- 2 hours ago
Outlander
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00:15Previously, there'll be a battle in about a year's time at a place called King's Mountain, and that James Fraser
00:20dies in it.
00:21I found Ben. He claims it was at your behest that he feigned his death.
00:25You've been concealing the truth.
00:27I felt I had to. Can you blame me?
00:28You were protecting yourself and Trava.
00:30Whatever feelings you have beyond what is familial duty would be improper.
00:35I have had carnal knowledge of your wife.
00:38Percival Beauchamp, although his name isn't Beauchamp, Perseverance Wainwright.
00:41He's an unscrupulous bastard loyal to no one but himself.
00:45Beauchamp is right about one thing. Richardson is a spy.
00:48He wanted influence over Hal, and he asked me to spy on you.
00:51So you found Captain Richardson?
00:53I have indeed.
00:53Where is the black-hearted scoundrel?
00:55You needn't look far.
01:05He wants to spy on you.
01:11He needs snort.
01:12He wants to spy on you.
01:12He wants to spy on you.
01:18Who has said it and he talks about you.
01:19Yeah, his grandparents tried to spy on you.
01:19Billy might be narrating.
01:20The haw we sw Looking-
01:20He has been off.
01:28He's been only Tool in but the entire world.
01:28You can't secure Krishna trying to,
01:28you save him all.
01:36where in god's name am i and what am i doing here first i'd like to apologize
01:43i have no personal animus against you if i could have managed this without involving you i would
01:47have done so and what of your personal animus against my son or have you forgotten your
01:52involvement of him in this political farce of yours i'm sorry about that as well god damn it
01:58you insufferable fool what is it that you want are you familiar with a man named neil stapleton
02:08i might have heard the name but if so it's been some time well perhaps i should have inquired
02:16as to whether you knew him in the carnal sense
02:31i believe you'll find that to be an accurate account of acts which occurred between the
02:36two of you
02:41he didn't write this of his own free will no sane man would
02:47what did you do to him bribery torture is he still alive do you care
03:00of course you do if he were dead you could claim this document was a forgery
03:07but mr stapleton is in fact still alive however he is in london fortunately i have additional
03:19testimony
03:21it's nearer to hap
03:34sorry john i'm not brave you've always been so what i never heard
03:48so you forced a confession out of him as well unnatural acts and what does it say here
04:00incest is that right dear me lord john dear me
04:10you've gone through a rather lot of trouble for nothing mr richardson
04:14i do not give a fig what you do with those documents
04:18a gentleman does not submit to blackmail
04:21oh funny almost all of them do
04:25then you'll be so good as to explain yourself at once
04:29i have a list of persons whose actions will lead to a particular outcome in this war
04:35your brother the duke of pardlow is one of them
04:38what on earth are you talking about
04:40he intends to give a speech to the house of lords recommending the withdrawal of funds for the war
04:46should that happen the british government will lose both the war and the american colonies that cannot be allowed
04:55and if i am to accept this wild assertion of yours
05:00what do you expect me to do about it
05:03persuade him
05:04not
05:05to make that speech
05:08i require him to give a different one instead
05:10one which keeps the war funds going
05:14i believe your life and honor are the only things that will ensure his doing so
05:19if you think that then plainly you do not know my brother
05:23and what if he declines
05:26then the scandal will thoroughly discredit him
05:30and everything he says
05:33and you'll be hanged
05:36for sodomy
05:39either way i get what i want
05:44you'll remain here as my guest while copies of these statements are sent to your brother
05:51what happens to you after that
05:54will depend upon his grace
06:12the
06:12is
06:12the
06:12is
06:12will be
06:12good
06:12will be
06:12will be
06:41well
06:51Oh
07:33Take it you're not here to liberate me
07:36I would if I could go to John
07:39Please bless me
07:40What then?
07:44Sentimental goodbye from the foot of the gallows
07:48Richardson has sent me to try and persuade you
07:53Reach not to as he asks, John
07:57Convince Al not to give that speech
08:00He'd listen to you
08:09I don't want you to die
08:11But I share that opinion
08:13But no
08:15I won't do it
08:16I want to say two things to you
08:21First
08:24I'm sorry
08:25I'm truly sorry
08:30And I believe that
08:32For what it's worth
08:34And the second
08:35That's how I love you
08:46I had hoped you would come a second way
08:51Richardson won't allow me to write to anyone
08:53Any last words I mean
08:54If you can
08:56I need you to go to my house
08:57Of course I will
08:58If you meant what you just said
09:00For the sake of any love that you've ever had for me
09:03Go and find my son
09:05And tell him
09:07That I love him
09:11Please
09:16Give him this
09:21He's my son
09:22It should be his
09:36Goodbye, Mr. Severance
09:39Give up to your name
09:44Sing me a song
09:48Of a last that is gone
09:51Say could that last be I
10:00Mary of soul
10:03She sailed on a day
10:06Over the sea to sky
10:15Billowing breeze
10:18Islands and seas
10:21Mountains of rain and sun
10:27All that was good
10:30All that was fair
10:32All that was me
10:35Is gone
10:39All that was me
10:41Sing me a song
10:44Of a last that is gone
10:48Say could that last be I
10:54Mary of soul
10:56She sailed on a day
11:02Over the sea
11:08To sky
11:10All that was me
11:16I
11:17I
11:17I
11:18I
11:18I
11:18I
11:19I
11:19I
11:39I
11:40I
11:43I
11:43Once believed
11:44Time could be reshaped
11:46By sheer force of will
11:47Like water
11:48Wearing away
11:49Its stone
11:49But with Jamie's fate
11:51Seemingly carved
11:52Into history's bedrock
11:53I found myself
11:54Searching
11:55For any crack
11:56Any fissure
11:58Through which hope
11:59Might seep
12:05Thank goodness you're here
12:06I wasn't sure if you'd
12:08Received my message
12:08It's been seven weeks. Has there been any word from him?
12:11None. Been in a state.
12:14Are you sure he didn't have a journey planned?
12:16His horse is stabled. All his belongings are in the house.
12:19Did you inquire at British headquarters?
12:22Yes. They know nothing.
12:24Has my Uncle Hal arrived?
12:25Not yet. There was a letter that he'd been delayed.
12:28He's likely still on business for Parliament, assessing the war effort.
12:31However, this package came for him a few days ago.
12:35The man who brought it, an odd fellow, seemed quite melancholy.
12:40Said it was for the Duke of Pardlow.
12:42He asked after you too, William. Said he had a message for you.
12:46What was the message?
12:47I pressed him to tell me, but he wouldn't say or give me his name.
12:51Said he had to relate to you in person.
12:53And he just... left?
12:57That's Trevor. Will you excuse me?
13:06Open it, lad.
13:16Your Grace, I am informed that after your time here, you are to return to England,
13:20where you will address the House of Lords in regards to the American War.
13:24I have taken the liberty of appending a direction that this address might take in terms of support of the
13:28war.
13:28Well, should you choose not to heed this suggestion, be apprised that copies of the accompanying documents will be forwarded
13:33to all London newspapers,
13:35as well as to each Member of Parliament.
13:42Son of a bitch.
13:44This was about my father's...
13:48proclivities.
13:49Apparently it's about to become public knowledge.
13:51Not if we get to John first.
13:54He's clearly still alive. Whoever has him intends to keep him, until the Duke returns.
13:59You need to find and burn all copies of these letters.
14:02Look at the signature.
14:06P. Wainwright.
14:08Is that our friend Percy, do you think?
14:11Hm.
14:25You!
14:26William!
14:27Where is he?
14:29Where is my father?
14:30I don't know.
14:31You're lying.
14:32I saw that statement you delivered for my uncle.
14:39Speak!
14:41You'll kill me if you find out I've told you anything.
14:44He's a madman.
14:45Who?
14:49Who?
14:51His name is Richardson.
14:53He's Ezekiel Richardson.
14:54Richardson?
14:56I'll kill him.
14:57After I kill you!
14:58I swear, I didn't want to be involved.
15:00It was a mistake.
15:02I was meant to wait for the Duke to arrive before delivering that package.
15:05Then tell us where Richardson is holding him.
15:08I don't know.
15:10I was blindfolded when they took us there and again when they brought me back to town.
15:14We traveled by boat.
15:16It took quite a while.
15:18Perhaps a few hours.
15:20And the place we went to itself was a boathouse.
15:23I could be any of the estuaries here about.
15:26I would never have left John.
15:28But I could do him no good.
15:31And I thought, well, he told me, in fact.
15:33He told me to go.
15:35And to find you.
15:37He wanted me to give you this.
15:41I've never once seen it off his hand.
15:43May I?
15:50There's something scratched on you inside.
15:55Pharoos.
15:56Screek.
15:57Lighthouse.
16:00Does that have some special significance for your father?
16:03Not that I know of.
16:04I've never heard him speak of a lighthouse.
16:06Not me.
16:07Then it must be that he's been kept near a lighthouse.
16:10Do you can have any nearby?
16:11There's one on Tybee Island.
16:13Richardson is insane.
16:16He's a turncoat who joined the Continentals.
16:18But now he says he wants the British to win.
16:21Your father is alive.
16:24Get your uncle, the Duke, to do as Richardson says.
16:35If we don't find my father, or if we do and he's dead,
16:40there will be nowhere safe for you.
17:13There's a boathouse up ahead.
17:14Is anyone on a boat?
17:22I see someone.
17:24May I look?
17:31That's Richardson.
17:33The bastard is going fishing.
17:37He seems to be alone.
17:40It'll likely be a while then.
18:06He's convinced you'll win.
18:08Enough.
18:09Aren't you?
18:10Fucking bugger.
18:13Joyce.
18:15Of course.
18:18I've had enough of you.
18:20You ain't laughing from the other side of your face
18:23if you can't run like that.
18:26What is she?
18:46Fuck.
19:10You look good with a beard, John.
19:13You're the oil painting of cells.
19:27You look good with a beard, John.
20:02You look good with a beard, John.
20:03Looks like they're biting.
20:10Mrs. Fraser?
20:11What?
20:13What are you doing here?
20:15Yes, it is Mrs. Fraser now.
20:18The circumstances being what they are, I'm here on behalf of my former husband, rather
20:24than my current one.
20:30Holmes, you expect me to believe you've come alone?
20:33No.
20:34No.
20:34Not at all.
20:54What are we planning to do with this waste of humanity?
20:58I'll deliver him to court-martial.
21:01He's a traitor to both sides.
21:03They'll draw lots so you get him.
21:05I suppose we will see who appears in the broadsheets now.
21:10John?
21:14Are there any other cards?
21:16There may have been.
21:18I only saw two, but it was difficult to design the voices.
21:21You, William, search outside.
21:25I'll retrieve the bottom.
21:44How did you find me?
21:49Percy Beauchamp.
21:52That debauched little snitch.
21:57You've no idea what you've done.
22:00What you're unleashing by stopping me.
22:04What are you even trying to do?
22:08Last I saw you, you were on the side of America.
22:12The side of freedom.
22:15It's what's changed.
22:17I fear an American victory may do little for the cause of freedom.
22:22So many in America may not be free.
22:25Not for years to come.
22:30How do you feel about slavery, Mrs. Fraser?
22:36Well, I abhor it.
22:38On both philosophical and compassionate grounds, of course.
22:43Why?
22:44Do you think I declare myself in favor of it?
22:48You might have, but I'm glad you didn't.
22:51I don't expect you or anyone else to understand, but it's something I care deeply about.
22:57You see, my great-great-grandmother was a slave.
23:02Her name was Abilene Meadows.
23:06She bore a child with a man who owned her.
23:13I see.
23:15There's an abolitionist movement in England.
23:17Do you know about it?
23:20I've heard of it.
23:21If it takes root, the king will sign an act of abolition which outlaws slavery and frees Britain's slaves in
23:28their colonies, over 800,000 of them.
23:31But that's not nearly the number in America who may not be free.
23:35Not for 85 more years, who continue to be enslaved and suffer and die.
23:40It's the revolution which allows slavery to flourish here, unchecked, and then leads to another bloody war.
23:48Civil war.
23:49What did you say, madam?
23:53You were talking about the North and South.
23:59Sherman's March, Gettysburg, Abraham Lincoln.
24:11You're a time traveler.
24:281945.
24:31And 1968.
24:37First time was an accident.
24:42Second wasn't.
24:461968.
24:50This can't be a coincidence.
24:52You're here to help me.
24:54You must be.
24:55I can assure you, I'm not.
24:58But surely you understand what I'm trying to do.
25:01Racism.
25:02Segregation.
25:03The Jim Crow laws.
25:05The reverberations of slavery.
25:07It could all go away.
25:08How?
25:09It's actually quite simple.
25:11If the Patriots don't win,
25:13then the American colonies remain under British law.
25:17Their existing slaves will all go free.
25:19The Civil War won't happen.
25:22Can't happen.
25:23That alone will save the lives of over 600,000 soldiers killed on the battlefield.
25:28That seems simple to you.
25:31I have pinpointed several persons whose actions will affect the trajectory of this war.
25:37But Harold Gray is the key.
25:39If I don't stop him, after a brief stay here, he'll return to England and give a speech to the
25:44House of Lords, insisting that the expense will be disproportionate to any benefit in retaining Britain's colonies.
25:51Lord North will abandon the war, Britain will lose, and slavery will continue here unabated.
25:58But if Harold Gray is key, then why not just kill him?
26:04I don't need him dead.
26:07I need him to reverse his position.
26:09If I kill him, someone else will give the speech he intends to give.
26:15I need him to deliver a different speech.
26:18One that convinces Britain to stay in the war and win.
26:22Lord John Gray is my leverage.
26:27You can't win a war that has already been lost.
26:31I understand your urge to try and change the course of history.
26:35I...
26:36I admire it.
26:39The past leaves a lot to be desired.
26:45But it won't work.
26:48Christ.
26:51You've tried, haven't you?
26:54Yes.
26:56When?
26:57What war?
27:01Culloden.
27:05The one that ended the Highland clans and destroyed their way of life.
27:12That one that saw 1,300 souls die in under an hour.
27:19We tried to stop it.
27:22My husband and I.
27:23Just because you failed, it doesn't mean...
27:26Alamance.
27:28You tried twice.
27:30No matter what side we fight on.
27:33No matter how hard we fight.
27:36What has happened before, always happens again.
27:41So you've stopped trying?
27:43Have you?
27:44You've given up trying to change history?
27:48You haven't, have you?
27:51I can see it in your face.
27:55I tried to change my own history.
27:58But changing your history can change everyone's.
28:01Don't tell me you haven't ruined lives.
28:04Taken lives even.
28:05You're right.
28:07I have.
28:09I have.
28:10But I have also saved lives.
28:15You know, maybe I'm not here to change history, but maybe I'm here to be a part of history.
28:22You know, when I first touched those stones, it wasn't a choice.
28:30I didn't try to come here, but I did.
28:34And I don't know if it was, if it was fate, or destiny, or God.
28:41But what I do know is that I'm supposed to be here.
28:45Is that I am meant to be here.
28:50This is my time.
28:52Oh, I believe I'm meant to be here too.
28:56I'm meant to be doing what I'm doing.
29:00What if it's the universe?
29:02Correcting a mistake.
29:04Righting a wrong.
29:05But who are we to say?
29:09What is this ability we have for?
29:14Except to try and make the world a better place.
29:20Let me go.
29:22Let me do what I believe is my part in history.
29:33Give me your word.
29:37Give me your word.
29:40That you won't harm anyone again.
29:45And I'll let you go try.
29:49I give you my word.
30:12You won't regret this.
30:31That was for William.
30:32If I had another shot, I'd put one in you for me, and another for Hal, too.
30:37For a moment I'd seen in Richardson's eyes what I'd carried in my heart.
30:41The desperate hope that somehow I could write a new chapter in Jamie's story.
30:46But as the life ebbed from his body, my foolish dream died with him.
30:50Reaffirming that history writes itself.
30:53He's so old.
30:54It's so old!
31:07It's so old.
31:08It's so old, is that the heating of all.
31:10I have a gladiwork called an old child.
31:10It's so old.
31:10It's so old.
31:11It's so old.
31:11It's so old.
31:12It's so old, it's so old.
31:15It's so old for you, blocks away.
31:28Thank you, both of you, for saving my life and my reputation.
31:38For the sake of our history, I could not let you die at the hands of that bastard.
31:45And I have decided to forgive you for what happened.
31:53We need never speak of it again.
31:58What did you just say?
32:01You forgive me.
32:05Aye.
32:07Be assured that while I thank you, sir, for today's good deed,
32:11I do not forgive you.
32:16I do not forgive your big-headed treatment of me for the past two years.
32:26Pride goeth before the fall.
32:30Don't quote the Bible at me, Claire.
32:32No?
32:34Then look at me.
32:36Tell me you don't love that man.
32:38And I'll never say his name again.
32:45Damn it, woman.
33:04You can, it's a freezer family traits to be as stubborn as a mule.
33:09My grandsire was said to have never apologized once in his life.
33:13The one beheaded at Tower Hill.
33:18Aye.
33:19Perhaps he should have tried being a bit more conciliatory.
33:24When you, Lee, were clear, you said you were both fucking me.
33:32That it was me you were reaching for.
33:36That felt like a betrayal of our friendship.
33:42What happened with Claire, that was born out of grief.
33:47Then I said what I said, trying to explain something that was impossible to explain.
33:54I never meant to hurt you, Jamie, but you, you nearly beat me to death for it.
33:58And might have if those soldiers hadn't come along.
34:01And if you're not able to forgive me after everything I've done for this friendship,
34:05then perhaps there is no friendship.
34:16I have wronged you, Jon.
34:24And I am sorry.
34:28My pride kept me from seeing clearly you have done more for me than I can ever be.
34:41When you and William embraced at the boardhouse, I saw the love between you.
34:48I had the making of him until he was six, but I ken well who shaped him after that.
34:59You made him the man he is.
35:03And I ken well what you had to sacrifice to do it.
35:09I have sacrificed many things.
35:15But Raisin William was never one of them.
35:19He's the greatest gift of my life.
35:22And I thank you for him.
35:25No.
35:28No.
35:29Thank you, Jon.
35:34No.
35:40You owe me a beating.
36:05When last we played, you thrashed me.
36:08Soundly.
36:10I would like to claim my revenge.
36:16Shall we?
36:18He wasiniz.
36:18No.
36:20No.
36:47Enjoying the quiet.
36:50Your fathers are having a much-needed conversation.
36:56Never get used to that.
37:01Don't even realize how much you are like both of them.
37:07Did you know that Brianna had two fathers?
37:11She told me.
37:14Her husband, he had two fathers.
37:17The swiftest of lizards, young Ian's son, he has two fathers.
37:22And I, technically, had two fathers.
37:26I only knew my real father, Henry, until I was five years old.
37:30I hardly remember him, but his brother, Uncle Lam, raised me.
37:38So many people in your life now were raised by a village.
37:44And if I do say so myself, we are doing just fine.
37:50It's still strange.
37:52I feel like I've been caught between them.
37:55Like I'm a rope in a tug of war.
37:57They both just want what's best for you, which means they will fight for you with everything they have.
38:06But how can I love both of them without betraying the other?
38:12William, love isn't a betrayal.
38:17It's a gift.
38:20You love them for who they are.
38:23Just as they love you for who you are.
38:26But who am I?
38:28Really?
38:29Fraser? Grey?
38:32You're their son.
38:34That's all you have to be.
39:00I'm happy I was able to meet James Fraser.
39:03He's an impressive man.
39:05He is.
39:07So you've forgiven him and your father, I suppose, for keeping the truth from you.
39:12I've learned that forgiveness is seldom a single act.
39:16You have to keep doing it.
39:20Do you think that, perhaps, maybe with time, you can forgive me?
39:31I understand why you did it.
39:34You had to protect Trevor.
39:36A few months ago, everything seemed clear.
39:40Black and white.
39:42Now I see the shades of grey.
39:45Does this mean that you might reconsider our future?
39:50I'm afraid there's no future for us.
39:52But you protected me, even after I lied to you.
39:56You must love me, William.
40:02You wouldn't want me to lie to you, would you?
40:11I wish you well.
40:14And I hope you find love.
40:16And happiness.
40:27Thank you very much.
40:54Thank you very much.
40:55Thank you very much.
40:56Thank you very much.
41:32We return to the ridge
41:34after Jamie reconciled
41:36with Lord John and William.
41:38But even as we brought in the harvest,
41:41I couldn't stop myself
41:42from counting the days
41:43we had remaining.
41:45What history had written
41:46about Jamie's fate
41:47at King's Mountain haunted me.
41:51But at little Davy's
41:53first defiant cry,
41:54I was reminded that Jamie and I
41:57had been rebelling against time itself
41:59from the very beginning.
42:19What's my newest grandson?
42:22Hmm, he's grand.
42:26I'm so glad you and Mama
42:27got back in time for the birth.
42:28I was terrified
42:30of going through it without her.
42:33And you.
42:34It was an honour.
42:36Welcoming David, William, Ian,
42:39Fraser Mackenzie into the world.
42:41Hmm.
42:44What is it?
42:52You can a fight
42:54at King's Mountain.
43:00Something Frank wrote
43:02in his book.
43:10You're not coming back, are you?
43:18It says I will be killed there.
43:25Well, if...
43:27If that's what it says,
43:28just don't go to King's Mountain.
43:31I have to, Manin.
43:33No.
43:34You don't.
43:36Not only to protect our home,
43:38our lands,
43:39though that alone would be with it.
43:41But if Frank is right,
43:44then this battle could be the one
43:46to end the war
43:47in the backcountry.
43:48If we win,
43:49and he says we will,
43:50then we need no longer fear.
43:53No longer fear?
43:55What I fear is losing you.
43:57It's Jem and Mandy and Davy
43:59growing up without their grandfather.
44:01And losing all of those years
44:03that I lost with you.
44:05God, I finally have you in my life,
44:07and I can't imagine it without you.
44:11Please.
44:13Please don't go.
44:18Maybe Daddy wrote this for you
44:19so you'd stay home
44:20if you knew what would happen.
44:24The man had no cause to love me.
44:27But he loved you.
44:29And he knew one thing about me,
44:31same thing I can't about him.
44:34That we would protect you
44:35with our lives.
44:38But I know
44:40the only way to truly protect you
44:43and everyone I love
44:48is the fate.
45:08I didn't expect to see you.
45:10Alive?
45:37You can't be serious.
45:39I've never been more serious
45:41in my life.
45:44You betrayed us, Percy.
45:48You betrayed me.
45:51For that,
45:53you must answer.
45:56Please, John.
45:58You know I had no choice.
46:02He threatened to kill me.
46:04And yet here you are,
46:05alive and well.
46:09Richardson, however,
46:11is not.
46:15I didn't mean for it to come to this.
46:20You must believe me.
46:24There is another option.
46:27You sign this affidavit,
46:29confessing to the scheme
46:31to malign my character,
46:34extortion,
46:35and kidnapping.
46:39You will let the law
46:41decide your fate.
46:44But Richardson is dead.
46:46There's no threat to you now.
46:48I can't take that chance.
46:49There very well could be copies
46:50that exist.
46:52If the confessions do resurface,
46:55the affidavit will render them
46:56null and void.
47:02And if I refuse?
47:05It will be your signature
47:06on that paper,
47:07or your blood.
47:09Either way,
47:11you will pay
47:11for your treachery.
47:32What will happen if I swing this?
47:34I will give it to the authorities.
47:37Someone will come for you
47:39and you will be arraigned.
47:41Your crimes will be laid bare
47:43and justice will be served.
47:46You will live,
47:48likely in prison,
47:50until your death.
47:54I've never wanted to hurt you.
47:58Make your choice.
48:00I'll give you a few minutes.
48:04I'll give you a few minutes.
48:05I'll give you a few minutes.
48:08I'll give you a few minutes.
48:11I'll give you a few minutes.
48:12I'll give you a few minutes.
48:16I'll give you a few minutes.
48:16I'll give you a few minutes.
48:17I'll give you a few minutes.
48:18I'll give you a few minutes.
48:19I'll give you a few minutes.
48:21I'll give you a few minutes.
48:24I'll give you a few minutes.
48:43Will you ever forgive me, John?
49:14May God have mercy on your soul.
49:36What are you doing hiding up here in the middle of the day?
49:40Looking for some peace.
49:46It's not look as though you're writing in your medical journal.
49:51You know, monstrous drawings or pictures of wee beasties.
49:57What are you doing?
50:10People disappear all the time.
50:13Young girls run away from home.
50:16Children stray from their parents and are never seen again.
50:20Most are found, eventually.
50:24Disappearances, after all, have explanations.
50:31Usually.
50:35It's a hell of a beginning.
50:38Huh.
50:40You writing your story?
50:42No.
50:45I'm writing our story.
50:52Fraser!
51:00Fraser!
51:02Fraser!
51:07The time has come, Fraser.
51:10Ferguson's on the march into North Carolina.
51:12Gather your men.
51:13All you can get, we muster with the rest of the over-mountain men at Sycamore Shoals in two days'
51:18time.
51:19You owe me, Fraser.
51:21You said so yourself.
51:24Cleveland's words echoed like a death knell across the ridge.
51:27The battle I'd so dreaded now cast its shadow before us.
51:32And though I had conquered time itself, I stood powerless as it marched my beloved towards a fate I could
51:39not change.
51:40It's just a little strange.
51:40It's a good sign.
52:08It's a very strange.
53:10Never with fury or fear or hatred, but the desire to fight for freedom.
53:23If I die tomorrow, remember me.
53:27Castle Durek!
53:33No!
53:35We will always be together.
53:39Over the sea to sky...
53:44No!
53:45No!
53:45No!
53:45No!
53:46No!
53:47No!
53:47No!
53:47No!
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