Tag: Stormfire

  • The Birth of the Ashborn

    The Birth of the Ashborn

    A poem from the whispers of the forest after Taranis saves the she-wolf and her pups.

    They say the storm once walked alone,
    Through fire’s breath and forests blown.
    A child of exile, ash, and flame,
    Who bore no crown, yet earned his name.

    He found her there the mother torn,
    Her belly bruised, her breath still warm.
    The hunters laughed. The kindling caught.
    But mercy moved where rage was taught.

    The wolves rose first with fang and howl.
    Then he, with eyes that shook the boughs.
    Through smoke he tore the yew’s black roots,
    And bore her forth with bloodied boots.

    The fire danced. The forest burned.
    But in the blaze, a legend turned.
    Three pups were born from soot and sky,
    And none who watched tell you why.

    One bore lightning on its spine,
    One with eyes of gold, divine.
    And one was pale as ghostly thread
    The fire not fled, but burned instead.

    Now whisperers call him Storm fire still,
    The boy who chose not rage but will.
    Who fed the flame and spared the beast,
    And from that night, the howls increased.

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

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

  • Born of Flame, Brother of Wolves

    Born of Flame, Brother of Wolves


    They say it happened on the edge of the fire season. When the trees stood crisp as tinder and the sky was low with storm breath. The boy was no longer just a boy then not quite a man, not quite a ghost. They called him Taranis Stormborne, though none dared speak it aloud after what he did that day.

    He had been wandering for days with Boldolph limping and Morrigan stalking ahead like a shade. Hunger bit at them, sharp and constant. The streams were low, and even the birds had gone quiet. But it was not food that found them first it was smoke.

    Taranis crouched low in the bracken and smelled it before he saw it: the reek of burning pitch, not wildfire. Deliberate. He motioned with his hand, and the wolves flanked him in silence. Through the underbrush, he saw it the den.

    Nestled beneath the roots of an ancient yew was a she-wolf, panting, bloodied, and gravid with life. Around her lay ash and ruin. Two men not of Taranis’s tribe circled the den with torches and stone axes. Laughing. Taunting.

    One of them stepped too close, and the she-wolf lunged. He clubbed her across the snout, and she crumpled, still breathing. Taranis felt something stir in his chest something hot and ancient, older than exile.

    “She has done no wrong,” he muttered to the wind. “Then why do I burn?”

    He rose from the bracken like thunder. The wolves ran with him, all teeth and fury. The first man turned and Taranis’s spear was already flying. It found flesh.

    The second man screamed, torch raised but Morrigan leapt, black shadow, and his cry was cut short. The woods howled then, louder than wolves, louder than any storm. A torch dropped. The dry brush caught.

    Flame leapt into the canopy.

    Taranis didn’t run.

    He tore the yew’s roots apart with bleeding hands and dragged the she-wolf to safety. Boldolph howled into the fire’s roar, guiding him. He covered her with his own cloak and stood between her and the blaze, smoke pouring into his lungs.

    When the fire passed, the glade was scorched, the sky blackened and the she-wolf was alive.

    She gave birth beneath the ashes, three pups whimpering in the smoldering earth.

    One with a streak of red across its back. One with golden eyes. One with fur white as ash.

    They say those pups were no ordinary wolves. They say the Phoenix’s line began that night the fire born. The storm guided, the ones who would follow only him.

    But when Taranis rose from the ruin. His face black with soot and eyes like lightning, the people stopped calling him cursed.

    They called him something else.

    Stormfire.
    Brother of Wolves.
    Protector of the Ashborn.

    A painted stone expressing gratitude to the reader and asking for likes and follows .

    © StormborneLore. Written by Emma for StormborneLore. Not for reproduction. All rights reserved.

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    Also if you wish to read more stories of Taranis please go to.

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded