In my continuing quest to quit playing attention to my family altogether and frolic in a world of Diana Gabaldon’s imagination, here is the previously missing recap for 102. 101 will be done before the premiere, and then I’ll be all caught up! Thanks for reading, sharing is love. Rest of my recaps archived here. Enjoy! ~Connie
We find Claire where we left her, at MacKenzie HQ: Castle Leoch. The highlanders are all happy to be home, but our heroine grimly remembers visiting with Frank, and marvels at the difference time travel makes on the structural integrity of the facade and how much action she’s likely to see once she’s in there. Not everyone is grumpy, dirty, or ridiculously hot, though. There are womenfolk here! A chipper looking lady walks over after a brief hug from Rupert and an even briefer sexual innuendo from a smiling Murtagh.
She looks pretty scandalized at the sight of Claire, who is ‘homeless chic’ by 2015 standards but just plain homeless by 18th-century ones. It’s a great moment, because even if Claire is wet, dirty, and exhausted, her b*tchface game is expert-level and she is not about to lower that head after the day(s) she’s had. The stare-down is quick, intense, and exquisite.
Someone light a torch because it got DARK UP HERE UNDER THIS SHADE.
Jamie rushes to explain to the older woman, Mistress Fitzgibbons, that Claire was found by Murtagh and Dougal decreed that they should bring her along.
Good enough for Mistress FG, who takes her by the arm to do God’s work: feed her and slap her in constricting underthings. As she does so, Claire protests that Jamie’s wound needs cleaning. “Mrs. Fitz,” impressed that Claire knows how to tend to wounds and isn’t scared to put a 6-ft. Scotsman in his prime on blast, recognizes a kindred spirit, and shoos Jamie inside as well.
Indoors, Claire are Jamie are left alone by the fire so she can tend to his wounds and they can window shop each other now they’re barely decent.
If you didn’t ship it before, you will after this scene. Jamie is wrapped toga-style in a red cloth like a hot roman senator, and when Claire gently uncovers him, we find out why. Homeboy is carrying what looks like a layer of fine salted ham around, because there is no way I can think of that as a human back. I’ll just look elsewhere while he drops some necessary exposition.
Jamie tells Claire that his scars are the result of being flogged twice in one week, which just seems like overkill. Turns out that he escaped a charge of obstruction about four years ago, resulting from a visit by English soldiers sent to collect levies on his family farm. His father was away when he heard a scream from the fields, and found his sister Jenny accosted by redcoats.
When he fought them to save her, their leader captured and held her at gunpoint, and when Jamie surrendered, responded like a real douchcanoe: a dry comment about her attractiveness and a yank of her bodice which exposes her bare chest to her brother. This is the same Captain Randall who assaulted Claire in the premiere, and now you know everything you need to about this character: he’s the kind of soulless bastage that will show a man his sister’s naked boobs just to make a point. Jamie knows what I’m talking about.
On top of that image burned on his poor retinas, Jamie also gets to endure his first flogging in his sister’s presence as a lesson to just
shush and submit. Randall, exhausted from flaying a man for a pithy
reason with what I am sure is a very warm wig, stops for a water break and to
casually barter raping Jenny in exchange for putting the breaks on
Jamie’s whipping. Jamie warns his sister not to accept, even if Randall
should kill him right in front of her. Randall, who must take this as a
dare, smirks, takes a knife and knocks Jamie unconscious.
Back
at Leoch, Jamie explains to Claire that his sister went with Randall,
and when he woke up he was with the most starstruck chickens ever in a
wagon bound for Wentworth Prison. Claire straps his injured arm to his
side and tells him she is sorry, prompting him to sweetly reply that she is “a kind woman with a good touch” and that her husband
is a lucky man.
We ain’t nothing but mammals.
Claire finally takes a moment as she gazes into the fire, and the thought of Frank overwhelms her -and us- as we get our first Frankback. It makes sense that Claire would wonder
how he’s handling her absence, and if he he thinks her abducted,
dead, or unfaithful. We see Frank and the Reverend in a flashback
(flashforward?) searching for Claire and finding only her abandoned car
which is great because at least he doesn’t have to deal with his insurance on top of all the other stress he has going on.
Back in
the 18th century, Claire finally breaks down. Jamie, who is totally asking for
a friend, inquires if her husband is “not alive”, and she answers with
a strangled “No, actually, he’s not alive” as she realizes her husband
is centuries from birth and she is for all intents and purposes, a hot
widow. Claire cries as Jamie holds her and shushes her and I know it is
inappropriate but I hear fireplace sex is amazing and life-affirming
in the face of our unavoidable mortality. JUST SAYING. I mean, LOOK AT THEM.
There is a beat where
they pause and stare at each other, and I silently will them to kiss. Or fist bump. Or do my taxes. I don’t care, I just love them
together. Proper Claire must feel it too, because she jumps back a couple of feet and apologizes to
Jamie for letting him smell the donuts when she can’t let him taste the
sprinkles.
Jamie quietly tells her that she “need not be scairt” of him,
“nor anyone else here,” so long as he is with her. It’s a lovely offer
and well-timed, but Claire, who has never met a blanket statement worth
taking at face value asks what she does when he is NOT
with her, and the answer’s pretty obvious to me.
Jamie, who is unlike me mindful of the plot, advises her to never forget she is an Englishwoman “in a place where that’s no’ a pretty thing ta be.”
He then gently tells her to rest, as she’s “worn out” and someone will want to grill speak to her soon.
That evening, Mrs. Fitz wakes Claire up and we learn that she slept
the entire day. After one lone spoonful of broth, Mrs. Fitz helps her
shed her weird French corset, and introduces her (and us) to the process
of dressing a decent lady in 18th-century Scotland. It is long and involves a lot of wool, but the end result is
pretty spectacular, as far as makeovers go. Like a Jacobite Miss Congeniality.
She’s escorted to meet with the MacKenzie, where she sneaks a peek at
a letter to glean the date:1743. The man in question stands in the
doorway, and introduces himself as “Colum ban Campbell MacKenzie,”
Laird of the Castle. The camera pans to his bowed legs, but Claire says
nothing. He speaks to her very kindly, and Claire responds to him just
as gracefully, asking him to thank his brother, Dougal for his
assistance and to arrange for her transport out. It’s all crazy civil
for two people who are BS’ing each other with every syllable.
Colum quickly answers that he is sure he can arrange it, but leans
in to ask for more information about how she came to be found in her
shift, wandering in the woods because we all know the English would never wander in the woods in such informal clothing. Claire remembers discussing interrogation techniques
at a pub with Frank and the Reverend Wakefield, and that the advice
given to officers was to “stay as close to the truth as possible,
altering only that information which must be kept secret.” Mmmkay….
So she tells
Colum she is a “widowed lady from Oxfordshire” who was on her way to
France with a manservant when they were set upon by bandits, and
escaped, leaving her horse and property and sucker manservant behind. It
was when she was in the woods, minding her own, that Capt. Randall
happened upon her and she was “relieved of [her] clothes.” Man, that accent makes it sound way better than it was. Colum asks her if she
expects him to believe that an English officer would rape a lady “for no
good reason” and Claire responds on behalf of all womankind, asking him
if there is “ever a good reason” for rape.
Attagirl. Colum, knocked off guard by
a thinking female, chooses to zag instead of zig and tells Claire she
can leave with a tinker, Sean Petrie, when he passes through Leoch on
his way to Inverness 5 days hence. In the meantime, she should you know,
chill and maybe put on another layer of clothing.
Claire wanders to the ramparts to muse via voiceover about how trippy
it is to witness history firsthand when she looks down and catches some
of the young boys at play with a laughing Dougal. Dougal smiling sincerely is such a
surprising sight that it’s damn near magical. Like some sort of magical animal.
But really, he is quite handsome as he smiles and plays with a little
redhead boy (Hamish, he calls him) that he is clearly close to, and
Claire questions if this time is truly that much different from her own.
Later that night Claire and her rack (she is seriously the only woman
not wearing a kerchief or fichu and those babies are time traveling at least a couple of seconds into the future) go to the Hall for dinner.
She is
invited to sit at the main table with the family, where she is
introduced to Colum’s wife Letitia, who has only known her 5 seconds
and is already complaining about her ovens because she has no manners whatsoever. NO ONE CARES, LETTY. Colum plies Claire with wine
and asks about the pronunciation of her name and what part of France her
relatives come from.
Claire fields both neatly (Some relative adopted
the English spelling, near Compiègne in the north) and then witnesses a
bit of strain about the brothers when she asks about Jamie. It turns out
that Dougal has sent him to the stables for some reason, and tells his
brother that he can countermand the order if he disagrees. After a
pregnant pause, Colum agrees that he is fine there and asks for “the
rhenish” to be brought out. The rhenish we come to find out, is pink and
packs quite a punch. Claire drinks it eagerly, remarking on how
delicious it is while Colum continues to pepper her with questions
about her planned trip to Compiègne. Claire’s starting to get
suspicious, and thankfully the little redheaded boy from before, Hamish,
comes running through and she stops him to say hello.
Laetitia tells
him to introduce himself, and Claire answers enthusiastically that she
saw him playing in the courtyard with his father, who she implies is
Dougal. Hamish is confused and the adults are stock-still. Claire,
well-lubricated, has said something she should not. Hamish says he is
the “son and heir of Colum MacKenzie” and everyone groans in unison over the laugh track.
Claire hastens to excuse herself, pleading tiredness, and once alone in
the hall, berates herself for falling for “the oldest trick in the
book,” allowing herself to be plied with food and liquor into letting her guard down during an
ongoing interrogation. She promises to be more vigilant, but not to quit drinking wine because that’s just ridiculous and untenable.
The next morning, Claire wanders into the kitchen to ask Mrs. Fitz about
Jamie so she can ‘change his dressing’ and Mrs. Fitz is all ORLY? I KNOW WHAT THAT MEANS.
Petition for a flashback series where Mrs. Fitz roams the Scottish countryside dispensing wisdom, food and eyerolls and IDK, solving crimes. And making out. I bet Fitz was a RIOT.
Claire walks to the stables and notices one of
Dougal’s men following her. She arrives to the sight of Jamie leading a white horse around on a lead while he coos at it, heretofore known as “the moment we all wished we were a horse.” He’s closing in on first base when Claire knocks a metal bit over and the
clang startles the horse, who rears up. Claire apologizes, but Jamie says that “she’s
just a girl with spirit,” which is “never a bad thing” because Jamie is trying to make me leave my husband. Even the horse is in love.
Now that his horse is on a break, Jamie asks Claire WHATUP and she is all BANDAGES AND GRUB, SON so they move the party to the stable.
Jamie is eating like a growing boy when Claire decides to food-shame
him by implying he’d eat grass. JOKE’S ON YOU, CLAIRE. Not only has he
sampled the delights of turf-n-turf, but he has also raided cattle, is a
wanted man with a price on his head as much as a farmer earns in a
year, and accused of murder but says he didn’t kill the man.
He tells Claire he was unconscious because of the flogging, and escaped with the
aid of friends, one of whom killed the guard to aid his escape. On second thought Claire, you may want to avoid this one.
Claire correctly guesses that his last name is NOT MacTavish, and
Jamie crouches down to tell her that while he doesn’t think anyone in
the castle would betray him, there might be those in the countryside
that would like to make money by turning him in. In other news, I had to rewind four times to write that one sentence. I
think Claire knows what’s ailing me.
Was everyone not RIVETED? If you were not, you are dead inside. DEAD.
And yet Claire is a woman out of time, not out of her damn mind. She manages
to get her eyes up long enough to ask if Colum knows he is an outlaw,
and Jamie grins, probably because it’s time to reel us all back in with the power of his lady-mojo so we will forget that he is truly %$#@. IT WORKS.
I know, honey. You two are adorable. I want to put you in my Barbie
Dream Scottish Keep and smoosh your faces together with all the finesse
and passion in my romantic 9 y.o. heart. Anyhoo, both Colum and Dougal know because get this: they are Jamie’s uncles, his mother’s
brothers. SOMEONE BOTTLE THOSE GENES. The MacKenzies make hot potatoes,
and Claire clearly wants to mash them.
She asks Jamie why he didn’t lie to her or tell her it wasn’t any of
her business. Jamie says he didn’t think of it and decided to trust her
instead. I’ll tell you what I trust. SCIENCE. Specifically, chemistry. There’s a reason Jamie decided to trust her, and you can see it clearly here in exhibit A.
Still, it’s only episode 2, so that bastard Aulde Angus had to come and ruin our fun.
He wants Jamie to quit freaking nourishing his body and get back to
talking to horses, damn it. Claire asks Jamie to thank her by trying not
to get flogged or stabbed today. “No promises, Sassenach,” he grins,
and I faint like a small goat.
This is about the high point of Claire’s day, because when she heads
back, she decides to confront Rupert, and ask if Dougal is having her
followed. He gives a really complicated answer about eyes and heids which is pretty much a yes.
Claire stomps off to give Dougal a piece of her
English mind while Rupert follows her and recites a litany ways Claire
can avoid having his guard partner Angus attempt to shag her, most of
which involve not being a barnyard animal or bathing. Hopefully she won’t regret taking notes on that.
Once Claire catches up to Dougal and confronts him, he quietly admits
that he thinks she is an English spy, since she’s not been honest
about why she is there. Until he is sure of her, he’ll have her
watched all the time. Claire answers that it’s fine by her because he
won’t see anything in the next four days. When he looks surprised,
Claire hits back with the information that Colum told her she is
leaving with Mr. Petrie on Saturday, and maybe Dougal doesn’t “ken” his
brother’s mind as well as he thinks. I mentally high five her and then immediately cringe. Dougal doesn’t seem like the type to forget being bested.
Claire decides that for the next few days, she’ll fight fire with a
complete lack of oxygen and bore her guards (and Dougal) to death. She
sets off to pick things from the garden at Mrs. Fitz’s request, and runs
into Geillis Duncan, who makes overtures of friendship via jokes about
offing your spouse LIKE YOU DO. She’s pretty friendly and cute as a button, but still sets my Spidey-senses off.
She knows who Claire is through gossip
that she is “likely a Sassenach spy”, but doesn’t mistrust her enough to
reveal things about herself, such as that she knows about herbs and
people think she is a witch. She tells Claire that the women in the
village come to her for abortifacients, and invites her for a visit to
look at her potions and medicinal herbs.
That night in the Hall, Claire mentally diagnoses Colum with Toulouse-Lautrec Syndrome,
“a degenerative disease of bone and connective tissue.” She thinks that
because of the state of current medicine, Colum is “certainly living
on borrowed time.” As Geillis translates, Claire listens to several
people bring their grievances to the MacKenzie for him to rule upon.
One such is a young blonde, whose father
“accuses her of loose behavior” and “wishes the MacKenzie to have her
punished for disobedience.” Everyone is riveted to this outcome when
Jamie, who has been whispering to Murtagh, speaks up loudly in Gaelic, walking up to the dais where his uncles are.
Geillis tells Claire that he is offering to take the
girl’s punishment. Claire is outraged that he is still injured, but Colum allows it. Jamie chooses fists instead of
the strap, which is understandable because that boy has been whipped more than an omelet. Murtagh warns Jamie that his uncle Dougal, who has been
glaring at him this entire time, is “up to something.”
Rupert
steps forward and you can tell that he doesn’t really want to punch Jamie very hard, but he’s loyal to Dougal, who has no such misgivings and cues him on every blow. I do love that both puncher
and punch-ee are so darn friendly about it, though.
WOOKIT DAT FACE. Poor Rupert.
And it can’t be easy being the one punched, but you wouldn’t know it from this curly little ray of amber sunshine.
Claire
asks Geillis how long it lasts, and she answers that only until blood
is drawn, “usually when the nose is broken.” Even though Rupert does in
fact break his nose with the next punch and Jamie spits blood, Dougal
cues another hit, right in Jamie’s wound.
Rupert turns to see if he is done, but no. Everyone but Dougal wants this to be over, but especially Rupert, whose regret is obvious as he hits Jamie hard once more in the face, knocking him down. Murtagh walks over to
help Jamie up, and as they stand and stare at Dougal, he finally
silently nods to Rupert that it is done. You can almost see the tears of relief
on this koala’s face.
Jamie,
bruised, bleeding and smiling, limps over to his uncle Colum and bows in a show of gallantry/respect/defiance/endurance,
and I think it is important to note that this is when I fell in love
with this character. There is an instant of eye contact between he and Dougal, but Murtagh wisely drags him away and out of the hall.
Claire wants to check on
Jamie and darts towards him, but Geillis leads her down an alternate route where she is less
likely to stir gossip. The girl whose beating Jamie took stares
longingly after him as he leaves the Hall.
In the kitchen, Claire
asks Jamie why he took the blonde’s punishment, and it wasn’t, as she assumed, because he knew her. He
stepped in because the punishment “would have shamed the lass” and it
would only take him a couple of days to get over his injuries.
Mrs.
Fitz comes in briefly with some willowbark tea and thanks Jamie for what he
did. Turns out the girl, Laoghaire, is her
granddaughter. Claire tells Jamie to change his bandage in
the next couple of days and when he asks if it would not be better if
she does it, she answers that she cannot, as she will leave with Mr.
Petrie the next day and will be gone. His disappointment flashes on his
face but is quickly masked. He stands up and says, “Then perhaps this is
goodbye,” to which she responds “Yes.” They stare at each other for a
brief moment when…
The
spell is broken as Claire notes that the girl he saved is waiting to
speak to him, and says a heartfelt farewell using his first name.
“Goodbye to you then, Jamie.” “Safe journeys to you…Claire,” he
reciprocates. After she leaves, Jamie sighs once deeply, and turns his
attention to the girl waiting in the doorway.
The
next day Mrs. Fitz is seeing Claire off with food and hugs when Dougal
comes up to them as they are loading her meager possessions in Mr. Petrie’s wagon, saying that Colum would like to see her.
Claire follows him in,
flashing back to when she and Frank wandered the halls of the ruined keep in
episode one. Dougal stops to ask if she is okay and she assures him she
is, but she is noticeably nervous, and rightfully so.
Inside a
large room waits Colum, who casually tells Claire that this was the surgery of
Davie Beaton. Clan Beaton produced reknowned healers, and since Davie died
from a fever, there has been no healer at Leoch. He asks Claire if she
has skill as a healer (“It’s an interest of mine, yes,” she replies) and if she knows
the uses of the potions kept there (“Some”).
Claire finds it
fascinating, but reminds him that she has to leave. It seems, however, that Claire
proved her worth a little too well. Colum tells her that he wants her
to continue his work. “But I am leaving,” she says, trying to assert
herself. “No,” Colum answers simply, “you’re staying.”
Claire,
panicked, asks him if something Dougal said changed his mind. He
clarifies that his brother “keeps his own counsel” on her, and that this
decision was his. She wants to know why, and he responds
simply that it is because it pleases him that she do so. I expected better from thoughtful, polite Colum but I guess now I know why Letitia is so bitter.
Claire,
finally pushed to her limit, blurts that it is because of the rumor that
she is a spy, and attempts to downplay it.
Colum finally looks her in
the eye and tells her that he does believe that she is keeping secrets,
and “maybe they’re the type of secrets that every woman has, that pose
no threat to me, to Leoch, or to Clan MacKenzie,” but until he knows for
sure, she will remain there as his ‘guest’. As he walks away, Claire shouts that he means she will remain as his prisoner.
"Only if you try to leave," he rejoins, and after he walks through the door, his brother locks it behind him.
Claire, all her hopes in tatters, walks into the same room where she once had some afternoon delight with her as-of-yet-unborn- husband, and breaks into tears.
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Episode 3 Recap