Tag: Stormborne saga

  • 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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        For more stories please visit

        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. The Dawn of Storm-Kin: A Tale of Thunder and Home

        The Dawn of Storm-Kin: A Tale of Thunder and Home

        The dawn came grey and sodden, dripping through the thatch. Smoke hung low in the rafters, curling like ghosts that hadn’t yet learned they were dead. The storm had passed, but the inn still smelled of thunder.

        Rægenwine crouched by the hearth, coaxing a dull ember back to life. “Damp logs, stubborn gods,” he muttered, striking flint.

        The brothers had slept little if they’d slept at all. Cups lay overturned on the table, and in the pale light the spiral mark still shimmered faintly in the grain.

        Stormwulf sat nearest the fire, his son curled beneath his cloak. He stared into the ash as though the future will write itself there.

        Leofric came softly from the loft, parchment clutched to his chest.
        “He’s strong,” he said. “Red hair like the first dawn. What will you call him?”

        “Thursson,” Stormwulf answered. “His mother chose it—said the lad’s forged of thunder same as I am.”

        The door creaked again. Rainlight spilled across the floor, and half a dozen flame-haired youths filled the threshold broad-shouldered, bright-eyed, each carrying Stormwulf’s grin.

        They strode for the bar, boots thudding.

        “Ale,” most demanded.
        “Yow got any mead?” asked the youngest, grin wide as summer.
        “brother sword!” another shouted, tossing a blade across the room.

        Rægenwine groaned. “Saints save me, the wolf’s whole litter’s come home.”

        Stormwulf laughed, deep and rough. “Aye, looks like the storm breeds true.”

        From the doorway Dægan watched, arms folded. “A plague of wolves,” he muttered. “Each one another storm for the world to weather.”

        Leofric turned, quill poised. “You envy him, brother. He leaves his mark in flesh. You leave yours in law.”

        “Law’s all that keeps men from tearing the world apart,” Dægan said.

        “Then write that down too,” Leofric replied, smiling. “The law and the storm two sides of the same sky.”

        Eadric appeared behind them, weighing a purse in one hand. “If we’re to keep this inn standing, we’d best start charging the lot of ’em.”

        Before Rægenwine answered, Thunorric as the men called Stormwulf when business was afoot nodded toward the shadows by the wall.
        “Payment, keep,” he said quietly.

        A cloaked figure stepped ahead, rain still dripping from his hood, and dropped a leather bag onto the table. It hit with the dull weight of coin.

        “Gold enough for board and barrels,” the man said.

        Rægenwine blinked. “You’re payin’? Saints above, the world has turned.”

        Thunorric only smirked. “Can’t have my lads drinkin’ the place dry and leavin’ you naught but splinters. Even wolves pay their keep.”

        The laughter that followed broke the morning’s chill. For the first time since the storm, the inn felt like a home.

        Outside, the clouds parted over the Chase, and light spilled through the shutters, turning the smoke to silver.

        Leofric dipped his quill, wrote a single line, and whispered as he worked.


        “Thus began the Age of the Storm-kin. When even peace sounded like rain upon the roof, and thunder learned to laugh again.

        Copyright Note© 2025 E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts. All rights reserved.Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this artwork and text is prohibited.Thank you for reading.

        Further Reading

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

        The Chronicles of Drax

        Chronicles of Draven

        Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

      2. Rægenwine’s Inn: A Gathering of Legends

        Rægenwine’s Inn: A Gathering of Legends

        (Anglo-Saxon Cycle – c. 430 AD)

        Rain hammered the shutters of Rægenwine’s inn until the boards shuddered. Smoke coiled in the rafters, thick with the scent of peat, wet wool, and spilled ale. Outside, the Chase moaned beneath the wind; the storm had teeth tonight.

        Rægenwine wiped the counter with a rag that smelled of salt and hops.

        “Ay,” he muttered, “always storms when old ghosts come knockin’.”

        The door blew open without a knock. A tall man stepped in, cloak dripping, eyes hard as river-iron Dægan. Once Prefect of Pennocrucium, now a lawman in a land with no emperor to serve.

        He crossed to the hearth, boots leaving muddy scars on the floor.

        “Ale,” he said.
        His voice still carried Rome’s cadence command given as fact, not asking.

        “Tha’ll have it,” Rægenwine answered, pouring dark froth into a cup. “Never thought I’d serve one o’ Rome’s men again.”

        Before Dægan replied, another gust tore the door wide. Smoke and rain flooded the room and through it came Stormwulf, the outlaw the peasants called Thunorric. The fire flared white as he passed, throwing lightning on the walls.

        “Salve, frater. Iam diu est,” he said with a half-smile that was never quite humour. Greetings, brother. It’s been a long time.

        Dægan’s hand went to the hilt at his belt.

        “You’ve no right to that tongue.”

        “Quomodo te appello?” Stormwulf asked softly How shall I name you now?

        Before Dægan answered, a voice from the benches called out,

        “He’s a lawman, that one.”

        Stormwulf’s grin sharpened.

        “Aye. He was the Prefect. The Romans handed their slaves to the invaders”

        He stepped closer, rain dripping from his hair, thunder answering outside.

        “so what are you goin’ to do, Dægan? Arrest me?”

        The two stared, silence vibrating between them like drawn wire.

        “Peace, brothers,” said Leofric, the scribe, descending from the loft with a candle and a roll of parchment. Ink stained his fingers; wax flecks dotted his sleeves.


        “Wyrd wendað geara-wælceare,” he murmured. “Fate turns the years of slaughter. It turns again tonight.”

        Dægan’s eyes flicked toward him.

        “You sent the summons?”

        Leofric shook his head.

        “No man did. The seal was older than any of us.”

        A chair scraped. Eadric, rings glinting on every finger, rose from the shadows.

        “Does it matter who called us? Trade dies, war comes, the Saxons push east. If the Storm-kin don’t stand together, we’ll all be dust by spring.”

        Rægenwine set fresh cups on the table.

        “Stand together, fight together, die together. Same as ever. You lot never learn.” He said it lightly, but his hands trembled.

        Lightning cracked overhead. For an instant the five faces glowed judge, scribe, merchant, keeper, outlaw the bloodline reborn into another dying age.

        Stormwulf lifted his drink.

        “Then here’s to what’s left of us. The law’s gone, the kings are blind, an’ the wolves are hungry. Let’s give the world somethin’ to remember.”

        They drank. The fire roared as if an unseen god breathed through it. Thunder rolled away toward the hills, leaving only rain whispering on the thatch.

        For a heartbeat it felt like peace.

        Then the door creaked again.
        A small figure stood in the threshold a boy, ten, slim and flame-haired, his tunic soaked to the knees. His wide eyes caught every glint of the fire.

        “Papà… who are these men?” he asked, looking straight at Stormwulf.

        The outlaw froze. The cup slipped in his hand; ale hissed on the hearth.

        Rægenwine raised his brows.

        “By the saints, the wolf’s got a cub.”

        Leofric’s candle wavered.

        “Stormwulf has a son.”

        The boy straightened, chin lifting with pride.

        “Yam son thirteen,” he said, the Chase thick in his voice.

        Dægan exhaled slowly.

        “You hide a child through war and outlawry? What future do you think you give him?”

        Stormwulf met his brother’s gaze.

        “The same future Rome gave us only this time he’ll choose his chains.”

        Eadric leaned forward, eyes narrowing.

        “Then he’s the legacy. That’s why we were called.”

        Leofric touched the parchment to his heart.

        “The blood renews itself. The storm passes from father to son.”

        Rægenwine poured the boy a sip of watered ale and pushed it across the counter.

        “Ay, lad, welcome to the trouble. Name’s Rægenwine. Don’t worry we only bite when cornered.”

        The boy smiled, uncertain but brave. Thunder rolled again, softer now, echoing deep in the forest.

        Stormwulf placed a hand on the child’s shoulder.

        “Whatever comes, we stand together. Storm-kin, by storm or steel.”

        Dægan gave a curt nod.

        “Then let it be written.”

        Leofric’s quill scratched across the parchment, capturing the words before they fade.

        When the last ember dimmed, a faint spiral. Had burned itself into the table’s grain the mark of the Stormborne glowing like lightning caught in wood.

        Leofric broke the silence.

        “You said son thirteen, Stormwulf. So you’ve others?”

        The outlaw’s mouth twisted into a grin.

        “Give or take fifty not all born to the same mother. Some Roman, some Saxon.”

        Eadric laughed low.

        “You’ve turned legacy into a trade.”

        Stormwulf raised his cup.

        “The world burns fast, brother. Someone’s got to leave a few sparks behind. Don’t act innocent, Dægan lawmen breed as quick as wolves. And Draven aye, you’ve your share.”

        His gaze slid to Rægenwine.

        “What of you, innkeeper?”

        Rægenwine shrugged.

        “My children’re these four walls, and the fools they shelter. That’s enough family for me.”

        The fire sighed. Outside, the rain softened to mist over the Chase

        Copyright Note© 2025 E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts. All rights reserved.Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this artwork and text is prohibited.Thank you for reading.

        Futher Reading

        The Chronicles of Drax

        Chronicles of Draven

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

        Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

        Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

        Author’s Note The Names of the Storm-kin

        Every age reshapes its heroes.
        When Rome fell and Britain fractured into the wild patchwork of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. The tongues of the land changed too. Latin softened into Old English; titles faded into kin-names; family names hadn’t yet been born.
        To keep the story true to its time. The Stormborne brothers now wear the names their world would have given them.

        Earlier Name Anglo-Saxon Form Meaning / Role

        Drax changed to Dægan which means “Daylight.” The lawman who still carries Rome’s order into a darker age.

        Lore changed to Leofric the meaning of thid name is “Beloved ruler.” The scribe whose ink preserves the old magic and the new faith.

        Draven was changed to Eadric which means “Wealth-ruler.” The freeman-merchant who keeps the Storm-kin fed when kings fail.

        Rayne Rægenwine “Counsel-friend.” The innkeeper who shelters all sides when storms rise.

        Taranis Stormwulf / Thunorric “Storm-wolf / Thunder-ruler.” The outlaw lord, half legend, half warning.

        Surnames did not yet exist. So “Stormborne” becomes a title rather than a family name a mark carried in blood and story.

        The people call them the Storm-kin, those who walk beneath thunder and never yield.These changes let the saga move naturally into the fifth century. without losing the heart of the brothers or the world they built.

      3. The Hollow Years: When the Eagles Fled

        The Hollow Years: When the Eagles Fled

        Interlude

        The banners of Rome had fallen long ago, but Drax still rode as if the legions would return. The road through Pennocrucium was broken now, weeds spilling through the cracks where once the eagles marched. His armour no longer shone, the crimson cloak dulled by weather and war. Yet he wore it still not for pride, but remembrance.

        He had buried too many men to abandon the law.

        To the north, word spread of ships black-prowed, heavy with warriors from across the sea. To the west, the Picts pressed down through mist and mountain. Between them, the land lay hollow, ruled by whoever still raise a blade.

        From the shadows of the trees, smoke curled not of hearths, but of hidden fires. The Black Shields were at work again.

        Drax halted his horse beside the stream. In the rippling reflection he saw a face harder than he remembered. The boy who had once followed Rome’s banners now hunted ghosts of his own blood.

        “Brother,” came a voice from the treeline.

        Taranis stepped out, cloak blackened, a scar like thunder down his cheek. His men lingered behind him, masked in soot and ash. Outlaws. Rebels. To the poor, heroes.

        “The Picts strike from the north,” Drax said, hand on his sword. “You have joined me in holding the border.”

        “I hold what matters,” Taranis answered. “The people. The fields Rome left to burn. You guard ruins, Drax I guard the living.”

        For a heartbeat, silence two worlds staring across a stream. Then the sound of hooves echoed through the trees.

        Draven rode between them, shaking his head. “Enough. We’ve bled too long for banners that mean nothing.” He threw down a pouch of grain. “There’s famine in the villages. We fight each other while children starve.”

        From deeper in the wood, Lore watched through drifting smoke. In the caves beneath Cannock Chase he had tended the cairns of their ancestors. Lore kept the fire burning through the endless grey. He whispered to the flame: keep them, all of them, even when they forget the old names.

        And Rayne, ever the exile, carved symbols into the stones near the water’s edge runes of storm and warning. Ships will come. The sea brings change.

        That night, as the brothers parted beneath a blood-red sky, the wind carried the faintest sound not thunder, but the creak of oars. Far beyond the estuary, lights moved upon the water.

        The first of the Saxons had come.

        And in the hollow of Britain’s heart, the Stormborne name still burned

        Copyright Note

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

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

        Read more from the Stormborne Brothers:
        [Lore – The Flame Beneath the Chase]
        [Draven – The Quiet Road]
        [Rayne – The Carver of Ghosts]
        [Taranis – The Black Shield’s Oath]

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

        Futher Reading

        The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

        The Chronicles of Drax

        Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

        Chronicles of Draven

        Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

      4. Draven: A Life Earned and the Weight of War

        Draven: A Life Earned and the Weight of War

        Colorful and abstract arrow design created with overlapping lines and vibrant hues of purple, orange, and teal.
        A vibrant abstract illustration featuring layered colors and an arrow design, symbolizing direction and change.

        The children were asleep when Drax arrived.

        The house was small, only one room wide, built of timber and stone Draven had carried with his own hands. Smoke curled from the hearth. His wife sat beside the fire, mending a tear in their daughter’s cloak. The scent of broth lingered in the air, soft and warm.

        Draven opened the door before Drax could knock. He had felt him coming, the way a wolf senses winter.

        They did not greet one another at first.

        Drax stepped inside, shoulders heavy with travel and silence. His eyes went to the sleeping children. To the carved wooden animals on the shelf. To the woven basket of herbs drying near the window.

        A life earned.
        A life held carefully.
        A life that could be broken by a single word.

        Draven’s wife looked up, needle paused above the cloth. As she looked to Drax a heavy silence stilled in the room. She had always known this peace was borrowed.

        Drax removed his gloves.
        He spoke quietly as he looked to his brother a man who stood 5foot 9 inches, slim build with dark hair..

        “War is coming.”

        There was no answer right away.

        Draven sat beside the fire.
        His wife rested her hand over his — steady, steady, steady —
        and he closed his eyes.

        Not in anger.
        Not in dread.
        But in that deep, wordless grief of a man who knew peace was never his to keep.

        After a moment, he nodded.

        Not to Drax.
        To the world.

        And the wolf rose.

      5. Draven Stormborne The Wolf

        Draven Stormborne The Wolf

        An abstract art piece featuring vibrant concentric patterns in shades of purple, blue, orange, and pink, with a prominent arrow shape at the center.
        Vibrant abstract artwork featuring layers of colorful concentric patterns and a bold arrow design.

        Not all protectors stand in front of you.
        Some stand behind, in the treeline, unseen.

        Draven Stormborne is the quiet brother
        the watcher in the woods,
        the one who listens before he speaks,
        the one who guards what others never notice is in danger.

        He does not seek glory, or power, or command.

        He simply protects.

        Because someone must.

        Identity & Role

        Archetype: The Wolf / The Ranger / The Guardian

        What he represents

        Survival, compassion, natural balance

        His purpose: To keep the living world safe

        His burden: He does so alone

        Where Taranis is fire, Draven is root and soil.
        Where Drax builds walls, Draven keeps the forest whole.
        Where Lore remembers the dead, Draven protects the living.

        He speaks little.
        But when he does, it is always truth.

        Strengths

        Silent hunter

        Patient, observant, precise

        Deep empathy for the vulnerable (even when it hurts him)

        Unshakable calm until someone threatens what he loves

        Draven does not fight for honor.
        He fights when children are cold.
        When villages are cornered.
        When forests are taken.
        When no one else knows danger is coming.

        He is the last line.
        Always.

        Wound

        Draven lives his life on the edges of others’ lives.

        He watches families grow old.
        He watches friends die.
        He walks away so they never have to see him remain the same.

        He carries the loneliness of the immortal who chooses love anyway.

        He is not forgotten
        he is simply unseen.

        Whispers Across History

        Draven does not appear in chronicles.
        He appears in folk tales.

        Stories of:

        A silent hunter who returns missing children

        A man who drives wolves away with nothing but a look

        Footprints in snow where no village scouts had been

        A stranger who buried the dead when plague took a town

        A figure seen at the treeline during winter famine watching, ensuring no one froze unseen

        He is myth, rumor, guardian, ghost.

        But he was always real.

        How Others Speak of Him

        “He does not ask for thanks.
        He does not wait for it.”

        “When the forest goes quiet he is there.”

        “Some gods protect nations.
        Draven protects one life at a time.”

        This Is Only the Edge of His Story

        Draven’s life does not unfold on battlefields or in king’s halls.

        It unfolds:

        in the hush of snow,

        in the shade of old trees,

        in the quiet moments between tragedy and survival.

        If you follow him,
        you follow the wild,
        the ache,
        the truth of what it means to care without being seen.

        StormborneLore holds the fragments.

        © 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.

      6. Rayne Stormborne The Shadow

        Rayne Stormborne The Shadow

        Some betrayals are born from hatred.
        Rayne’s are born from love.

        He is the brother who watches everything.
        Who listens to what is not said.
        Who sees the shape of the world before others realize it is shifting.

        Rayne does not swing the heaviest sword.
        He does not command armies.
        He moves in quiet influence, whisper, negotiation, pressure, timing.

        And sometimes the choice that saves the world
        is the choice that breaks his brother.

        Identity & Role

        Archetype: The Shadow / The Knife in the Dark

        What he stands for: Strategy, consequence, balance

        His purpose: To act where others refuse to

        His burden: He is always seen as the betrayer

        Rayne is the one who understands that:

        To prevent ruin, someone must be willing to be hated.

        And he carries that willingly.

        Even when it destroys him.

        Strengths

        Keen intelligence and deep foresight

        Ability to see outcomes before they unfold

        Adaptability in changing political landscapes

        Unmatched skill at infiltration, negotiation, and persuasion

        Rayne doesn’t read rooms.
        He owns them.

        Wound

        He will always walk behind his brothers.
        Never beside them.
        Never in front.

        Taranis inspires armies.
        Drax shapes kingdoms.
        Lore carries memory.
        Draven guards the living world.

        Rayne is the one who:

        Sees the danger coming first

        Understands what must be done

        And makes the decision no one else will make

        Knowing they will hate him for it

        His tragedy is simple:

        He betrays to protect.
        And no one thanks him.

        Whispers Across History

        Rayne appears not in legends
        but in footnotes and political outcomes.

        There are hints of him in:

        Counselors who changed the course of kingdoms

        Spies who vanished before wars began

        Treaties signed at the last moment

        Disappearances that prevented worse bloodshed

        Rebellions guided by unseen hands

        He is the presence behind curtains,
        the voice in the private hall,
        the man no bard sings of.

        Yet history bends around him.

        How Others Speak of Him

        “He does not lie.
        He simply speaks the truth you did not want to hear.”

        “He loved his brother more than any man I have seen.
        And that is why he broke him.”

        “There are men who save the world in daylight.
        Rayne saves it in silence.”

        This Is Only the Surface

        Rayne’s story is not one of villains or heroes.
        It is a story of the cost of understanding too much.

        To follow Rayne’s thread,
        you must look not at what is celebrated
        but at what was prevented.

        His truth is found in the empty spaces
        where disaster should have been.

        StormborneLore holds the fragments.

        If you can read the shadows,
        you will find him.

        To read more Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

        https://stormbornelore.co.uk/character-profiles

      7. Lore Stormborne The Memory

        Lore Stormborne The Memory

        Some men are remembered.
        Some men remember.

        Lore Stormborne is the keeper of what the world forgets.

        Where his brothers shape battles, laws, and kingdoms,
        Lore moves quietly, carrying the stories that would otherwise be lost.

        He walks between the living and the dead,
        between the world that is
        and the world beneath it.

        He is the one who listens when the wind speaks names
        long erased from history.

        Identity & Role

        Archetype: The Memory / The Spirit / The Cairn-Keeper

        What he shows: Identity, ancestry, meaning

        His purpose: To remember what time tries to erase

        His burden: He carries every loss the brothers have endured

        Lore does not raise armies.
        He does not command power.

        He remembers so the others do not forget who they are.

        And without memory, even immortals collapse.

        Strengths

        Gentle presence that calms the broken mind

        Deep empathy masked behind silence

        Knowledge of runes, bones, cairns, barrows, and spirit crossings

        A patience that stretches across centuries

        Lore can stand beside a grave and tell you who is under it.
        what they loved,
        and why they were never truly gone.

        Wound

        To remember everything
        is to grieve everything.

        Lore carries:

        The faces of villages burned

        The children who vanished in plague years

        The lovers his brothers not save

        The first names of every tribe now buried under cities

        Where others forget to survive,
        he survives by remembering.

        This is both his anchor and his sorrow.

        Whispers Across History

        Lore is not famous.
        He is felt.

        Stories of:

        A quiet man who tends burial mounds that no one else remembers

        A traveler who can speak any dialect, even ancient ones

        The stranger who sings old songs to the dying so they are not afraid

        A monk who copied entire libraries before they were burned

        The last witness wherever history ends and begins again

        He is always there, just out of the corner of the world.

        How Others Speak of Him

        “He said my grandmother’s name though I never told him.”

        “He does not fear the dead.
        He talks to them.”

        “He carries stories like others carry scars.”

        This Is Only the Surface

        Lore’s story is not recorded in books.
        It is spoken in:

        firelight,

        winter rooms,

        stone circles,

        and places where silence feels ancient.

        To understand Lore,
        you follow the echoes,
        not the path.

        His truths are found in the spaces between stories
        scattered across StormborneLore

        Futher Reading:

        Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne

        Character Profiles

      8. The Long Game

        The Long Game

        “Mother, Father,” Caelum said quietly, his small hands trembling as he stepped into the firelight. “I saw him. My uncle chained in every way. I gave him the bowl of food.”

        The words fell like stones into still water. Even the fire’s crackle softened, as if the hearth itself held its breath.

        Lady Maerin rose from her chair, skirts whispering against the flagstones. “You saw him?” she whispered. “How, Caelum? How did they let a child so near?”

        Caelum swallowed hard. “The guards… they didn’t care. Uncle Marcos said it would ‘toughen me.’ He said I should learn what happens to men who defy Rome.” His gaze darted to Drax. “But Uncle Taranis he wasn’t broken, Father. Not like they said.”

        Drax’s jaw tightened. His hands curled into fists against the edge of the table. “Go on,” he said, voice low.

        Caelum’s eyes glistened in the glow of the fire. “He was hurt… bleeding. But he looked at me and smiled. He told me not to cry. He said” the boy’s voice faltered, “he said you’d come for him. That you’d want to. But he warned me… he said if you launch a rescue, they’ll make everyone suffer. If he escapes, they’ll make us all suffer. He said” Caelum’s voice broke. “He said to play the long game.”

        A silence followed that seemed to swallow the world.

        Lady Maerin’s breath hitched. “He’s thinking of us, even now,” she whispered. “Even in chains.”

        Drax rose slowly, the fire casting bronze and gold across his face. He moved to the window, where the mist pressed thick against the glass. Outside, thunder murmured faintly across the hills. He stared toward the south toward the Roman fort where his brother sat in chains.

        “The long game,” Drax repeated, the words rasping like steel drawn from a scabbard. “He means patience. Observation. Wait… and strike when the empire’s eyes are elsewhere.”

        Caelum nodded, wiping his nose on his sleeve. “He said storms don’t break, Father. They change the sky.”

        A small, aching smile ghosted across Drax’s lips. “Aye,” he murmured. “That sounds like him.”

        Behind him, Maerin’s voice was brittle as frost. “And what will you do, my lord? Wait… while they bleed him dry?”

        Drax turned, shadows shifting across his face. “I’ll do what he asks. For now.” His eyes hardened. “But when the storm comes when it truly comes not even Rome will stand in its path.”

        Lightning flashed through the mist. Illuminating the valley below and for a heartbeat, the clouds took the shape of wings unfurling above Emberhelm.

        Caelum hesitated before speaking again. “Father… are they poisoning Uncle Taranis?”

        Drax turned sharply. “What?”

        Caelum’s voice dropped to a whisper. “He’s not eating what they give him. He said the food tastes wrong.”

        The fire crackled louder then, as if stirred by an unseen wind. Drax’s gaze darkened.


        “Then Rome has already begun its slow killing,” he said softly. “But storms, Caelum…”


        He looked toward the thunder rolling in the distance.


        “…storms have a way of purging poison from the earth.”


      9. The Weight of Emberhelm

        The Weight of Emberhelm

        A vibrant abstract background featuring intricate colorful patterns with the text 'The Chronicles of Drax' prominently displayed.

        The fires in Emberhelm burned low, their glow tracing the hall’s carved beams in dull amber. Outside, wind howled through the moors, carrying the echo of the horn that had once called the clans to war. Now it was only memory.

        Lord Drax Stormborne sat alone in the council chamber, a single goblet of wine untouched beside him. The maps and missives lay strewn across the oak table. Roman reports, messages from border scouts, pleas for grain from villages too frightened to send men to market.

        He had not slept. Sleep meant dreams, and dreams brought Taranis.

        His brother’s face haunted him not in death, but in defiance. Bound, bloodied, yet unbroken. There was strength in that memory, but guilt too.

        “You always were the fire,” Drax murmured, voice low. “And I the stone that smothered it.”

        A faint shuffle broke the silence. Caelum lingered at the doorway, unsure if he was welcome. “Father,” he said softly. “Marcos sent word. The Romans will move east toward the river forts. He says it’s only a patrol.”

        Drax’s lips curved into something that have been a smile. “Marcos says many things to make Rome sound smaller than it is.”

        He rose, the movement slow, heavy with sleepless weight. “Tell the men to prepare rations, but not weapons. We will not meet them with steel not yet.”

        Caelum hesitated. “Uncle Taranis wouldn’t wait.”

        “No,” Drax said, turning toward the window, where mist swirled over the dark moorlands. “He would burn the world to free one man. I must keep the world standing long enough for him to have one to return to.”

        The boy nodded but did not understand. Few ever would.

        Drax rested his hands on the cold stone sill, the wind tugging at his hair. Somewhere beyond the horizon, his brother still fought, still endured. And Drax the eldest, the anchor bore the burden of every storm that raged beyond his reach.

        “Forgive me, brother,” he whispered to the wind. “I keep the hearth burning, not because I’ve forgotten you… but because I know you’ll come back to it.”

        Further Reading

        The Chronicles of Drax