The Companion to the Fiery Cross, a Breath of Snow and Ashes, an Echo in the Bone, and Written in My Own Heart's Blood

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The Companion to the Fiery Cross, a Breath of Snow and Ashes, an Echo in the Bone, and Written in My Own Heart's Blood Page 83

by Diana Gabaldon


  All trace of his profession had been cleared away, and the light of the candle he lit shone serenely on a plainly furnished but comfortable room. Two small wing chairs sat beside the hearth, a single book on the table between them. And, through the open door, a bed fresh-made with a smooth counterpane and plump white pillows beckoned enticingly.

  The blood still thrummed through her body like wine, though she’d had very little to drink. Still, she felt unaccountably shy and stood for a moment just inside the door, as though waiting to be invited in. Denny lit two more candles and, turning, saw her standing there.

  “Come,” he said softly, stretching out a hand to her, and she did. They kissed lingeringly, hands roaming slowly, clothes beginning to loosen. Her hand drifted casually down and touched him through his breeches. He drew breath and would have said something, but wasn’t quick enough.

  “One flesh,” she reminded him, smiling, and cupped her hand. “I want to see thy half of it.”

  ***

  “Thee has seen such things before,” Denny said. “I know thee has. Thee has brothers, for one thing. And—and in the course of…of treating wounded men…” He was lying naked on the bed, and so was she, fondling the object in question, which seemed to be enjoying the attention immensely. His fingers were sliding through her hair, playing with her earlobes.

  “I hope thee doesn’t think I ever did this to any of my brothers,” she said, sniffing him with pleasure. “And those of wounded men aren’t generally in a condition to be appreciated at all.”

  Denny cleared his throat and stretched himself a little, not quite squirming.

  “I think thee should allow me to appreciate thy own flesh for a bit,” he said. “If thee expects me to be able to make thee a wife tonight.”

  “Oh.” She looked down at his cock and then at herself, surprised. “What do—does thee—mean? Why wouldn’t thee be able to?”

  “Ah.” He looked pleased and eager—he was so young without his glasses—and bounced off the bed, going into the outer room, his bottom pale and tidy in the candlelight. To Dottie’s astonishment, he came back with the book she’d noticed on the table and handed it to her. It was bristling with bookmarks, and as she took it, it fell open in her hands, displaying several drawings of a naked man in cross section, his private parts in various stages of operation.

  She looked up at Denny in disbelief.

  “I thought—I know thee is a virgin; I didn’t want thee to be frightened, or unprepared.” He was blushing like a rose, and instead of collapsing in howls of laughter, which she badly wanted to do, she shut the book gently and took his face between her hands.

  “Is thee a virgin, too, Denny?” she said softly. His blush grew fierce, but he kept her gaze.

  “Yes. But—I do know how. I’m a physician.”

  That was too much, and she did laugh, but in small, half-stifled blurts of giggling, which infected him, and in seconds they were in each other’s arms on the bed, shaking silently, with occasional snorts and repetitions of “I’m a physician,” which sent them into fresh paroxysms.

  At last she found herself on her back, breathing heavily, Denny lying on top of her, and a slick of perspiration oiling them. She lifted a hand and touched his chest, and gooseflesh rippled over him, the dark hairs of his body curly and bristling. She was trembling, but not with either fear or laughter.

  “Is thee ready?” he whispered.

  “One flesh,” she whispered back. And they were.

  ***

  The candles had burned down nearly to their sockets, and the naked shadows on the wall moved slowly.

  “Dorothea!”

  “Thee should probably be quiet,” she advised him, briefly removing her mouth in order to talk. “I’ve never done this before. Thee wouldn’t want to distract me, now, would thee?” Before he could summon a single word, she had resumed her alarming actions. He groaned—he couldn’t help it—and laid his hands gently, helplessly, on her head.

  “It’s called fellatio, did thee know that?” she inquired, pausing momentarily for breath.

  “I did. How…I mean…Oh. Oh, God.”

  “What did thee say?” Her face was beautiful, so flushed that the color showed even by candlelight, her lips deep rose and wet…

  “I said—oh, God.”

  A smile lit her shadowed face with happiness, and her already firm grip on him tightened. His shadow jerked.

  “Oh, good,” she said, and with a small, triumphant crow of laughter, bent to slay him with her sharp white teeth.

  ONE WORD SPEAKS VOLUMES (THEMES OF THE NOVELS)

  Books don’t write themselves, as anyone who’s ever tried to write one can tell you. And if there is a secret to writing anything—fiction, nonfiction, TV scripts, greeting cards, poetry, or epitaphs—it’s this: the only way to write is one word at a time. This is either reassuring or Absolutely Horrifying, depending on how you look at it, but it’s the truth.

  But, as anyone who writes books can also tell you, books do have a mind and a voice of their own. And a successful book is one that talks to the reader.

  The interesting thing is that they talk to the writer, too. (Some writers suffer from the notion that they are in charge. Maybe they know something I don’t.8)

  If you’ve ever been exposed to high school English classes, you’ve doubtless been forced to discern and explicate the theme of a novel. This is ungodly boring but possibly helpful to those who’ve never heard of a theme before. (Frankly, my opinion is that if you read a lot, you absorb this notion by observation, and if you don’t like to read in the first place, being forced to look for themes in books you don’t care about to start with is not likely to change your aversion to the practice.)

  Still, the general notion of a theme is sometimes useful to a writer, in that it influences both the content and the organization of your story. Not always—or even often—in a deliberately conscious way, but it’s there. And once you’ve assembled most of a book, you really ought to be able to tell someone who asks what the theme is.

  I didn’t really think about the themes of my books for some years, but some intelligent NPR interviewer9 asked me one day whether I could sum up the book we were talking about in a single sentence—and I realized that, in fact, I could summarize the theme of each book in a single word.

  These are as follows:

  Outlander—Love

  While my books are often referred to (by people at a loss as to what to call them) as romance novels, they aren’t. However, Outlander is in fact the only one that has the necessary structure to even pass as a romance novel. I.e., it is a courtship story; its central mechanism concerns the coming together of two people in a (theoretically) permanent pair bond. Beyond that, though, it explores the nature of love on a number of levels and in a variety of contexts.

  We have Claire’s conflict over (truly) loving two men. We have Jamie’s love for his father, his sister, and his home, and Murtagh’s love for his godson. We have the deeply conflicted love between the brothers MacKenzie. We have the love of the clansmen for one another, their laird, and their home. We have the very complicated emotions of Captain Jack Randall—though whether any of these constitutes love, or merely obsession, is a matter for the reader to decide. And we have Divine Love, which Claire more or less stumbles into as an act of desperation. But almost every relationship in the book rests on love, and the entire story is a testament to the power of love.

  Dragonfly in Amber—Marriage

  This book deals primarily with the development of a specific marriage—Jamie’s and Claire’s—but along the way looks at quite a few other relationships and arrangements that explore the concept. We have the arranged marriage of Mary Hawkins and the elderly, warty Vicomte Marigny. We have the loveless but pragmatic marriages of class and convenience seen in the French court and the casual, selfish affairs that contrast so strongly with the sense of commitment and self-sacrifice at the heart of a good marriage. Later we see the doomed love between Mary and
Alex Randall—and the pragmatic marriage between her and Jack Randall (based on Jack’s love for his brother, rather than for Mary). We see the guilt of a broken-and-patched marriage in Claire’s resumption of her relations with Frank, and the peace of a long-term, deeply committed marriage between Jenny and Ian at Lallybroch—and appreciate the various threats there are to these social bonds and how people sustain a marriage—or don’t.

  Voyager—Identity

  Voyager has a lot of adventure, changing of times and places, seeking of destiny, and so on—but the underlying theme is that of a person’s search for identity and how they define themselves, in their own eyes, or those of another, or those of society at large. By marriage, by career, by calling—or by recognition of one’s own essential being. You see this worked out most noticeably (of course) in Claire’s and Jamie’s story, first as she seeks the husband she’s lost and longed for, and then as they look for safe landing and a place in which they can survive together.

  The continuing metaphor lies in their names: Jamie has five to choose from, plus a title, plus various nicknames, and he lives under an assortment of noms de guerre (often quite literally de guerre) throughout the book, in response to his changing roles and who’s after him at the moment. Claire, of course, has gone from Beauchamp to Randall to Fraser to Randall, and is now once again about to be Claire Fraser—or is it Mrs. Malcolm? Or perhaps Madame Etienne Marcel de Provac Alexandre? (Symbolizing the linking of her fate with Jamie’s, aye?) As Jamie tells Claire mid-book,

  “For so many years,” he said, “for so long, I have been so many things, so many different men.” I felt him swallow, and he shifted slightly, the linen of his nightshirt rustling with starch.

  “I was Uncle to Jenny’s children, and Brother to her and Ian. ‘Milord’ to Fergus, and ‘Sir’ to my tenants. ‘Mac Dubh’ to the men of Ardsmuir and ‘MacKenzie’ to the other servants at Helwater. ‘Malcolm the printer,’ then, and ‘Jamie Roy’ at the docks.” The hand stroked my hair, slowly, with a whispering sound like the wind outside. “But here,” he said, so softly I could barely hear him, “here in the dark, with you…I have no name.”

  The two of them adopt, discard, and adapt roles as they go from an Edinburgh brothel to Lallybroch to the Caribbean and at last, cast ashore by a hurricane,10 to America. There—stripped of everything except each other—Jamie finally reclaims and restates his identity, when he introduces himself to a rescuer: “My name is Jamie Fraser…. And this is Claire…My wife.”

  Drums of Autumn—Family

  If Dragonfly in Amber deals with the establishment and growth of a marriage, Drums does the same with the concept of family and its importance in a person’s life. One of the major notions—developed throughout the books—is that a family doesn’t consist only of people who share DNA, nor does a family cease to be important if the members of it are separated—or dead. Jamie and Claire’s family as they settle in North Carolina consists of Fergus and Marsali, their son, Germain, and Jamie’s nephew Ian—as well as Brianna, the daughter Jamie has never seen.

  As for that daughter, her shock at learning the truth of her parentage leads her to find her family and risk everything to save them, while Roger MacKenzie Wakefield (born a MacKenzie but adopted by his great-uncle) risks everything for her sake—and becomes her family, as well, along with her child, Jeremiah (who may or may not be Roger’s but whom Roger claims firmly as his own).11

  As Brianna writes in her note to Roger, enclosed with her family silver, photos, and memorabilia: “Everyone needs a history…. This is mine….”

  The Fiery Cross—Community

  The Fiery Cross12 continues the “building” sense of the books, from courtship to established marriage to family and now to the formation of a community, as Jamie reclaims his original destiny as laird and leader, supporter and protector of a community. We saw him do this (briefly) at Lallybroch and then during the years after Culloden, when he led the prisoners at Ardsmuir and kept them (mostly) sane and alive by forging them into a community. Jamie has always been defined (to himself, as well as to the reader) by his strong sense of responsibility, and here we see it in full play, as he gathers tenants to his land at Fraser’s Ridge, with the help (and occasional hair-raising hindrance) of the time travelers in his family.

  As with any worthwhile story, the self-definition of a protagonist (whether that’s a single person or a group) is a process both of discovery and of conflict. Stumbling blocks, opposition, and danger are the tools that nature uses to carve a striking personality from the native rock. And thus we see not only the formation of the community of Fraser’s Ridge (a parallel and microcosm of the emerging America) but the individual struggles of Jamie, Claire, Brianna, Roger, and others, to fit into their changing environment and preserve their own identities and discover their callings in the process.

  A Breath of Snow and Ashes—Loyalty

  I’m tempted to say that the one-word theme of this book is “survival,” but the means by which so many people survive the vicissitudes of a world spinning rapidly out of control is really a better theme, I think. In this instance, we explore the fierce loyalty of Claire and Jamie to each other and to their family. But beyond loyalty to people, loyalty to ideals and ideas is a huge thing at this time in the history of America, and the conflict of those loyalties is paradoxically both the cause of social fracture and the means of survival when the world is coming apart at the seams.

  We see other forms of loyalty at work—the loyalty of greed and self-protection, among the Brown gang and Hodgepile’s band of marauders; the loyalty to tradition and leaders among the Cherokee; the loyalty to King, country, and regiment shown by John Grey—and the loyalty of friendship, as we see between Lord John and Jamie.

  And ultimately we see the loyalty and love of parents, who will make any sacrifice for the sake of their children and the future.

  An Echo in the Bone—Nexus

  The icon on the cover of the U.S. edition of this book is a caltrop—a military weapon dating back to Roman times.13 The icon on the U.K. edition of the book is a very beautiful skeletal leaf—showing the superiority of the Orion art department to my own artistic instincts but embodying the same underlying concept: the complex and fragile linkages between people, times, and circumstance.

  The book follows four major story lines, which connect in major and minor ways and—depending on which cover image you prefer—display the importance and resilience of such connections in time of wars and personal conflicts or show the underlying veins of nurture and sustenance between people that keep them whole in spite of the stresses of passing time.

  As with A Breath of Snow and Ashes, I considered an alternate one-word theme—in this case “mortality.” Not death, as such, but a realization of the finite nature of life and what this does to people. That was a much harder concept to put on a cover, though.

  Written in My Own Heart’s Blood—Forgiveness

  If Echo’s word was “nexus,” most acute readers are probably expecting MOBY’s to be “spaghetti”—or, possibly, “octopus.”14 It isn’t, though; it’s “forgiveness”—both the giving of that balm, and the refusal to forgive, and what giving or refusal does to both giver and recipient in either case.

  We see this concept in operation among the major characters—particularly with regard to William’s response to discovering his true paternity, and with regard to Claire’s efforts to deal with meeting the man who raped her and her response to what Jamie does about it. But we also see it in the lesser passages dealing with incidental characters: Mrs. Bradshaw and the slave Sophronia, for example. Mrs. Bradshaw shows a courageous determination to help the girl (thus forgiving her for what might have been seen by a lesser woman as complicity in her husband’s infidelity), despite her inability (and who could wonder at it?) to forgive her husband and the apparent internal struggle the situation costs her.

  Rachel forgives Ian instantly upon his confession that he was married before and his admitting the fear that
he might not give her children.

  Jamie forgives Claire and, reluctantly, Lord John, for having slept with each other while thinking him dead—but can’t bring himself to forgive Lord John for baldly acknowledging his own desire for Jamie.

  Claire instantly forgives Jenny, the sister-in-law she once loved deeply. Jenny emphatically doesn’t forgive Hal, the commander of the men who hurt her family and contributed to her husband’s death—but she counsels and supports Claire, who must deal with her realization that the man who raped her is alive, by sharing her daughter’s experience.

  Buck MacKenzie can’t forgive himself for the ways in which he failed his wife. Roger explicitly forgives Buck for his role in getting Roger hanged—but demonstrates the boomerang effect of forgiveness, in which the sense of injury returns and must be dealt with afresh.

  Fanny forgives William and Jamie for not being able to save Jane—but you can plainly see that they don’t forgive themselves and will live with the effects of their failure for some time.

  “Spaghetti” is probably the right term, really….

  * * *

  1 No, not the English department, nor yet the history department. I was a biologist in my previous academic incarnation (though I’d sort of slid sideways and become an “expert” in scientific computation—it’s easy to be an expert if only six other people in the world do what you do…) and worked at the Center for Environmental Studies at Arizona State University.

 

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