As he pressed his palm against the central monolith, the air grew thick with the scent of ozone and gorse. Usually, the stones screamed with the sound of a thousand bees, but tonight, they whispered. They whispered a name: Brian.
Local legends spoke of the Fuil nan Creagan —the Blood of the Crags. They said that when the moon hung like a silver sickle, the stones would weep a dark, viscous sap. But Jamie, kneeling in the damp heather, saw it for what it truly was: a tear in the fabric of time that was physically hemorrhaging.
He realized then that he was never just a man caught in a story of time travel. He was the anchor. The blood of the Frasers was the key that turned the lock of history, a crimson bridge built so that love could find its way home across two hundred years. Outlander - Blood of...
Jamie watched, frozen, as his father took a dirk and sliced his palm, pressing the red life-force into the stone. The rock drank it greedily. In that moment, Jamie understood: his family’s destiny hadn’t started with Claire’s fall through the circle. It had been bought and paid for by his father’s blood years before, a sacrifice to ensure that when a "Sassenach" finally arrived, the stones would recognize the Fraser line and let her through.
It was 1752, a decade after the smoke had cleared from Culloden, and Jamie Fraser found himself back at the hill where his heart had been torn out. He wasn't there to find Claire—he knew she was safe in a future he couldn’t touch—but because the "Blood of my Blood" was calling from the earth itself. As he pressed his palm against the central
The vision snapped. Jamie pulled his hand back, his own palm stinging. A thin, red line had opened across his skin, mirroring his father’s old wound. The stones fell silent.
The standing stones of Craigh na Dun did not just hum; they bled. Local legends spoke of the Fuil nan Creagan
"Blood of my blood," he murmured into the wind, "and bone of my bone."