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New
Year Excerpt A from
An Echo in the Bone
Copyright
© 2008 Diana Gabaldon, An Echo in the Bone,
Outlander series. All rights reserved.
Youve
been dreaming of them, havent you? I said.
He
glanced at me and nodded slowly, a small frown between
his brows. That made me uneasy; the occasional dreams
he had of Bree or the children normally left him peaceful
and happy.
What?
I demanded. What happened?
He
shrugged, still frowning.
Nothing,
Sassenach. I saw Jem and the wee lass-- a smile
came over his face at that, --God, shes
a feisty wee baggage! She minds me o you, Sassenach.
This
was a dubious compliment as phrased, but I felt a
deep glow at the thought. Id spent hours looking
at Mandy and Jem, memorizing every small feature and
gesture, trying to extrapolate, imagine what they
would look like as they grew--and I was almost sure
that Mandy had my mouth. I knew for a fact that she
had my eyes--and my hair, poor child, for all it was
inky black.
What
were they doing?
He
rubbed a finger between his brows as though his forehead
itched.
They
were outside, he said slowly. Jem told
her to do something and she kicked him in the shin
and ran away from him, so he chased her. I think it
was summer, for the yellow was on the broom.
He smiled, eyes fixed on whatever hed seen in
his dream. I mind the wee flowers, caught in
her hair, and lying in drifts across the stones.
What
stones? I asked sharply.
Oh.
The gravestones, he answered, readily enough.
Thats it--they were playing among the
stones on the hill behind Lallybroch.
I
sighed happily. This was the third dream that hed
had, seeing them at Lallybroch. It might be only wishful
thinking, but I knew it made him as happy as it made
me, to feel that they had made a home there.
They
could be, I said. Roger went there--when
we were looking for you. He said the place was standing
vacant, for sale. Bree would have money; they might
have bought it. They could be there! Id
told him that before, but he nodded, pleased.
Aye,
they could be, he said, his eyes still soft
with his memory of the children on the hill, chasing
through the yellow broom and the worn gray stones
that marked his familys rest.
A
flutterby came with them, he said suddenly.
Id forgot that. A blue one.
Blue?
Are there blue butterflies in Scotland? I frowned,
trying to remember. Such butterflies as Id ever
noticed had tended to be white or yellow, I thought.
Jamie
gave me a look of mild exasperation.
Its
a dream, Sassenach. I could have flutterbys wi
tartan wings, and I liked.
I
laughed, but refused to be distracted.
Right.
What was it that bothered you, though?
He
glanced curiously at me.
How
did ye ken I was troubled?
I
looked at him down my nose--or as much down my nose
as was possible, given the disparity of height.
You
may not have a glass face, but I have been married
to you for thirty-odd years.
He
let the fact that I hadnt actually been with
him for twenty of those years pass without comment,
and only smiled.
Aye.
Well, it wasna anything, really. Only that they went
into the broch.
The
broch? I said, uncertainly. The ancient tower
for which Lallybroch was named did stand on the hill
behind the house, its shadow passing daily through
the burying-ground like the stately march of a giant
sundial. Jamie and I had gone up there often of an
evening in our early days at Lallybroch, to sit on
the bench that stood against the brochs wall,
and be away from the hubbub of the house, enjoying
the peaceful sight of the estate and its grounds spread
white and green below us, soft with twilight.
The
small frown was back between his brows.
The
broch, he repeated, and looked at me, helpless.
I dinna ken what it was. Only that I didna want
them to go in. It..felt as though there was something
inside. Waiting. And I didna like it at all.
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