| Pardon me, ladies. |
| I'm looking for this woman. |
| (LOW CONVERSATION) No. |
| All right. |
| Thank you. |
| No, sorry. |
| I don't. |
| Thank you. |
| My establishment offend you in some way, sir? No, no. |
| It's only that (CLEARS THROAT) I'm looking for this lady. |
| She recently arrived on the Philip Alonzo. |
| I-I've made inquiries, but no one's seen her. |
| I haven't either. |
| Have you completed your inventory? Yes, sir. |
| We'll need 12 more composing sticks come Thursday. |
| (SIGHING) All right. |
| Sir, have you seen this lady? I'm sorry, I haven't. |
| - Where's the bairn? - (CHUCKLES) Go see for yerself. |
| (BABY COOS) FERGUS: Milady. |
| Milord. |
| I'm so glad you could come for a visit. |
| Please (CHUCKLES) - Is Ian not with you? - Uh, he'll be along tomorrow. |
| He's gone to Brunswick to fetch casks for our whisky. |
| The governor has invited us to join him and his wife at the theater. |
| Summoned us to join him. |
| You came all this way for a play? No, we came all this way to see you. |
| - And Germain. |
| - CLAIRE: Shall I put him down? - Mm. |
| - (SIGHS) The governor's eager to introduce me to one of his right-hand men, Mr. |
| Edmund Fanning. |
| A right-hand man with both his hands dipped in the treasury Or so Murtagh would tell us. |
| Marsali, shall I help you get the rest of lunch? Yes. |
| So, how are you all coping You and Fergus with the baby? (LAUGHS SOFTLY) Bein' a mother to a wee bairn My heart is so full o' love it's fit to burst (LAUGHS) But (SIGHS) Is something the matter? No, 'tis only wi' Germain bein' so precious, I look at him and I ken I'd have a knife through my gut before seein' him hurt or in sorrow. |
| If anything should ever happen to him (STAMMERS) CLAIRE: That's the hardest thing about being a parent I'm sure. |
| Though you know you would die trying, you can't protect them from everyone and everything. |
| (DRINK SPILLS) Ah, for Christ's sake. |
| (SIGHS) - WOMAN: Excuse me. |
| - MAN: Yes, lass? WOMAN: Do you know where I might be able to buy passage to Cross Creek? I'd like to leave tomorrow. |
| The Sally Ann is in port. |
| It makes the journey every week or so. |
| You can ask Captain Freeman. |
| WOMAN: Thank you. |
| ROGER: Brianna? It's you. |
| (GASPS) Oh, thank God. |
| - (GASPS) - Thank God I found you. |
| Hi. |
| Oh, my God. |
| What are you doing here? Looking for you. |
| At no small risk to life and limb, I might add. |
| You weren't supposed to come here. |
| That wasn't the plan. |
| What, and you call tearing off into bloody nowhere a plan? No, I would've told you. |
| I just I didn't know where we stood after the last time we talked. |
| What do you mean, you didn't know where we stood? You didn't know how I felt about you? Let's go outside. |
| Roger, wait. |
| How did you even know where I was? I spoke to Gayle. |
| She told me you were going to visit your mum. |
| So I went to find you in Inverness - You read my letter. |
| - Of course I read your letter. |
| And that's all I got? A letter? - You could have called me. |
| - I wanted to call you, but I didn't know how to tell you that I love you, and I thought that if I told you I was coming here, you'd try to stop me. |
| (CHUCKLES) Did you just say you love me? Come with me. |
| BRIANNA: Close the door. |
| (DOOR THUDS) (PANTING) Mm wait. |
| Stop. |
| - What? - Stop. |
| - Are you sure? - (SCOFFS) Do you not know how badly I want you? But we're not engaged. |
| That seemed to be very important to you. |
| At the festival, you said I said (SIGHS) I said I would have all of you or none at all. |
| Have you changed your mind? (EXHALES SHAKILY) No. |
| (SIGHS) Well, then You have all of me. |
| You'll marry me? How could I say no to a man who pursued me for 200 years? Oh I don't have a ring. |
| I still have the bracelet you gave me. |
| It's the gemstone you used to come through the stones. |
| I have an idea. |
| D'ye know what handfasting is? (CHUCKLES) It's, um it's sort of a temporary marriage. |
| In the Highlands, where, uh Where folk are a long way from the nearest minister, a man and a woman in this time can be promised to one another for a year and a day. |
| - At the end of that time - Let's do it. |
| Really? Yes. |
| (CARRIAGE CLATTERING ON ROAD) Very pleased you could join us, Mister and Mistress Fraser. |
| This play is said to be quite exceptional. |
| Indeed, it was written by a native son of Wilmington. |
| (INDISTINCT CHATTER) Ah, Fanning! Come, come. |
| Come. |
| I must introduce you to a friend. |
| Mr. |
| Fanning, may I present Mr. |
| James Fraser of Fraser's Ridge. |
| Mr. |
| Edmund Fanning, my dear friend and colleague. |
| A pleasure, sir. |
| My wife, Claire Fraser. |
| Mr. |
| Fanning sits on the Assembly and is my public register of deeds. |
| He's also, I might add, leader of the Orange County militia and judge of the superior court in Salisbury, in your county. |
| A man with many strings to his bow. |
| His Excellency speaks highly of you as well, Mr. |
| Fraser, especially in the light of our current grievances in the western counties. |
| The Regulators? Do not dignify those insurgents with that name. |
| I would be ashamed to declare anyone save the Lord above a "regulator" of all things. |
| - (GRUNTS SOFTLY) - Are you in pain, Mr. |
| Fanning? Oh, I am afraid I injured myself standing against the mob which assembled in Hillsborough last May. |
| Quite literally standing, mind you. |
| - (ALL CHUCKLING) - I am an object of jest. |
| In an attempt to appease the insurgents, I carried rum to the river where they were encamped, meaning to persuade them against their lawlessness. |
| A noble deed One which preserved the lives of many, I'm sure. |
| As I turned to leave, my boot stayed in the mud, and I must have wounded myself. |
| I've a strange protrusion. |
| The least movement now sends me into paroxysms of pain. |
| My physician assures me it will go away in time. |
| Not if it is what I think it might be. |
| If I were to examine it, I could know for sure. |
| My wife is a healer, Mr. |
| Fanning. |
| Ah. |
| TRYON: Well, let us defer to Mr. |
| Fanning's physician, shall we? Well, if the pain gets worse, you may need to see a surgeon. |
| Mr. |
| Fraser, uh, allow me to introduce you to some of my acquaintances. |
| My wife will present Mistress Fraser to the wives. |
| Please. |
| Ah the society of the wives. |
| (LAUGHS) Indeed. |
| But fear not I will help you navigate these waters. |
| Ah, there. |
| You've heard of the face that launched a thousand ships. |
| Well, here's a lady who could fill as many with tobacco if she so chose. |
| Wit and wealth aplenty. |
| - (INDISTINCT CHATTER) - (CHUCKLES) CLAIRE: Her husband seems to have captured the attention of the crowd as well. |
| That's Colonel Washington. |
| I'm sorry, who? Colonel George Washington. |
| He's a former soldier with the Virginia Regiment. |
| (LAUGHTER) Well, I should love to meet them both. |
| Mister and Mistress Fraser recently settled their own estate 10,000 acres in the Blue Ridge Mountains. |
| The parcel that Mr. |
| Washington surveyed for me last year. |
| Yes, I remember. |
| A magnificent stretch of wilderness. |
| Aye, good land So generously granted to us by His Excellency. |
| Hitherto unprecedented generosity. |
| 10,000 acres the governor must be quite fond of you. |
| TRYON: Of course I'm fond of him. |
| Mr. |
| Fraser is a loyal man A former soldier, you know. |
| Oh? Were you with us against the French? No but I've heard tales of your husband's exploits in those wars. |
| I fought at Culloden in '46. |
| I do not recall that battle. |
| I spent my youth in Virginia. |
| Chopping down cherry trees Is what a-a young boy would do. |
| - Figure of speech. |
| - (BELL RINGING) MAN: Ladies and gentlemen, the play will soon begin. |
| - Ah. |
| - Let us be seated. |
| (INDISTINCT CHATTER) George Washington He will be perhaps the most famous American to ever live. |
| What does he do to gain such notoriety? Well, he's the man who wins the war against the British, and he'll be the first leader of this country. |
| But he won't be a king. |
| He'll be called a "president," elected by the people. |
| Oh, if Brianna were here, she'd have a hundred questions to ask him. |
| Uh, yeah I think we're supposed to kneel. |
| (SOFT MUSIC) I, Roger Jeremiah Do take thee, Brianna Ellen, to be my lawful wedded wife. |
| With my goods I thee endow, with my body I thee worship, in sickness and in health, in richness and in poverty, so long as we both shall live, I plight thee my troth. |
| I, Brianna Ellen, take thee, Roger Jeremiah, to be my lawful wedded husband. |
| With my goods I thee endow, not that there's much of that. |
| With my body I thee worship, in sickness and in health, in richness and in poverty, so long as we both shall live. |
| - The plight. |
| - Right. |
| I plight thee my troth. |
| By the power vested in this unusual Scottish tradition, I I now pronounce us BOTH: Man and wife. |
| Has my mistress returned? No, still off with that man. |
| The man of wanton morals? (CHUCKLES) (INDISTINCT CHATTER) The Regulators mean to deprive me of my home. |
| They refuse to see their taxes apportioned for the construction of my palace. |
| Well, let's hope my men put on a good show tonight. |
| I'm sorry? "All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players. |
| They have their exits and their entrances. |
| " Shakespeare, you know. |
| Never goes out of fashion. |
| (CHUCKLES) Aye, but it's not Shakespeare we're seeing tonight, Your Excellency. |
| Indeed not, but we are at a theater of His Majesty the King in all its glory, made possible through taxes, not something those insurgents would ever comprehend. |
| - A night to remember. |
| - (CHUCKLES SOFTLY) But what has this to do with yer men? The insurgents (CHUCKLES) I have a spy in their camp. |
| They mean to rob a carriage carrying tax monies to the treasury at New Bern Tonight, as it leaves Wilmington. |
| They're here, gentlemen, encamped upon the road to New Bern. |
| My redcoats are going to arrest them. |
| Do ye, uh, ken who these men are? Oh, yes, and they have a leader among them, Murtagh Fitzgibbons. |
| (DRAMATIC MUSIC) Hmm. |
| If ye'd like, I could ride out and join yer men. |
| Oh, I appreciate your offer, but I have it in hand. |
| Enjoy the performance. |
| Aye. |
| (APPLAUSE) MAN: He comes (CARRIAGE CLATTERING ON ROAD) (SOFT MUSIC) (CHUCKLES SOFTLY) (GASPS) ROGER: Your skin is so soft. |
| You're the most beautiful woman I've ever seen. |
| (GASPS) (PANTING) I've wanted this for so long. |
| If I take you now, it's for always. |
| Yes (SIGHS) Yes, please. |
| (CRIES OUT SOFTLY) (GASPING) (MOANS) (MOANS QUIETLY) (GROANS) (BOTH GASPING, MOANING) Feel my heart. |
| Tell me if it stops. |
| (MOANING) (GROANING) (BOTH PANTING) - What? - Just I want to make this last. |
| I've been wondering for a while what color your hair is down here. |
| - It's - Shh, shh. |
| ROGER: I'm gonna find out for myself. |
| - And what's that name - MAN: What splendid robes. |
| - LYSIAS: Thank you, sir. |
| - (LAUGHTER) LYSIAS: Ambient air, and weary gracious heaven with ceaseless bellows? MAN: Your ceaseless bellowings. |
| (LAUGHTER) LYSIAS: Vardanes sounds with equal harmony, and suits as well the loud repeated shouts of noisy joy. |
| Can he bid Chaos Nature's rule dissolve? MAN: I know what's going to happen. |
| LYSIAS: Can he deprive mankind of light and day, and turn the seasons from their destined course? - Such poetry. |
| - MAN: What poetry? Say, can he do all this and be a god? (TENSE MUSIC) (LEAVES RUSTLING, BRANCHES SNAPPING) Patience, lads. |
| Can I ask you something? Anything. |
| Was it all right? Did I do it right? Oh, God (CHUCKLES) - It was all right, then? - Christ, yes. |
| What could possibly make you think otherwise? Well, you didn't say anything. |
| You just lay there like someone had hit you over the head. |
| (LAUGHS) I thought maybe you were disappointed. |
| No. |
| No. |
| God, no. |
| Behaving as though you've had your spinal column removed is a fair indication of male satisfaction. |
| Can I ask you something? Of course husband. |
| Did it hurt? The first time? Yes but I liked it. |
| (LAUGHS SOFTLY) Hm. |
| (INHALES) Oh, when I thought of our wedding night, I always pictured clean sheets, champagne, a bed. |
| (CHUCKLES) I have those things. |
| Not this. |
| (GENTLE MUSIC) I don't think I've ever been so happy. |
| Bree (GROANS) What dares he, Vardanes dares not? Blush not, noble prince. |
| - LYSIAS: Have pity. |
| - (AUDIENCE CHATTERING) LYSIAS: I'd loud proclaim the merit of Vardanes. |
| (GROANS SOFTLY) VARDANES: Brother, my soul endures him not, and he's the bane of all my hopes of greatness. |
| Artless verse. |
| - No rhyme intended. |
| - (LAUGHTER) Like the sun, he rules the day, and like the night's pale queen (GROANS SOFTLY) VARDANES: My fainter beams are lost when he appears. |
| And this because he came into the world a moon or two before me. |
| What's the difference? - (GROANS) - Christ, forgive me. |
| - (SCREAMS) - This man needs a surgeon! JAMIE: Colonel, please help me. |
| Apologies, ladies and gentlemen. |
| Uh, players, I'm sorry. |
| This this man is in distress. |
| This man is dying! Is there a surgeon present? Here. |
| Well, my wife is a surgeon, Your Excellency. |
| You said she was a healer. |
| I mean, herbs and potions are one thing, but this Bring him into the lobby. |
| Lay him flat on his back. |
| - Now, please. |
| - Yes, mistress. |
| - Now! Now! - I'm sorry. |
| (DRAMATIC MUSIC) What on Earth is going on? I havena killed the man, have I? No, if he's suffering from what I think he is, you may have just saved his life by forcing me to operate. |
| Governor Tryon is gonna arrest a gang of Regulators tonight, here in Wilmington. |
| - Murtagh's among them. |
| - Arrest them for what? Robbery a hanging offense. |
| I must go warn Murtagh, but Tryon canna ken I've gone. |
| Will ye keep him occupied? I'll buy you as much time as I can, but be careful. |
| (GRUNTING) Inguinal hernia. |
| His intestines have moved and the blood flow may be cut off. |
| I need to operate immediately. |
| You, go behind the stage and find me a needle and thread. |
| And you, sir, go next door and fetch me a small, sharp knife, some liquor, and some linens Lots of linens. |
| Frohock, for God's sake, find us a surgeon. |
| I am a surgeon, Your Excellency, and it cannot wait. |
| Now, if you would be so kind as to assist me Should we not undertake this somewhere more private? We'll have him carried to the inn. |
| If I don't act quickly, this man will die. |
| (GASPING) Mr. |
| Fanning, I need you to take a long drink and hope that it knocks you unconscious. |
| GEORGE WASHINGTON: How is the patient? Uh, my wife will do her best to help him. |
| - She's very skilled. |
| - Excellent news. |
| - Ye're leaving? - We are indeed. |
| What a lugubrious performance. |
| You are leaving as well? Well, I must fetch my wife's surgical tools from our residence. |
| May we offer you transport? Aye. |
| Here you are, mistress. |
| I brought you this as well. |
| Thank you. |
| Put them down. |
| No, we don't need more rum. |
| It's already taken effect. |
| - He looks so pale. |
| - WOMAN: He's at death's door. |
| Where is the needle and thread? Thank you. |
| (CROWD MURMURING) What are you doing? I'm cleaning the area where I'm going to make an incision. |
| I need four men to hold down his arms and legs and keep him still while I work. |
| The rum can only do so much. |
| He's likely to come in and out of consciousness with pain. |
| I can't do this without your help. |
| Please. |
| (SNAPS FINGERS) You're his colleague, Your Excellency. |
| If he wakes, it would do him good to see a friendly face to keep him calm. |
| - You have a kerchief? - (LIQUID POURING) Um, yes. |
| Well, if he wakes, let him bite down on it. |
| (CARRIAGE CLATTERING ON ROAD) Whoa there, now. |
| I, uh, I'll borrow a horse onwards from here. |
| Thank ye for aiding a fellow soldier. |
| Is there a war I'm not aware of? Aye. |
| Aye, there is, sir. |
| (KNOCKS SOFTLY) Hold him steady. |
| - (GASPS) - WOMAN: Oh, my. |
| (GROANING LOUDLY) (GASPING) CLAIRE: There. |
| (PAINED GROANING) You must keep calm, Mr. |
| Fanning. |
| (WHIMPERING) (INCISION SQUELCHING) Governor Tryon, talk to him. |
| Distract him from the pain. |
| Now, if you lie still, Fanning, when all this is over, I'll dip my hands into the treasury and have a house built for you with the finest brick exterior you've ever laid your eyes upon. |
| Impenetrable as a fortress, - safe from those insurgent mobs. |
| - CLAIRE: All right. |
| - Hold him. |
| - (SCREAMS) (SCREAMING CONTINUES) (MUFFLED SCREAMS) (EXHALES) Well done, Governor. |
| I must admit that was all rather exciting. |
| He, uh, he won't remember what I said, will he? MAN: Make way. |
| Let me through. |
| What hath hell wrought? I've just begun to close the opening. |
| You've butchered him, madam. |
| All he needed was tobacco smoke up through the rear. |
| No need of you. |
| The lady has it in hand. |
| (HOOFBEATS APPROACHING) MAN: Stop! Will you stop? (GUNS CLICKING) Let's take our money back. |
| (SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC) Finished, madam? Thank you, gentlemen. |
| I'll see him home. |
| Believe you may have saved his life. |
| (CROWD APPLAUDS) I see now why your husband claims he cannot live without you in the wilderness. |
| (SOFTLY) You certainly left that to the last moment. |
| He didna seem to notice. |
| I think he's going to be all right. |
| Did you manage to reach Murtagh in time? I hope so. |
| MAN: Good evening. |
| Oh, it's cold out. |
| - What the - It's me, Fergus. |
| The governor knows of your plan and intends to have you arrested. |
| (MEN MURMURING) (SOFTLY) Fergus? Is that you? Milord sent me to warn you Do not rob the coach. |
| (CLICKS TONGUE) (WHISTLES LIKE A BIRD) May I help you? (WHISTLING) Apologies, sir. |
| We've had a bottle or two this evening. |
| I thought you might tell us if this is the road to Wilmington. |
| COACHMAN: Aye, it is. |
| You must be on your way. |
| It's not wise to linger on these roads at night. |
| MAN: Ah, we'll We'll be doing just that. |
| Be well, sir. |
| Thanks. |
| Appreciate it. |
| Come on, come on. |
| Up here. |
| Have a good night. |
| (INDISTINCT CONVERSATION) We've been found out. |
| Come on. |
| Clear out. |
| You have a spy in your camp. |
| I suppose I must. |
| My godson couldn't be troubled to come here and tell me himself, eh? He is at the theater. |
| - The theater? - (CHUCKLES) Just as well. |
| There's no other man I'd rather see. |
| We should start looking for gems to get back through the stones after we help your parents. |
| Yeah. |
| It's just so frustrating not knowing the exact date of the fire. |
| I know I have time. |
| I just don't know how much. |
| - (SIGHS) - I could kill that printer. |
| (CHUCKLES) When I met him, I was tempted to tell him off, but Who? The printer who smudged the date. |
| How did you know? Hmm? I just told you about the obituary today. |
| How could you have known about the smudged date or who the printer was? Unless y Unless you already knew. |
| (SIGHS) Don't be angry, but I did know. |
| I found the same obituary. |
| After I left? No. |
| Before. |
| - And you didn't tell me? - I almost did. |
| But (SIGHS) You were so happy when I told you that your parents found each other. |
| I couldn't bear making you sad again. |
| You found out my mother died, and you didn't think that I should know that? At first, I did. |
| I wanted to tell ye. |
| Brianna there was no point breaking your heart. |
| Even Fiona agreed Fiona? You talked to Fiona about this? About my mother and time travel? That's how I found the obituary. |
| Fiona had it, or her granny did. |
| She was a caller for the dancers at Craigh na Dun. |
| Fiona already knew about time travel, and she agreed that if I told you about the fire, it would do more harm than good. |
| Oh, she did, did she? She's the one you consulted about this and not me? And then the two of you decided that I shouldn't know that my own mother was dead? She was already dead. |
| You knew she was dead. |
| She's been dead for 200 years. |
| What could you do? This. |
| Roger, I could do this. |
| But you didn't want me to. |
| ROGER: Brianna, we have this gift, but we cannot be the arbiters of who lives and who dies, or we'd save all our loved ones. |
| That was my decision to make. |
| I would never have done that to you, Roger. |
| How dare you take that choice away from me? I didn't want to break your heart! No, you wanted me to be happy so I'd marry you. |
| Yes! Yes. |
| Pardon me for wanting you to be my wife, which, by the way, you are now, so maybe it's time you listened to me. |
| What? I'm your wife, so now I have to do what you say? Is that how it's gonna be? You make all of my decisions for me so I don't have to worry my pretty little head? You're twisting my words. |
| I nearly died coming after you! Well, I didn't ask you to come. |
| Oh, that's right. |
| You just left. |
| You left without saying a word Just a note I was supposed to receive a year later, after ye'd died or got stuck. |
| - Maybe I should just go back. |
| - Maybe you should. |
| Is that what you want? For me to leave and return through the stones? Turns out Lizzie and I do pretty well on our own. |
| Brianna, you told me about your last words to your father and how you've never forgiven yourself for leaving him like that Don't you dare bring my father into this. |
| It's the same thing. |
| Can't you see that? Right when it matters, you're pushing me away. |
| Screw you! I was just a kid. |
| Well, you know what? You still are. |
| You're acting like a child. |
| Maybe this was a mistake. |
| Fine. |
| If you really believe that, then you should go. |
| (SOMBER MUSIC) Look me in the eye and tell me, because if that's what you really want I will go. |
| No one's stopping you. |
| (DOOR CREAKS OPEN, CLOSES) (SOBS) The insurgents must have received word of my plan. |
| - Someone alerted them? - TRYON: Obviously. |
| I told both of you about it, as well as Fanning and Colonel Washington, but you were all in my company. |
| No. |
| I saw him leave the play. |
| Who? Colonel Washington, Your Excellency. |
| I saw him and his wife putting on their coats as I ran to fetch the surgeon. |
| - The two of them? - Yes. |
| The two of them together. |
| Never trust a Virginian. |
| Washington's day will come. |
| (INDISTINCT CHATTER) MAN: (LAUGHS) Losing your courage, man? (CHUCKLES) I may have lost 20 shillings, but I still have my soul. |
| A soul is as rare as hen's teeth around here. |
| How about something with a little more earthly value, then? You'll need a lot of luck to pull this one off, Bonnet. |
| BONNET: Yes, I will. |
| Blow on it, will ye, darlin'? (MEN CHUCKLING) Perhaps ye'll change my luck. |
| Where did you get this? Why do you ask? It looks like one my mother had. |
| Does it now? Is she alive? It's bad luck to wear the jewelry of the dead. |
| I cannot say I've noticed that effect myself, but I can assure you, your mother was both alive and well when I left her. |
| Where is she? Afraid I don't know. |
| My time with the lady was some while ago, though pleasant. |
| (MEN CHUCKLING) But if you'd like to return it to her perhaps an agreement could be reached. |
| Fold. |
| - You'll sell it to me? - Come now. |
| I never haggle in public. |
| This lot will learn my tricks. |
| (LAUGHTER) (FOOTSTEPS FADING) (SOFT FOREBODING MUSIC) How much money do you want for it? BONNET: I've enough money. |
| Well, perhaps you could earn it. |
| I think you've mistaken me. |
| I Oh, no, I think you've mistaken me. |
| No! Please, just let me go. |
| Please (SCREAMS) (GASPING) - You want to play games, do you? - No! No! (GRUNTING) BRIANNA: Somebody! (STRUGGLING) BRIANNA: Somebody, please! (DOOR SLAMS) - Two pairs. |
| - Fold. |
| BRIANNA: Get off of me! MAN: Queen high. |
| BRIANNA: (MUFFLED SCREAMING) Somebody help me! Please, somebody help me! (MEN LAUGHING) BRIANNA: (MUFFLED SCREAMING) MAN: Pair. |
| (INDISTINCT CHATTER) BRIANNA: (MUFFLED CRYING) MAN: (MURMURS) BRIANNA: (SOBS) BONNET: (GRUNTING) BONNET: (MUFFLED) I've had livelier rides. |
| You know I thought ye might've been a virgin But that wasn't your first time, was it? Forgot something, didn't you? BONNET: (CHUCKLES) I pay for my pleasures. |
| I'm an honest man for a pirate. |
| If you find your mother, give her my regards. |
| (FOREBODING MUSIC) |