Because yes, Claire and
Claire chooses Frank for 20 years until his death and then she finds out Jamie survived Culloden. She heads back to the past to choose Jamie for a second time. There's no way Claire and Jamie will choose someone other than themselves after this. They are endgame, and it doesn't matter what anyone else thinks.
At its heart, Outlander is just a really long romance story, and all romances need a happy ending. Insofar as wombs are original homes, this installment in the series ends with Jamie and Claire coming home to each other.
What happens at the end of the novel is that Brianna, Roger, Jem, and Mandy show up at Fraser's Ridge. Jamie and Claire see them coming, recognize them, and start running toward them – and that's the end.
Brianna and Roger gradually take their leave of the Ridge, and the people they love. Jamie presents Claire with a gemstone, but she throws it out into the night, firmly refusing the possibility of ever leaving him to return to the future.
Following the Battle of Culloden, Fergus continues to live at Lallybroch, and Jenny Murray tutors him with the rest of her children. He sometimes brings food to Jamie, who lives in a cave near the estate.
While his father was still in prison, his mother gave birth to a daughter, Malva Christie, who was actually Edgar's child. After his mother murdered Edgar, she was sentenced to hang, leaving Allan and Malva in the care of their aunt.
Claire is shot. Jamie resigns his commision to stay with her, and Denzell Hunter performs a surgery to retrieve the bullet. Grey is reunited with William and Hal. Ian kills one of the Indians who attacked him earlier, and leaves the British camp.
The simple answer is no. Claire and Jamie don't have any more children after Brianna. Claire heads through the stones while pregnant with Brianna at the end of the second season/book. She spends 20 years in the 20th century, and she and Frank don't have any children together.
For instance, Lord John Grey learns the truth about Claire, Brianna, and Roger... though he has a hard time believing it. And speaking of Roger and Brianna, they get into their own time-travel trouble — Roger with his ancestor Buck and Brianna with Rob Cameron.
Taking the prisoner's long, wavy hair into account, the jailed thief must be none other than Wendigo Donner, whom Claire first encountered in the season-five finale.
Diana Gabaldon has confirmed there is no possibility that Jamie Fraser will time-travel into the future and live out his life at Lallybroch.
Claire receives a letter from Jamie, telling her Ian Mòr has died and Jenny has decided to leave Lallybroch and come with her brother to America. Some time later Claire receives devastating news – the ship that Jamie and Jenny were on has sunk, with no survivors.
In a strange turn of events, Claire ends up married to Jamie to keep her from falling into the hands of the evil Captain Randall. But what does this mean for her marriage to Frank in the 20th century?
Thank you for subscribing! Diana Gabaldon has confirmed there is no possibility that Jamie Fraser will time-travel into the future and live out his life at Lallybroch.
Stay tuned for more on Season 7 as it continues to take shape at Starz, and settle in for the next Droughtlander, which will thankfully pass quicker than Claire and Jamie's 20-year separation through time.
When Claire returns to the past, she and Jamie reconnect and begin to live as man and wife once again. But some might be wondering what the legal implications of Jamie's marriage to Laoghaire might mean. Given he remarried after Claire, it seems possible their marriage might be void after all.
Claire visits Faith's grave, where she leaves a single pink tulip from Jared's conservatory, and is surprised at how emotional she feels after all this time.
With regret, they report that they've lost Willie – to marriage. Claire is pleased to hear that Willie has married and moved to the colonies, and suggests that marriage wouldn't do any of them harm.
Some think Jamie's spirit (but not his body) traveled to through time to guide Claire to him; others suggest Jamie had a near-death experience after the Battle of Culloden, and that's why his ghost is 25 when he appears to Frank.
Outlander fans were left devastated after couple Jamie and Claire were forced apart by historical events at the end of season two. Claire went back through the stones and to the 20th century where she was reunited with her first husband Frank Randall (Tobias Menzies).
Sadly, all good things do have to end, and there is an end in sight to this story. Diana Gabaldon has said that the last of the main series will be Outlander Book 10. There will be other books after it, but not in the main series. We already know there is a prequel book that focuses on Jamie's parents.
Jamie denies having slept with her, but the damage to his and to Claire's reputation is done—and the bond between the Frasers and Malva is severed, until just a few weeks later, when Claire finds Malva murdered in the garden.
In A Breath of Snow and Ashes, Malva accuses Jamie of being the father of her unborn child. The accusation has weight thanks to her knowledge of his scars.
The haircutting was part of the process. Malva wanted to make Claire undesirable. She wanted to make Jamie turn to her instead of to his wife. We can get a sense of that from the way Claire worried about Jamie seeing her with the short, jagged hair.