DISCLAIMER: This story is based on characters
and situations created and owned by Disney. No money is being made and no
copyright or trademark infringement is intended. Hopefully, Disney's many
experienced lawyers will not decide to come after me for this, as I posses only
a Gateway computer, some black eyeliner, and a stack of library books by
Patrick O'Brien.
Posted by: Elspeth (AKA Elspethdixon).
Author's Notes: To my eternal shame, I have only seen
this movie once, so if you find any mistakes, inconsistencies, or inaccuracies
in characterization, please tell me.
Ships: Will/Elizabeth, Jack/Elizabeth,
eventual Jack/Will, eventual Norrington/OC
Warning: This story contains killing,
stealing, lots of angst, an OC, and a non-evil Norrington. It also contains
drinking, swearing, a male/male relationship, and an eventual threesome. Sadly,
it probably will not contain any hot, steamy sex scenes. I am the queen of the tasteful fadeout.
Chapter Two: In Which
Well met, well met, my
own true love,
well met, well met cried
he.
I've just returned from
the salt, salt sea
all for the love of
thee.
The sun had nearly set, and the sky inland was a wash of
rose and pale lavender, like the inside of a seashell. Elizabeth Turner,
however, was not looking at the remnants of the splendid
The sea stretched away before her, wide and empty save
for that single moonlit path. As the sky darkened, and the moon began to shine
more brightly, the path became more solid-looking, until it appeared a silver
road stretching away to the horizon. A magical road to lead her away from
Presumably, young women in fairy kingdoms did not have to
wear corsets and fancifully upswept hairstyles, and listen politely at dinner
to red-faced older men who went on and on about the proper management of cane
plantations.
Will, displaying a devious turn of mind that probably
would have made his pirate father proud, had claimed a (non-existent) pressing
engagement and begged off.
Still, she had managed to convince her father's
coachmen that really, she could walk the short distance back from the
Jacobsons' manor to the governor's house, neglecting to mention her planned
little detour. After that endless dinner, she had desperately needed the fresh
air.
Sand was doing its best to sift inside her embroidered
slippers, the soft breeze blowing out to sea had disarrayed her carefully
arranged hair, and Will was almost certainly waiting for her back home, but
Elizabeth stayed and watched the water.
There had been a school of dolphins fishing offshore when
she had first arrived, jumping playfully in and out of the waves. They were
gone now, and the strand was empty but for herself and her imagination.
The whistling was so faint that for a moment she thought
she had imagined it, drifting to her on the warm land breeze like a song
whistled by a ghost. It sounded familiar. Oddly familiar…
We're rascals, scoundrels, villains, and knaves,
her brain supplied automatically. We're devils and black sheep and really
bad eggs. Drink up, me hearties, yo ho.
"Yo ho, yo ho," she sang aloud, voice soft, but
strong enough to carry to where ever the whistler was, "a pirate's life
for me."
"Good song, isn't it?"
The voice spoke directly into her ear, causing her to
spin around wildly, yanking the little dagger Will had made her from its hiding
place in the front of her bodice and brandishing it in front of her.
"Oooh, do that again." Dark eyes smiled
charmingly at her, flicking from her bodice to the dagger in her hand and back
again. They were not a pair of eyes she had expected to see again. Hoped to see
again, certainly, but not expected.
"Sneaky freebooter," she accused, sliding the
dagger back into place. "Don't creep up on me like that. I might have
stabbed you."
Jack grinned and spread his arms wide, as if inviting her
to do her worst. "Such a welcome for an old friend. I'll make a pirate out
of you yet." He looked much the same as he had the last time she'd seen
him--same faded blue waistcoat, same red scarf around his head, same
magpie-like assortment of beads and gee-gaws tied and braided into his hair.
The same dark lines drawn around his eyes in kohl, more make-up than most women
would dare wear. She might have thought that the thick, dark outlines made his
eyes look like the eyes of a skull in the dim moonlight, had she not previously
seen what his eyes really looked like set into a skull. His feet were bare, the
better to sneak up on unsuspecting young women.
"What are you doing here?" she demanded. The
words came out sounding almost accusing, so she quickly added an explanatory,
"If you get caught…"
He grinned, and she caught the quick glint of gold teeth.
"Nobody catches Captain Jack Sparrow."
"Which, of course, is why I've seen you in chains
more often than any other man of my acquaintance."
"You've led a very
sheltered life, haven't you?"
She folded her arms and
attempted to glare sternly at him. She had a feeling she wasn't too successful
at it. It is difficult to glare at a man you haven't seen in seven months or
heard from in seven months, particularly one whose life you saved the last time
you saw him. Seven months. Seven months without the slightest missal to let her
and Will know that he was alive, that he hadn't gone down in one of the winter
hurricanes or even drowned in the sea after falling off that rampart. Suddenly,
it was much easier to glare.
"But I always get away, don't I?" A wider grin,
and a dramatic flourish of ringed fingers.
"Yes." She felt herself smiling slightly,
unwillingly. "You do, don't you? Even if you have to bribe rumrunners with
God knows what to do it."
"Better than burnin' perfectly good rum. You're just
lucky that ship showed up, or we'd have died of thirst. No water, and you had
to go and burn all the rum."
With a graceful but slightly unsteady bow and a wave of
his arm, Jack produced a small object wrapped in a scrap of water stained silk
and held it out to her. ""Your weddin' present, my lady. Unless the
lad hasn't married you yet, in which case he really is a eunuch."
There were some things,
"Oh, Jack, they're beautiful." Her eyes
narrowed in sudden suspicion. "Where did you get them? Never mind,"
she added, cutting him off before he could reply, "I don't want to know.
I'd only feel guilty if I did."
"You prob'ly don't want to know," he
agreed. "I'll just put them in for you, then?"
And before
He grasped her chin in one hand and turned her head
gently to one side, then released her and reached up to carefully thread the
wire loop of the earring through her earlobe. His face was inches away from
hers as he squinted at her ear, and she could feel the warmth of his breath
against her neck. The last time they'd been so close together, they'd been
sitting before a fire with a bottle of rum, discussing freedom. The last time
before that, he'd had a cutlass at her throat.
The earring slid easily into her ear, with none of the
painful pokes that usually occurred when someone else tried to put earrings in
for her.
Jack leaned around to her other side to work on the
second ear, fingers trailing across her throat. He had callused hands, like
Will, and the rough skin brushing against hers tickled slightly.
The second ear was done as easily as the first, and Jack
stepped back to look at her, somehow managing to avoid catching any of his
rings in her hair as he pulled his hands away.
"Beautiful," he said, looking at her with those
startlingly out-lined eyes, and for a moment she was unsure whether he was
referring to the jewellery or her. "They suit you, even if they are the
wrong colour."
Of course he had meant the earrings, she chided herself.
They were made of gold. Jack was very fond of gold. "Black pearls are much
more difficult to find," she answered, guessing what he meant.
The opportunity for a terrible pun or self-aggrandizing
comment was there, but he let it lie.
"What are you really doing here?"
"Mrs. Turner, you wound me." Jack clutched a
hand to his heart, staggering back a step as if dealt a mortal blow.
"No, but I could if you'd like." She gestured
toward the hidden dagger, feeling herself grin.
"And if I'd like-"
"Stop it," she interrupted, seeing where his
eyes were aimed and trying not to giggle. "I'm married!"
"Well yes, there's that. Normally, you understand,
it wouldn't be a problem, but as your husband's a pirate also…"
"He's a blacksmith," she corrected
automatically.
"Yes. Pr'cisely. Which means he can fix cannons,
right?"
"Will can fix anything,"
"Anything including cannons?"
"Yes, anything including cannons. Why?"
"Because two of the
"He might. You would have to ask him. Wait, you'd
better not. I can't bring you back to my father's house, and if I bring Will
out here, people are going to wonder why we're going trooping out to the beach
in the dark."
"They'll prob'ly just think that you're havin' a
romantic moment out here together."
"Will and I do not have 'romantic moments' out of
doors in the sand."
"Why not?" Jack looked genuinely puzzled.
"Because someone might come along and see
us," she said, shuddering slightly at the very idea.
"Tell him to meet us down at the south end of the
docks at
"Then we row back to the
A month.
"I'll tell him for you," she said. She turned
to go, then hesitated. "Thank you for the earrings. They really are
lovely, wherever you got them." She reached up to finger one.
"They're a shallow bribe to get me to give up my husband to you for a
month without complaint, aren't they?"
Jack laughed. "Maybe. That and you're the only woman
I can safely give gifts to without gettin' me face slapped."
"Undeservedly, I'm sure."
"Good bye, love."
That might have been the first time the two of them had
bid an official farewell to each other,
When she arrived at home, Will and her father both rushed
to the door to meet her.
"
"Walking by the water," she told him, giving
his fingers a silent squeeze. Will nodded slightly, understanding. He spent a
lot of time down by the water himself, since their seagoing adventure. A taste
for the sea seemed to be like a taste for strong rum; once it got its hooks
into you, it hung on like a demon and never let go.
"Really, Lizzie," her father scolded.
"Walking about alone in the dark. You could have been set upon by ruffians
or pirates."
With an effort,
Her father sighed, then smiled. "Of course, my
dear."
Will, who was not fooled by the bit of subterfuge, looked
her questioningly. She inclined her head slightly toward the stairs.
"Good evening, Governor Swann," Will said
politely, with a slight bow. He then pulled
"What is it?" he whispered, as soon as they
were out of immediate earshot.
"You weren't wearing those earbobs when you left,
were you?" he asked. "I don’t think I've seen them before."
"A little bird gave them to me."
He blinked, looking puzzled for a moment, and then light
dawned. "So that's why you twitched when your father mentioned pirates.
What the devil is Jack doing here?" Will had begun to grin faintly, even
as he made the demand.
"He needs someone to fix two of the Black Pearl's
guns, and came in search of a blacksmith."
"Just like that? After seven months?" Will
sounded aggrieved. "Hello, Will and Elizabeth, how are you doing? Sorry I
haven't written. Could you come and do a favour for me?"
"Ah, yes. That was pretty much how it went."
She smiled. Will looked cute when he was aggravated. That little line would
appear between his eyebrows, and his chin would set determinedly, as it was
doing now.
"I suppose he wants me to do it for free, as
well?"
"He probably does, yes."
"Well I won't." Will folded his arms across his
chest, and added, "I expect to be well paid in ill-gotten Spanish coin for
my labours." Then he seemed to realize that he had essentially just agreed
to fix the two guns. The two of them had assumed that his going was a foregone
conclusion immediately,
"I'd probably have to go out to the Black Pearl to
do it," Will ventured. "She'd have to put into harbour somewhere, and
she can't do that here."
"Jack said he'd meet you down at the docks at
"You really wouldn't mind my going?" Will asked
uncertainly, reaching up to capture her hand. "It just, it doesn't seem
fair to you, Elizabeth, leaving you here all by yourself while I go off and
have fun."
"I only wish I could go too," she told him.
"And not just because I'll miss you." She sighed. "I spent the
whole of dinner commiserating with Mr. Morrison about the difficulty of holding
on to good slaves in this climate. Apparently, his keep dying off of something
or running away, which I personally don't blame them for. And tomorrow I am
engaged to meet with Mrs. Morrison and Mrs. Jacobson and her daughter over tea
and embroidery, which wouldn't be so bad, save that Julia Jacobson has set her
cap for Commander Norrington, and glares daggers at me over the cream
pitcher."
"Poor
"That and she resents that I'm an unladylike hoyden
who married beneath her, but yet can still sew smaller stitches than she
can,"
Will looked back up at her face earnestly, not
relinquishing her hand. He absently drew a callused thumb across the raised
surface of the scar, which still tickled, but not as much. "I don't know
what I managed to do to deserve you. Every morning, I wake up and I'm surprised
all over again to find you next to me."
"You saved my life like a hero from a story, of
course,"
"His loss is my gain." Will pulled her closer
to him, and reached up to catch one of the little pearl earrings, inspecting
it. "These are surprisingly tasteful for Jack. I thought his taste in
jewellery ran more toward 'giant and shiny.'" He smiled teasingly.
"But you can't go to sleep in them, pretty as they are."
Will didn't answer. Instead, he reached up to take hold
of the delicate little gold wire with his surprisingly clever blacksmith's
fingers. It took two tries, but after a moment he was able to get it free. He
leaned in closer, blowing softly on her now naked ear and giving her earlobe a
little nip with his teeth.
Will moved lower, kissing the curve of her neck, then
came about behind her to reach her other ear, trailing his fingers across her
throat just as Jack had earlier. He leaned in so close to her that the ends of
his hair tickled her cheek and neck, and began to work on the second earring.
This one came out more quickly, and was followed by another nip and kiss. Will
was even better at taking out earring than Jack was at putting them in.
"Jack will be waiting for you down at the
docks,"
"Let him wait a bit longer," Will breathed
against her shoulder. "I'm not leaving you alone for a month without
saying a proper good-bye first."
^_~
Palisadoes Split: a long stretch of joined cays and
sandbars connecting
Gallows Point: site near
^_~
Next up, chapter three: In
Which Mary Rose Relates her Tragic Story, and Norrington is Greatly Moved.
There will be tears, noble
vows of vengeance, and a memorial service for poor dead
Robert-Swann-the-plot-device.