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مسلسل Outlander مترجم - Episode 1
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00:00:08People disappear all the time.
00:00:12Young girls run away from home.
00:00:15Children stray from their parents and are never seen again.
00:00:20Housewives take the grocery money in a taxi to the train station.
00:00:25Most are found eventually.
00:00:28Disappearances, after all, of explanations.
00:00:33Usually.
00:00:39Strange the things you remember.
00:00:42Single images and feelings that stay with you down through the years.
00:00:47Like the moment I'd realized I'd never owned a vase.
00:00:51That I'd never lived in any place long enough to justify having such a simple thing.
00:00:59And how at that moment, I wanted nothing so much in all the world as to have a vase of
00:01:04my very own.
00:01:09It was a Tuesday afternoon.
00:01:12Six months after the end of the war.
00:01:18Oh, God!
00:01:22Oh, God!
00:01:24Oh, God!
00:01:25Hold him! Hold him right now, you hear me?
00:01:26Jesus!
00:01:29Oh, God!
00:01:31Oh, God!
00:01:32Oh, God!
00:01:36Oh!
00:01:39Oh, God!
00:01:39Let the club the febrile artery before he bleeds out!
00:01:42Oh, boy!
00:01:42All right.
00:01:43You're going home, now.
00:01:43You're going home.
00:01:44Oh, God!
00:01:46Oh!
00:01:49Oh!
00:01:49Oh!
00:01:50Oh!
00:01:51Oh!
00:01:52Oh!
00:01:54Oh!
00:01:58We've got him now, nurse.
00:02:03Let's go.
00:02:26Claire, did you hear? It's over. It's really finally over.
00:03:05Somehow in my mind, V.E. Day, the end of the bloodiest and most terrible war in human history, grows
00:03:14fainter with each passing day.
00:03:18But I can still recall every detail of the day when I saw the life I wanted sitting in a
00:03:23window.
00:03:25I sometimes wonder what would have happened if I'd bought that vase and made a home for it.
00:03:31Would that have changed things? Would I have been happy? Who can say?
00:03:37I do know this. Even now, after all the pain and death and heartbreak that followed, I still would make
00:03:46the same choice.
00:03:48Sing me a song of a lass that is gone. Say, could that lass be I?
00:03:58Mary of soul, she sailed on a day over the sea to sky.
00:04:11Billow and breeze, islands and seas, mountains of rain and sun.
00:04:20All that was good, all that was fair, all that was me is gone.
00:04:31Sing me a song of a lass that is gone. Say, could that lass be I?
00:04:55Sing me a song of a lass that is gone.
00:05:09I am high, fillet, all that was fair, all that was fair, all that was fair, all that was fair.
00:05:30We were in Scotland on our second honeymoon, or at least that's what Frank called it,
00:05:36a way to celebrate the end of the war years and begin our lives anew.
00:05:44But it was more than that.
00:05:46I think we both felt a holiday would be a convenient masquerade for the real business of getting to know
00:05:52the people we've become after five years apart.
00:06:01What do you suppose that is?
00:06:02Huh?
00:06:03Oh, good lord.
00:06:05Blood.
00:06:06You sure?
00:06:08I think I should know the look of blood by now.
00:06:11The stain just liked it on the house next door.
00:06:15There's two more over there.
00:06:21You seem to be surrounded by homes marked with blood.
00:06:25Perhaps Pharaoh has refused Moses and the spirit of death will travel the streets of Inverness tonight,
00:06:30sparing only those who marked the doors with lamb's blood.
00:06:33You may be closer than you think.
00:06:35It could well be some sort of sacrificial ritual, but I suspect pagan rather than Hebrew.
00:06:40I've had no idea in Inverness such a hotbed of contemporary paganism.
00:06:44Oh, my dear, there's no place on earth with more magic and superstition mixed into his daily life in the
00:06:48Scottish Highlands.
00:07:04The blood you saw is that of a black cockerel.
00:07:07Well, it's an old custom at this time of year to make such a sacrifice to honour St. Orin.
00:07:13Ah, Orin.
00:07:14He was sainted in the 8th century?
00:07:17Oh, you know your history.
00:07:19I'm afraid my husband's the historian, Mrs. Baird.
00:07:22He'd quite happily stand here holding forth for hours if you encourage him.
00:07:26Oh, hardly.
00:07:27No.
00:07:27Hard and folklore is far from my speciality, but am I right in thinking there's, um...
00:07:32Isn't there an old saying associated with St. Orin?
00:07:38Yes, the earth went over Orin's eyes. He, um, he was buried alive voluntarily.
00:07:46Charming.
00:07:48Are you a professor then, Mr. Randall?
00:07:50I will be soon.
00:07:50Oh.
00:07:51This is accepted at post at Oxford beginning in two weeks.
00:07:54Ach, then this is a last holiday before settling down to a workaday life again, is it?
00:07:59Well, you've picked up any time to be here. Just now on Samhain.
00:08:03I take it that's Gaelic for Halloween?
00:08:05Ah, well, Halloween is derived from Samhain.
00:08:08Um, you know, the church often took pagan holidays, renamed them for their own purposes, so...
00:08:13Samhain became Halloween, uh, Yule became Christmas, so on.
00:08:18Well, you're both welcome at the festival, of course.
00:08:21Mind you, ghosts are freed on the feast days, and they'll be wandering about,
00:08:26afraid to do good or ill as they please.
00:08:28And, of course, what would Halloween, Samhain be without a good ghost story?
00:08:33Oh, and we have those for sure. I'll show you to your room.
00:08:44Before the war, we were inseparable.
00:08:47But for the next five years, we saw each other a grand total of ten days.
00:08:52That's not without its chance.
00:08:55It's an army tent and a cot in the mud.
00:08:57Ah, indeed.
00:09:05When the war ended, we both thought things would return to the way they once were.
00:09:11But they hadn't.
00:09:17Gosh.
00:09:19So much for a man for privacy.
00:09:21Do you think the sound carries?
00:09:24I think it's fair to say Mrs, uh, Mrs. Baird will be kept appraised of any renewed attempt to start
00:09:28a family.
00:09:38Lazy bones.
00:09:38Lazy bones.
00:09:40You'll never manage the next branch in your family tree if you don't chew more industry than that.
00:09:45Oh, really?
00:09:50What are you doing?
00:09:51Come on.
00:09:53Mrs. Randall, how am I to do with you?
00:09:57Right.
00:10:00Ridiculous.
00:10:01What are you doing?
00:10:02I'm going to break it down.
00:10:03I'm going to break it down.
00:10:17You know, one of those things I used to try and remember, lying in my cot.
00:10:23That's the sound of my husband's laugh.
00:10:27Couldn't conjure it no matter what I did.
00:10:30Couldn't hear it even though I'd heard it a million times before.
00:10:38It's the strangest thing.
00:10:40I know.
00:10:44I used to, um,
00:10:48I used to sketch this.
00:10:49My hand.
00:10:50Well, the lines, really.
00:10:54Why exactly, I'm not sure, but I had a very clear memory of this, this pattern.
00:11:00Made little doodles everywhere.
00:11:04There was, um,
00:11:06a brigadier once dressed me down because I drew it in the margin of a report for the minister.
00:11:10No.
00:11:28Claire.
00:12:17Happy?
00:12:18Yes.
00:12:23Frank's passion for history was another reason for choosing the Highlands.
00:12:27You see up there?
00:12:28On the top there, that's like Cocknam and Rock.
00:12:31And in the 17th and 18th centuries, you'd have often found a British Army patrol up there,
00:12:36lying in wait for Scottish rebels and brigands.
00:12:39Can you see how it commands the high ground in every direction?
00:12:42It's a perfect position for an ambush.
00:12:46Not that I minded.
00:12:48I was raised by my uncle after the death of my parents.
00:12:57Uncle Lam was an archaeologist.
00:12:59Oh, yes.
00:13:00So I'd spent the balance of my formative years traipsing through dusty ruins and various excavations throughout the world.
00:13:07I'd learned to dig latrines and boil water and do a number of other things not suitable for a young
00:13:13lady of gentle birth.
00:13:14Uncle.
00:13:15Uncle.
00:13:15Uncle.
00:13:16Uncle.
00:13:23Uncle.
00:13:25Uncle.
00:13:26Uncle.
00:13:26Uncle.
00:13:26Uncle.
00:13:27Uncle.
00:13:28Uncle.
00:13:30Uncle.
00:13:30Uncle.
00:13:30Uncle.
00:13:37Uncle.
00:13:43Uncle.
00:13:46Uncle.
00:13:53Uncle.
00:13:54but from what I can gather,
00:13:56Castle Leigh was the ancestral home of the
00:13:59laird of the Mackenzie clan
00:14:00until midway through the 19th century.
00:14:02Hmm.
00:14:03If you take a look.
00:14:21In a way, burying himself in the distant past
00:14:24gave Frank an ability to escape the recent.
00:14:28While I was in the army,
00:14:30Frank had served in London, intelligence,
00:14:33overseeing spies and running covert operations.
00:14:36So I think this might have been the kitchen.
00:14:38Really?
00:14:39Hmm.
00:14:40I would say that's probably a hearth.
00:14:47Yeah.
00:14:52Strange.
00:14:53I have no evidence that my ancestor visited this castle, but...
00:14:58He was within his operational sphere, so...
00:15:01It's just possible that he walked his very halls.
00:15:08He'd sent dozens of men behind the lines on secret missions,
00:15:12and most never came back.
00:15:15He didn't talk about it very often,
00:15:18but I knew it preyed on him.
00:15:24Mm-hmm.
00:15:26Let's go.
00:15:56Let's open.
00:15:57Come on.
00:16:00Three, two, one.
00:16:37What do you think this was useful?
00:16:39The lack of proper lighting and ventilation, I would say...
00:16:44...province of the castle hermit?
00:16:46Mm-hmm.
00:16:47Perhaps a troll or two?
00:16:52I don't think trolls live in pairs.
00:16:55Solitary creatures, though, eh?
00:16:59Well, it's pity.
00:17:02Or this.
00:17:04No one to share it with.
00:17:11You get dirty?
00:17:14You can give me a bath.
00:17:35Why, Mrs. Randall, I do believe you've left your undergarments at home.
00:17:40Mm-hmm.
00:17:43Mm-hmm.
00:17:52Oh.
00:18:03Oh.
00:18:06Oh.
00:18:09Oh.
00:18:10Oh.
00:18:11Oh.
00:18:18Yes. Yes, yes, yes, I found him.
00:18:22Oh, indeed. Let's have a look.
00:18:24Him? What is it? Is it Walter?
00:18:27No, darling. Jonathan. Jonathan Wolverton Randall, finally.
00:18:30Captain of Dragoons in the British Army and your direct ancestor.
00:18:36Exactly. Otherwise known as Black Jack.
00:18:38A rather dashing nickname that he probably acquired while he was stationed here in the 1740s.
00:18:43The Reverend has found a series of army dispatchers that mention the captain by name.
00:18:47Oh, how exciting. It is.
00:18:49Good to see all your sleuthing over the past week has paid off.
00:18:52Hmm. Hmm.
00:18:53Yes, I was beginning to wonder.
00:18:55Defears Black Jack commanded the garrison at Fort William for four years or so.
00:18:59Seems to spend quite a bit of his time harassing the Scottish countryside on behalf of the Crown.
00:19:04Well, he was hardly allowed in that endeavour.
00:19:06The English were deeply unpopular throughout the Highlands in the 18th century.
00:19:10Hmm. Well into the 20th, it would seem.
00:19:12I distinctly heard the barman in the pub last night refer to us as Sassanux.
00:19:17Oh, boy. I hope you didn't take offence.
00:19:19It only means Englishman, after all, or at worst, outlander.
00:19:25Hmm.
00:19:26I've brought you a wee bit of refreshment, gentlemen.
00:19:29I brought but the two cups for...
00:19:31I thought perhaps Mrs. Randall might care to join me in the kitchen.
00:19:34Yes.
00:19:35Yes, absolutely. Thank you.
00:19:40See you later.
00:19:48Oh, it's been so long since I've had a good cup of oolong.
00:19:53Aye. I couldn't have get it during the war.
00:19:58It's best for the readings, though.
00:20:00Oh, I had a terrible time with that arrow grey.
00:20:03The leaves fall apart so fast it's hard to tell anything at all.
00:20:10So you read tea leaves, then?
00:20:12Like my grandmother taught me.
00:20:15And her grandmother before that.
00:20:18Drink up your cup. Let's see what we've got there.
00:20:33Well, am I going to meet a tall, dark stranger and take a trip across the sea?
00:20:38Could be.
00:20:40Or could not.
00:20:44Everything in it's contradictory.
00:20:47There's a curved leaf, which indicates a journey,
00:20:50but it's crossed by a broken one, which means staying put.
00:20:55Hmm.
00:20:57And there are strangers there, to be sure.
00:20:59Several of them.
00:21:00And one of them's your husband, if I read the leaves, all right.
00:21:06Show me your hand, dear.
00:21:14Lord, most hands have a likeness to them.
00:21:18There are patterns, you know?
00:21:20But this is a pattern I've not seen before.
00:21:29The large thumb, now,
00:21:31means that you're strong-minded
00:21:33and you have a will not easily crossed.
00:21:37And this is your Mount of Venus.
00:21:41In a man, it means he likes the lasses,
00:21:44but it is a bit different for a woman.
00:21:46To be polite about it,
00:21:48your husband is nae likely to stray far from your bed.
00:21:56The lifeline's interrupted,
00:22:00or bits and pieces.
00:22:05The marriage line's divided,
00:22:07means two marriages.
00:22:10But
00:22:11most divided lines are broken.
00:22:18yours is
00:22:22forked.
00:22:27I suspect
00:22:28your ancestor
00:22:29had a patron.
00:22:31A prominent and powerful man
00:22:33who could protect him from the censor of his superiors.
00:22:35Possibly, but it would have to have been someone
00:22:37very high up in the hierarchy of the day
00:22:39to exert that kind of influence.
00:22:41The Duke of Sandringham?
00:22:44The Duke of Sandringham?
00:22:46Hold on.
00:22:47Wasn't Sandringham a suspected Jacobite himself?
00:22:50Aye, you know,
00:22:51I believe you're right.
00:22:52And the Duke died under very suspicious circumstances
00:22:55just before the battle.
00:22:56None of that, none of that.
00:22:57Stand away before you do some pediment and damage.
00:22:59We're getting somewhere at last.
00:23:00I'm really glad to hear it,
00:23:02but
00:23:03I think I shall take my leave.
00:23:05Oh, so soon?
00:23:06Yes, I, uh,
00:23:08I feel a bath is in order.
00:23:10Aye, of course.
00:23:11Well, I hope you'll join us
00:23:12for Samhain tomorrow night.
00:23:14What, the Pagan Festival?
00:23:15Reverend Wakefield,
00:23:16you do astonish me.
00:23:17Oh, well,
00:23:19I love a good ghost story
00:23:20as much as the next fellow.
00:23:22Right.
00:23:23Take your time, darling.
00:23:25Do try to get home
00:23:25before the storm breaks.
00:23:26I will.
00:23:37I'd never put any stock
00:23:38in superstition
00:23:39and my Catholicism
00:23:41was nominal at best.
00:23:43However,
00:23:44I couldn't shake the feeling
00:23:45that Mrs. Graham's words
00:23:46had a ring of prophecy.
00:23:50The war had taught me
00:23:51to cherish the present
00:23:52because tomorrow
00:23:53might not ever come to pass.
00:23:56But what I didn't know
00:23:57at the time
00:23:58was that tomorrow
00:23:59would prove less important
00:24:00than yesterday.
00:24:08Jesus,
00:24:09free Jerusalem,
00:24:10Christ.
00:24:11Christ.
00:24:50excuse me.
00:24:51Excuse me.
00:24:52Can I help you
00:24:53with something?
00:25:19Frank, it's happened to have the whole place lit up by the time you got back.
00:25:25darling what's the matter Frank look like you've seen a ghost I'm not sure that I haven't when he pushed
00:25:45past me he was close enough that I should have felt him brush my sleeve as he passed but I
00:25:49I didn't and then I turned
00:25:53around to say something and he gone he just vanished so I felt a chill down my spine
00:26:06did you have many Scots in your charge during the war
00:26:11yes there was quite a few there was one in particular he was a piper in the third sea force
00:26:20he couldn't stand being stuck with a needle
00:26:26right
00:26:35what is it exactly that
00:26:39you're asking me Frank
00:26:42when I saw that chap staring up at you
00:26:46I thought he might be someone you'd nursed
00:26:49someone who might be looking for you now
00:26:52to reconnect
00:26:58to reconnect
00:27:00it wouldn't be unusual
00:27:03I mean it wouldn't be surprising if you had a sense of comfort or
00:27:09are you asking me
00:27:12if I've been unfaithful
00:27:13yeah
00:27:14so what do you think of me Frank
00:27:17no darling no
00:27:19no
00:27:20all I meant was that
00:27:22even if you had
00:27:23it would make no difference to me
00:27:25I love you
00:27:25I love you
00:27:26and nothing you could ever do
00:27:27could stop my loving you
00:27:35forgive me
00:27:38forgive me
00:27:44of course
00:28:13sex
00:28:14sex
00:28:14sex was our bridge back to one another
00:28:17the one place where we always met
00:28:20whatever obstacles presented themselves during the day or night
00:28:24we could seek out and find each other again in bed
00:28:28as long as we had that
00:28:30I had faith everything would work out
00:28:54that reminds me I um
00:28:55I want to set an alarm
00:28:59I want to see the witches
00:29:08must I ask
00:29:11apparently there's a circle of standing stones
00:29:13on a hill just outside the village
00:29:15and there's a local group
00:29:17who still observe rituals there
00:29:19well they're not actually witches
00:29:21this lot are meant to be druids
00:29:23sadly I don't think there'll be a coven of devil worshippers
00:29:26it was a pity
00:29:28I can't imagine anything I'd rather do
00:29:31liar
00:29:33where will we be watching this spectacle?
00:29:36a place called Craig and the Dune
00:29:48so according to local folklore
00:29:51these stones were carried here from Africa
00:29:53by a race of Celtic giants
00:29:55I wasn't aware
00:29:57I wasn't aware that the Celts made a lot of trips to Africa
00:29:59only the giant ones
00:30:04Casat and Vaness
00:30:06yes it must be
00:30:11someone's coming
00:30:22you
00:30:23you
00:30:32you
00:30:33you
00:30:35you
00:30:49Is that Mrs. Graham?
00:30:52I think it is.
00:30:54Reverend's housekeeper is a witch.
00:30:57Not a witch.
00:30:58Drew would remember.
00:31:21They should have been ridiculous, and perhaps they were, parading in circles on top of
00:31:28a hill, but the hairs on the back of my neck prickled at the sight, and some small voice
00:31:35inside warned me I wasn't supposed to be here.
00:31:39I was an unwelcome voyeur to something ancient and powerful.
00:32:11I was an unwelcome boy.
00:32:14I am an unwelcome boy.
00:32:17I am an unwelcome boy.
00:32:22I am a unwelcome boy.
00:32:32The Lord is the one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the
00:33:02one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the
00:33:02one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the
00:33:02one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the
00:33:02one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the
00:33:02one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the
00:33:02one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the
00:33:02one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the
00:33:02one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the
00:33:02one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the
00:33:02one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the one who is the
00:33:02one who is
00:33:25Oh, my God.
00:33:42Oh, my God.
00:34:07Oh, my God.
00:34:17I've got something, I've got a minute.
00:34:22Someone's coming.
00:34:33Come on.
00:34:43Can you see that?
00:34:56Come on.
00:34:58You should be happy.
00:35:15What have you got there?
00:35:17I'm looking for that plant.
00:35:19I think it's a forget-me-not, but I'm not sure.
00:35:21Why don't you pop back and get it?
00:35:22I was considering it.
00:35:25Would you care to go with me?
00:35:26Oh, darling.
00:35:28I'd love to, but I've got an appointment with the Reverend.
00:35:30Found a box of materials last night.
00:35:33Bills of sale from Blackjack's quartermaster.
00:35:35That sounds terribly exciting.
00:35:38Are you laughing at me?
00:35:40Never.
00:35:42Shall I meet you for dinner later?
00:35:44Yes.
00:35:45Love you.
00:35:46Love you.
00:35:46Come here.
00:35:51Come here.
00:36:02I'm going to go.
00:36:06See you next to one another.
00:36:06With his eyes.
00:36:18I'm going to go over here.
00:36:19I'm going to go over here.
00:36:20I'm going to go over here.
00:36:23Amen.
00:36:57Amen.
00:37:44Once, traveling at night, I fell asleep in the passenger seat of a moving car.
00:37:50Lulled by the noise and the motion into an illusion of serene weightlessness.
00:37:56Then the driver took a bridge too fast, and I woke to see the world spinning outside the
00:38:01car windows, and the sickening sensation of falling at high speed.
00:38:08That is as close as I can come to describing what I experienced, but it falls woefully
00:38:15short.
00:39:03What?
00:39:26What?
00:39:27What?
00:39:28What?
00:39:28What?
00:39:30What?
00:39:32What?
00:39:33What?
00:39:35What?
00:39:37What?
00:39:41What?
00:39:43What?
00:40:00What?
00:40:06What?
00:40:08What?
00:40:14What?
00:40:15When confronted with the impossible, the rational mind would grope for the logical.
00:40:22What?
00:40:23What?
00:40:24Perhaps I had stumbled onto the set of a cinema company filming a costume drama of some sort.
00:40:30Ah!
00:40:31What?
00:40:41Evoliger!
00:40:43What!
00:40:44What?
00:40:46But there was no logical reason for actors to fire live ammunition.
00:41:17Oh, my God.
00:41:47What the hell are you doing?
00:41:56You're not Frank.
00:41:58No, madam, I'm not.
00:42:01Who the bloody hell are you?
00:42:09I'm Jonathan Randall, Esquire.
00:42:11Captain of His Majesty's Eighth Dragoons.
00:42:17At your service.
00:42:29Who are you?
00:42:30My husband's expecting me.
00:42:32He'll come looking for me if I'm not back in ten minutes.
00:42:34Your husband?
00:42:35What's his name?
00:42:38What is his name?
00:42:41Frank.
00:42:43Frank what?
00:42:46Frank Beacham.
00:42:47He's a teacher.
00:42:49Oh, it's a pleasure to meet you, Mrs. Frank Beach and the teacher's wife.
00:42:54You must take me the fool.
00:42:55You'll be well advised to tell me exactly who you are and why you are here.
00:43:00Adam!
00:43:00You will find my patience is not infinite.
00:43:03Get off me, you bastard.
00:43:07Ah, the speech of a lady.
00:43:10The language of a whore.
00:43:12I choose the whore.
00:43:20Threw it!
00:43:21What?
00:43:22Threw it!
00:43:24Who are you?
00:43:25Where are we going?
00:43:26Where are we going?
00:43:28Come here.
00:43:31You men over there.
00:43:32Help me!
00:43:33Help me!
00:43:37I wanted it to be a dream, but I knew it wasn't.
00:43:47If nothing else, my erstwhile saviour fairly reeked of odours, too foul to be part of any dream I was
00:43:54likely to conjure up.
00:44:06Let's try the king of a boy.
00:44:09To the king of a boy were the king of a night.
00:44:15I thought that she was a man of a man going to go.
00:44:15Tell me your boy.
00:44:16He said he drove me to go.
00:44:18He said he said he was a man and I was a man of a man.
00:44:18Don't let him go.
00:44:24He said that I would go.
00:44:25And he said that I have a man and had a man of a man.
00:44:25I'll give you that last.
00:44:29I trust you're able to see me now.
00:44:32Excuse me.
00:44:33I decided to continue using my maiden name.
00:44:36If they intended to ransom me,
00:44:38I didn't want to lead them back to Frank.
00:44:40Claire.
00:44:42Claire Beecham.
00:44:43Claire Beecham.
00:44:46That's right.
00:44:47And just what the hell do you think you're doing?
00:44:48I said you found her.
00:44:49Aye.
00:44:50She was up in words with a certain captain of Dragoons
00:44:53with whom we are acquainted.
00:44:54There seemed to be some question
00:44:56as to whether the lady was or was not a whore.
00:44:58And what was the lady's position in this discussion?
00:45:03I am not.
00:45:04We could put her to the test.
00:45:07I don't hold with rape.
00:45:10I'll leave another time for it anyway.
00:45:12Dougal, I've no idea what she might be or who.
00:45:16I'll stick my best shirt.
00:45:17She's no a whore.
00:45:21We'll puzzle it out later.
00:45:23We've got a good distance to go tonight.
00:45:25And we must do something about Jamie first.
00:45:27Escape was my chief concern.
00:45:29Oh, I've done it.
00:45:29But I had no idea where I was.
00:45:31And trying to find the road back to Inverness
00:45:34in the gathering darkness felt like a fool's errand.
00:45:37It's a joint, poor bugger.
00:45:39You can't ride with it like that, can't you, lad?
00:45:41That's bad enough sitting still.
00:45:43I couldn't manage a horse.
00:45:44I don't mean to be leaving him behind.
00:45:46There's no help for it, then.
00:45:48I'll have to force the joint back.
00:45:50The wisest course of action
00:45:52would have been to keep my head down,
00:45:54my mouth shut,
00:45:55and wait for the search parties
00:45:57Frank must have called out by now.
00:45:59Be your love.
00:46:02Hold on.
00:46:03Hold on.
00:46:15Hold on.
00:46:16Don't you dare.
00:46:18Stand aside at once.
00:46:21You break his arm if you do it like that.
00:46:25You have to get the bone of the upper arm
00:46:26in the correct position
00:46:27before he slips back into joint.
00:46:44Hold him steady.
00:46:58This is the worst part.
00:47:13Tangier.
00:47:16It doesn't hurt anymore.
00:47:18It will.
00:47:19It'll be tender for about a week.
00:47:21You'll need a sling.
00:47:23You.
00:47:24Fetch me a long piece of cloth or a belt.
00:47:27Fetch me, she says.
00:47:28Oh, dear, the lads.
00:47:30You are your belt.
00:47:36Taking a guess you've done this before.
00:47:38I'm a nurse.
00:47:41Not a wet nurse.
00:47:42Not a wet nurse.
00:47:46You mustn't remove the joint for two or three days.
00:47:49When you begin to use it again,
00:47:51very slowly at first.
00:47:53Stop it once if it hurts.
00:47:56Use warm compressors on it daily.
00:47:59All right.
00:48:02How does that feel?
00:48:04Better.
00:48:08And you're right.
00:48:10Aye.
00:48:11Good.
00:48:11We'll leave in.
00:48:36Where is it?
00:48:38Where's the city?
00:48:39It should be visible for her.
00:48:42And Vanessa.
00:48:44Are you looking straight at it?
00:48:49There were no electric lights as far as the eye could see.
00:48:52So as much as my rational mind rebelled against the idea,
00:48:56I knew in my heart I was no longer in the 20th century.
00:49:04Get yourself up.
00:49:07You be sure to stay close to the rest of us.
00:49:09And should you try anything else,
00:49:10I shall slit your throat for you.
00:49:12Do you understand me?
00:49:14Give me your foot.
00:49:16Give it to me.
00:49:27Careful.
00:49:28What are you trying to do?
00:49:29I'll get my propelish to cover you.
00:49:32Shivering.
00:49:37Thank you, but I'm fine, really.
00:49:40You're shaking so hard as making mighty throttle.
00:49:43The plat will keep us both one, but...
00:49:45Can I do it one-handed?
00:49:47Can you reach?
00:49:48Can you reach?
00:49:48You're so clean, sir.
00:49:49You're all in, eh?
00:49:58Shawneys.
00:49:59I'll go to the freeze before sun-up.
00:50:03Sun-up?
00:50:04You mean, we'll be riding all night?
00:50:07All night?
00:50:08Well, the next one too, I reckon.
00:50:11I'm a fine time of year for a ride, though.
00:50:14Through it.
00:50:15Let's go.
00:50:45Let's go.
00:51:15Let's go.
00:51:18Let's go.
00:51:20Let's go.
00:51:21Let's go.
00:51:46Let's go.
00:52:03Let's go.
00:52:07Let's go.
00:52:10Let's go.
00:52:11Let's go.
00:52:11Let's go.
00:52:34Let's go.
00:52:57Let's go.
00:53:02Let's go.
00:53:03Let's go.
00:53:05Let's go.
00:53:06Let's go.
00:53:07Let's go.
00:53:12Let's go.
00:53:18Let's go.
00:53:20Let's go.
00:53:22Let's go.
00:53:33Let's go.
00:53:37Let's go.
00:53:45Let's go.
00:54:05Let's go.
00:54:08Let's go.
00:54:11Let's go.
00:54:20Let's go.
00:54:27Let's go.
00:54:32Let's go.
00:54:35Let's go.
00:54:44Let's go.
00:54:48Let's go.
00:54:50Let's go.
00:55:01Let's go.
00:55:03Let's go.
00:55:05Let's go.
00:55:07Let's go.
00:55:10Let's go.
00:55:21Let's go.
00:55:23Let's go.
00:55:23Well, it's bruising.
00:55:24Well, wasn't much of a choice.
00:55:27If I didn't even move my shoulder, I'd never have moved anything else ever again.
00:55:32Now, I can handle a single red coat with one hand.
00:55:34Maybe even two, not three.
00:55:38Besides, you can fix it for me again when we get to where we're going.
00:55:41That's what you think.
00:55:44Here's to you, lass, for tipping us to the villains in the rocks
00:55:48and giving us a wee bit of fun!
00:55:50Slangerva! Slangerva!
00:55:58Have a wee nip.
00:56:00Money fill your belly, but make you forget you're hungry.
00:56:21You're hungry.
00:56:25You're hungry.
00:56:27You're hungry.
00:56:31You're hungry.
00:56:42Let's go.
00:56:47Stop!
00:56:50Help! He's going over!
00:56:56Help me get him up!
00:56:59Come on!
00:57:01Take it easy.
00:57:03Easy, man.
00:57:12Gunshot wound. The idiot could have said something.
00:57:14It's a clean exit. I think the round's gone straight through the muscle.
00:57:18I don't think it's serious, but he's lost a lot of blood.
00:57:21It'll need to be disinfected before I can dress it properly.
00:57:25Disinfect?
00:57:27Yes, it must be cleaned of dirt to protect it from germs.
00:57:30Germs?
00:57:32Just get me some iodine.
00:57:37Methylate?
00:57:40Alcohol?
00:57:42Oh, aye.
00:57:43Here you go.
00:57:51Help me get a stir.
00:57:52Welcome back.
00:57:54I'm all right. Just help me get dizzy.
00:57:56You're not all right.
00:57:57Couldn't you tell how badly you were bleeding?
00:57:59You're lucky you're not dead, brawling and fighting and throwing yourself off horses.
00:58:04All right. I need a sterile bandage and some clean cloth.
00:58:12Jesus H. Roosevelt Christ!
00:58:22You're still.
00:58:27Eat me.
00:58:31Lift him up.
00:58:38Come on, you goddamn bloody bastard.
00:58:41I've never had a woman use this language in my life, huh?
00:58:44Your husband should turn your height for you woman.
00:58:47Listen, Paul says, let a woman be silent.
00:58:49You can mind your own bloody business and so can St. Paul.
00:58:57And if you move so much as a single muscle while I'm tying this bandage, I'll bloody throttle you.
00:59:02Ah.
00:59:04Threats, is it?
00:59:05Enough to shed my drink, are they?
00:59:08Fifteen miles to go yet.
00:59:09Five hours at least, if not seven.
00:59:12We'll stay long enough for you to stem the bleeding and dress his wound, no more than that.
00:59:18He needs rest.
00:59:21Did you hear me?
00:59:22Randall!
00:59:27The officer you encountered, he won't give up so easily.
00:59:34He commands the Redcoats hereabouts.
00:59:38They sent patrols out in every direction by now.
00:59:42I cannae stay here long.
00:59:45You know Randall?
00:59:47Black Jack Randall, that is.
00:59:51Aye.
00:59:55No one will risk you or anyone else being taken prisoner by that mine.
01:00:00If you cannae fix me up well enough to ride,
01:00:03you will leave me here with a loaded pistol.
01:00:05So may I determine my own fate.
01:00:12Mind if it all told me you were shot before you fell off the horse?
01:00:16Didn't hurt much at the time.
01:00:19Is it hurt now?
01:00:22Aye.
01:00:24Good.
01:00:26That's about all I can do.
01:00:28The rest is up to you.
01:00:46Thank you, Sarsenak.
01:00:49Truly.
01:00:53All right.
01:00:54Well, on your horse, soldier.
01:01:04Do you know what to do?
01:01:05Yes, you have to leave.
01:01:17It'll be great.
01:01:18It's okay.
01:01:30Castle Leoc.
01:01:34I'd been here with Frank two days ago.
01:01:38Or was that in the future?
01:01:42How could I remember something that hadn't happened yet?
01:01:50So far, I'd been assaulted, threatened, kidnapped, and nearly raped.
01:01:55And somehow, I knew that my journey had only just begun.
01:02:18I'm sorry.
01:02:20I'm sorry.
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