eBook Details

An Echo in the Bone

By: Diana Gabaldon | Other books by Diana Gabaldon
Published By: Random House Publishing Group
Published: Sep 22, 2009
ISBN # 9780385342452
Heat Index
Price: $8.99

Available in: Secure Adobe Epub eBook

Categories: Fiction Historical Fiction

Description

In this new epic of imagination, time travel, and adventure, Diana Gabaldon continues the riveting story begun in Outlander.

Jamie Fraser is an eighteenth-century Highlander, an ex-Jacobite traitor, and a reluctant rebel in the American Revolution. His wife, Claire Randall Fraser, is a surgeon--from the twentieth century. What she knows of the future compels him to fight. What she doesn't know may kill them both.

With one foot in America and one foot in Scotland, Jamie and Claire's adventure spans the Revolution, from sea battles to printshops, as their paths cross with historical figures from Benjamin Franklin to Benedict Arnold.

Meanwhile, in the relative safety of the twentieth century, their daughter, Brianna, and her husband experience the unfolding drama of the Revolutionary War through Claire's letters. But the letters can't warn them of the threat that's rising out of the past to overshadow their family.

Diana Gabaldon's sweeping Outlander saga reaches new heights in An Echo in the Bone.

 
Reader Rating:  starstarstarstarstar (1 Ratings)
Sensuality Rating:   Not rated
Excerpt:


Sometimes They're Really Dead

Wilmington, colony of North Carolina

July 1776


The pirate's head had disappeared. William heard the speculations from a group of idlers on the quay nearby, wondering whether it would be seen again.

"Na, him be gone for good," said a ragged man of mixed blood, shaking his head. "De ally-gator don' take him, de water will."

A backwoodsman shifted his tobacco and spat into the water in disagreement.

"No, he's good for another day--two, maybe. Them gristly bits what holds the head on, they dry out in the sun. Tighten up like iron. Seen it many a time with deer carcasses."

William saw Mrs. MacKenzie glance quickly at the harbor, then away. She looked pale, he thought, and maneuvered himself slightly so as to block her view of the men and the brown flood of high tide, though since it was high, the corpse tied to its stake was naturally not visible. The stake was, though--a stark reminder of the price of crime. The pirate had been staked to drown on the mudflats several days before, the persistence of his decaying corpse an ongoing topic of public conversation.

"Jem!" Mr. MacKenzie called sharply, and lunged past William in pursuit of his son. The little boy, red-haired like his mother, had wandered away to listen to the men's talk, and was now leaning perilously out over the water, clinging to a bollard in an attempt to see the dead pirate.

Mr. MacKenzie snatched the boy by the collar, pulled him in, and swept him up in his arms, though the boy struggled, craning back toward the swampish harbor.

"I want to see the wallygator eat the pirate, Daddy!"

The idlers laughed, and even MacKenzie smiled a little, though the smile disappeared when he glanced at his wife. He was at her side in an instant, one hand beneath her elbow.

"I think we must be going," MacKenzie said, shifting his son's weight in order better to support his wife, whose distress was apparent. "Lieutenant Ransom--Lord Ellesmere, I mean"--he corrected with an apologetic smile at William--"will have other engagements, I'm sure."

This was true; William was engaged to meet his father for supper. Still, his father had arranged to meet him at the tavern just across the quay; there was no risk of missing him. William said as much, and urged them to stay, for he was enjoying their company--Mrs. MacKenzie's, particularly--but she smiled regretfully, though her color was better, and patted the capped head of the baby in her arms.

"No, we do have to be going." She glanced at her son, still struggling to get down, and William saw her eyes flicker toward the harbor and the stark pole that stood above the flood. She resolutely looked away, fixing her eyes upon William's face instead. "The baby's waking up; she'll be wanting food. It was so lovely to meet you, though. I wish we might talk longer." She said this with the greatest sincerity, and touched his arm lightly, giving him a pleasant sensation in the pit of the stomach.

The idlers were now placing wagers on the reappearance of the drowned pirate, though by the looks of things, none of them had two groats to rub together.

"Two to one he's still there when the tide goes out."

"Five to one the body's still there, but the head's gone. I don't care what you say about the gristly bits, Lem, that there head was just a-hangin' by a thread when this last tide come in. Next un'll take it,...

An Echo in the Bone

By: Diana Gabaldon

TOP 10 LISTS

Best Sellers
  1. Frog
  2. Anything He Wants
  3. Special Force
  4. Black Wolf
  5. Redemption by Fire
  6. The Alpha's Pet (Dark Hollow Wolf Pack 1)
  7. Mind Magic
  8. Army Beasts Resurrection
  9. The Pleasures of Id
  10. Acrobat
Best Sellers
  1. Of Swine and Roses
  2. Princess For Hire
  3. Banished
  4. The Assassin and the Desert
  5. The Untouchable Echo
  6. Hunting Kat
  7. Betrayed by the Incubus
  8. 101 Amazing McFly Facts
  9. Inferno
  10. Cursed Among Sequels
Top Reader Rated
  1. Chase in Shadow
  2. Prince Prelude Legend
  3. How to Marry A Martian
  4. Catch & Hold Legend
  5. Frog
  6. Spellbound Legend
  7. One Small Thing
  8. Who We Are
  9. Deliver Us
  10. Blaine: A Wolf's Second Sight
  11. The Rebuilding Year