Tag: Thunorric Stormwulf

  • 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

  • After the Burning

    After the Burning

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

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

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

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

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

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

    The Hunter in the Trees

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

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

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

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

    As he ate, he watched the woods for soldiers.

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

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

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

    The ache in his chest was sharper than any blade.

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

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

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

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

    The Crossroads

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

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

    Perfect.

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

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

    “Out. Yow get,” he barked.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    As he rode away, the noble roared:

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

    Thunorric laughed.

    “Tell ’em the devil said vilis.”

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

    The Boy on the Road

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    “My lord… the storm”

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

    “What do they call him now?”

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

    Whispers spread. Hard men crossed themselves.

    Coenwulf did not.

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

    He nodded to the scribe.

    “Write.”

    The vellum unfurled.

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

    A scarred hunter stepped forward.

    “I’ll bring your demon in chains.”

    Coenwulf nodded once.

    The hunt began.

    The Inn at the Border

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

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


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

    He tied the horse beneath the oak and stepped inside.

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

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

    Rægenwine looked up colour draining from his face.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Thunorric’s smile was thin and dangerous.

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

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

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

    Rægenwine hurried, hands trembling.

    Thunorric turned to the Black Shields behind him.

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

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

    Cold air.
    Wet leaves.
    Heavy, familiar footsteps.

    The Brothers Arrive

    Dægan and Leofric stepped inside.

    The inn froze again.

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

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

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

    Leofric’s gaze drifted toward the back tables.

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

    Dægan spotted him with the Black Shields.

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

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

    One Shield swallowed. “Wolf… your brothers”

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

    He finally turned, smirking beneath his hood.

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

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

    Thunorric’s eyes gleamed.

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

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

    Thunorric smiled slow and wolfish.

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

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

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

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

  • The Law and the Storm

    The Law and the Storm

    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 ask.

    “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 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?”

    “No man did,” Leofric said. “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.”

    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 ahead, 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 burned itself into the table’s grain the mark of the Stormborne glowing like lightning caught in wood.

    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 coaxed a dull ember back to life.

    “Damp logs, stubborn gods,” he muttered.

    Stormwulf sat nearest the fire, his son curled beneath his cloak.

    Leofric came softly from the loft.

    “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. Half a dozen flame-haired youths entered broad-shouldered, bright-eyed, each carrying Stormwulf’s grin.

    “Ale,” most demanded.
    “Yow got any mead?” asked the youngest.
    “Hey, 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.

    “Aye, looks like the storm breeds true.”

    Dægan watched from the doorway.

    “A plague of wolves,” he muttered.

    Leofric turned, smiling.

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

    Eadric appeared behind them, weighing a purse.

    “If we’re to keep this inn standing, we’d best start charging the lot of ’em.”

    Thunorric when business was afoot nodded to the shadows.

    “Payment, keep,” he said.

    A cloaked man dropped a leather bag onto the table.

    “Gold enough for board and barrels,” he said.

    Rægenwine blinked.

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

    “Even wolves pay their keep,” Thunorric said with a smirk.

    Laughter rolled through the rafters, breaking the morning’s chill.

    Stormwulf pushed through the curtain into the back room, air thick with smoke.

    “So how much trouble am I in, big brother?”

    “Depends,” Dægan said. “How many laws did you break before breakfast?”

    “Lost count somewhere between robbin’ Romans and raisin’ sons.”

    They shared a thin smile.

    “You think the world can be mended with rules,” Stormwulf said. “I mend it with fire.”

    “Fire burns more than it heals.”

    “Aye but it keeps the dark away.”

    They held each other’s gaze law and chaos, both carved from the same storm.

    “Sit,” Dægan said at last. “If you’re to be judged, we’ll at least drink first.”

    “That’s the best sentence I’ve heard all week.”

    As they drank, Thunorric said quietly,

    “It’s been four hundred years, brother. Right?”

    Dægan paused.

    “I stopped counting after the legions left. Kingdoms fall, years blur.”

    “Aye, but they always fall. Rome, Albion same storm, new banners.”

    “And yet we stay,” Dægan murmured. “To guard or to burn.”

    “Both, maybe,” Thunorric said. “That’s what we were made for.”

    The candle guttered between them, flame bowing like it was listening.

    “Just promise me, Leofric and you too, Dægan if anything happens to me, look after those kids.”

    Thunorric shifted, cloak pulling aside to show blood darkening the linen.

    “You’re bleeding,” Leofric said.

    “It was over a girl,” he muttered. “Saxon soldiers had her chained for stealing bread.”

    “You fought soldiers for that?”

    “Wouldn’t you?” he rasped. “She was no older than James. They called it justice; I called it cruelty. We didn’t see eye to eye.”

    “You never learn,” Dægan said.

    “Aye,” Thunorric smiled faintly, “and the day I do, the world’ll be colder for it.”

    He left for air, ignoring the pain. Rain had stopped; the Chase glistened.

    For a few breaths he walked, cloak heavy with water then his knees gave way. He hit the ground, one arm reaching for the forest.

    Inside, Rægenwine frowned.

    “That sounded like someone droppin’ a cart.”

    Leofric and Dægan rushed outside.

    “Da! He’s down!” one of the lads cried.

    They knelt beside him; blood soaked the mud.

    “Hold on, brother,” Dægan said. “Four hundred years you’ve cheated death you don’t start losin’ now.”

    Thunorric’s lips moved, faint smile ghosting his face.

    “Told you… fire keeps the dark away…”

    The rain began again, soft as breath.

    James froze, head tilting.

    “Is that a whistle?”

    A low, rising note drifted through the mist.

    “Signal,” Dægan said. “Not ours.”

    Another whistle answered, closer now.

    “Da’s men?”

    “No,” Leofric said. “Whoever they are… they’ve been waitin’ for this.”

    A rough voice from the treeline growled,

    “Not us, boy that’s Saxon.”

    The forest fell silent but for the wind.

    Thunorric stirred where he lay.

    “Leofric’s,” he rasped. “That whistle it’s his. He only uses it when death’s close.”

    Another note cut through the Chase.

    “Then he’s not alone out there,” Dægan said.

    “Aye. And if he’s callin’ the storm, we’d best be ready to meet it.”

    “When was your father’s last meal?” Leofric asked the boys.

    “A month back,” James said.

    “Then he’s runnin’ on stubbornness alone,” Leofric muttered. “Keep him still.”

    Outside, the whistle sounded again then steel rang in the mist.

    Thunorric gritted his teeth, forcing himself upright.

    “If Leofric’s callin’ the storm, it’s for me. Always has been.”

    “You’ll tear that wound open,” Dægan warned.

    “Better that than let him face it alone.”

    He rose, blood dripping, and gave a sharp whistle of his own Leofric’s answer.

    “Stay here,” he told James. “If I don’t come back, you listen to your uncle.”

    He staggered through the doorway into the mist, sword dragging behind him.

    Dægan cursed, after.

    “Storm-kin don’t fall alone.”

    Thunder rolled across the Chase, echoing through the trees then silence before the storm.

    The mist swallowed the world. Branches loomed like ghosts, dripping with rain. Every sound was magnified the squelch of mud, the whisper of steel.

    Thunorric slowed, hand pressed to his side, sword held low.
    Dægan shadowed him, eyes scanning the treeline.

    “You be best standin’ back, lawman,” Thunorric said without looking round. “Leo was one o’ mine. Last thing I need is your laws gettin’ in the way.”

    “My laws keep men alive,” Dægan answered.

    “So does killin’ the right ones,” Thunorric shot back.

    They stopped at the edge of a clearing. where the fog thinned just enough to show movement figures circling something in the centre. The shrill whistle came again, shorter now, followed by a cry that cut straight through the trees.

    Leofric.

    Thunorric’s grip tightened.

    “Stay if yow like, brother. I’m done talkin’.”

    He charged through the undergrowth, cloak snapping behind him. Dægan cursed and followed, drawing his blade.

    Shapes turned Saxon warriors, five, maybe six, ringed around a man bound to a tree. Blood ran down his sleeve where his quill-hand had been cut. Leofric’s eyes widened as Thunorric burst into the clearing.

    “Told you he’d come,” one of the Saxons sneered. “The ghost of Pennocrucium, they call him. Let’s see if ghosts bleed.”

    Thunorric didn’t answer. His sword flashed, catching the first man across the throat. The mist erupted into chaos steel, shouting, thunder breaking overhead.

    Dægan waded in beside him, parrying a spear and driving his blade home with Roman precision.
    For all their differences, the brothers fought as one storm and law bound together by blood.

    When the last Saxon fell, silence returned, broken only by the rain hissing on iron.

    Thunorric staggered, breath ragged, and tore the ropes from Leofric’s wrists.

    “Told yow not to go wanderin’,” he rasped.

    Leofric smiled weakly.

    “Couldn’t let the story end without you.”

    Thunorric’s hand trembled, blood darkening his sleeve again.

    “This tale’s not endin’ yet.”

    Dægan caught his brother’s arm before he fell.

    “You’ve done enough for one day.”

    “Aye,” Thunorric breathed, staring at the bodies. “But the storm’s not done with us.”

    Overhead, lightning split the sky, white against the Chase. The thunder that followed sounded almost like a name old, familiar, and waiting.

    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

    Join the Adventure in Tales of Rayne’s Universe

    Chronicles of Draven

    Ancient Magic and Myth of the Stormborne