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 on
sailing ships and the navy.
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.
Chapter Three: In Which
Mary Rose Relates her Tragic Story, and Norrington is
Greatly Moved.
They'd not been gone but
about two weeks,
I'm sure it was not
three,
when that fair maiden, she began to
weep.
She wept most bitterly.
“Why do you weep, my own
true love?
Weep for your golden
store?
Or do you weep for your
house carpenter?
You're never gonna see him anymore.”
When the green mass that was the
It took a long time to bring the Dolphin into
port, short-handed as she was, and by the time the ship was moored and the gangplank
laid, Mary Rose was beyond ready to disembark. Two of the sailors were kind
enough to carry her chest--which the pirates had left untouched, not being much
interested in women's clothing--to the dock, and she was sitting upon it
tiredly, wondering how she ought to go about contacting Robert's uncle with
news of her arrival, when the naval officer approached.
He stood on the dock for a moment, surveying the wreckage
of the Golden Dolphin with a hard, angry look on his face. Around him,
the ship's surviving crew members went about the business of unloading what
remnants of cargo they still had. Apparently electing not to interrupt their
work, he turned to her.
"What happened here?" he asked, in a polite
voice at odds with his angry bearing.
"We were attacked," Mary Rose said dully. Could
the man not see that?
"By pirates, I presume." It was not a question.
"Yes." She provided an answer even though one
did not seem to be required. "By, by pirates."
She could hear her voice tremble slightly over the word, and tried desperately
to get a hold on herself. She could not break down and cry here on the dock, in
front of a total stranger. "They took everything, even my jewellery. Everything except my wedding ring." She blinked hard
several times, forcing back tears. "And, and my husband… He tried to fight
them, and one of them stabbed him with a sword."
The officer's expression shifted to something gentler,
sympathy, or something like it, seeping into those sharp eyes. "My
condolences, Mrs…" he left the sentence hanging, waiting for her to supply
the proper name.
"Swann. Mary Rose Swann. My… Robert and I were coming here to start a sugar
plantation. His uncle lives here."
"Governor Swann," the officer nodded. "I
know him. If you will wait until I have spoken to the ship's captain, I can
provide you with an escort to his residence."
"That would be most kind of you, sir," she
said.
"Commodore," he corrected gently. "Commodore Norrington." He sighed, looking
unhappy. "I hate to dredge up unpleasant memories, but can you remember
anything specific about the pirate ship that attacked you? Anything
at all?"
"The ship had white sails," she told him,
shifting her gaze downward from his stern, square-jawed face to where her hands
lay folded in her lap. "I know, all ships have white sails, but some of
the sailors seemed to think that important. That they were
white and not black. It had more than one mast. I can't remember exactly
how many. I'm sorry."
"It's all
right," he reassured her. "You've been very helpful," he added,
though Mary Rose was fairly certain that she had not been helpful. The details
of the pirate ship were hazy in her mind, consisting mainly of a lot of
confused memories of smoke and canonfire. There were
other memories, however, that were not hazy at all.
"Wait," she said, forestalling him before he
could turn away. "I don't remember the ship but, the pirate, the one who,
who… murdered Robert. I remember him." She looked back up into Commodore Norrington's face, remembering another face, almost more
pretty than handsome, with wild hair and crazy, kohl-lined eyes. "He had
black hair, with, with beads and things in it. And paint around his eyes. And
he killed Robert." She blinked again, but in spite of her efforts, a few
tears escaped. "I think he might have been their captain."
Commodore Norrington had stiffened when she mentioned the
beaded hair, and now his eyes hardened again, blazing with a contained anger
that Mary Rose was very glad not to find directed at her.
"Sparrow," he growled softly, his right hand
closing seemingly without his knowledge around the hilt of his sword. "I
might have guessed." His grip on the sword hilt tightened until his
knuckles showed white, and he glanced down at his hand almost in surprise,
releasing the weapon. "I assure you, Mistress Swann, I will do everything
in my power to bring to justice the scum that murdered your husband. You have
my word."
Slightly startled by the force of his statement, Mary
Rose stared at him for a moment, before gathering her wits to phrase an answer.
"Th-thank you, Commodore.
I, I would appreciate that greatly." She was almost shocked at herself to
realize that her words were completely true. Never before in her life had Mary
Rose wished another person harm, but the thought of
her husband's killer dangling at the end of this angry Commodore's rope was
very satisfying indeed.
^_~
"I am the resurrection and the life, sayeth the Lord," Father Williams intoned solemnly.
"He that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live…"
Beside
Mary Rose, however, was most definitely real, and so was
her grief, and the sight of her trying manfully—womanfully?—to
suppress her tears finally brought a few tears of sympathy to
Elizabeth and her father had not asked Mary Rose about
Robert’s death, accepting her brief declaration that he had been slain trying
to fight off a pirate attack without pressing her for further details. Governor
Swann had his own memories of Captain Barbossa’s crew
and their attacks on
After all,
Thoughts of Jack led inevitably to thoughts of Will, and
she wondered what her husband was doing at the moment. Was he already in
Either way, she wanted to be with him. She would
willingly have traded every stilted conversation with the memorial service’s
other attendees, all offering formal and nigh identical condolences to the Swanns and Mary Rose in particular, for five minutes with
Jack and Will, the deck of the Pearl heaving beneath her feet or the
sand of a beach sifting between her toes.
"I’m sure Mr. Turner will return to
"What?"
"Your husband," Mary Rose repeated. "I’m
sure he will return shortly." She offered up a tremulous smile for
"I am not so much sorrowful," she confessed, as
the two women were handed up into the Governor’s carriage by Norrington—who
gave
"Some tea would be lovely," Mary Rose replied
softly, staring down at her hands before looking back up at
Of course she doesn’t,
"Of course you don’t,"
She was trying to think of some further comment to make,
something that would involve neither ships nor embroidery, when she noticed
Mary Rose gazing intently at her, eyes fixed on her ears. Involuntarily, she
raised a hand to her head to see if one of her earrings was missing. To her
relief, both little pearls were still there.
"Those…" Mary Rose hesitated. "Those earrings. Where did you get them?" She
looked pale suddenly, as if she had seen a ghost.
"These?"
Mary Rose had gone, if anything, even paler, face so
white beneath her ash blonde hair that she looked as if she were fading into
the coach’s champagne-colored cushions.
"Are you all right?" she asked, reaching to
place one hand on the other woman’s wrist.
Mary Rose pulled her wrist away slightly, the movement
almost a flinch. "Yes. Yes, I’m fine. Who did you say gave you those
earrings?"
With a sudden, cold feeling in the pit of her stomach,
"Oh, it does not matter." Mary Rose turned
away, directing her attention out the small window set in the coach’s side.
"It’s merely that, for a moment, they looked almost familiar. I imagine
your friend must have bought them in
"Yes,"
^_~
Brigantine: A two-masted
merchant ship.
The Horn:
Interesting tidbit: Norrington is shown wearing a British Naval uniform
in the movie, however, Britain didn’t officially adopt any sort of uniform for
her Navy until the 1740s, several decades after the movie’s supposed to take
place. I’ve decided to go along with this, inaccurate or not.
^_~
Next up: Chapter Four,
In Which Much Drinking Occurs, but Nothing is Resolved.
The angst and woe will be
abandoned briefly in favour of vaguely slashy humour
as we catch up on what Jack and Will have been doing.