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Ah
look there! Where he had played and
fought with other boys; there, the tree where he killed his first boar, that
path - oh yes, that path he walked with Cyneburh when
he vowed undying love but they still hid from the eyes of others for fear of
being seen. For her
family and his were mortal enemies and they would have been parted by the
elders.
Here
was the grove where the Druids once came with secret rituals and powerful
incantations - where the rituals continued long after everyone said ‘we are a
Christian country!’ and proved it by burning a man in a wicker cage, a man whose addled wits and
terrible vile ways made him a danger - they said. And later they came with the Christian god to
worship in the same place.
The
burning evening sky, clouds alight with fire, reminded him vividly of the awful
sacrifice he had witnessed. Secretly. And never
told anyone of what he had seen, although he sometimes woke in the night to the
sound of the man’s demented screams.
Kenweard dragged his thoughts
back to good things, calming thoughts.
The
great oak was still there; he could see the top weaving its patterns against the
brightness. It was a symbol of Blac’s village and of
all Kenweard held dear. They would be beneath the oak
tonight, the men of the village, dictating the size of the Midsummer fire and
who would lead the dance. Such an honour to lead the dance! No mere mortal could do such a thing, in Blac’s view. And Kenweard did not
think Blac, the arrogant ‘I know better than anyone’
elder, had changed much since he had been gone.
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