Stephen Bonnet is a major antagonist in the fourth season and the main antagonist of the fifth season of Outlander. He is a pirate, smuggler, murderer and all-round disreputable character, as well as the arch-enemy of Brianna Mackenzie.
Type of Villain
Geillis Duncan (born Gillian Edgars) is an antagonist in the Outlander novel series by Diana Gabaldon, as well as the main antagonist of the television adaptation's third season.
Captain Jonathan “Black Jack” Randall (played by Tobias Menzies) passed many seasons ago. The evil villain died at the Battle of Culloden at the hands of Highlander Jamie Fraser (Sam Heughan).
In the television series, Outlander, the main character of Claire Fraser encounters "a flame-haired herbalist" called Geillis Duncan (played by Lotte Verbeek) who is wrongfully accused of witchcraft.
Jamie then went with his uncle Dougal to collect rents, and returned married to Claire Fraser, which outraged Laoghaire. She put an ill-wish under Jamie and Claire's bed, and later forged a note from Geillis Duncan begging Claire to come tend to her.
The Frasers vs.
Flashing back to the present day, A.K.A Fraser's Ridge in the 1790s, Jamie Fraser (Sam Heughan) is facing off against Richard Brown and his men, who have arrived to arrest Claire for the murder of Malva Christie and her unborn baby.
Jamie's Secret is a story about a nine-year-old who loves soccer, playing with her best friend Sadie, and collecting crystals. She loves hugging and climbing trees, watching butterflies, and soaring on her swing. Jamie loves life and everything that points to it.
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.
Just as she begins to worry that Jamie might be capable of lying to her, Jamie quells her fear by revealing to her his indiscretion with Mary MacNab, a woman who worked at Lallybroch, while Claire was back in 1968 with Frank and Brianna. This confession soothes Claire, and the two find themselves realigned once again.
Claire Saves Jamie's Life by Giving Him a [NSFW] in Outlander Season 5, Episode 9. Forget CPR! So, this entire episode of Outlander basically revolved around an evil snake (Lord Voldemort, is that you?) biting Jamie's thigh, and it was all extremely dramatic and angsty so let's get right to it.
Because yes, Claire and Lord John end up married in book seven, and yes, they drunkenly (and full of grief for the loss of Jamie, whom they both love with all of their heart) consummate that marriage. And then Jamie shows up alive and well!
Diana Gabaldon has confirmed there is no possibility that Jamie Fraser will time-travel into the future and live out his life at Lallybroch.
"The ghost is Jamie–but as for how it fits into the story, All Will Be Explained—in the last book," Gabaldon writes in the FAQ section of her website. She's also revealed that the Outlander series will likely have ten books total, and the ninth, Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone, debuted in 2021.
This storyline is taken from the books. In A Breath of Snow and Ashes, Claire and Tom come down with the same sickness around the same time dysentery is traveling around the Ridge.
Jamie marries Claire to keep her from falling into the hands of the evil Captain "Black Jack" Randall. They have one child, Faith, who doesn't survive birth; an adopted son named Fergus; and a daughter, Brianna.
Dr. Charles Montgomery, in the first season of American Horror Story, is shown to have acquired an ether addiction. In the sixth season of the television adaptation of Outlander, Claire Fraser temporarily develops an addiction to ether while self-medicating for her PTSD-induced insomnia and nightmares.
Malva developed a sexual relationship with Ian Murray during the time frame that she was trying to find someone to place blame upon for her pregnancy. Ian knew that he was not the only man she was sleeping with, after he showed late for one of their meetings he found her having sex with Bobby Higgins instead.
In Scotland in 1968, Claire tells Roger Wakefield that Geillis Duncan was his ancestor and that she was burned as a witch in 1743.
"In some way Jamie represents everything that Jack isn't, and you both love and want to destroy the thing that you can't be. He's drawn to this person. "Jack is someone who is interested in pain and people's pain thresholds. He's sort of clinical in his atomization of Jamie.
Claire, saying “Jonathan Wolverton Randall….” Close up on Randall's face as Claire tell him his birth date: “Born, Sept 3, 1705, dies….” Claire whispers his date of death into his ear, and the camera pulls back from his face, where he knows, HE KNOWS that she is telling the truth and there's nothing he can do about it.
The main part is Jamie's leg being amputated.
Author of the original books Diana Gabaldon has confirmed the ghostly figure is indeed the spirit of one Jamie Fraser (Sam Heughan). Unfortunately, she still hasn't revealed how he appeared nearly 200 years after his death to seek out Claire.
It's all pretty bizarre, but Brianna sensibly plays along to save herself, and even convinces Bonnet to let her go home and get Jemmy. Well, at least until Bonnet wants to seal their agreement with a kiss, at which point he realizes Brianna has no real feelings for him.
Yet, even with so many people suspicious of her, there are plenty of characters who know that Claire is a time traveler. As the number of time travelers on Outlander increases, the secret understandably has become harder to keep. But the more people who know, the more Claire and her family could be in danger.
Jamie does admit he's slept with someone else, telling her about his one-night tryst with Mary MacNab (Emma Campbell-Jones) before he turned himself in to authorities following the Battle of Culloden nearly 20 years prior.