Outlander: Blood of My Blood (2025) s01e02 Episode Script
S.W.A.K. (Sealed With A Kiss)
1
[Ellen] Previously
[Ned] Now that your father has passed,
there are plenty of folk more than eager
to see the demise of Clan MacKenzie.
'Tis a time for celebration, is it not?
[Janet] Ye ken she loved
Da more than most.
And wi' him gone, she's lost her power.
[Colum] Have you seen Ellen?
Some saw her going off
with Malcolm Grant.
[Malcolm] Dougal, have ye lost yer way?
[Colum] We must make
amends without delay.
Where in God's name have you been?
What does that matter?
On principle alone, I will not tell you.
Give Ellen to Malcolm Grant.
How is it you came into
the service of the Grants?
Met Malcolm in Inverness,
asked me to be their bladier.
Ah, thereby hangs a tale.
[Davina] You have to be unseen.
- Ah!
- [gasps]
[carriage rattles, water splashes]
- [distant scream]
- Sweetheart?
[dramatic music plays]
[dramatic music plays]
Long the way ♪
O'er the bridge I crossed ♪
For my love ♪
For my love that's lost ♪
By the brae ♪
In the verdant moss ♪
Where I watch. Where I wait ♪
For my love that's lost ♪
Hi a bho ♪
Hoireann eile o ♪
Hi a bho ♪
Fair a leo fair a lè ♪
Hi a bho ♪
Hoireann eile o ♪
'S tu mo run. 'S tu mo ghràdh ♪
Agus m' eudail o ♪
[airplane engine rumbling]
[gunfire]
[men shouting]
Go! Go! Move, move!
Come on!
[gunfire]
[men shouting]
[gunfire continues]
[man screams]
Where's Private Charlton?
Who was the last man to
see Private Charlton?
[explosion]
Captain!
Captain, one of my men hasn't returned.
That's unfortunate, Lieutenant.
Sir, he's young, sir, and bloody brave.
Please, I can go back. I can
I'm sorry.
Sir
I made a promise to the men
that I wouldn't leave
anyone behind this time.
- Please
- You did make a promise
to follow orders in His Majesty's Army.
Your order is to stand down.
Am I understood?
Sir
I think I could do it, sir,
if you'd just let me try.
I said stand down. Do you hear me?
[gunfire and explosions continue]
Two, three.
[whimpers, screams]
Two, three.
- [men shouting]
- [grunts]
Beauchamp!
[moaning]
[gasps]
[sobs, whimpering, shouts]
[groaning]
[panting]
[Henry] Easy.
[Willie groaning and whimpering]
Easy now. Easy.
Make room. Make room.
All right, Willie, lad. All right.
Let's have a look.
[whimpers]
[gasps, panting]
It's just a Blighty wound, Willie.
You mean enough to send me home?
That's right, Private. That's right.
[panting] This is for my mother.
I wanted to say sorry for joining up.
[groans in pain]
[breathing rapidly] Can
you help me get it to her?
Certainly not.
You can give it to her
yourself, all right?
- Good man.
- [Lambie] Beauchamp.
You just rest, Willie.
You disobeyed a direct order, Beauchamp.
I'd be quite within my
rights to shoot you.
[explosions]
But if I did,
I fear the regiment
would run me through.
His mother deserved to
have him home, sir
one way or the other.
- [explosion]
- Indeed she does.
In the future, Lieutenant,
if you have one
try to restrain yourself.
You have my word, sir.
As you were.
[water sloshes]
[somber music plays]
[Henry] "To whom it may concern,
I write to you from hell on Earth
the Western Front.
Here I have learned a thousand
different ways to suffer,
countless different ways to die.
I've lost more friends
than I care to remember,
but even death itself is kinder
than some of the things
that I have seen,
things that I wish I
could erase from my mind
with every fiber of my being.
All around me,
brave souls cling to their
last shreds of dignity,
and men who once laughed and loved
lie alongside boys
who have barely had time to do either,
buried in some bloodied
bit of foreign soil."
[explosions rumbling]
[soldier] Corporal.
[Henry] "It is possible to
withstand physical pain,
but an injured mind is,
I fear, irreparable,
particularly one bearing
the immortal wounds of war.
I find myself destined, perhaps,
to join the hordes of men
who are aching for peace
and waiting for death,
not fearing it as such,
not the when or the where of it,
not even the how, but the why.
[horse neighs]
And so, before that time comes,
I write not just as a
soldier but as a witness
to the tragedy that's unfolding daily
in this infernal place
to let you know that we are trying,
holding on to sanity as best we can,
holding on to a dwindling hope.
But fear is a powerful poison."
[bell tolling]
[indistinct chatter,
typewriters clacking]
You're the only person I know
who'd take a break from reading
to read even more.
What is it today? Botany?
Physics? Chemistry?
Biochemistry.
Well, when your break is over,
have a look at the new work assignments.
[loud thud, dishes clatter]
Oh, goodness me.
- [Lizbeth] Blimmin' trolley!
- [man] Oh, my goodness, sorry.
You can barely make out a word.
[typewriters clacking]
- Have that, Julia.
- Oh, thank you very much.
Think I can remember.
Uh [clears throat]
Uh, Broodseinde,
Regiments 4 and 9 on Desk A,
uh, Poelcappelle, Regiments 8 and 11
on Desk E,
and Passchendaele,
Regiments 6, 12, and 99
on C and J.
I have no idea how you do that,
but it certainly makes my life easier.
I'll take Passchendaele, then.
"Living through these
incredibly uncertain times,
is it not enough of a thrill for you?"
You need to be careful, Julia.
All this civil-disobedience stuff.
[scoffs] I remember the hunger strikes
and that woman who died jumping
in front of the king's horse.
- Emily Davison?
- [Lizbeth] Mm.
Well, things are different now.
We're turning the tide of
public opinion in our favor
- with our war work.
- "We"?
I'm very proud of the work we do.
I just hope that one day,
like many of the highly
educated women involved,
that I'll be admitted to university
and eventually earn a degree.
They're never going to award
women a degree, surely.
The first matriculated
female undergraduates
at a British university were
the Edinburgh Seven, 1869.
Yes, they may not have been
permitted to graduate
I knew it.
But there have been many
since-remarkable women.
You have a memory like
a bloody steel trap.
There's one here about a soldier
who had to have both arms
amputated because of gangrene.
Says his comrades nicknamed him Octopus.
[sighs, scoffs] It's awful, isn't it?
If we didn't laugh,
we'd sob for all of eternity.
I thought I'd start to feel
numb to it after three years.
I don't think I'll ever
get used to the fact
that so many of them are so very young.
Come on, then, they'll be
waiting for us to finish.
[soldier 1] Mother, I hope
this short note finds you well.
[soldier 2] My dearest
daughter Phyllis
[overlapping voices]
[soldier 3] I hope this
short note finds you well.
[soldier 4] I'm sending all my love.
[overlapping voices]
[soldier 5] Weather has been
[soldier 6] I am so very weary
[soldier 7] Terrible feeling
[overlapping voices]
[soldier 8] I must close now.
[soldier 9] Keep me in your prayers.
[soldier 10] Please remember me
[voices fade]
[somber music plays]
[gentle music plays]
[Henry] "I suppose I could
have written this letter
to my brother,
but I realized that every
man in Passchendaele
is a brother of mine.
Only here, you see,
brother slays brother
in a world where their father,
God Himself, is dead.
So, instead, this is an open letter
to ask quite sincerely
what is there to live for?
- Passchendaele.
- Yes. Yes, of course.
[steady piano music plays]
[sniffles]
[Henry] "If God is not dead,
then He has forgotten us.
And I am starting to forget, perhaps,
not what we are fighting for
but what we are dying for.
Yours, Lieutenant Henry Beauchamp."
[Julia] "Dear Lieutenant Beauchamp,
you asked a difficult question,
to which there is no easy answer,
but I feel compelled to reply.
My name is Julia Moriston,
and like you, I often wonder why.
Why must we live through
this abominable war?
I do not know.
But the naturalist in me finds comfort
in the arms of Mother Nature.
Nature always finds a way.
I'm reminded of the raindrop-
never too small or insignificant
to make a difference,
beautifully volatile, evaporating,
falling as precipitation,
joining the rivers until
it becomes the ocean.
There is a certain alchemy to it.
We, too, are shaped and
changed by our suffering
until we are strong enough, like water,
to carve our way through rock.
I've known suffering and grief.
When my parents died,
I was determined to carry on doing
what I knew would make them proud.
I paused my studies to make
my own small contribution
to the war effort.
So I know what it is to feel alone
and to ask why.
When all else fails
[soldier] Beauchamp.
[Julia]take a deep breath
and remember England is still here.
Do not give up, Lieutenant.
And if you need to confide in someone,
you may write back to me.
And, perhaps boldly,
I shall expect a reply."
[gunfire, explosions]
[soldier] Gas! Gas, gas, gas!
[whimpering]
[distant explosions]
[whimpering]
[coughing]
[gunfire]
[breathing shakily]
[soft music playing]
[Henry] "Dear Julia,
I hardly know where to begin,
but you are right.
There was profound magic in your words,
some strange alchemy
that produced in me a glimmer of hope."
[Julia] "Dear Henry,
remember that our very existence itself
is miraculous.
As human beings,
we have a profound capacity
for love and goodness."
[Henry] "Julia, I have been
devouring your letters.
I so hope you got my last ones in order.
Tuesday's might arrive
after Wednesday's."
[Julia] "Henry, have you
heard from your brother Lam?
Has he uncovered a new
Egyptian pharaoh?"
[Henry] "I can't wait to
hear what you've been up to,
what you've been reading this week.
You still in your Scottish phase?"
[Julia] "I adore Scotland-
the flora and the fauna,
the landscape, the archaeology,
something inescapably
romantic about all of it.
Folklorist J.F. Campbell writes of a man
who joins the circle dance
of a faerie ring in the Highlands.
When he comes out, he feels as though
he's only been gone for a moment,
but, really, it's been years.
That's how our letters feel to me.
I could spend an eternity
in the dance of our words."
[Henry] "The poet John Donne writes,
"More than kisses,
letters mingle souls."
I think you know by
now that I find in you
a kindred spirit, a soulmate.
But just to be on the safe side,
I'm sealing this letter with a kiss."
[jaunty music plays]
[Julia] "I'll raise
you some Robert Burns
for your John Donne.
"My heart's in the Highlands.
"My heart is not here.
My heart's in the Highlands
a-chasing the deer."
Or it would be, if it wasn't
on the battlefield with you."
[Henry] "Should I be worried?
Are you going to run off with
some handsome Highlander?
I've never made the journey,
but I've always longed
to visit Scotland.
Sounds as if I might
have to start packing,
if only to stay in this
faerie dance with you.
As it happens,
I am trying to convince
my commanding officer
to allow me my leave
in the coming month.
Not enough time for a
trip all the way up north,
but London, perhaps."
[airplane engines rumbling]
[engines grow louder]
[distant boom]
[bombs whistling, explosion]
- [coughs, panting]
- [explosion]
[explosion]
[whistle blows, men shouting]
[explosion, gunfire]
[Julia] "That would be wonderful.
Did you know that my
greatest fear is not death
but us never having the chance to meet?"
[soldier] Bailwick.
Bellam.
[soft music plays]
- [soldier] Beauchamp.
- Yes.
[soldier 2] Whoo-hoo!
Lefty has another one from his Betty.
- [laughter]
- Hook, line and sinker.
- He's not even seen
- [explosion]
[soldier 2] Help! Help!
[coughing, grunting]
[airplane engines rumbling]
Get me out! [groans]
[men grunting]
[explosion]
[Henry] "Julia, I have
decided to call you my hope,
for that is what you are to me.
Fingers crossed my leave
will come through."
[somber music plays]
[typewriter clacking]
[Julia] "Hope springs eternal.
I've never heard your voice, Henry,
but the silence is deafening.
It's been two weeks and a
day since your last letter.
I won't despair just yet,
since "hope" is our byword,
but I am frightened, Henry."
Is he still intending to take his leave?
Last I heard, if reinforcements arrive.
And if he's still
You might have to brace
yourself, my dear.
[indistinct chatter]
[hoofbeats]
[horse nickers]
Hope springs eternal.
[sweeping music plays]
Henry?
Julia.
My hope.
[laughter]
[both breathing heavily]
Oh, I don't know what I'm doing.
[laughs]
Ah. Wait, wait, wait, wait.
You're not worried that we're
not married yet, are you?
"Yet"? Not exactly up
there with the proposals
of great literary
masterpieces. [laughing]
But, yes, I accept.
[Henry chuckles]
Mm. [breathing heavily]
Blasted thing.
[zipper opens]
[grunts, pants]
You know, I thought I'd
have to put away my dreams
to go to war, but
oh, here you are.
[chuckles]
- [Julia] Oh.
- Oh. Oh, God.
Oh, stay still. Stay still!
- For God's sake.
- [panting]
[romantic music plays]
[Julia giggles]
[Henry] Oh, what was it we
promised each other, again?
For richer or poorer,
for better or worse.
[grunts] Through doors wide and narrow.
[laughs] Yes, my darling,
something like that.
- Oh.
- Oh, I can't believe we did it.
I'm so very glad the priest
was able to fit us in.
So am I.
Well, welcome home, Mrs. Beauchamp.
- [chuckles]
- I love you, Henry.
[ticking]
Henry, my darling, are you still awake?
I don't like to blow my own trumpet,
but it seems I am quite the horologist.
[watch snaps]
[Henry moaning softly]
Henry?
[Henry whimpering]
[moaning]
[soft dramatic music plays]
[whimpers]
- Henry.
- [car engine sputters]
No! [screams] Oh, God!
There's gas everywhere!
There's gas! There's gas!
- It's okay. Come back to me.
- Oh, God! Oh, God!
- Come back to me.
- Oh, God! Oh, God! Oh, God!
You're in a flat in London with me.
Oh, God. Oh.
- You are here.
- [sobbing]
Dear Lieutenant Beauchamp,
my name is Julia Moriston,
and like you, I often wonder why.
[breathing heavily]
Julia. Julia.
[breathing slows]
My hope.
Yes, my darling.
Hold on to your hope.
[breathing heavily]
[stream trickling]
[wind whooshing]
[groans softly]
My ring.
Oh, no.
[crows cawing]
[mutters]
[sighs]
[wind whooshing]
[dramatic music plays]
Henry?
Henry!
This isn't funny!
Henry!
Henry!
[horse neighs]
[wagon rattling]
Excuse me.
Excuse me.
Excuse me.
Have you
have you by any chance
seen a man on this road?
Wavy hair, blue eyes?
[person speaking Gaelic]
[person 2 speaking Gaelic]
We had an accident in our motorcar,
my husband and I,
and somehow we were separated.
- [speaking Gaelic]
- [speaking Gaelic]
Oh, uh, I-I don't know Gaelic,
I'm afraid.
Do you speak any English at all?
Ah, Sassenach.
[Julia] Please, can you help me?
Perhaps-perhaps you could-
you could ask the
authorities in Inverness,
uh, to-to send help?
Inbhir Nis?
Inverness, yes, yes, yes.
Yes, that's right.
Oh, I'd be ever so grateful.
[speaking Gaelic]
Inbhir Nis. Inverness.
[speaking Gaelic]
Oh, no.
See, I have to stay here
to look for my husband.
What are you
No!
Get off of me!
No! No!
- Let me
- [object thuds]
[breathing heavily]
Julia!
[person] Feeling a wee
bit better, dearie?
[groans softly] What-what are you doing?
Just trying to help, if you'll let me.
Where am I?
Castle Leathers.
I'm Mistress Porter, housekeeper.
And the people that brought me here?
The Connors've gone, lass.
Done their part.
I don't understand.
Delivered ye here as
payment for their debts.
They owed a fair amount.
[ominous music plays]
[Julia grunts] Get ah!
- [Balloch grunts]
- No! Get your hands off me!
My, my, my, a Sassenach!
And a fiery one.
You can't keep me here
like some sort of prisoner.
I hope you didn't speak to
your last master this way.
"Master"?
Mistress Porter,
a maidservant needs
more suitable attire.
Yes, m'laird.
I am not your maidservant.
I am Julia Beauchamp
of Hyde Park, London.
I think you'll find that
you're now the property
of Simon Beaufort Fraser of Leathers.
Lord Lovat.
- [door rattles and clunks]
- Father.
We should press for the
Connors' coin instead.
And why on earth would I do that?
The coffers are dwindling.
The house is in need of repair.
That may be, but I have
my own particular needs
to think of as well.
[dramatic music plays]
[sighs] Please.
[sighs]
Excuse me. Excuse me, gentlemen!
[Campbell bladier] Sassenach.
Sassenach?
What on earth?
[indistinct lively chatter]
Oh, Julia
what has happened to us?
[indistinct chatter]
Excuse me, sir, I'm,
uh-I'm looking for a lady.
- Uh, dark hair, blue eyes.
- [person] A lady?
Oh, you'll not find one
of those in here, sir.
There's a few bonnie, uh
bonnie faces right enough, Sassenach.
But, uh, all of them have bollocks.
[laughter]
Forgive me.
Aye, what are you having?
Yes. I'll have a,
uh-a pint of ale, please.
Ale it is, then.
Well, sir, I am rather
urgently looking for a lady
by the name of Julia Beauchamp. If
[indistinct chatter]
Uh, sorry, I don't seem to,
uh, have any, um
You owe me.
[Campbell bladier] As I
was saying, Mr. Grant,
the terms we're proposing
are quite generous.
Three dwellings on fertile
land that borders Grant land
in exchange for monies owed.
Ah, a surprisingly generous
offer from the Campbells.
- Do you think so?
- Aye.
I can assure you, Mr. Grant,
of the good condition of
the properties mentioned.
You'd be able to house
a fair few families.
Aye, I think your da will approve.
Do hope they brought the deeds
to those properties, hmm?
What in God's name did he just say?
[tense music plays]
[grunting]
[grunts] Wait!
- Ah!
- [men grunting]
How dare you involve
yourself in clan matters?
I'm sorry! Look, please,
I meant nothing by it.
Should have kept your
mouth closed, then.
- [Henry grunts]
- Wait!
Maybe slit his throat first.
[Malcolm] Hold.
[Henry panting]
Now, what were you saying in there?
You were kind enough to pay for my ale.
I was merely pointing out what
I'm sure you already noticed.
Please, I don't want to be involved.
Too late for that now.
Tell me what you meant by what you said.
[Henry whispering indistinctly]
You'll tell that to my father.
[Davina] You'll begin with
the washing and mending
and windows and stairs.
The chamber pots need emptying as well,
and you'll assist the cook, of course.
Please, ma'am.
Mistress Porter.
Mistress Porter, I don't belong here.
I came to the Highlands
with my husband on holiday.
[Davina] Holy day?
Which holy day would that be?
He had business in Edinburgh,
so we thought we'd turn it
into a longer trip, but
I cannot explain it. I-I lost him.
How long has it been since his passing?
No, he hasn't-he hasn't passed away.
He's alive.
And he must be looking for me.
Well, he hasna found ye yet, has he?
If it's been more than
a fortnight, then
I doubt he's coming for you now.
What-what day is it now?
Must have knocked the sense out of you.
It's a Saturday.
Saturday.
Saturday when?
Next, you'll be asking
me what year it is,
or who sits upon the throne. [chuckles]
K- King George V.
King George I
in the year of our Lord 1714.
Goodness me.
[dramatic music plays]
No, it it it can't be.
I
I have a husband.
I have-I have a daughter, Claire.
I-I need to get back to them. I must.
I'm sorry for you, lass
but you've been sold to us,
and here you'll stay.
But I have no patience
for impertinence or
disobedience, mind you,
and neither does the laird.
And one last thing
on occasion
our laird can be most attentive.
Try not to linger in his presence.
Now, wash that look off your face
and come and find me in the kitchen.
[hoofbeats]
[dramatic music plays]
[birds chirping]
Our laird, Isaac Grant,
I present Mr. Henry Beauchamp.
My son says you have
something to tell me.
It was merely an observation.
"An observation"?
I've been trying to get
what the Campbells owe me for months,
so I do hope that what you have for me
is more than an observation, Sassenach.
Yes, well, in-in my
experience as a solicitor,
you know, uh, a lack of legal paperwork
is never a good sign when
it comes to property.
[chuckles]
That's it?
Uh
[clock ticking]
Well
it seems you're unfamiliar
with how we conduct our affairs
here in the Highlands.
A man's word is his bond.
And quite right.
And I shan't trouble you any further.
If you'd just kindly let me go,
I could, uh
Tell him what you told me at the well.
Well, I mean, judging by what I heard,
you know [chuckles]
um, if you were to accept
the properties that the
other party are offering
The Campbells.
The Campbells, uh, were offering,
um, there would be no guarantee
of ownership on the
land on which they sit.
You see, the written contract
must state that you would own the land
and collect the rents,
not the, um-the Campbells.
Told you, Da.
He has an eye for the particulars.
[Henry] Well, with all due respect,
it wasn't the particulars
that drew my attention,
it was your advisor.
Pádraig Druiminn is my bladier.
Apart from my son here,
he's my most trusted counsel
and my right hand in all matters.
What observation do you have
to make about him, then?
Uh
He was misrepresenting you.
Why don't you search this
most trusted of bladiers
for a sack of coins?
Not his usual purse.
[Isaac] Mr. Bug.
[muffled arguing]
[thumping, shouting]
[thumping, groaning]
You're canny
for a Sassenach.
[whispering indistinctly]
How would you like to be my new bladier?
[scoffs]
- What about the other fellow?
- Never mind him.
Well, unfortunately,
there are other matters
occupying my time.
See, I'm actually urgently
searching for someone.
Our business would take you
all across the Grant lands
and beyond.
An opportunity to kill two
birds with one stone, perhaps.
I'm afraid, as much as I
would like to accept
Well, you're not obliged, of course.
You're free to continue on your own.
And good luck to you.
But
an Englishman
alone in the Highlands
without protection
You would have all
this at your disposal,
and the strength of the
Grant name behind you.
I see.
Well, very well, then.
I'd like to accept.
Let's have a dram.
[sighs]
[sheep bleats]
[footsteps]
[door creaks]
[footsteps approaching]
What are you doing in here?
Oh, forgive me, sir. I-I was dusting.
I'll leave you to your work.
Oh, there's no work that cannot wait
when there's a bonnie
English rose before me.
- [chuckles nervously]
- [Lovat chuckles]
You are too kind, sir.
Oh, how very observant of you.
Kind.
Handsome, some might say.
[chuckles] The perfect gentleman.
[Julia chuckles awkwardly]
Well, I'm-I'm finished in here.
I have some mending to do
for Mistress Porter, so I
Ah, ah.
I'm the laird
and you'll do as I say.
Oh, here I am, Mistress Porter.
Oh.
Could have sworn I heard her calling me.
Very well.
Not this time.
[ominous music plays]
[thunder rumbling]
[nocturnal birds whistling]
[panting]
[hoofbeats]
[gasping]
[horse huffing]
You've enough there for a long journey.
Please, sir.
Brian. Fraser.
Mr. Fraser, I believe
your father is the laird.
I don't belong here.
I'm trying to find my husband.
Please let me go, I beg you.
[bird whistles]
That may be true,
but you'll no' find him tonight.
There's a storm coming.
A Highland storm's unforgiving.
If you're caught out here,
you'll soon be humbled
or suffer a fate much worse.
I've weathered many a storm.
I appreciate your concern,
but I will take my chances.
[Brian] My da willna.
He'll send his man
Balloch here after you.
A matter of pride.
Please.
Balloch! No!
[Julia] No! Please!
Get your hands off of me!
You-no!
Let me-let me go!
No! No!
Let me go! No!
[tense music plays]
What have you to say for yourself?
I have told you, I do not belong here.
I am no one's prisoner or servant,
for that matter.
I was doing what anyone in
my position would have done.
[grunts, coughs]
[Lovat] Twenty should be lesson enough
to temper that insolence.
Father, it wasna her. 'Twas me.
Ask Balloch, here.
I aided her in her attempt.
I heard her pleas to you, and
well, I convinced her to go.
[Julia coughs, wheezes]
Mistress Porter,
take our new maidservant to her quarters
and make sure that she's
secured for the night.
Give him the twenty, then.
- No.
- No.
Don't make me say it again or
you'll both be joining him.
[breathing heavily]
Dinna fash, Ma. 'Tis only a few lashes.
Would you like to count?
Or shall I?
[whip cracking]
The bladier's quarters.
I think you'll find it to your liking.
If not, you can sleep in the barn
with the other beasts.
You don't like me much, do you?
Dinna ken you well enough
to have formed an opinion.
Ah
your predecessor.
Now, him, I didna like much at all.
[ominous music plays]
[indistinct chatter]
[lively music plays]
I must apologize for the conduct
of the younger MacKenzie.
Since the death of his
father this past month,
he's not been himself.
No, I'd say that his
fisticuffs spoke quite clearly
to the younger Grant's face.
Hmm?
The laird is not pleased.
What can I do on behalf
of the MacKenzies
to make things right with the Grants?
I'm not sure that there
is anything you can do.
Perhaps you might consider an offer
a betrothal
between our Ellen MacKenzie
and Malcolm Grant,
their marriage come harvest time.
A- a gesture of peace and an alliance
that will benefit both clans.
The laird
he wants Dougal MacKenzie's head,
not his sister's hand.
You're still a stranger in these parts.
Not been with the Grants long at all.
Here at the gathering,
I couldn't help but notice
that you've been asking for a woman.
There are plenty to hand,
but none to your liking?
No.
I have, um
particular tastes.
Perhaps we could help each other.
You bring an offer of a
betrothal to the Grants,
and I will
offer my assistance
in satisfying your particular tastes.
I will put your offer before the laird.
[distant bird calling]
[fire crackling]
[sighs]
[Julia] "My dearest Henry,
my last memory with you was
at the circle of stones.
There was a deafening sound,
like an angry swarm of bees,
and then you were gone.
Or perhaps I was.
Perhaps I am dead.
Perhaps I've lost my mind.
Have I fallen through
the looking glass?"
[Henry] "My dearest Julia,
everywhere I turn,
I search for your face,
but it remains elusive.
Each day, I am forced to play a role,
to wear a mask of bravery
that feels foreign to me.
The memory of you and
Claire is my only solace-
the single thread keeping
me tethered to hope.
Without you, I am adrift,
a man lost in a sea of uncertainty
and longing."
[Julia] "I am the same as I ever was-
mad with love for you,
our beautiful Claire,
and our unborn child.
But my circumstances have changed.
[breathing heavily]
There are some unfathomable obstacles
in our path.
I don't know how this letter
could possibly reach you.
Perhaps it will simply be
a record of my thoughts."
[Henry] "I vow to you with
every fiber of my being
that I will find my way back to you.
No matter the distance or
the time that separates us,
I will not rest until we are reunited."
[Julia] "You are surely home
by now with our darling girl.
I must believe that you are.
How could I bear this otherwise?
Kiss her for me.
Tell her I love her.
I promise to find a way to both of you.
Just as your first letter found me,
I'll find a way back to you."
[Henry] "You are my anchor, my love,
and my reason for enduring this madness.
Sealed with a kiss,
Henry."
[smooches]
Sub extracted from file & improved
[Ellen] Previously
[Ned] Now that your father has passed,
there are plenty of folk more than eager
to see the demise of Clan MacKenzie.
'Tis a time for celebration, is it not?
[Janet] Ye ken she loved
Da more than most.
And wi' him gone, she's lost her power.
[Colum] Have you seen Ellen?
Some saw her going off
with Malcolm Grant.
[Malcolm] Dougal, have ye lost yer way?
[Colum] We must make
amends without delay.
Where in God's name have you been?
What does that matter?
On principle alone, I will not tell you.
Give Ellen to Malcolm Grant.
How is it you came into
the service of the Grants?
Met Malcolm in Inverness,
asked me to be their bladier.
Ah, thereby hangs a tale.
[Davina] You have to be unseen.
- Ah!
- [gasps]
[carriage rattles, water splashes]
- [distant scream]
- Sweetheart?
[dramatic music plays]
[dramatic music plays]
Long the way ♪
O'er the bridge I crossed ♪
For my love ♪
For my love that's lost ♪
By the brae ♪
In the verdant moss ♪
Where I watch. Where I wait ♪
For my love that's lost ♪
Hi a bho ♪
Hoireann eile o ♪
Hi a bho ♪
Fair a leo fair a lè ♪
Hi a bho ♪
Hoireann eile o ♪
'S tu mo run. 'S tu mo ghràdh ♪
Agus m' eudail o ♪
[airplane engine rumbling]
[gunfire]
[men shouting]
Go! Go! Move, move!
Come on!
[gunfire]
[men shouting]
[gunfire continues]
[man screams]
Where's Private Charlton?
Who was the last man to
see Private Charlton?
[explosion]
Captain!
Captain, one of my men hasn't returned.
That's unfortunate, Lieutenant.
Sir, he's young, sir, and bloody brave.
Please, I can go back. I can
I'm sorry.
Sir
I made a promise to the men
that I wouldn't leave
anyone behind this time.
- Please
- You did make a promise
to follow orders in His Majesty's Army.
Your order is to stand down.
Am I understood?
Sir
I think I could do it, sir,
if you'd just let me try.
I said stand down. Do you hear me?
[gunfire and explosions continue]
Two, three.
[whimpers, screams]
Two, three.
- [men shouting]
- [grunts]
Beauchamp!
[moaning]
[gasps]
[sobs, whimpering, shouts]
[groaning]
[panting]
[Henry] Easy.
[Willie groaning and whimpering]
Easy now. Easy.
Make room. Make room.
All right, Willie, lad. All right.
Let's have a look.
[whimpers]
[gasps, panting]
It's just a Blighty wound, Willie.
You mean enough to send me home?
That's right, Private. That's right.
[panting] This is for my mother.
I wanted to say sorry for joining up.
[groans in pain]
[breathing rapidly] Can
you help me get it to her?
Certainly not.
You can give it to her
yourself, all right?
- Good man.
- [Lambie] Beauchamp.
You just rest, Willie.
You disobeyed a direct order, Beauchamp.
I'd be quite within my
rights to shoot you.
[explosions]
But if I did,
I fear the regiment
would run me through.
His mother deserved to
have him home, sir
one way or the other.
- [explosion]
- Indeed she does.
In the future, Lieutenant,
if you have one
try to restrain yourself.
You have my word, sir.
As you were.
[water sloshes]
[somber music plays]
[Henry] "To whom it may concern,
I write to you from hell on Earth
the Western Front.
Here I have learned a thousand
different ways to suffer,
countless different ways to die.
I've lost more friends
than I care to remember,
but even death itself is kinder
than some of the things
that I have seen,
things that I wish I
could erase from my mind
with every fiber of my being.
All around me,
brave souls cling to their
last shreds of dignity,
and men who once laughed and loved
lie alongside boys
who have barely had time to do either,
buried in some bloodied
bit of foreign soil."
[explosions rumbling]
[soldier] Corporal.
[Henry] "It is possible to
withstand physical pain,
but an injured mind is,
I fear, irreparable,
particularly one bearing
the immortal wounds of war.
I find myself destined, perhaps,
to join the hordes of men
who are aching for peace
and waiting for death,
not fearing it as such,
not the when or the where of it,
not even the how, but the why.
[horse neighs]
And so, before that time comes,
I write not just as a
soldier but as a witness
to the tragedy that's unfolding daily
in this infernal place
to let you know that we are trying,
holding on to sanity as best we can,
holding on to a dwindling hope.
But fear is a powerful poison."
[bell tolling]
[indistinct chatter,
typewriters clacking]
You're the only person I know
who'd take a break from reading
to read even more.
What is it today? Botany?
Physics? Chemistry?
Biochemistry.
Well, when your break is over,
have a look at the new work assignments.
[loud thud, dishes clatter]
Oh, goodness me.
- [Lizbeth] Blimmin' trolley!
- [man] Oh, my goodness, sorry.
You can barely make out a word.
[typewriters clacking]
- Have that, Julia.
- Oh, thank you very much.
Think I can remember.
Uh [clears throat]
Uh, Broodseinde,
Regiments 4 and 9 on Desk A,
uh, Poelcappelle, Regiments 8 and 11
on Desk E,
and Passchendaele,
Regiments 6, 12, and 99
on C and J.
I have no idea how you do that,
but it certainly makes my life easier.
I'll take Passchendaele, then.
"Living through these
incredibly uncertain times,
is it not enough of a thrill for you?"
You need to be careful, Julia.
All this civil-disobedience stuff.
[scoffs] I remember the hunger strikes
and that woman who died jumping
in front of the king's horse.
- Emily Davison?
- [Lizbeth] Mm.
Well, things are different now.
We're turning the tide of
public opinion in our favor
- with our war work.
- "We"?
I'm very proud of the work we do.
I just hope that one day,
like many of the highly
educated women involved,
that I'll be admitted to university
and eventually earn a degree.
They're never going to award
women a degree, surely.
The first matriculated
female undergraduates
at a British university were
the Edinburgh Seven, 1869.
Yes, they may not have been
permitted to graduate
I knew it.
But there have been many
since-remarkable women.
You have a memory like
a bloody steel trap.
There's one here about a soldier
who had to have both arms
amputated because of gangrene.
Says his comrades nicknamed him Octopus.
[sighs, scoffs] It's awful, isn't it?
If we didn't laugh,
we'd sob for all of eternity.
I thought I'd start to feel
numb to it after three years.
I don't think I'll ever
get used to the fact
that so many of them are so very young.
Come on, then, they'll be
waiting for us to finish.
[soldier 1] Mother, I hope
this short note finds you well.
[soldier 2] My dearest
daughter Phyllis
[overlapping voices]
[soldier 3] I hope this
short note finds you well.
[soldier 4] I'm sending all my love.
[overlapping voices]
[soldier 5] Weather has been
[soldier 6] I am so very weary
[soldier 7] Terrible feeling
[overlapping voices]
[soldier 8] I must close now.
[soldier 9] Keep me in your prayers.
[soldier 10] Please remember me
[voices fade]
[somber music plays]
[gentle music plays]
[Henry] "I suppose I could
have written this letter
to my brother,
but I realized that every
man in Passchendaele
is a brother of mine.
Only here, you see,
brother slays brother
in a world where their father,
God Himself, is dead.
So, instead, this is an open letter
to ask quite sincerely
what is there to live for?
- Passchendaele.
- Yes. Yes, of course.
[steady piano music plays]
[sniffles]
[Henry] "If God is not dead,
then He has forgotten us.
And I am starting to forget, perhaps,
not what we are fighting for
but what we are dying for.
Yours, Lieutenant Henry Beauchamp."
[Julia] "Dear Lieutenant Beauchamp,
you asked a difficult question,
to which there is no easy answer,
but I feel compelled to reply.
My name is Julia Moriston,
and like you, I often wonder why.
Why must we live through
this abominable war?
I do not know.
But the naturalist in me finds comfort
in the arms of Mother Nature.
Nature always finds a way.
I'm reminded of the raindrop-
never too small or insignificant
to make a difference,
beautifully volatile, evaporating,
falling as precipitation,
joining the rivers until
it becomes the ocean.
There is a certain alchemy to it.
We, too, are shaped and
changed by our suffering
until we are strong enough, like water,
to carve our way through rock.
I've known suffering and grief.
When my parents died,
I was determined to carry on doing
what I knew would make them proud.
I paused my studies to make
my own small contribution
to the war effort.
So I know what it is to feel alone
and to ask why.
When all else fails
[soldier] Beauchamp.
[Julia]take a deep breath
and remember England is still here.
Do not give up, Lieutenant.
And if you need to confide in someone,
you may write back to me.
And, perhaps boldly,
I shall expect a reply."
[gunfire, explosions]
[soldier] Gas! Gas, gas, gas!
[whimpering]
[distant explosions]
[whimpering]
[coughing]
[gunfire]
[breathing shakily]
[soft music playing]
[Henry] "Dear Julia,
I hardly know where to begin,
but you are right.
There was profound magic in your words,
some strange alchemy
that produced in me a glimmer of hope."
[Julia] "Dear Henry,
remember that our very existence itself
is miraculous.
As human beings,
we have a profound capacity
for love and goodness."
[Henry] "Julia, I have been
devouring your letters.
I so hope you got my last ones in order.
Tuesday's might arrive
after Wednesday's."
[Julia] "Henry, have you
heard from your brother Lam?
Has he uncovered a new
Egyptian pharaoh?"
[Henry] "I can't wait to
hear what you've been up to,
what you've been reading this week.
You still in your Scottish phase?"
[Julia] "I adore Scotland-
the flora and the fauna,
the landscape, the archaeology,
something inescapably
romantic about all of it.
Folklorist J.F. Campbell writes of a man
who joins the circle dance
of a faerie ring in the Highlands.
When he comes out, he feels as though
he's only been gone for a moment,
but, really, it's been years.
That's how our letters feel to me.
I could spend an eternity
in the dance of our words."
[Henry] "The poet John Donne writes,
"More than kisses,
letters mingle souls."
I think you know by
now that I find in you
a kindred spirit, a soulmate.
But just to be on the safe side,
I'm sealing this letter with a kiss."
[jaunty music plays]
[Julia] "I'll raise
you some Robert Burns
for your John Donne.
"My heart's in the Highlands.
"My heart is not here.
My heart's in the Highlands
a-chasing the deer."
Or it would be, if it wasn't
on the battlefield with you."
[Henry] "Should I be worried?
Are you going to run off with
some handsome Highlander?
I've never made the journey,
but I've always longed
to visit Scotland.
Sounds as if I might
have to start packing,
if only to stay in this
faerie dance with you.
As it happens,
I am trying to convince
my commanding officer
to allow me my leave
in the coming month.
Not enough time for a
trip all the way up north,
but London, perhaps."
[airplane engines rumbling]
[engines grow louder]
[distant boom]
[bombs whistling, explosion]
- [coughs, panting]
- [explosion]
[explosion]
[whistle blows, men shouting]
[explosion, gunfire]
[Julia] "That would be wonderful.
Did you know that my
greatest fear is not death
but us never having the chance to meet?"
[soldier] Bailwick.
Bellam.
[soft music plays]
- [soldier] Beauchamp.
- Yes.
[soldier 2] Whoo-hoo!
Lefty has another one from his Betty.
- [laughter]
- Hook, line and sinker.
- He's not even seen
- [explosion]
[soldier 2] Help! Help!
[coughing, grunting]
[airplane engines rumbling]
Get me out! [groans]
[men grunting]
[explosion]
[Henry] "Julia, I have
decided to call you my hope,
for that is what you are to me.
Fingers crossed my leave
will come through."
[somber music plays]
[typewriter clacking]
[Julia] "Hope springs eternal.
I've never heard your voice, Henry,
but the silence is deafening.
It's been two weeks and a
day since your last letter.
I won't despair just yet,
since "hope" is our byword,
but I am frightened, Henry."
Is he still intending to take his leave?
Last I heard, if reinforcements arrive.
And if he's still
You might have to brace
yourself, my dear.
[indistinct chatter]
[hoofbeats]
[horse nickers]
Hope springs eternal.
[sweeping music plays]
Henry?
Julia.
My hope.
[laughter]
[both breathing heavily]
Oh, I don't know what I'm doing.
[laughs]
Ah. Wait, wait, wait, wait.
You're not worried that we're
not married yet, are you?
"Yet"? Not exactly up
there with the proposals
of great literary
masterpieces. [laughing]
But, yes, I accept.
[Henry chuckles]
Mm. [breathing heavily]
Blasted thing.
[zipper opens]
[grunts, pants]
You know, I thought I'd
have to put away my dreams
to go to war, but
oh, here you are.
[chuckles]
- [Julia] Oh.
- Oh. Oh, God.
Oh, stay still. Stay still!
- For God's sake.
- [panting]
[romantic music plays]
[Julia giggles]
[Henry] Oh, what was it we
promised each other, again?
For richer or poorer,
for better or worse.
[grunts] Through doors wide and narrow.
[laughs] Yes, my darling,
something like that.
- Oh.
- Oh, I can't believe we did it.
I'm so very glad the priest
was able to fit us in.
So am I.
Well, welcome home, Mrs. Beauchamp.
- [chuckles]
- I love you, Henry.
[ticking]
Henry, my darling, are you still awake?
I don't like to blow my own trumpet,
but it seems I am quite the horologist.
[watch snaps]
[Henry moaning softly]
Henry?
[Henry whimpering]
[moaning]
[soft dramatic music plays]
[whimpers]
- Henry.
- [car engine sputters]
No! [screams] Oh, God!
There's gas everywhere!
There's gas! There's gas!
- It's okay. Come back to me.
- Oh, God! Oh, God!
- Come back to me.
- Oh, God! Oh, God! Oh, God!
You're in a flat in London with me.
Oh, God. Oh.
- You are here.
- [sobbing]
Dear Lieutenant Beauchamp,
my name is Julia Moriston,
and like you, I often wonder why.
[breathing heavily]
Julia. Julia.
[breathing slows]
My hope.
Yes, my darling.
Hold on to your hope.
[breathing heavily]
[stream trickling]
[wind whooshing]
[groans softly]
My ring.
Oh, no.
[crows cawing]
[mutters]
[sighs]
[wind whooshing]
[dramatic music plays]
Henry?
Henry!
This isn't funny!
Henry!
Henry!
[horse neighs]
[wagon rattling]
Excuse me.
Excuse me.
Excuse me.
Have you
have you by any chance
seen a man on this road?
Wavy hair, blue eyes?
[person speaking Gaelic]
[person 2 speaking Gaelic]
We had an accident in our motorcar,
my husband and I,
and somehow we were separated.
- [speaking Gaelic]
- [speaking Gaelic]
Oh, uh, I-I don't know Gaelic,
I'm afraid.
Do you speak any English at all?
Ah, Sassenach.
[Julia] Please, can you help me?
Perhaps-perhaps you could-
you could ask the
authorities in Inverness,
uh, to-to send help?
Inbhir Nis?
Inverness, yes, yes, yes.
Yes, that's right.
Oh, I'd be ever so grateful.
[speaking Gaelic]
Inbhir Nis. Inverness.
[speaking Gaelic]
Oh, no.
See, I have to stay here
to look for my husband.
What are you
No!
Get off of me!
No! No!
- Let me
- [object thuds]
[breathing heavily]
Julia!
[person] Feeling a wee
bit better, dearie?
[groans softly] What-what are you doing?
Just trying to help, if you'll let me.
Where am I?
Castle Leathers.
I'm Mistress Porter, housekeeper.
And the people that brought me here?
The Connors've gone, lass.
Done their part.
I don't understand.
Delivered ye here as
payment for their debts.
They owed a fair amount.
[ominous music plays]
[Julia grunts] Get ah!
- [Balloch grunts]
- No! Get your hands off me!
My, my, my, a Sassenach!
And a fiery one.
You can't keep me here
like some sort of prisoner.
I hope you didn't speak to
your last master this way.
"Master"?
Mistress Porter,
a maidservant needs
more suitable attire.
Yes, m'laird.
I am not your maidservant.
I am Julia Beauchamp
of Hyde Park, London.
I think you'll find that
you're now the property
of Simon Beaufort Fraser of Leathers.
Lord Lovat.
- [door rattles and clunks]
- Father.
We should press for the
Connors' coin instead.
And why on earth would I do that?
The coffers are dwindling.
The house is in need of repair.
That may be, but I have
my own particular needs
to think of as well.
[dramatic music plays]
[sighs] Please.
[sighs]
Excuse me. Excuse me, gentlemen!
[Campbell bladier] Sassenach.
Sassenach?
What on earth?
[indistinct lively chatter]
Oh, Julia
what has happened to us?
[indistinct chatter]
Excuse me, sir, I'm,
uh-I'm looking for a lady.
- Uh, dark hair, blue eyes.
- [person] A lady?
Oh, you'll not find one
of those in here, sir.
There's a few bonnie, uh
bonnie faces right enough, Sassenach.
But, uh, all of them have bollocks.
[laughter]
Forgive me.
Aye, what are you having?
Yes. I'll have a,
uh-a pint of ale, please.
Ale it is, then.
Well, sir, I am rather
urgently looking for a lady
by the name of Julia Beauchamp. If
[indistinct chatter]
Uh, sorry, I don't seem to,
uh, have any, um
You owe me.
[Campbell bladier] As I
was saying, Mr. Grant,
the terms we're proposing
are quite generous.
Three dwellings on fertile
land that borders Grant land
in exchange for monies owed.
Ah, a surprisingly generous
offer from the Campbells.
- Do you think so?
- Aye.
I can assure you, Mr. Grant,
of the good condition of
the properties mentioned.
You'd be able to house
a fair few families.
Aye, I think your da will approve.
Do hope they brought the deeds
to those properties, hmm?
What in God's name did he just say?
[tense music plays]
[grunting]
[grunts] Wait!
- Ah!
- [men grunting]
How dare you involve
yourself in clan matters?
I'm sorry! Look, please,
I meant nothing by it.
Should have kept your
mouth closed, then.
- [Henry grunts]
- Wait!
Maybe slit his throat first.
[Malcolm] Hold.
[Henry panting]
Now, what were you saying in there?
You were kind enough to pay for my ale.
I was merely pointing out what
I'm sure you already noticed.
Please, I don't want to be involved.
Too late for that now.
Tell me what you meant by what you said.
[Henry whispering indistinctly]
You'll tell that to my father.
[Davina] You'll begin with
the washing and mending
and windows and stairs.
The chamber pots need emptying as well,
and you'll assist the cook, of course.
Please, ma'am.
Mistress Porter.
Mistress Porter, I don't belong here.
I came to the Highlands
with my husband on holiday.
[Davina] Holy day?
Which holy day would that be?
He had business in Edinburgh,
so we thought we'd turn it
into a longer trip, but
I cannot explain it. I-I lost him.
How long has it been since his passing?
No, he hasn't-he hasn't passed away.
He's alive.
And he must be looking for me.
Well, he hasna found ye yet, has he?
If it's been more than
a fortnight, then
I doubt he's coming for you now.
What-what day is it now?
Must have knocked the sense out of you.
It's a Saturday.
Saturday.
Saturday when?
Next, you'll be asking
me what year it is,
or who sits upon the throne. [chuckles]
K- King George V.
King George I
in the year of our Lord 1714.
Goodness me.
[dramatic music plays]
No, it it it can't be.
I
I have a husband.
I have-I have a daughter, Claire.
I-I need to get back to them. I must.
I'm sorry for you, lass
but you've been sold to us,
and here you'll stay.
But I have no patience
for impertinence or
disobedience, mind you,
and neither does the laird.
And one last thing
on occasion
our laird can be most attentive.
Try not to linger in his presence.
Now, wash that look off your face
and come and find me in the kitchen.
[hoofbeats]
[dramatic music plays]
[birds chirping]
Our laird, Isaac Grant,
I present Mr. Henry Beauchamp.
My son says you have
something to tell me.
It was merely an observation.
"An observation"?
I've been trying to get
what the Campbells owe me for months,
so I do hope that what you have for me
is more than an observation, Sassenach.
Yes, well, in-in my
experience as a solicitor,
you know, uh, a lack of legal paperwork
is never a good sign when
it comes to property.
[chuckles]
That's it?
Uh
[clock ticking]
Well
it seems you're unfamiliar
with how we conduct our affairs
here in the Highlands.
A man's word is his bond.
And quite right.
And I shan't trouble you any further.
If you'd just kindly let me go,
I could, uh
Tell him what you told me at the well.
Well, I mean, judging by what I heard,
you know [chuckles]
um, if you were to accept
the properties that the
other party are offering
The Campbells.
The Campbells, uh, were offering,
um, there would be no guarantee
of ownership on the
land on which they sit.
You see, the written contract
must state that you would own the land
and collect the rents,
not the, um-the Campbells.
Told you, Da.
He has an eye for the particulars.
[Henry] Well, with all due respect,
it wasn't the particulars
that drew my attention,
it was your advisor.
Pádraig Druiminn is my bladier.
Apart from my son here,
he's my most trusted counsel
and my right hand in all matters.
What observation do you have
to make about him, then?
Uh
He was misrepresenting you.
Why don't you search this
most trusted of bladiers
for a sack of coins?
Not his usual purse.
[Isaac] Mr. Bug.
[muffled arguing]
[thumping, shouting]
[thumping, groaning]
You're canny
for a Sassenach.
[whispering indistinctly]
How would you like to be my new bladier?
[scoffs]
- What about the other fellow?
- Never mind him.
Well, unfortunately,
there are other matters
occupying my time.
See, I'm actually urgently
searching for someone.
Our business would take you
all across the Grant lands
and beyond.
An opportunity to kill two
birds with one stone, perhaps.
I'm afraid, as much as I
would like to accept
Well, you're not obliged, of course.
You're free to continue on your own.
And good luck to you.
But
an Englishman
alone in the Highlands
without protection
You would have all
this at your disposal,
and the strength of the
Grant name behind you.
I see.
Well, very well, then.
I'd like to accept.
Let's have a dram.
[sighs]
[sheep bleats]
[footsteps]
[door creaks]
[footsteps approaching]
What are you doing in here?
Oh, forgive me, sir. I-I was dusting.
I'll leave you to your work.
Oh, there's no work that cannot wait
when there's a bonnie
English rose before me.
- [chuckles nervously]
- [Lovat chuckles]
You are too kind, sir.
Oh, how very observant of you.
Kind.
Handsome, some might say.
[chuckles] The perfect gentleman.
[Julia chuckles awkwardly]
Well, I'm-I'm finished in here.
I have some mending to do
for Mistress Porter, so I
Ah, ah.
I'm the laird
and you'll do as I say.
Oh, here I am, Mistress Porter.
Oh.
Could have sworn I heard her calling me.
Very well.
Not this time.
[ominous music plays]
[thunder rumbling]
[nocturnal birds whistling]
[panting]
[hoofbeats]
[gasping]
[horse huffing]
You've enough there for a long journey.
Please, sir.
Brian. Fraser.
Mr. Fraser, I believe
your father is the laird.
I don't belong here.
I'm trying to find my husband.
Please let me go, I beg you.
[bird whistles]
That may be true,
but you'll no' find him tonight.
There's a storm coming.
A Highland storm's unforgiving.
If you're caught out here,
you'll soon be humbled
or suffer a fate much worse.
I've weathered many a storm.
I appreciate your concern,
but I will take my chances.
[Brian] My da willna.
He'll send his man
Balloch here after you.
A matter of pride.
Please.
Balloch! No!
[Julia] No! Please!
Get your hands off of me!
You-no!
Let me-let me go!
No! No!
Let me go! No!
[tense music plays]
What have you to say for yourself?
I have told you, I do not belong here.
I am no one's prisoner or servant,
for that matter.
I was doing what anyone in
my position would have done.
[grunts, coughs]
[Lovat] Twenty should be lesson enough
to temper that insolence.
Father, it wasna her. 'Twas me.
Ask Balloch, here.
I aided her in her attempt.
I heard her pleas to you, and
well, I convinced her to go.
[Julia coughs, wheezes]
Mistress Porter,
take our new maidservant to her quarters
and make sure that she's
secured for the night.
Give him the twenty, then.
- No.
- No.
Don't make me say it again or
you'll both be joining him.
[breathing heavily]
Dinna fash, Ma. 'Tis only a few lashes.
Would you like to count?
Or shall I?
[whip cracking]
The bladier's quarters.
I think you'll find it to your liking.
If not, you can sleep in the barn
with the other beasts.
You don't like me much, do you?
Dinna ken you well enough
to have formed an opinion.
Ah
your predecessor.
Now, him, I didna like much at all.
[ominous music plays]
[indistinct chatter]
[lively music plays]
I must apologize for the conduct
of the younger MacKenzie.
Since the death of his
father this past month,
he's not been himself.
No, I'd say that his
fisticuffs spoke quite clearly
to the younger Grant's face.
Hmm?
The laird is not pleased.
What can I do on behalf
of the MacKenzies
to make things right with the Grants?
I'm not sure that there
is anything you can do.
Perhaps you might consider an offer
a betrothal
between our Ellen MacKenzie
and Malcolm Grant,
their marriage come harvest time.
A- a gesture of peace and an alliance
that will benefit both clans.
The laird
he wants Dougal MacKenzie's head,
not his sister's hand.
You're still a stranger in these parts.
Not been with the Grants long at all.
Here at the gathering,
I couldn't help but notice
that you've been asking for a woman.
There are plenty to hand,
but none to your liking?
No.
I have, um
particular tastes.
Perhaps we could help each other.
You bring an offer of a
betrothal to the Grants,
and I will
offer my assistance
in satisfying your particular tastes.
I will put your offer before the laird.
[distant bird calling]
[fire crackling]
[sighs]
[Julia] "My dearest Henry,
my last memory with you was
at the circle of stones.
There was a deafening sound,
like an angry swarm of bees,
and then you were gone.
Or perhaps I was.
Perhaps I am dead.
Perhaps I've lost my mind.
Have I fallen through
the looking glass?"
[Henry] "My dearest Julia,
everywhere I turn,
I search for your face,
but it remains elusive.
Each day, I am forced to play a role,
to wear a mask of bravery
that feels foreign to me.
The memory of you and
Claire is my only solace-
the single thread keeping
me tethered to hope.
Without you, I am adrift,
a man lost in a sea of uncertainty
and longing."
[Julia] "I am the same as I ever was-
mad with love for you,
our beautiful Claire,
and our unborn child.
But my circumstances have changed.
[breathing heavily]
There are some unfathomable obstacles
in our path.
I don't know how this letter
could possibly reach you.
Perhaps it will simply be
a record of my thoughts."
[Henry] "I vow to you with
every fiber of my being
that I will find my way back to you.
No matter the distance or
the time that separates us,
I will not rest until we are reunited."
[Julia] "You are surely home
by now with our darling girl.
I must believe that you are.
How could I bear this otherwise?
Kiss her for me.
Tell her I love her.
I promise to find a way to both of you.
Just as your first letter found me,
I'll find a way back to you."
[Henry] "You are my anchor, my love,
and my reason for enduring this madness.
Sealed with a kiss,
Henry."
[smooches]
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