This story is inspired in part by the archaeological discovery in 2010 of the remains of a 15 year old boy found near Stonehenge in southern Britain. The manner of his burial and the objects he was buried with suggest that he was from a wealthy and important family, but what is even more surprising is that archaeologists were able to determine that he was not native to the British Isles, but came from somewhere around the Mediterranean Sea. How and why this young man came to the British Isles is a mystery that will probably never be known.
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4,262 years ago (2252BCE):
The pale sunlight shined brightly over the grassy plains. The great sun was hanging low above the western horizon. A flock of birds flew across a blue, cloudless sky, riding upon a rising northeastern wind. The flock passed over the great circle of stones below, quietly except for the sound of their flapping wings.
Sitting amongst the great stone circle was a young woman. She looked up at the birds as they passed overhead, bringing her out of her silent meditation. She listened to the wind as she watched the birds fly towards the horizon, hoping to hear something, anything. She then looked at the silent, giant stones around her, noticing their shadows growing long, telling her that she had been here for almost half a day. She was sitting upon her knees, her legs tucked under her.
Her ancestors had put these Great Stones here many, many lives ago. It was a place of magic and spirits, not only for her people, but for many other people as well. She liked coming to this place when she wanted to be alone, which was often lately. Soon, many clans would make the journey here for the great Harvest Gathering, to give thanks to the spirits for their harvests and to ask the spirits to guide and protect them through the coming season of cold.
The young woman looked down upon the earth, and absently drew random lines in the soft dirt with her finger. She sighed.
Suddenly and unexpectedly, the wind shifted with a powerful gust from the south. The young woman was facing west, towards the setting sun. The sudden powerful gust whipped and howled around her, pushing her slightly off balance and she had to place her right hand on the ground for support. She looked to the south, brushing the hair from her face with her left hand.
The wind moaned through the Great Stones, "Druuu-shaaa." She shivered, even though this gust was warmer than the previous chill northeastern wind. She looked south with a searching gaze. For a moment she closed her eyes and tilted her head up, smelling and breathing in the wind.
Within her mind, she spoke, "Spirits of the South, what is it you have come here seeking?"
A second gust blew then, more gently, like a fresh breeze. "Druu-shaa," the wind whispered, this time more softly, as it danced and swirled among the Great Stones.
The young woman opened her light blue eyes and stared south for a great while, trying to connect with this spirit from the south. The howl of a distant wolf brought her from her trance. She looked back to the west and saw the bottom of a reddened sun beginning to touch the horizon.
Reluctantly, she rose and set off towards the southwest at a leisurely, unhurried pace. The wind was growing chill once more, shifting again out of the northeast. She walked through a sea of wavy grass, letting her fingertips brush over the tops of the stalks as she made her way home.
Darkness had fallen when she topped the slight ridge to look upon the village. It consisted of about fifty round wooden and stone huts clustered around a central, rectangular longhouse. She occupied a round-hut near the longhouse with her husband, but as she entered the village she made her way not to it, but to the longhouse, where most of her clan would be gathered.
She entered the welcoming warmth and made her way towards the center, near the hearth fire. She stopped before a large man, with a bushy black beard flecked with grey, seated before the fire. He looked up at the young woman with affection and a warm smile. The young woman bowed her head and kneeled.
"Hello, my father."
"Ah, my Drusha. I have been searching for you, daughter. You shouldn't wander so far from the village after nightfall."
"I do not fear the darkness, my father," Drusha said as she took her place to his right and portions of the communal dinner were passed to her.
"As well you should not. What you must fear are the spirits of darkness."
Her father was chieftain of this clan, and highly respected. Unlike other clan chieftains, he was also a priest. In other clans, the positions of chieftain and priest were held by two separate individuals, but due to the proximity of their village to the Temple of the Great Stones, her father was recognized as its protector and keeper. Priests and chieftains traveled far and wide to confer with her father.
"I received word today from your husband's trading party. They are on the coast, two days journey south from here."
"Oh? Should I be hopeful enough to receive from my husband a necklace of seashells?", Drusha said, with barely hidden contempt for her husband. Her father either missed or ignored her contemptuous tone.
"Perhaps you may hope for something more of value. They have encountered traders from across the sea. Strange men, I am told, unlike any which we have ever seen before."