced her. “Do you ever stop fighting?”

    “Only when I’m sleeping.” A half-smile appeared on her face “And sometimes not even then.”

    He studied her in the fading light the blood on her hands that hadn’t come from mercy, the way she stood like someone expecting betrayal at any moment. And yet, she was still here.

    “They called me cursed,” he said. “Storm-marked. Said I was born to end things, not build them.”

    Nessa’s gaze didn’t waver. “Then build something anyway. Let the curse bite its own tail.”

    He stepped toward her. Close enough to feel her breath, to see the flecks of gold in her eyes.

    “You speak like a seer,” he said.

    “I speak like a woman who’s already lost too much to superstition.”

    He wanted to reach for her but didn’t. Instead, he offered his hand. Just his hand.

    She stared at it like it was a blade, then took it.

    No vows were spoken. No gods were called.

    But something passed between them in that moment not love, not yet.
    Something older.

    Something true.

    Later that Night Emberhelm


    Lore lit the sacred fire at the centre of the stone ring. The flame flared blue for a moment unnatural. Ominous.

    Draven flinched. Rayne smiled.

    “Balance is shifting,” Lore muttered, eyes on the flame. “Something has stirred it.”

    Drax stood at the edge of the circle, arms crossed. “He’s with her again.”

    Rayne’s voice was soft and snake-slick. “Then let him be. Let him forget his duty.”

    Draven shifted uneasily. “If Taranis lets her in, he could let in worse.”

    “Or better,” Lore countered. “She may be a sword that cuts both ways.”

    Rayne’s grin widened. “Then let’s see what she severs first.”

    Outside the circle, a storm began to gather. Quiet, coiled. Watching.

    The Circle of Stones, Emberhelm
    The storm broke slowly, not with thunder, but with footsteps.

    Boots echoed between ancient stones as Taranis stepped into the sacred ring, his cloak still damp from river mist. Nessa walked a pace behind him, her eyes wary, her scar bright under the firelight.

    The brothers stood in silence as he approached. Drax by the child’s cradle, Lore near the flame, Draven wringing his hands in shadow. Rayne stood like a blade left out in the cold smiling, but never warm.

    Taranis’s voice cut through the stillness like flint on steel.

    “I know what you speak when I’m not here. I hear it in the wind. I feel it in the ground. You question my loyalty because I do not sit with you every day. Because a girl now walks beside me.”

    He looked at each of them in turn not as brothers, but as warriors who once bled beside him.

    “Let me be clear. My oath to Caernath stands. I have not broken it. I will not.”

    He turned briefly to Nessa, then back to the Ring, his voice rising with quiet fury.

    “But I am not made of stone. I am not your thunder without end. Like you, I bleed. I grieve. And I deserve gods be damned to feel joy. To be loved.”

    A gust of wind swept through the circle, snuffing one of the smaller fires. The shadows leaned in.

    Taranis stepped closer to the central flame, gaze hard now.

    “One of you will betray me. I don’t know when, or how. But it will be for power, land, and coin. That truth rots in the air. But hear me now.”

    He unsheathed his blade, slowly, and drove it into the earth beside the flame.

    “If you seek to take my crown, then come for me openly. Not with poison. Not with lies.”

    His eyes flicked to Rayne just a heartbeat.

    “Because I will forgive a blade. But I will not forgive a coward.”

    The wind stilled. Even the stones seemed to listen.

    Drax stepped forward first, his voice low and steady.

    “My brother, I believe you. And should the time come I will not stand behind you. I will stand with you.”

    Lore said nothing, but he placed his palm on the stone rune before him the sign of silent accord.

    Draven looked down, unable to meet anyone’s gaze.

    Rayne only smiled, slow and wolfish.

    “You speak of storms and love as if either can save you,” he said softly. “But I wonder, brother… which will break you first?”

    After Taranis walks away from the fire:

    Nessa followed a few paces behind him, silent until they were beyond the edge of the circle. She spoke without looking at him.

    “That wasn’t a warning. That was a reckoning.”

    Taranis’s voice was low.

    “They needed to hear it. And I needed to remember who I am.”

    “And who is that?” she asked.

    He paused, fingers brushing the hilt of the blade still buried in the earth behind them.

    “A man who has been many things. But never loved and still whole.”

    She touched his arm, gently.

    “Then let this be the first time.” she replied

    Further Reading

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring… Chapter One

    The Chronicles of the Gold Ring Chapter Two

  • Forged from Fire: The Journey of Taranis

    Forged from Fire: The Journey of Taranis


    The campfire had burned low, all golden coals and wind-tossed ash, when Solaris approached the general.

    Taranis knelt nearby, shoulders hunched. His wrists were bound, but not tight just enough to remind. The black collar still pressed against his neck like a verdict carved in bone. His mask, polished smooth and pitiless, lay beside him like a shadow waiting to return.

    “Sir?” Solaris spoke softly. “Are we binding him again tonight?”

    Grael didn’t respond at once. He studied the boy or whatever he was becoming with a gaze that weighed survival against prophecy.

    “He walks beside the horse now,” Grael said. “Not behind it. That’s earned.”

    “But still tethered?”

    “Until trust is more than fire and fury.”

    Solaris hesitated, then asked more plainly, “And the food? He eats with us now?”

    “He eats what he earns,” Grael said. “He trains. He serves. He carries burdens. So we feed him as one of the line half rations until proven otherwise. If he bleeds for us again, the portions grow. But he’s no beggar. He earns it.”

    Taranis stirred. His voice cracked when he spoke.

    “Now I’ve got one foot in both worlds… the world of a chosen, and one of an outcast. One step wrong, and I’m whipped or worse. One step right, and they carve my name into stone.”

    Solaris frowned. “But the mask…”

    Grael stepped closer. He picked it up and turned it over in his hand.

    “We remove it when he fights. When he trains. When he speaks with command. But in towns and camps?” He pressed it gently to the boy’s face. “It reminds him and us of what he was forged from.”

    “Forged?” Solaris echoed. “Or broken?”

    Grael didn’t blink. “Both.”

    “And can he see through it?”

    “Barely. But that’s the point. To teach him to listen more. Feel more. Trust the wind and the wolves.”

    The fire cracked.

    Solaris stepped back, watching as the leather straps were tightened once more.

    “And when does it come off for good?”

    “When the storm calls him by name,” Grael said.

    “And if it never does?”

    Grael didn’t answer.

    The wind howled across the ridge sharp and ancient.

    And far above, in the swirling clouds, something winged and watching passed through the sky without sound.

    By E.L. Hewitt StormborneLore

    Thank you for reading.© 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.

    To read more taranis stories please see The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

  • Discover Legends: The Stormfire Saga Part 4

    Discover Legends: The Stormfire Saga Part 4


    The fire cracked and spat, its glow painting the blood-stained earth in amber and shadow. Smoke curled into the sky, mixing with the iron-rich scent of blood, sweat, and scorched heather. Around the blaze, three brothers sat warriors of old blood, each marked by time, loss, and prophecy.

    Taranis sat with his legs folded, sword across his lap. His great frame bent slightly ahead as if burdened by ghosts. At eighteen, he already bore the presence of a myth. His grey eyes, like the storm itself, reflected both silence and fury. He had not returned as a boy. He had returned as legend.

    Beside him sat Drax, once the fiercest of the elder siblings. His frame scarred but unbowed, his voice deeper and darker than memory allowed. Across from them was Lore, the quietest of the three thinner. More thoughtful his staff carved with runes from the old tongue. His breath rose in the chill air like whispered scripture.

    Drax poked the fire absently with a stick.

    “Draven went missing,” he said finally, breaking the silence. “So did Rayne. Last we heard, a group of blackclaw warriors was seen not far from their camp. We hope they’re still alive.”

    Taranis looked up sharply. “And Father?”

    “Fever and war,” Drax answered, voice low. “Three winters past. But he saw the sky darken before he died. He knew the storm was waking. He knew you would return.”

    Taranis stared into the fire, jaw clenched. “He died thinking I was a curse.”

    Lore leaned ahead. “He died knowing you were the key. He just didn’t live long enough to see the lock.”

    The wind passed softly through the broken trees around them, carrying the scent of rain and ash. The brothers sat in silence for a while longer. No one had the heart to speak of the others they’d buried. Too many names. Too few fires.

    Drax rose slowly and raised his drinking horn to the stars.

    “Now we step into a new age,” he said. “Brothers bow to the true leader of the Stormborne clan.”

    Taranis blinked. “What?”

    “You’re the High Warlord now,” Lore said, smiling faintly. “I stay the Flame keeper. Drax… he commands the Blood bound. These aren’t boasts. They’re burdens.”

    Taranis stood, slowly, as if weighed down by every step. The firelight cast monstrous shadows behind him.

    “Is there anyone left?” he asked.

    Drax nodded. “Some. Hiding in the Wychbury caverns. Scattered through the old marshes. A few loyal to the name. Most think we’re dead.”

    Lore lifted his staff and traced the air. Sparks flickered from the fire. “You carry the name now. You carry us all.”

    Taranis exhaled. “Fights are breaking out around us. Tribes testing borders. Raiders from across the sea. This wasn’t my first battle since exile.”

    Drax frowned. “What do you mean?”

    Taranis smirked. “Did you ever hear of the boy who walked out of a siege. Leaving only one man alive to tell the tale?”

    Lore narrowed his eyes. “That was you?”

    “I was ten,” Taranis said. “Found myself in Pict lands. A village took me in bark bread and bone broth, but they gave freely. Raiders came. Painted in bone ash. Serpent fangs. I stood between them and the fire.”

    “And you fought?”

    “I didn’t just fight,” Taranis said quietly. “I became something else. They called me ghost. One man I spared to carry the tale. Word of a storm-child spread fast. I moved on before the dead were buried.”

    “You fought like a god out there today,” Drax said, his voice softer now. “The storm moved with you. Boldolph and Morrigan at your side. Pendragon and Tairneanach overhead. You were prophecy.”

    “I was survival,” Taranis replied. “I fought because I had no choice. The gods didn’t give me power. They gave me fire and asked me to burn for it.”

    Lore’s eyes flicked upward. “And burn you did.”

    Taranis nodded. “But now… now I need more than fire. I need people. A clan. A home.”

    Drax drank deeply from his horn. “Then let’s build one. Three brothers. Three lands. One name.”

    Taranis looked between them. “Where?”

    “Where we once stood,” Lore said. “But different. You, in the east on the high hills of Malvern, where the sky remembers you. Drax, in the west near the marshes, to guard the old trails. I will hold the centre, near the stone circle. The fire will not die.”

    Taranis slowly nodded. “Then we rebuild. Not as children of the stone but as fathers of the bronze.”

    Lore smiled. “The Neolithic dies with tonight’s embers. From now, we shape flame and forge blade.”

    “We become what they feared we would be,” Drax said. “Stormborne. Eternal.”

    Taranis reached out and grasped their arms one brother to each hand. “We lead together.”

    The fire roared.

    Part II: The Storm Remembers
    Later, as the night deepened, Taranis sat with his back to a tree. Boldolph rested his head on Taranis’s leg. The great black wolf was still and watchful, his red eyes scanning the shadows. Morrigan curled near the fire, pale as snowfall, her ears twitching at every distant noise.

    “Do you think they’re truly gone?” Taranis whispered.

    Lore didn’t answer at first. He simply watched the flames. “No one is ever truly gone. Not in our line. Some names survive in flesh. Others in fire.”

    “And the enemy?” Drax asked.

    “Still out there,” Lore said. “Still watching. The Saxons come. The Romans return. But we… we will be ready.”

    Taranis stared into the night. “I never wanted to be leader.”

    “That’s exactly why you should be,” Drax said. “Those who crave the crown often destroy the land they wear it on.”

    “We carve new paths,” Lore said. “Not in stone. Not in blood. But in memory and meaning.”


    Morning light rose over the battlefield. The dead were buried, their names sung into the mist. Taranis, Drax, and Lore stood before the hill where they would build their future.

    Three brothers.

    Three keeps.

    One storm.

    “I’ll raise warriors,” Taranis said. “Not just fighters but those who stand for the forgotten.”

    “I’ll raise shields,” Drax replied. “Those who know honour and vengeance.”

    “I’ll raise stories,” Lore said. “And through them, we will never be lost again.”

    Boldolph howled once deep and mournful. Morrigan joined in, her voice carrying across the valley like wind through bone.

    Above them, high in the clouds, Pendragon and Tairneanach circled not as beasts of war, but guardians of legend.

    And so, the Bronze Age of the Stormborne began. Not with kings or crowns, but around a fire, carved in blood and rebuilt in hope.

    Thank you for reading.

    © 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.

    If you would like to read more Taranis stories please see: The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

    If you would like to read more about Drax : The Chronicles of Drax

    If you would like to read more about Rayne: The tales of Rayne

    If you would like to read more about Lore: The Keeper of Cairnstones: Myths and Mysteries Revealed