Title: A Very Captivating Captain
Author: Webcrowmancer
Email: webcrowmancer@hotmail.com
Archive: Yes. Help yourself. Just make sure you include the first chapter too.
(They're mates, you see.)
Series: Yes, this is Chapter 2. Chapter 1 is 'A Most Accommodating Commodore'.
Disclaimer: The Mouse is very big and can squish me as I be only a penniless fan.
Don't hurt me? No money, no money!
Rating: NC-17 for non-con/bondage elements, graphic sexual m/m (slash) content and
language
Pairing: J/N (Captain Jack Sparrow/Commodore Norrington)
Beta: Moonsalt
Summary: This time, it is Norrington who is bound, but this time for a destination
that he is sure will result in Jack's death as well as his own. Norrington mourns the loss
of a proud lady; Jack Sparrow comforts him, in his own inimitable fashion.
Notes: Word Master - the fine Caribbean tradition of Word Play, as performed by a
master, is considered singularly important, even if the recipients don't understand. In
fact, if the listener doesn't understand the meaning of the joke, it's considered an even
greater success than if he doesn't!
Some information on Piri Reis is here:
http://www.world-mysteries.com/sar_1.htm
Also, '***' - indicates point-of-view switch, and sometimes scene change.
Warning: May contain anachronisms. Not a deathfic. Also, this is very long, because
Jack Sparrow just would not shut UP!
A Very Captivating Captain
by Webcrowmancer
"I have a
matter to settle with you, Sparrow." Commodore
Norrington's tone was implacable, despite the
fact that he was sitting on the deck of the
Black Pearl with his hands tied before him and
his men captured and bound likewise, surrounded
by the crew of the Black Pearl. With Jack
Sparrow leering over him.
"The rope was a
nice touch, weren't it? Thought you'd appreciate
the irony." Jack smiled at him.
"You
stole my brandy," Norrington accused, as if they
weren't speaking before his own men and the
Pearl's crew as well.
"I did, at that.
Tell you what," Jack proposed, as if thinking it
over. "I'll make it up to you. We liberated some
rather fine port on our last run. You can have
as much of it as you can hold down. I'll be
liberating your coat and hat now, too." Jack had
the coat and Norrington's hat in his left hand,
his right still using the sword to punctuate his
speech.
"How the Devil did you get past
the guards? On the dock, on the Admiral's ship,
and in the fort?" Norrington couldn't help
wondering.
"There's something about an
officer in uniform that always makes me want to
impersonate him, on principle. In fact, it was
such a nice fit, I considered holding onto it.
The uniform," Jack explained, gesturing with his
sword as if illustrating a point. "But the
underwear was frightful," Jack continued,
commenting almost as if to himself. "Navy
issue's still skimping on the drawers, I
couldn't 'elp but notice. Poor
blighter."
"So you helped yourself to the
Admiral's ship, instead," Norrington pointed out
accusingly.
Jack was taken aback. "Of
course. She was the best thing floating in the
water. The perfect choice - the only choice, as
a matter of fact. The dolphins were absent from
the docks, and the whales were otherwise
engaged. Mating season, you know. There was a
distinct lack of merchant vessels in the
vicinity. Which left just the
ship."
Jack's grin glinted, an annoying
reminder to Norrington, who couldn't help
dropping his gaze momentarily to regard the
flash of gold... and the sensual mouth, those
lips. Those same lips he'd feasted upon,
savored, loved -
The grin widened as Jack
continued looking down at him, a knowing
expression reaching those dark eyes as he
considered Norrington's plight.
Norrington flushed and snapped, "Well,
since your escape, Admiral Sinnott has given
orders that the entire fleet is to be on the
look-out for you. He practically had a stroke. I
have his personal command to retrieve his ship
myself."
"'Sinnott'?" Jack repeated, in a
scandalized tone. He pointed at Norrington,
waving the sword tip casually before him to
demonstrate his frustration. "See, that's
precisely what I've been trying to tell you,
aye? 'Sin' 'not'? You see the problem? If you
lot spent more time shagging, there'd be less
call for hanging the likes of
meself."
Gibbs came up behind Jack and
said, "Sir, this won't be going down well with
the crew and all. He's a British officer. It'll
be bad luck to keep 'im. Worse; it'll have the
Navy running us down te get him
back."
Jack swung to regard him, one brow
lifted. "That," Jack shook a finger under Gibbs'
nose, "Is a very good point, mate."
Gibbs continued, "Best be sending 'im
back with his men, sir."
Jack shook his
head. "The others can go. We're keeping this
one."
"What for?" Gibbs was apparently
not happy with Jack's
decision.
Norrington almost smiled at
this. "You'll have twice the number of ships out
looking for this vessel if you do."
Gibbs
looked worried. ""E's right, Jack. Best not to
tempt fate. You know how fickle she
is."
Jack straightened with a frown. "She
can duke it out with Lady Luck, then, who's a
more pleasing mistress. That one's never played
me false. This is one captive who's bound to be
our guest aboard the 'Pearl 'til I says
otherwise. 'Sides, one Commodore in return for
the Admiral's ship ought to tide them over.
Don't worry, Gibbs. This man here is worth his
weight in gold. Trust me." He gave Gibbs a
knowing glance. "We'll be needing him for that
other matter."
"Aye, sir," Gibbs
muttered, moving off to order the crew to push
Norrington's men off the railing and let them
see themselves as best they could to the
Admiral's ship, which Sparrow had
abandoned.
"And Gibbs," Jack called after
him, "Strip them first."
There was a
general outcry from Norrington's soldiers. "But
I can't swim!" protested one. "Neither can I!"
cried another.
Sparrow turned in
disbelief and called back, "Well, then those of
you that don't know how to swim, ask those who
do know how to swim to teach those that
don't."
Norrington sighed. Three of his
men fell overboard, pushed at the same time,
their undergarments not lending them any agility
or buoyancy and they floundered in the water,
spluttering. Sparrow's crew laughed, gathering
up discarded uniforms and weapons.
Norrington ground his teeth with
exasperation. He looked over at Sparrow. "If you
have such an aversion to British officers, why
keep me aboard? Why not kill me and be done with
it?"
Jack beamed at him. "You're the
exception to the rule, matey. Same's meself. And
you'd best keep quiet about why you're aboard,
or everyone else's going to want to have a turn
as well."
"You're no exception at all,"
Norrington accused. "You're always insisting
you're a captain... and you're as British as I
am."
"Now, now," Jack chided, as if
offended. "There's no call to be insulting. That
was a long time ago, that was. And just ask any
of me crew if I'm captain of the Pearl. They'll
set you straight."
Norrington was
curious. "You forgo your own ancestry to wear
the brand of pirate, then?"
"With pride,"
Jack smiled at him. "You'll have to have a look
from my perspective. Although, let's do this
somewhere more private-like." He motioned a
couple of the crew over, and ordered Norrington
taken to his cabin.
Norrington would have
struggled more than he did, but it might have
given the game away. He knew he was outnumbered,
beaten and had lost for now. And he knew Sparrow
hadn't the slightest intention of actually
harming him. Not since their last encounter. It
had been two months since Jack Sparrow's
now-famous escape from Bermuda and the Yard, on
Sinnott's ship.
The Admiral had finally
seen things Norrington's way after that loss.
Sparrow was a menace, the Admiral had stated
with apoplectic gestures. Norrington had
half-expected the man to keel over where he
stood, the hues of red in the man's face had
been so violent.
Apparently the Admiral
was quite attached to his ship. Apparently the
Admiral now saw it as an imperative that Sparrow
hang from the nearest gallows. Apparently it was
the Commodore's duty to apprehend Jack Sparrow,
which he'd of course been telling the Admiral
all along.
The two crewmen left him in
Sparrow's cabin, not even bothering to lock the
door or secure him, and he sat down on the edge
of the bed, noting the surrounds.
He
looked down at the bed. Jack Sparrow slept here.
Norrington wondered if Sparrow's head was as
filled with thoughts of him when he lay his head
on that pillow, as his own was when he slept
aboard his ship.
His ship! Norrington
scowled, his mood darkening.
Damn
Sparrow, anyway! The Dauntless was slipping even
now to a watery grave below the waves. He
couldn't stop the pang of loss. He'd even been
denied the last sight of her, as it was night
and she'd taken a few well-placed shots from the
Black Pearl on Sparrow's orders, after
Norrington's men had overenthusiastically
stormed the Pearl momentarily.
They had
chanced upon the Black Pearl and the Admiral's
ship, the H.M.S. Endurance, after sunset, tucked
away in the bay of a little island a small ways
off Exuma, and now Norrington knew Sparrow had
allowed it to happen. He must have recognized
the Dauntless and let his ship sit awaiting the
Dauntless' arrival, right in the bay.
Sparrow's crew had sent up a white flag
of surrender after several minutes of cannon
fire, visible clearly in the darkness of the
gathering night. His men had been overjoyed, and
began boarding her before Norrington had given
word. He'd feared exactly what transpired: the
crew waited until they were aboard and then
simply began to cut them down where they were
outnumbered in the dark.
The Pearl's
crew had overpowered them too easily. He'd
guessed Sparrow's crew would be larger, but no
one could have expected so many pirates at once.
He should have expected Sparrow to account for
more men needed to crew the Endurance as well.
Still, he'd thought the element of surprise with
them, rather than against.
The Black
Pearl was a large ship. He was paying the price
for his overzealous attempt to capture her now.
Sighing, he considered the folly of rushing her,
rather than blowing them out of the bay from a
distance like he should have done. But he hadn't
wanted Jack killed. That was the problem. As it
had been for a time, now.
And things
didn't appear as if they were likely to ever
proceed beyond that point either, at least where
his heart was concerned. His career was over, he
decided. He was compromised by the existence of
this...this pirate, he thought, in aggravated
anger towards Sparrow and himself.
He
simply couldn't kill him. Times he'd tried
before had ended with Sparrow eluding death
somehow, usually because of that Turner lad,
Norrington remembered. But the man had a
reputation for narrow escapes. Now he'd aided
Sparrow himself, in their last meeting. And he
knew he couldn't hang the man. He couldn't
just...kill him. Be done with it.
Why
Sparrow?! Why him, for God's sake? Never had
anyone ever inflamed his blood this way. The
former Miss Swann had been everything a man
could dream of, should dream of. Sparrow was
simply a vagabond and a thief. Hardly worthy of
the dreams of a ranking officer of His Majesty's
fleet.
Sparrow had grown on him, he
mused. It had to be. Couldn't be anything else.
The initial disdain and revulsion he'd expressed
along with his ridicule had eventually given way
to grudging respect, and appreciation of the
man's unsinkable zest for life and his slippery,
clever wits. Now it was flying somewhere in
between helpless lust and possessive admiration.
The fascination he'd hoped to burn out
of his system in their last encounter had only
gained him sleepless nights of solitary fantasy
followed by empty dreams. Slaking his lust on a
few corruptible, eager young soldiers on
occasion had done nothing to keep at bay the
need to have Sparrow again.
One single
night was hardly enough.
It was the
man's eyes, he decided. They were far too
changeable, and seemed to reveal too much while
giving away nothing; taunting without ever
delivering, and belying the devilishness of his
behavior and his dishonest prattling while
promising so much more.
As the door
crashed open, Norrington sat up with a jolt,
stiffly. He hated being off-guard like this,
particularly with this man, who knew far too
much about him for Norrington ever to be
comfortable in his presence again. As if he'd
ever been. Damn him. Sparrow knew as well as he
did that they both wanted to bring this to the
only conclusion either of them desired, and as
quickly as possible.
But Jack instead
went to the table and poured himself a measure
of rum, which he lifted in Norrington's
direction. "Cheers."
"Is there any of my
brandy left?" Norrington asked,
casually.
"Aye. Enough for one glass,
which is all you offered me before." Jack was
looking rather smug and satisfied with himself.
As well he might, Norrington thought.
Then a horrible glimmer of realization came to
him. "No food either, then, I
suppose?"
"Not until tomorrow," Sparrow
said. "It's for the best, really."
"So
you'll only give me as good as you
got."
"Wouldn't want your reputation
tarnished by having one of me crew come upon us
in some of the positions I have in mind, now
would we?"
Norrington returned his level
gaze and held it. "Be concerned for your own,
Sparrow. You're the one keeping me here in your
cabin for the night. What will your crew think
of that?"
"They're completely happy for
us, mate. Delighted. See, this is the next best
thing to a night in the taverns for them, seeing
as I'm occupied with your lovely self for the
evenin'."
Norrington allowed himself a
yawn. "I suppose regarding things from your
perspective entails lying on my back considering
the ceiling for a few hours. Hardly the way to
treat a captive officer of the Royal Navy. Or a
guest, for that matter."
"Ah, I did
forget. Sorry, matey, I was distracted by the
fact you're sitting there without your coat and
all disheveled, with your hands all...tied up. It
suits you, really it does," Jack said, as if
bestowing a compliment. "I promised to show you
what things look like from my angle, and so I
shall."
He put down the tankard of rum
and swayed dangerously over to where Norrington
sat, still bound. He sat down beside him, and
placed a friendly arm around Norrington's
shoulders. Extending his arm, Jack flipped up
the cuff to reveal his wrist. "See for yourself,
Commodore."
Sure enough, there was the
brand. The 'P' stood out from Sparrow's tanned,
bronze skin. He'd seen it before, even upon
their first meeting. He wondered what point
Sparrow was trying to make.
"Pirate,
indeed." Norrington glanced over at him, trying
to remain unmoved by Jack's body pressed all
along his right side, and failing. Jack's eyes
were mesmerizing.
"Look again," Jack
urged. "Real close."
With a sigh,
Norrington regarded the brand, trying to ignore
the rum on Sparrow's breath. Laced with the
scent of the man himself, it was nearly
intoxicating, seducing him without Sparrow
having to lift a finger. The hand warmly
clutching his left shoulder was equally
distracting however. He tried to focus on the
man's arm - the tattoo of the sparrow over the
water... and the brand.
Abruptly, he
realized Sparrow always saw it
upside-down.
"Could stand for many
things, really," Jack mused. "Dark, dangerous,
deadly... Daring, darling, dashing, ducky. Hm,
best forget the last. Doesn't have a nice ring
to it."
"Deluded? Delirious? Dead?"
Norrington continued, scathingly.
"Now
you're catching on," Jack said, beaming at him.
He hugged him tighter, placed a rummy kiss on
Norrington's cheek and stood up, walking to the
cabinet where he began rifling through papers
within.
"According to our little game
last time, I'm supposed to let you go after
having my way with you, aren't I?" Jack was
still rummaging about looking for something. He
turned from the cabinet and went to his desk,
pulling open the drawers.
It became
abundantly clear in that instant that Sparrow
had no intention of releasing him at any point.
Norrington swallowed. "So I'm to be a permanent
guest aboard the Black Pearl."
Jack
turned and gave him a wink. "Better incentive
for the crew to keep sharp, seeing as you and
Gibbs were right. I've got meself a Commodore;
quite the prize. You'll be giving me all manner
of aid. Ah, here she is," he added, withdrawing
a large map from the bowels of the desk.
Unfurling it over the desktop, he motioned to
Norrington.
Curious, Norrington stood and
made his way to stand over the desk. He frowned.
"That's not a proper map."
Jack leaned
down to peer at it. "Yes, it is."
"Not
only is it disproportionate, it has additional
features that don't exist," Norrington stated.
"You really are mad, aren't you? Sailing around
with this to guide you? Absurd."
Jack
leaned down, stroking his chin, his eyes falling
to the map, then back up to Norrington. "I paid
a fortune for this thing. Are you saying I was
robbed?"
"Robbed," Norrington repeated.
"You could say that. Swindled you
blind."
"Swindled?"
"You were
cheated."
"No one cheats Captain Jack
Sparrow." It was a statement of
fact.
"Well, this time they did. None of
those lands exist. And this cluster of islands
along here, and up along the Pacific, it's a
fabrication."
"Says you," Jack smiled,
indulgently. "Check the year."
Norrington
regarded it. "It's a forgery," he concluded.
"I don't show this to just anyone," Jack
said in a wounded tone.
"Hm. Next you'll
be telling me that if we sail too far, we'll
fall off the edge. Really, Sparrow; I'd
accredited you with less gullibility than
this."
Jack tapped the map with a ringed
finger. "This is one of the original portolani
that the Turkish Admiral Piri Reis used to draw
his famous little map of the New World.
Savvy?"
Norrington stretched and said, in
a bored voice, "Are you planning some ill
begotten voyage into unexplored territory? Fancy
yourself another Magellan then, I take
it?"
Jack shifted, and perched on the
edge of the desk. "I'm not Christian," he
pointed out. "Not a proper one, anyway." At
Norrington's blank look, Jack explained, "Poor
bloke died trying to convince the natives they
should renounce their idols and turn Christian.
They weren't real pleased with his attempts, in
true Spanish fashion, to convince them they
should hand over all their valuables and
possessions in the name of the Church and the
Spanish court."
Norrington raised a brow.
"As I heard it, he was slain in shallow water,
attempting to escape during a bloody civil war
between the savages - who took his
head."
"Aye, the stories do change,
depending on the nationality of the man telling,
don't they now?"
"Sparrow, what is this
about? What do you need me for?"
Jack
brightened, waving his hands over the map.
"Well, there's this here little map, and you're
going to help me fill in where all the British
are on it. And anyone else you know
of."
Norrington blinked. "Out of the
question."
"Not even to save your life?"
Jack queried, with a sidelong glance at
him.
"No, not on my honor or my life."
Norrington was resolute. It was one thing to
dally with a man, pirate or not. It was another
to babble every last current position of the
British Royal Navy.
Norrington grew
uncomfortable, as he did indeed know many of the
routes, destinations and current positions of
most of the fleet. He began to realize that far
more was at stake than he'd suspected. Maybe he
should have listened to Admiral Sinnott
previously, when the man had warned him there
was more to be gained from laying traps than
facing a man like Sparrow in his
element.
Jack's shrewd eyes raked over
him as Norrington bit his lip. "Is it starting
to sink in, Commodore?"
Slowly,
Norrington said, "You've stolen and pillaged the
Endurance, gutted and sunk the Dauntless,
captured an officer of the British Navy and
you're using this...mockery to navigate your way
around the Spanish Main. Yes, it is beginning to
sink in, now that you mention it." Norrington
went to the cabinet and threw it open, looking
for his brandy bottle.
Though his hands
were still tied, he managed to open the bottle
and take a swig. Jack had left a healthy
remainder for him, more generous than Jack had
let on, in fact.
He turned and
commented, "You're mad, Sparrow."
"You
can take your pick of new ships in Nelson's
Dockyard, mate. I have to get mine where I can,"
Jack pointed out, sitting down and putting his
boots up on the desk, crossing one leg over the
other.
"You sank her," Norrington said,
enunciating every word with the sorrow and anger
he felt at the loss of the Dauntless again.
A twist of sympathy and regret danced
over Jack's face and he sat up, removed his
boots from the desk and said, "You didn't have
to attack tonight, mate. Bloody stupid thing to
do, really. I was rather shocked, to be honest
with you. I thought you had more sense." Jack
spoke gently; somehow it wasn't very
comforting.
Instead, Norrington found it
was almost insulting. He could tell Jack didn't
mean it to be. But it didn't help that he
concurred: he'd been a complete fool. Not to
mention his men - who'd all somehow been seized
with the idea that they were to storm
immediately upon seeing the white flag. Unheard
of. If he survived this, he intended to discover
the reason for it. Perhaps his idiocy had been
contagious, however.
Stiffly, Norrington
said, "It wasn't the cover of dark; it was your
crew complement which outnumbered
mine."
"Aye, that's what I'm referring
to."
The sympathy in Jack's voice was
beginning to sound more like pity, and
Norrington found that it was indeed starting to
sink in: he was defeated this time.
Most
buccaneers feared and hated him more than any
other officer in the Navy, and with good reason.
If the Black Pearl were to meet a victorious
enemy en route to whatever insane destination
her mad captain chose, Norrington was unlikely
to be taken prisoner. At least, not for very
long.
Norrington drew himself up however.
The excitement of coming upon the Black Pearl
and the Admiral's Endurance together in the bay,
along with the thrill of combat and having
cornered Sparrow's ship, only to be so quickly
followed on its heels by defeat, his men's
strange idiocy and the pain of losing the
Dauntless...
It was enough to take its toll
on his nerve, and weigh as heavily on his
shoulders as anything ever had. But he wouldn't
back down. He still had his pride, even if it
had taken a battering tonight.
Jack
asked, "How old are you,
mate?"
Norrington scowled. The question
threw him. In all his years moving up the ranks
to the coveted position of Commodore, with the
title of 'Admiral' beckoning, no one had ever
questioned his age or experience. No one would
have dared. "Why?"
Jack shrugged. "Thirty
- thirty-five?" he guessed.
Norrington
made a noise of exasperation. "I fail to see the
relevance."
"I've ten years on you,
maybe."
"Ten years of stealing, looting
and lawlessness, yes."
"Sailing," Jack
gesticulated. "Nautical proficiency in knotty
situations."
In a bored tone, Norrington
said, "If there's a point to this, feel free to
come to it."
"I'm asking you to trust my
judgment. Look, I know it's not easy for you,
being an officer and the King's man and all. I
respect the Crown; I do. I've always shown
leniency towards English boats. Ships. Well,
both, really. Mind you, the ships' almost always
spoiling for a fight and they give me no choice
but to plunder them. But you get my
meaning."
Norrington sighed and cast his
eyes upwards. "Mr. Sparrow, this is all beside
the point. You are asking me to betray my
country, to commit treason. You know very well
that I cannot and will not provide you with the
information you want."
Jack nodded,
sympathetically. "Not easy to stand with your
neck in a noose, is it, sir?"
"It's
called kidnapping, blackmail, intimidation and
harassment."
Jack waved a finger at him.
"Ah-ah. I'm not asking you to help me,
Commodore. I'm telling you. There's a
difference." Jack grinned at him, unperturbed
with Norrington's description of his
circumstances. "It would appear we have a
stalemate, don't we, mate?"
It did appear
that way, indeed, Norrington thought. Still, he
knew Jack Sparrow's predilections did not sway
towards outright murder for no purpose, and in
fact as long as he had the information he
refused to give the pirate, he was valuable as a
hostage... as well as personally, if Sparrow's
performance that night in his bedroom was
anything to go by. Norrington allowed a cold
smile.
"As I'm your guest, Sparrow, the
least you could do is offer me a decent meal."
He turned, dismissively, and went to the chair
in front of Jack's desk, and put his feet up on
the edge of the desk, knowing the move would not
go unnoticed by the Captain of the
Pearl.
***
"As a privateer-" Jack
began, refusing to rise to the bait as the
Commodore relaxed with his boots on Jack's
desk.
Norrington interrupted, "You bear
no Letter of Marque, therefore you can't claim
that honor, Sparrow."
"Buccaneer, then,"
Jack corrected, with ill grace. "By the time
we're through, I'll have your Marque and full
support for this little venture-"
"What
is a buccaneer, after all? A pirate. Nothing
more," Norrington said.
"If I might
finish," he growled. Jack was getting irked by
Norrington's interruptions. "That was the
French, again. Boucaniers, the lot of them. If
you're wanting us to be pedantic, I'll oblige
you. And since I do tend to make my living
catching swine, I suppose I really am a
bacon-eer after all, eh?" Jack was delighted at
this thought. "The secret to cooking bacon is in
the timing. You have to make sure it's
well-done, and real slow-like."
"Are you
insinuating that I am a pig?" Norrington asked,
his voice deceptively amused.
Jack
grinned at him. "Now, lovey, I do prefer my pork
well-salted. That's what I was tryin' to tell
you earlier, wasn't it?"
Norrington let
out a breath that seemed he was bored with the
entire conversation. "Are you a marooner,
then?"
"You're fishing, Commodore." Jack
returned to the desk and rolled up the map.
"You're presence here is non-negotiable, see. I
ask the questions..." he trailed off, unable to
resist answering his captive guest. "I'm not
Spanish, and I'm not a deserter. I'm a pirate.
As I said. So I can't be a marooner. And I'm not
French. Savvy?"
"Hm. Far be it from me to
deny you the pleasure of hearing your own voice.
You talk too much, Sparrow. I noticed that from
the very beginning."
"We'll 'ave to come
to some sort of understanding, first. I'm a
pirate," Jack stated, as if to a small child.
"You're an officer of the Royal Navy, and my
hostage - guest," he corrected, quickly.
"And I'd always thought you were a ham,"
Norrington put in, lightly.
Jack grimaced
and locked the map carefully away in the desk
drawer. "Seems there was a night not too long
ago that belies your assertion, mate. Time was
you fancied me worth more than a plate of ham,
and preferred me dancing in your sheets rather
than in the air."
Norrington didn't
twitch a hair at this reminder of their last
night together.
Blast. Jack was hoping
to get some sort of rise out of Norrington. But
the Commodore only replied, "I think you
overrate your appeal."
"Still, you can't
kill me, can you? Although, methinks you've
thought it over since and are no longer of the
mind to repeat our little dalliance."
"If
that was the case," parried Norrington, "I
wouldn't have bothered to send my men over to
board your ship, instead of blowing you out of
the water."
Jack chuckled at him. "You
never sent your men over, matey, and we both
know it, eh?"
Norrington paused, his
hesitancy causing his stoicism to slip. Jack was
starting to find vulnerability on the upright
Commodore rather fetching. He decided Norrington
would keep the rope for a while yet. He looked
so pretty in disarray with his shirt all undone
and his hands bound before him.
Jack sank
bonelessly into his chair behind the desk and
put his boots up on the desk also, in an
imitation of Norrington's pose. "Would you like
to know why your men rashly ignored rank and
command and hurled themselves at my crew? I'll
warrant that's been eating at you since it
'appened."
Norrington lifted his chin.
"The white flag was a ruse."
Jack
couldn't help laughing. "It weren't no flag,
love. Them's were a pair of Navy-issue britches.
No one in my crew would be caught dead in 'em.
So we used 'em as a taunt. I guess it worked,
didn't it?"
The look on Norrington's face
as this sank into his mind was priceless.
Chortling, Jack said, "Figured no Navy man could
ignore an insult like that. White linen flying
from the mast is something of an irresistible
invitation. 'Twas good enough for the
Jacobites." He winked at Norrington who scowled
darkly at him, at the reminder of Highlanders
fighting in underclothes against Parliament
soldiers in the Civil War in the 1640s - and
winning.
There was a knock on the cabin
door. Gibbs poked his head in. "Beggin' yer
pardon, Captn', here's the Commodore's coat.
Clean, like you wanted."
Jack got to his
feet and went to the door. "Excellent. One more
thing - send us in a rasher? Is there any
going?"
"Aye, sure there is, sir. Will
you be wanting two plates or just the one?"
Gibbs glanced meaningfully over at the Commodore
behind him.
Jack considered it. "Alright,
alright. I won't starve 'im. Even though he
deserves it."
Gibbs left, and Jack
started trying on the coat.
Norrington
looked coldly angry, as though trying to stifle
his reaction to Jack helping himself to his
clothing.
Jack drew up in it proudly,
saying, "A bit loose in the shoulders, but it'll
do. How do I look?"
"Like a pirate in
fancy dress," Norrington said,
noncommittal.
"I've got your hat, too.
Put that on later, for effect."
A look of
realization darted over Norrington's face.
"That's why you wanted the uniforms. I suppose
you took the Endurance's colors too."
"Of
course. They'll be terribly useful for confusing
your fleet when they get too close."
"You know very well I'm not going to
cooperate. Why bother keeping me aboard? It only
serves to engage them further. They'll have more
incentive than ever for hunting you
down."
"Security," Jack explained,
flashing him a grin. "They'll keep their
distance to keep you alive."
"Mrs. Turner
was right," mused Norrington. "You are, in a
word, despicable."
"I saved her life, and
you wanted me to swing for it. Eye for an eye, I
guess. I may be despicable, but you're
dishonest."
Norrington's brows rose
dangerously high. "And you aren't?"
"Ah,
but I'm honest about it. I never claimed to be
honest. But you, you're dishonestly honest, and
so it isn't really honesty, is it? There's a
word for that," Jack said.
"You're a poor
judge of character and, candidly, a pirate. I'm
liable to regard your opinions as flawed and
take anything you say with a grain of
salt."
"And any man worth his salt, even
just a grain, would know the odor of hypocrisy
when he encounters it, which is probably why
you'll never get the rank of Admiral and will
always be passed over." Jack watched the good
Commodore struggle with that one, wondering when
the man would crack.
He didn't as a rule
molest prisoners unless they were very pretty,
but there was something pretty still about
Norrington's distress at being captured by the
very man he was so taken with. Jack felt the
anticipation of the days ahead filling him in
all the right places.
Crossing words with
the Commodore was even more enjoyable than
crossing blades with him would be, but the
balance between the need to bring it to a
conclusion and into his own bed, and the
continued fun of endlessly poking fun at him,
was shifting towards the former.
He
removed the coat and laid it carefully over the
back of the chair, went to retrieve the bottle
of rum and took a swig to clear his thoughts.
Things always seemed to make more sense when
looked at through an amber haze. More cheery,
certainly.
He glanced back at Norrington.
The poor fellow was sulking. A daft little urge
to comfort him ran through Jack's insides.
Taking another gulp of rum, he returned to the
desk and put his feet up on it. Norrington was
sitting up straight in his seat now. He looked
thoughtful. Worried, even.
The knock on
the door was followed by Gibbs entering with two
steaming plates of food. Jack jumped up. "Ah,
thankee kindly."
"We stowed the goods and
the bayonets, and the ammunition, Jack. But the
crew's wonderin' when we'll be puttin' the
Commodore here ashore."
Jack was
bewildered. "Eh?"
"Aye; they seem to have
got it into their heads that the only use for
'im is marooned here off Exuma. The British will
pick 'im up right quick enough. They're saying
we should kill 'im rather than leave 'im here,
though. They say you've got a soft spot for 'im.
It's affectin' yer judgment," Gibbs
declared.
Jack nodded, sagely. "True
enough. We'll let the Commodore decide." He
looked askance over at Norrington. "What do you
say, mate?"
Norrington regarded Gibbs,
looking down his nose with the condescending air
a nobleman would give a plate of pork. Oh, of
course. Jack gestured at Gibbs. "Give him 'is
dinner, then."
As Gibbs set the plates
before them, Norrington commented, "I'm not
helping you with this one, Sparrow. I made my
choice, which you denied me when you kept me
aboard and sent the Endurance on her
way."
"She's still 'ere," Gibbs
said.
Norrington sat up, looking between
Jack and Gibbs. "What?!"
"Dead in the
water," Jack drawled, getting out two forks and
stabbing a bite of bacon. He pushed the other
fork across the desk to Norrington who was
staring at him. "We'll be making way in the
morning - didn't want to have to worry about
getting chased all over again, now did
I?"
"Then my choice is obvious. I wish to
be returned to my men, aboard the
Endurance."
"That weren't one of the
options, love. Sorry. Marooned, killed, or stay
aboard the Pearl, as my imprisoned
guest."
Gibbs shook his head. "Can't
exactly be letting you back over there to start
another fight, can we?"
"Not to mention
you've lost the Dauntless," Jack pointed out.
"You'll have twice the fire in your blood this
time."
If looks could kill, Norrington's
eyes were daggers that would have slain them
both where they sat. And stood. Jack gave him a
cheerful smile. "Don't worry, I'll not have you
scuppered unnecessarily. Far too valuable. As I
already explained." He looked up at
Gibbs.
Gibbs sighed. "Aye, yer right. But
I 'ave to say, yer takin' a chance this time,
Captain." He left, and Jack waited until Gibbs
got to the door.
"Be sure to spread the
word, Gibbs. He's not to be harmed."
"No
marooning, then?"
"No
marooning."
"Aye." Gibbs shut the door
behind himself.
Norrington was finally
angry. Jack was delighted. At last! Some real
action could begin.
Sure enough, the
Commodore said, "I demand that you put me aboard
the Endurance. You have no reason to keep me
aboard and will only incur the mistrust of your
own crew. As you said, the ship's disabled; you
can sail away and we'll have to limp into the
nearest port as best we can."
"I can't,"
Jack said simply.
"You can. And you
will," Norrington insisted.
"But I've
already got me heart set on having you aboard.
It won't do," Jack explained, before spearing
another mouthful of bacon. He gestured with his
fork. "Eat up."
Livid, Norrington
snapped, "So this is some sort of twisted
revenge, is it?"
"Saved your life, mate,"
Jack pointed out, mildly. "You saved mine. You
could have left me there to rot on Devil's
Island, named after their own wild swine, funny
enough. Although all the pigs are in
regimentals, now. You got me out, so I'm just
returning the favor." He watched Norrington
sharply at this. "After all, you didn't exactly
let me go, did you?" He smiled
benevolently.
Norrington sat back in his
seat, looking so distraught and tense that Jack
was very nearly ready to offer to go down on him
then and there. A little solace. It wasn't like
he wanted to torture the man. Much. Besides, it
was true that his Commodore had a severe
Achilles Heel where he was concerned. It was
rather touching.
And it was rather
interesting that Norrington was trying so hard
to not show the awkward embarrassment of knowing
that they were both very well aware of his
regard for Jack. Jack grinned to himself,
basking in the appreciation of Norrington's
predicament.
"You can't just keep me
here," Norrington declared,
helplessly.
"I can. I am," Jack replied.
"I thought you were
hungry?"
***
Norrington
impatiently commented, "You are mad,
then."
"Between the two of us, I think
you're madder than meself at the moment." Jack
stopped, a look of chagrin coming over him.
"Port! I've been most remiss as a host. Why
didn't you say anythin'?!" He got up and left
the cabin, leaving Norrington sitting at the
table with his hands tied and a plate of food
cooling in front of him.
Having no real
course but to go ahead and play along with
whatever Sparrow had in mind, Norrington picked
up the fork and helped himself.
Jack
wasn't long, however, and it was only a few
minutes later that he staggered back into the
cabin and slammed the door behind him, laden
with a crate that he set gingerly on the floor.
Prizing it open, Jack muttered, "The wine of
adversity. Suitably so."
The port,
Norrington realized. "From whom did you liberate
that small fortune?"
"'T'was a Ferreira,"
Jack claimed, proudly, brandishing a bottle and
bringing it to the table. He went to the cabinet
and got a glass and his own
tankard.
Peering into it, he made a face,
drained it of the remainder of rum, and poured
overly generous amounts into both vessels.
Offering the glass to Norrington, Jack
said, "Drink up, me 'eartie."
"I'm not
one of your hearties," Norrington retorted, even
as he took the glass with his bound
hands.
"You are for now," Jack replied,
undaunted; then paused, watching Norrington's
face as he sipped the port.
"This is the
original 1751," Norrington said, taken aback. A
dark glower settled over him. "So you've
pilfered Sinnott's personal store." Wonderful.
The Admiral was going to see him hung beside
Sparrow.
"Every last drop," Jack
declared, happily. "It's a tidy
fortune."
"Tidy, indeed. But then, you
had no way of knowing it would be so valuable.
You might be forgiven, seeing as you're so
generous with it."
"Any port in a storm,"
Jack flung at him, with a gilt grin. His eyes
held Norrington's and positively twinkled at
him.
Again with the man's damnable good
humor and mischievous wickedness and flirtation.
Norrington sighed into his glass as he sipped.
He felt the warmth trickling down into
his insides, suffusing him with a warming glow
that only really good port could achieve.
Sinnott's loss was his gain, and he might as
well enjoy his circumstances, seeing as he
couldn't affect them. Alter them perhaps, as
Sparrow was undoubtedly amenable to negotiating,
even as the pirate declaimed it. The man's eyes
told otherwise, in any case.
Jack licked
his lips, dark-rimmed eyes narrowing, as he
noticed Norrington's change in mien.
Norrington felt an arrow of heat stab in
his lower belly at the sight of that tongue
flicking over those full lips. He chased it down
with another draught of the dark wine. Dark,
sweet, hot and seductive, just like Jack
Sparrow. Damn him.
Once really hadn't
been enough.
Jack grinned wider now and
raised his tankard. "Aye, Commodore. Welcome
aboard."
With a wry smile, Norrington
raised his own glass. "To generosity,
then."
Sparrow's grin turned feral and
strange. "To freedom." He gulped back an unwise
amount, his slender throat moving hypnotically
in a very accustomed rhythm.
"Freedom has
its price. Generosity is truly
free."
"But more free than all these, is
the port," Jack slurred, "and there's an
unended- an anon - undead -
unleaden-"
"Unending," Norrington pitched
in.
"Yes...supply of
it."
***
The port flowed a little
too freely and Norrington couldn't remember much
of what transpired afterwards.
All he
retained of the remainder of the evening was
singing some strange and very lewd songs that
were unaccountably hilarious at the time, and
the unavoidable knowledge that the port had been
far stronger than he'd suspected.
Sparrow, being the capital fellow he
was, had patiently gone over them word by word
until Norrington had them down by heart, so they
could sing them together. Apparently, Elizabeth
Swann-turned-Turner was to blame for teaching it
to Jack.
Somewhere along the course of
the night, not to mention the past year, he'd
got lost in a pair of Sparrow's knowing dark
eyes that had weakened him... In fact, they'd
always weakened him. His resolve, his
self-control and his honor, as well as his
loathing of Sparrow.
For he did loathe
him, he did. The man was a pirate. Beneath
contempt. He didn't hate him though. That was
too strong a word, like the port. Too strong.
Not as strong as rum, at which Sparrow had
enlightened him with libations for sampling in
comparison.
And it had been most
uproariously funny to share these observations
with Sparrow, who, being the gentleman he was,
kindly let Norrington collapse on his bed when
the room eventually began spinning too hard for
his condition to be compared even to
seasickness.
***
Commodore
Norrington gripped the rail with white knuckles,
his hands still bound before him.
In the
cold light of mid-morning, only the crow's nest
and sagging remainder of the Dauntless' colors
were sticking obscenely out of the water of the
bay. She'd sunk close enough to shore to lie
bellied and broken in the sand like a drowned
horse mired in mud.
Inaudible mutters
reached his ears downwind and he glanced to his
left with a sour taste in the back of his
throat. A nod and a pitying look in his
direction assured him that the sight equally
disturbed the Black Pearl's crew.
It was
not a pretty death, to be sure. Norrington
wasn't certain if grief or anger were more in
control of him at this moment.
He felt
physically sick to his stomach, although he
hoped he wouldn't vomit over the side and thus
cause all manner of rumors to circulate that he
couldn't hold his drink. Seeing her sticking out
of the water in this way was making him feel
more and more queasy though, and finally he
turned away.
"It's a terrible sight for a
sober man," came a voice belonging to a bulky
shadow that blocked the sun
momentarily.
"Gibbs, is it?" He
considered the man for a moment, then
dismissively went back to staring hard at the
coastline of the island beyond, with its high
rugged cliffs and forested hills.
"Aye.
Hair of the dog?" Gibbs offered.
"I think
not," Norrington replied, stiffly.
"Suit
yerself," Gibbs replied, taking a swig of his
whiskey.
The Endurance still sat in the
waters beyond, the barely-discernable figures of
his men, sans their coats and hats, milling
about on the deck, while others attempted to
redress the damage done to her at Sparrow's
orders so they could set sail. She was too far
out for them to attempt anything in broad
daylight; the Pearl's cannons would take them
first.
"Jack said you weren't allowed to
come up. Said you'd be better off not to see. I
told him that were cruel, to deny you last sight
of her."
Norrington exhaled, sadly. "My
thanks."
He went back to contemplating
the beach beyond. It rankled that the Black
Pearl's sails were new, the rigging in fine
condition, and everything topside was gleaming
and beautiful. The plunder from Isla de Muerta
had enabled Sparrow to refit her.
It
rankled too that he'd been captured in the first
place. He glanced upwards; true enough, the
white britches still flapped as sordidly in the
sea breeze as the downed flag of the Dauntless
nearby, trailing in the seawater.
It
wasn't just the loss of the Dauntless; it was
the fact that it was due to his own negligence
and lack of foresight, his own rash
irresponsibility, that she was gone. He eyed
Gibbs' whiskey.
Gibbs noticed and handed
it to him.
Taking a swig, he welcomed the
burning drink. Thoughtfully, he took another.
The heat chased out the pain and abruptly, he
realized it would be bad indeed to face Jack
Sparrow this morning with a sober head. He'd
wring the man's neck. No one would be able to
get his hands from around Sparrow's neck and
he'd probably be shot and dumped overboard for
his trouble. He handed it back to Gibbs. "Thank
you."
"Ye'll be needing something
stronger. Or at least more of
it."
Norrington raised a brow at him.
"Oh?"
"Jack said ye were to be taken
below until we get out into the open again."
Gibbs shrugged apologetically. "Doesn't want you
knowing where we're goin'. Can't say's I blame
'im, either. Come along,
Commodore."
Bitterly, Norrington allowed
Gibbs and two men to lead him down below deck,
taking a last mournful look over his shoulder to
where she sat, brokenly engulfed. He wished she
could have had a decent burial, all the way down
to the bottom of the sea, in a proper bed for
her final resting place.
It wasn't until
he was secured in the brig below that it
occurred to him, the irony of his mourning more
over the loss of the Dauntless than of the
Governor's daughter. But then, Elizabeth was
still alive.
***
It was several
hours later, as Norrington sat in the brig and
mulled over various schemes and suggestions to
offer Sparrow in return for his freedom without
having to compromise his career or Naval
knowledge, when Gibbs returned for
him.
"Wants you back up in his cabin, he
does."
"What a surprise," he stated,
sarcastically. "You were with us on the crossing
from England. Why have you thrown your lot in
with this pirate?"
Gibbs shrugged. "E's a
better man than most."
Which gave
Norrington something to mull over as he
accompanied them out of the brig. After all,
what else could tempt a man from the Navy but
greed? Norrington considered that he had gravely
underestimated the men he hunted.
There
was nothing but flat, ocean horizon to meet the
eye as he was escorted back to Sparrow. He
couldn't ascertain the direction they were
headed, for the sun was still mostly
overhead.
Upon entering the cabin,
however, Norrington was treated to the rather
startling sight of Jack Sparrow engaged in sword
practice, clad in his breeches, white shirt,
boots and nothing more. The coin that dangled
over his headband jerked along with his head, as
Jack whipped to face them standing in the open
doorway.
Upon seeing them, Jack nodded
once, and said, "Give him a blade," in a voice
almost out of breath. "His own."
Gibbs
shook his head and began muttering about it
being a very bad idea to give a weapon to a man
in the Commodore's current frame of mind. Jack
didn't reply, just waited for Gibbs to
leave.
Norrington clumsily held the sword
Gibbs had returned to him, his own sword, and
watched as Jack approached.
"Your hands,
if you please, sir." Jack's expression was
serious, and his eyes were
alive.
Norrington held out his bound
wrists, and Jack's sword sundered the
rope.
With a salute of his blade, Jack
said, "I thought some time below would match
your mood. Seeing as you needed time to sulk and
all. 'Sides, couldn't very well have you seein'
which way we were headed, now could
we?"
"What is this about?" Norrington was
suspicious.
"Indulge me," Jack said, with
a little bow. "We've not crossed blades before,
and I find me curiosity is plaguing something
fierce. En guard." He advanced swiftly, and
Norrington was forced to put up his own, a quick
and automatic reaction.
Lightning moves,
heartbeats' pace and silver swift, and they were
dancing to a different song now. With each
counter-thrust and parry, Jack's face deepened
in concentration and intensity.
Soon,
both men's breathing came shallow, and abruptly,
Norrington realized Jack was doing him a favor,
allowing him to leach the fury and grief and
humiliation he suffered from, all at once.
Jack's eyes glowed rather too brightly,
and Norrington was angry afresh at the knowledge
that he was providing the pirate with
entertainment.
A practiced swordsman,
however, Norrington allowed the anger to course
through him and direct the flow of his motion
rather than dull his attention. It came as a
surprise to him when he outmaneuvered Jack's
next series of play and struck lightly home, the
edge of his sword grazing Jack's right arm and
disappearing into the folds of the white
shirt.
A line of red appeared, staining
the sleeve. They were both frozen, and
Norrington backed off slightly. Jack glanced
down with a grin at his arm and then saluted
Norrington again. "First blood. Well
done."
And Jack promptly renewed the
struggle, whipping his blade back up and once
more forcing Norrington to counter. Norrington
was backed up against the large wooden cabinet
as the contents rattled within.
Jack's
blade was dangerously close to his throat,
although he'd blocked it, and he tried to fling
both the blade and the man away from him. Jack
pressed closer, anticipating this. Jack's body
came crashing against his, the heat and supple
power of him sending a jolt of desire through
Norrington's already tense form. This kind of
distraction he did not need. It was far too
successful.
With a shove, Norrington
forced him back, and Jack danced away again,
this time with a grin. The confines of the cabin
were beginning to annoy Norrington now, and he
considered taking it outside where they could
both let loose the reins and really go for
it.
He realized in that moment however,
that they were both enjoying it far too much and
it wasn't so much a duel as foreplay. Damn
Sparrow, anyway!
Although Jack's shorter
stature and lesser strength told against him,
Jack's sword-skill was by no means lacking and
Norrington found himself distracted by the slim,
almost boyish hips, and the grace of Jack's
footwork. Compared to the usually staggering,
sashaying pirate's walk, the steps currently
made him feel wooden and militaristic in
comparison. He ignored it, however, as neither
wanted to bring this to a
conclusion.
"Still delaying the
inevitable, Sparrow?" he managed.
With
another clash of their steel, Jack gasped, "Word
Master or sword master, 'tis all the same.
You're in the Caribbean, mate. Don't forget
that."
"And you'd do well not to forget
I'm an officer of the Royal Navy." Norrington
cornered Jack against the foot of the bed and
the wall with a blinding series of
thrusts.
Jack leaped nimbly sideways
however, up and then over the edge of the bed
and backed into the middle of the cabin once
more, saying with a maniacal glint in his eyes
that matched his gold grin, "Haven't forgotten
for an instant, matey. Not bad form, I must
say."
Contentedly, Norrington pressed his
advantage. He knew Jack was toying still,
allowing him enough room to prove his skill as
well as give too much away. There was also the
decidedly suspect motive of allowing him to
release his emotions rather than actually allow
him a chance to escape. Where would he go, after
all? Even if he beat Jack, it was unlikely the
crew would comply with his wishes, even if he
threatened to skewer him.
Jack must have
already thought of it, however, for in the next
moment they were circling around each other
rather quickly, with Jack backing away towards
the bed again, and abruptly falling backwards
onto it in a somewhat rash move to break his
fall. Norrington would have considered it near
suicidal if he hadn't been the one to surprise
the pirate with a counter-move he hadn't used
yet in their sparring.
Standing over Jack
as he lay panting, Norrington held the tip of
his sword to his throat. "That was rather
obvious and very stupid."
"Probably,"
Jack managed, "But then, so was attacking the
Pearl at night without any of your precious
Admiral's pretty ships to back you up." The
reminder was a taunt and very successful. The
total lack of concern Jack was showing at having
Norrington's blade at his neck was both
insulting and appealing.
Norrington did
not lower his sword but considered thoughtfully,
"You let me win. By rights, I should challenge
you to a rematch." He pressed the tip home,
denting the skin in the hollow of Jack's throat,
enjoying the way Jack's eyes widened at it. "Or
run you through, for capturing me, sinking my
ship and kidnapping me on some insane,
rum-influenced fancy for Naval fleet
movements."
Jack waggled his brows at him
and said, "Aye, but if you do, you won't have
anything left to satisfy any future Mrs.
Commodore, even the current Mrs. Turner, once
she's tired of him and come looking for you. Or
me? Both of us, perhaps. Either way, you'll be
needing it." Jack was grinning at him
salaciously. "Now, unless you fancy becoming a
eunuch, I suggest you put up your
sword."
Norrington looked down swiftly.
Jack's sword was currently threatening his one
anatomical area Norrington knew could be put to
better use. He backed off, withdrawing the blade
from Jack's neck, and watched in amazement as
Jack merely tossed his sword onto the bed and
pulled off his boots.
"This isn't over,"
Norrington stated.
"I should hope not,"
Jack said in a hurt tone, managing to sound like
a jilted courtesan.
Norrington was not in
the mood though. And decided to say so. "I won't
be your sport for the afternoon, Sparrow. Find
yourself another amusement." Not relinquishing
his sword, he began edging to the door of the
cabin.
"I wouldn't do that if I were
you," Jack suggested calmly, removing his shirt
and examining the still-bleeding cut on his arm
that Norrington's sword-edge had inflicted. He
went over to the dish of water in the corner of
the room and began rinsing the blood from the
sleeve.
The cabin was too confining.
Norrington felt himself ready to bolt. The air
was too thick to breathe. It smelled of both
their fresh sweat and his own arousal, and a
little bit of fear, if he were honest with
himself. And rum. The permeating, eternal scent
of rum that clung to Jack Sparrow for the very
good reason that he always seemed to be drinking
it.
"Give me one reason why not."
Norrington saw no reason why he shouldn't try to
make a break for it. His situation might be
hopeless, but he was sure the pirate understood
the sentiment: better to die with sword in hand
than betray one's principles, honor, one's
country...
"They'll shoot you, and not on
my orders." Jack said bluntly, tying a wrap of
cloth around his arm to cover the sword-cut. He
pulled back on the shirt; having decided his cut
wouldn't need stitches.
Norrington gave
him a tight-lipped smile. "I have no choice.
Unlike you, when you handed me my
sword."
"Nice work, that one," Jack
commented sunnily, as if Norrington wasn't
standing by the door. "I recognized the grip, as
well as the blade. Had ample opportunity to
study Will's craft up close, on our first
meeting." Jack got to his feet, and slid his
sword back into the scabbard.
Jack was
playing with him still, and Norrington wasn't
happy about it. "You sank her," he said. "That
was unforgivable of you."
"Aye, that it
was," Jack agreed, with a sorrowful face. Then
he ruined any semblance of sincerity by adding,
"But then, if I hadn't, it would also have been
unforgivable of me." He turned to his
desk.
Norrington advanced on him, sword
ready. And froze as Jack turned to face him,
flintlock pistol in hand.
Jack shrugged.
"Sorry. Admittedly, it was fun while it lasted."
He motioned with the pistol. "Put it back. Over
there."
Oh well. He hadn't really
expected to gain the edge for long, anyway.
Wryly, he slid it home into his scabbard with a
sigh. He wasn't fool enough to rush a loaded
pistol, and he didn't need a shoulder full of
shot right now.
Turning, he beheld Jack
sitting on the bed, this time with an interested
smile wreathing his lips and yet holding the
pistol in Norrington's direction.
"You
don't need that," Norrington said
unconcernedly
"Allow me to disagree,
Commodore," Jack cheerfully replied. "See,
m'crew are terribly upset to be having you
aboard, and the only way you can stay is if
you're bound. So if you'd be so kind, I'll be
tying your hands again. I'm terribly
sorry."
"Rot," Norrington said. "You're
enjoying this far too much to be
sorry."
"Or is it that I'm sorry I'm
enjoying it so much?" Jack countered. "On second
thought, or third, it's that I'm sorry you're
not enjoying it -more-. We'll 'ave to remedy
that." Rising, he went to the door and opened
it, calling out, "Ah, Pete. Aye, you. Bring us a
length of rope."
It took a few moments.
As the swarthy crewman entered the room with a
rope, Jack motioned with the pistol. "Bind his
hands. Be quick about it."
Norrington
stood, bored, and waited until the pirate left
them alone once more, then went and sat in the
chair before Jack's desk. "This is going to
become old, very rapidly."
"I'm counting
on it," Jack said. "Have some breakfast.
Luncheon. Noonday snack.
Whatever."
Norrington considered the
apples in the basket before them. They hadn't
been there the previous night. He selected one
and bit into it. "You can't keep me here
forever, you know."
"Can I not?" Jack
took up an apple, himself. He scrutinized it and
chuckled enigmatically before biting into
it.
Norrington began wondering if Jack
had any intention whatsoever of having his way
with him. It dawned on him that, despite being a
slut and a pirate and a man with no principles
or morals in any way, shape or form, he wasn't
interested in repeating their performance that
night on Bermuda.
In which case, he'd
been thrice the fool, as he'd counted on that
being his bargaining chip, the persuasion for
negotiable terms. Not only had he pursued rashly
into the fray, he'd allowed Sparrow to go free
before, and now he'd compromised himself
completely by allowing the bloody pirate to get
inside his head. And heart. Sparrow knew himself
to be his weakness, as he'd
feared.
Bitterly, Norrington chewed on
his apple.
***
Jack was enjoying
himself, just as the Commodore had accused. So
much so, in fact, that he couldn't bring himself
to end their tete-a-tete just yet.
Things
were going his way at last. The Pearl was his,
refitted and glowing like a new bride. The ocean
was his once more too, and to have both at once
was sheer luxury. He was willing to bet his
honeymoon was lasting longer than the cozy
Turners'.
He had the tormented Commodore
trussed before him, and the poor bloke had
absolutely no idea that Jack had no intention of
giving him what he wanted until Norrington gave
him something first. Namely, the temporary
filling in of a few blanks on his little map.
That very precious and valuable map. It
was often the way with really valuable things,
Jack had noticed, that most folks simply
couldn't recognize their worth until it was too
late, if at all.
He had the entire pile
of the treasure of Isle de Muerta, painstakingly
transported these past ten months to a new,
secret location. And of course he had his
freedom. Taking another bite of his apple, he
relished it simply because Barbossa couldn't.
The Commodore didn't know it yet, but he
had his freedom too. Jack was looking forward to
introducing him to it. He wondered offhandedly
how much it would actually take to turn
Norrington pirate.
He'd be loved for it,
if he could pull it off. The man was a terror
and a nuisance to all self-respecting pirates in
the Spanish Main. Not to mention everywhere
else.
There had been a distinct lack of
business with merchant vessels of late, as
Norrington had taken his new title and used it
to establish an even harsher grip of the
'civilized' islands. Unlike other officers in
Norrington's position, who would have used the
opportunity to garner an admiralship, Norrington
would earn one simply by outdoing himself and
achieving one by default, pursuing the bloody
business of putting pirates out of
theirs.
He watched Norrington glumly
chewing and decided to put him out of his
misery. A teensy bit, anyway. Clearing his
throat, he said, "I've a proposition for you,
mate."
"I told you before, I don't make
deals with pirates. I'm your captive, not your
ally."
Jack smiled fondly at him. "Very
good of you to remind me, too. Captive. Wasn't
flattering you, when I said the rope suits you.
I meant it. Truly."
Norrington took that
in, and appeared to digest it. Was it just
Jack's hopeful imagination, or did the good
Commodore's spirits actually lift a little at
the crumb he'd tossed in his
direction?
"Of course, I'm sure the rest
of the crew will agree, once you're back in the
brig."
Norrington paused, finished his
mouthful and swallowed. "You kept me here last
night. They'll probably kill me if you keep me
there."
"If. If they kill you, or they
might find the rope as flattering as meself."
Jack shrugged. "You help me, I'll help you. You
really should stay away from the port. You
passed out in disgraceful time. Was expectin'
more from you, I have to say."
"I
wouldn't have, if you hadn't had the bright idea
of mixing it with rum. So your idea of
pleasantly passing the time during my
incarceration aboard your vessel is to ply me
with alcohol until I pass you information, or
pass out? That would be the more disgraceful of
both our actions, I think. Shocking conduct,
using liquor on your prisoners."
"You
have your own Navy to blame for that. Bottles of
rum weren't growing on the trees when we started
sailing round these little islands. Any sailor
will agree if you care to ask around. Rum is
miraculous stuff. Much better than port. I'll
prove it to you, if you like.
Later."
Give it up, man, Jack thought
silently, you're no match for ole Jack.
He could talk the Commodore under the
table, drunk or not. Admittedly, Norrington was
better with a blade than he'd supposed, but
there was method to his madness in this
circumstance. Multiple methods, if he were
honest. Which he wasn't. He finished the apple
and licked his fingers, noting the way
Norrington tried not to notice.
Lovely.
It really was, the way the blighter couldn't
help himself. He'd have him begging before
long.
The word 'mercy' had always had a
lovely ring to it, but only when he was the one
asking for it. When others used it, he always
heard the French expression of gratitude,
probably because most people tended to use it
when they were in bed with him, regardless of
their nationality.
"Every time our paths
cross, I lose a ship," Norrington
commented.
Jack squinted and counted on
his hand, slowly. "Powers, you're right." Then
he shrugged and picked out a banana. "And I seem
to gain one." He put his bare feet up on the
desk and crossed them. "I'm of the mind that I'm
being the soul of generosity itself to offer you
any kind of deal, seeing as you're the one bound
and captive. Hear me out."
Norrington's
eyes fell to the desk. He looked away and said,
"Get on with it."
"We're bound for one of
those islands you claim don't exist. The ones on
that map that so offends you. Now, I've got me
an officer of the British Navy, and the moneys
and ship and the time to get me there. All I
lack is the fleet positions, and Aunt Fannie's
my uncle. Or is my uncle Aunt Fannie? Hm." Jack
considered this poser.
Norrington's eyes
flickered and he turned to Jack. "What on earth
do you need them for?"
"To avoid them,
love," Jack stated, as if to a
simpleton.
Norrington's eyes narrowed.
"You have the fastest ship in the Caribbean, and
you expect me to believe that you're concerned
about avoiding the Navy?"
"Upon our
return from the island," Jack said, impatient
now. "With the treasure."
Norrington
frowned. "What the bloody hell are you talking
about? What treasure?"
Jack stood up and
stabbed the air aimlessly with the banana in his
frustration. "My treasure, from the Isla de
Muerta. You saw it yourself. Remember?" He
gestured helplessly. "The- the crown? The gold?
The piles of gold?"
Norrington sat back
in his seat in disbelief. "That is the poorest
excuse for my kidnapping that you could possibly
offer. You are truly mad. I'm supposed to
believe this is about treasure? You've kidnapped
an officer of the fleet and sunk my ship...for
treasure?" Norrington's blood was up,
now.
Jack stopped. "Is there a better
reason? Ever?"
Norrington leaned forward
on the desk and put his head in his hands.
"Bloody pirates," he cursed.
Jack leaned
forward, and confided, "Now, it was fairly
difficult getting back. Too many ships. I really
want to avoid what happened last
time."
"And what was that?" Norrington
groaned, as if his head hurt too much to
ask.
"Well, the Yard," Jack explained,
leaning back in his chair, for once forgoing the
opportunity for a good tale. Because it was
self-explanatory, and for once, not a very nice
tale at all. Awkward, embarrassing and horribly
inconvenient.
"The Pearl's fast, but
she's only one ship, savvy?" That was the only
explanation Norrington was going to
get.
The Black Pearl's subsequent
outrunning of the British ships stationed just
beside the island they'd passed on their return
to the vicinity of Bermuda had been the ones
Jack had ended up attempting to elude in port,
on foot, while trying to conclude too many
schemes at once while on land. The crew of the
Black Pearl had left without him, complete with
the treasure they'd retained from their visit to
the new island stash, through no fault of their
own.
Of course, Tortuga was the best,
first place to weigh anchor to wait to see if
Jack could get himself out of his latest scrape
and so the Admiral's admittedly pretty Endurance
had frightened the living daylights out of most
of the pirate vessels already docked at Tortuga
when he arrived.
He laughed to himself
at the memory, ignoring the look of puzzlement
Norrington shot at him.
It appeased
Jack's sense of justice to have the same
Commodore who liberated him from the Devil's
Island see him safely through the identical
procedure again, this time avoiding contact with
any Naval vessels and as leverage as his
hostage, should any try to stop him.
It
made no sense to make the same mistake twice.
And this way was more fun; he got to have
Norrington along to fill the dreary days through
the journey there and back.
Norrington
sat up, only to sit back in his chair, slumped
slightly. "You can't afford to leave me alive
after you've revisited your
island."
"Never fear, sir. I've no
intention of allowing you near my charts once we
reach a certain point of no
return."
Norrington looked up. "Out of
curiosity, just what did you do with that Aztec
chest of gold, in the end?"
"Buried it.
Davy Jones' locker were the safest place, we
figured."
"And you still haven't
explained how you managed to take the Admiral's
ship. How'd you get the Endurance off,
yourself?"
"It was difficult, to be
sure," Jack admitted. "Nigh impossible to manage
all on my ownsie, but as I told you, albatrosses
can be useful."
Norrington frowned in
confusion. Then light dawned. "You managed to
convince someone to go with you before you
left."
Jack glared at him. "Has that lass
been talking to you as well,
then?"
"What?"
Jack shook his head
irritably. It was harder to get anyone to take
him seriously anymore, the Black Pearl's
notoriety garnered over the past decade
notwithstanding.
Ever since the
revelation of how he'd actually escaped his
marooning on that island by bloody Barbossa,
Mrs. Turner had single-handedly ruined years'
worth of reputation for him, both with his own
crew and at large. It couldn't really be helped,
seeing as they'd been marooned there together...
and she had taught him that lovely song, after
all, so he'd forgive her.
Then he
realized his second escape from that hellish
little piece of nowhere was all thanks to his
officer, here.
He turned a nostalgic
smile upon Norrington, who stared back in
complete bewilderment.
He could tell from
Norrington's expression and behavior however,
that the man believed he was quite safe now from
his advances. Jack mused upon this, regarding
the banana. He'd have to take care of that
belief immediately and set Norrington's notion
to rest.
With a suggestive glance, he
said, "I could pay you for your trouble. You
could have, say, five percent of what we bring
back on board?"
***
The man was
mad. Completely and utterly stark-raving mad.
Norrington felt like he was in some sort
of rum-inspired nightmare. In fact, that was the
best summation of his situation that he could
find.
"You can't buy me,
Sparrow."
Jack nodded. "Every man has his
price, Commodore. What would you say the
inconvenience is worth?"
Norrington shot
him a sorrowful glare. "The loss of the
Dauntless was not a mere inconvenience and I
resent you saying so."
"Not the ship,
certainly, nor the rope and all. I'm talking
about the time out from your
commodoring."
"That would depend. How
long is the voyage?"
Jack looked up at
the ceiling, considering this. "Shall we say,
oh, two weeks?"
Norrington's brain began
to recover from the stinging insult that he'd
been apprehended simply for treasure. "Hold on.
You've already got the treasure, and you've
already successfully moved it. Why take the
chance of compromising its location while I'm on
board, when you've already got it? What do you
need it for? It was a king's ransom, enough to
set you up as Governor of your own fleet and
territory... or buy some throne
somewhere."
"Retire?" Jack squawked, as
if the idea were abhorrent to him. "Now where
would be the point in that?!"
"To avoid
the noose and the Navy's fleet," Norrington
rejoined acidly.
"And -I'm- mad?" Jack
mouthed to himself, clutching his banana to his
chest. To Norrington, he said, brandishing it,
"Now see here, Commodore; I don't do charity,
and neither do you. I can hardly hand meself
over to you along with me treasure and just give
everything up. I won't retire until I'm dead.
I'm afraid I shall have to reject your
offer."
The man was insufferable.
Norrington turned a cynical eye upon him. "It
was no offer. It is, in fact, the only way
you're going to avoid meeting an early
death."
Jack grinned at him. "Is that a
threat?"
"It's a fact."
Still
amused, Jack murmured, "You haven't been able to
kill me thus far."
Exasperated,
Norrington said, "Not me! The gallows. You'll
swing yet, mark my words."
Jack got to
his feet, saying, "Rather warrant that's not
something you're looking forward to, mate."
Making his way around to stand behind
Norrington's chair, he placed both hands on his
shoulders, and leaned down to say in his ear,
"Mark my word, love, though we both know you'd
die rather than admit it. I've done you a favor,
have I not? Whisked out of doldrums and
Sinnott's stuffy pomposity...for a teensy bit of
adventure? And maybe something
more?"
Norrington tried not to gulp at
the smooth, honey and velvet voice so close
beside him, breath warming his ear with the
speaking of it, and the damnable accompanying
warmth of Jack's hands. They were burning
through his shirt where they lay, and he was
barely able to suppress the tremor that tried to
move over him.
Gathering his wits, he
replied, "You're right; I'd rather die." And
blast if the man wasn't right; he couldn't admit
it. Sinnott had been a bore. A swine. Not nearly
Navy enough for Norrington's liking.
Jack
chuckled delightedly in his ear. "So you -are-
enjoying yerself then. Good." He stepped away,
and Norrington cursed him silently for the cold
that suddenly replaced his touch.
Then
he saw where Jack was headed and he groaned
aloud.
Jack picked up the rum bottle and
sloshed it gently. Pulling out the cork, he took
a swallow. "Turnabout is fair
play."
Norrington sighed. It was going to
be a long day. A long voyage. In fact, it was
going to be a long, long time before he was
going to be able to live this down. Admiral
Sinnott would probably see him court-martialed
before this was over. "I'm ruined."
Jack
turned with a frown and a grimace. "Nonsense.
You're a blighted hero. They'll be singing your
praises. You'll probably get a medal. And a new
ship. You'll have all the lasses hanging on your
arm, and your every word."
"You take such
a positive view of my future. I'll be
court-martialed. I may swing before you
do."
Jack stepped close to lean against
the edge of the desk in front of Norrington and
thoughtfully swigged from the bottle again.
"Your own men saw the Dauntless go down; and
yourself captured by the infamous Captain Jack
Sparrow, aboard the equally infamous Black Pearl
- feared throughout the Caribbean as the most
terrifying terror of the past ten years. With a
crew still known as cruel, demented, vicious
pirates, and until of late, undead pirates what
couldn't be killed and took no survivors. And
with you being the most notorious pirate-hater
in the Spanish Main. Love," Jack looked down at
him, askance, and pointed the bottle at him.
"Love, you get through this in one piece, with
your sword and your honor intact, and they'll
give you a bloody knighthood."
"But I
will know the truth, and so in all honesty, upon
my honor, I will be unable to accept it,"
Norrington pointed out.
Cryptically, Jack
rebutted, "Wouldn't be the first time you've
lied. Why stand on ceremony now?" He took a long
drink. "You look dry. Rum?" Jack offered the
bottle.
Norrington took it, his
sensibilities beginning to suffer.
He
was starting to see the sense in what Jack
Sparrow was so elegantly articulating. After
all, it would be incredibly easy simply to enjoy
the trip to the island, avoiding of course any
unpleasantness with the Pearl's crew... And avoid
all the British ships and others en route, to be
returned - where?
He swallowed the rum
and asked, "What about when we
return?"
Jack took the bottle from him
with a smile. "Knew you'd see things my way. You
tell me where, and I'll drop you there. Nothing
easier."
"And I have your word on
it?"
Jack raised his brows at him.
"You're going to trust the word of a
pirate?"
"Do I have any
choice?"
"Good point. Very well. You have
my word."
Norrington regarded him, and
then realized with some discomfiture that Jack
wasn't looking away. He wasn't prepared for the
wall of heat that rushed over him, head to toe,
in response. Damn him. He looked away first,
wondering why, why WHY the man had to be so
unnervingly, uncomfortably, damnably
pretty.
The memories from the night in
Bermuda roiled in his mind's eye and he
swallowed, carefully. The way Sparrow had moved
under him, and the breathy cries as he'd lost
control, and how he'd found his release with the
man he'd caught and bound...How Sparrow had lost
it under him. He hadn't been imagining -that-.
Unfortunately, it did appear that Jack
no longer felt it, nor did he consider it worth
anything more than a convenient tool to use
against him, to rattle his
composure.
Jack set the bottle down on
the desk and stepped in front of Norrington,
waiting until Norrington looked up at him with a
frown.
Norrington was taken aback to find
warm lips against his, that opened quickly and
invitingly, and then there was only the
darkly-sweet heat of rum and Jack's tongue upon
his own. His heart was pounding in his ears but
he could hear Jack's as well.
God, he'd
needed this so badly. So hungry for it. Had
waited so long to taste him again. Wanted it.
Golden moments. Stolen. Desired.
When
Jack pulled back, he actually gasped - then
realized his eyes had drifted shut and he was
breathless. The shame at his helplessness in his
own desire quickly replaced the pleasure of the
few moments' kiss and he opened his eyes,
looking down - not wanting to see the man's
victory over him.
Damn Sparrow, anyway.
Somehow, the silent words rang not with
conviction this time but mournful loss.
But the bare feet in his field of vision
stayed in place and Jack leaned down once more,
this time placing both hands on either side of
Norrington's neck, and he murmured, "It's hardly
treason if you're saving your own life, and we
refuse to kill you into the bargain. You can
tell them we threatened you with a fate worse
than death. Their dirty little minds will supply
all the details - you'll probably not have to
say 'nother word."
Wryly, Norrington met
his gaze. "A fate worse than death?"
Jack
shrugged. "No need to tell them it was worth it;
that you were begging for it rather than
against."
This was familiar territory
once more...and Norrington was again assailed with
the sinking sensation that Jack Sparrow knew
something he didn't, even as they appeared to
have an accord of some kind.
"Home, then.
Upon our return."
"Port Royal, it is,"
Jack grinned. And this time, it was Jack who
held out his hand. Norrington could not help a
dry smile at the irony: he shook Sparrow's hand
with both his tied before him.
As Jack
made to pull away however, Norrington gripped
Jack's hand between his. "Begging for it?" he
repeated.
Jack made a little moue.
"Figure of speech."
Norrington sniffed.
"Help me up, then." And waited.
Jack
looked down at their hands, then back up to meet
his eyes, and pulled Norrington to his
feet.
The Commodore, having had his fill
of Jack's unspoken jibes and dark, meaningful
stares, continued slowly forward, and maneuvered
Jack against the desk, trapping him between the
edge of the desk and himself, and looped his
bound hands over Jack's head, trapping him
neatly.
Looking down into Jack's eyes,
which had gone very dark with concern at his
actions, he said, "I still say you talk too
much."
He waited for Jack to open his
mouth to reply before bringing his lips down
upon Jack's to silence him.
God, too
much, this fire. It ravaged him from the inside
out, burning out of control. He could barely
move, for fear he'd move too quickly. The world
disappeared very rapidly and was nothing but the
thudding of his pulse and Jack's devilish mouth,
still saying too much even though the pirate
couldn't speak. The quickening of breath was
also probably more eloquent than Jack would have
preferred Norrington to know.
Slow,
leisurely devouring, this taste... Jack sighed
against him and the tension went out of him as
he relaxed against Norrington's embrace.
Norrington was surprised by it, although
he supposed he shouldn't have been. Nor by the
pirate's hands as they stole around his waist to
pull their bodies even closer.
And the
kiss still went on; he was chagrined at how
quickly time was still passing as it did, and it
marred the contentment of being allowed these
moments to explore the other man's mouth, to
enjoy the dance of their tongues in a parody of
their sparring earlier. It was almost enough.
Almost.
Finally Jack dragged his mouth
away, to catch his breath.
Norrington
stared down at him, licking his lips and
muttering, "I want you. Now, like
this."
Jack gave a little smile and his
eyes were half-lidded. "Like this?" He scooted
up so that he was sitting on the desk. "Or like
this?" Jack pulled him towards the edge so that
his legs were pressed against it. Jack's knees
came around to entrap him further, and
Norrington groaned, unable to resist his need
any longer. He brought their mouths together
abruptly, forcing Jack's head back with the
fervor of the kiss.
With sweet, liquid
heat racing along his veins and savaging what
shreds of his self-control remained, he wondered
why they still hadn't moved to the bed. It would
be more comfortable, not to mention
practical.
Jack pulled his face to the
side and gasped, "The bed."
"My thoughts
exactly," Norrington muttered, relinquishing his
grasp and bringing his hands up, stepping back
as Jack darted out from under
him.
Norrington paused, swept up the rum
and took another few swallows.
Jack was
laughing silently as he stood by the bed,
pulling off his shirt. "I'll see you turn
pirate, yet."
"Have you ever met anyone
you couldn't?" Norrington was genuinely curious.
"I mean, when you were actively trying to turn
them, not simply by association?"
"If
they are my associates, then they'd have to be
pirates just for me to associate with 'em, now
wouldn't they?" Jack explained, stripping, and
turned to face Norrington who had moved to join
him by the side of the bed. He regarded the rope
with disgust now. "Hands over your head, sir."
As Norrington complied, Jack undid the buttons
and lifted the shirt over his head, leaving it
swathed around his forearms. "Much better. So
what does that make you, I
wonder?"
Grudgingly, Norrington scowled,
"A privateer."
"A very proper British
privateer," Jack grinned.
"And your
conquest, apparently." He stared down at
Jack.
"Not yet," Jack promised, with a
leer that somehow lacked the mistrust that Jack
himself had always retained where Norrington was
concerned.
Norrington grew thoughtful.
"You were right, I think." At Jack's look of
non-understanding, he added, "You said that I
didn't own you, that I was the one who was
owned."
Jack tilted his head and regarded
him. "A man cannot hope to own even his own
self, let alone anyone else. Anything else is
simply self-delusion."
Jack raised both
hands and placed them on Norrington's
arms.
Who replied, "Only a free man who's
tasted slavery would say such a
thing."
Jack raised his brows at him.
"Speak for yourself, Commodore. You are more the
slave than me ownsie. Your fancy regimentals
bind you a little too tightly to ever really
enjoy them, eh?"
Norrington smiled. "You
win. I won't deny that."
Jack paused,
considering Norrington's laces on his breeches
with a grimace. "Too tight, indeed. Methinks
your blade needs freeing more than you do."
Gallantly, he attempted to undo
them.
Norrington had to suck in a breath,
for Jack's fingers against his groin were
causing havoc.
At last the blasted laces
came undone, Norrington nearly coming undone
along with them. The need to lay full-length
against Jack was becoming painful. He had to
feel skin against skin.
Finally, Jack
pulled him down on the bed, and deftly turned
them so that Jack was lying atop him. At
Norrington's look of surprise and nervousness at
this, Jack swiftly said, "My turn, love, after
all."
The way Jack's eyes glittered was
more than enough to make him nod his head like a
puppet. "Need...your mouth."
Jack let out a
single laugh under his breath. "Bet you do,
after these past months." Jack bent and began a
protracted assault on his lips, accompanied with
cat-like writhings atop him that had him
whimpering before long.
As Jack released
him, he gasped with ragged breaths, "Damn it
all, Sparrow, get to it, can't you?"
"All
in good time, love; got to make sure you're
ready." Jack lifted off him to scrabble about
above their heads.
Norrington almost
laughed at the familiar sight of his own vial of
oil. "I wondered where that had got
to."
"A memento," Jack said by way of
explanation, uncorking it. "Give me your
hands."
Norrington did so, and was
relieved when Jack removed the shirt altogether.
He was then scintillated to find Jack anointing
his fingers. "Get me ready," Jack
ordered.
Happy to finally oblige, he took
Jack's cock between his slicked hands, careful
to avoid rubbing it with the rope edges, and
marveled at the way Jack tensed in his grasp,
and sucked a breath from between clenched
teeth.
Damn their earlier words; to
handle him this way was too intimate for it to
be anything other than ownership, however
temporary. Jack was his. And they both knew it,
in the way he could coax the pleasure from
him.
Sure enough, Jack finally had to
pull back, saying, "Enough, enough. Don't want
this over before it began."
Jack leaned
down to use his talented mouth on Norrington's
skin, the twin beaded braids of that dark beard
providing interesting secondary sensations as
those lush, full lips marched a deliciously
complete and wet trail downwards over his belly,
to his thighs.
At this point, Norrington
was indeed ready to beg. But Jack didn't appear
to want to make him plead, for he licked a path
up the weeping shaft and took him into his
mouth.
The shock of pleasure of being
engulfed in that hot, wet, silky heat was too
much and he spasmed, feeling the shooting begin
deep in his balls. He'd had to wait too long,
with too much anticipation without promise of
release, and the tantalizing sparring match
earlier followed by the kisses was too much. He
was unable to stem the tide as it raced from his
toes all the way up to his head.
His body
lifted off the bed as he came, pulsing into that
demonically delicious mouth, Jack's eyes
flicking upwards to meet his in that instant.
Holding him down, Jack sucked, catching it all,
wrenching it from him. Every last drop. Each
lingering tremor. Black fog covered him with
spots of light and his moans sounded hollow in
his ears as the ecstasy captured him and won him
over. And over and over.
The pleasure
was keen enough to be almost painful and still
that warm, lapping tongue lashed against the
head of his cock, drawing it out again and
again.
Finally, he had to beg him to
stop. Jack lifted off him with a final lick, and
regarded him with an expression reminiscent of a
cat that'd got the cream. Which he was, really,
Norrington supposed. Expectant, fond, even
smug.
"Was that worth waiting for,
then?"
Norrington tried to get his
breathing back to something regular. Far too
smug, by half. "So it would seem. Bit early to
tell, really."
He glanced back down and
nearly laughed at Jack's dismay.
In a
slightly ruffled tone, Jack complained, "I've
had no complaints yet."
"And you won't,"
Norrington assured him.
"Then it's time
for the piece de resistance," Jack said,
gleefully.
"What -is- it with you and
French?" Norrington wondered, not even trying to
edit his thoughts.
Jack paused at this,
and looked puzzled. "Can't say for sure. It's
not my fault the English borrow so much from
them. Phrases, statues, colonies...fashion." He
looked back down at Norrington with an evil
smile. "Positions."
Norrington hadn't
heard that before. "I don't buy that
one."
"Lie back and think of England,"
Jack replied. "You're about to have a
demonstration."
At Norrington's quickly
stifled expression of nervousness, Jack
undulated a little and said, "Trust me. I know
what I'm doing."
"Yes, that's what
bothers me," Norrington muttered.
Jack
merely laughed under his breath and dived down
once more to take Norrington's cock into his
mouth again. Nibbling gently, Jack coaxed his
organ into life, humming a little against him,
causing the most wonderful vibrations in doing
so.
Norrington's breath caught in his
throat. "That- that song. What is
that?"
Jack didn't answer him, merely
continued to lave at his cock, pulling at him
with long strokes and going up and down on him
with such practiced skill that Norrington
realized there was no way Jack was mimicking
moves done to him by some past whore - this was
from previous personal experience.
The
lilting, off-kilter tune was a little haunting,
inexplicably, and to have Jack humming it
continuously was curiously disturbing, as well
as exciting. Then he remembered. He'd been
singing it last night, along with the other
chanteys Jack had taught him. But it was one
he'd known and for some reason had known the
tune even before Jack had begun singing
it.
Getting him fully erect once more,
Jack pulled off of him and looked down, proud at
his achievement. "Not bad, if I do say so
meself."
"Elizabeth!" Norrington bit out,
the answer finally reaching his lust-addled
brain. "That's who it was. My God, that was
years ago."
Jack gave him a look that
bespoke volumes. "You'd be best not to go around
calling other men mad, mate. And I have to say,
it's bad manners to go shouting about your lost
fiance when I've done such a fine
job."
"My apologies, it was just that
song you were humming."
"Ah yes, darling
Elizabeth," Jack said, understanding him now. "A
pretty partridge if ever there was one. Tell me,
Commodore, have you ever shared a bed with a
couple before?"
"A couple of
what?"
"Oh, now that begs the question,"
Jack smiled.
"Lasses, plural: yes. Lads,
singular. I'm afraid I've not had the pleasure
of having them together."
Jack urged him
to turn over. "You've not had enough spice in
your life."
"Hm. I'm of the mind you are
more than enough spice for anyone's life,"
Norrington replied as he complied.
The
warm hands that trailed thoughtfully down his
back and palmed his ass stilled his voice and
his thoughts.
Those fingers were parting
him, slickly, and the body heat radiating off
Jack's nearness caused an answering rush of the
so-recently attained pleasure to flood his
already-sensitized nerves. Questing fingers
encircled his opening and slid within him,
showing the same care than he'd shown Jack that
night, before. Now he was glad of it, and was
even gladder that he'd not been cruel. Or he
might never have this, as much of him as he
had.
Then Jack was finally, at long last,
laying full-length against him, those lovely
lips coming to rest against the back of his
neck.
"It's occurred to me that you -are-
cabin fever," Norrington commented, slightly
muffled against the bed.
"I'm a lot more
than that," Jack suggested in a low voice. "And
now, if you please, prepare to be
boarded."
Norrington twitched and tried
not to laugh. "Boarded?"
"Nautical term,"
Jack mumbled, as he began the long, slow slide
within.
Norrington cried out against the
bed, not sure if it was from pleasure or pain or
both and something more altogether. Taken.
Owned.
Wasn't that the point, he
wondered? To own each other for a short while,
and take everything the other had to give. To
give it all until satiated.
Every inch of
Jack's hardness that glided deeper into his
body, pressing farther with each slow stroke,
even and gentle, yet merciless, answered with an
assent.
Jack's guttural moan, accompanied
by the teeth biting into his neck, was an
additional incentive to take it all. He reared
back, impaling himself more fully on Jack's
cock, wringing a surprised hiss from the man who
rode him.
Then teeth nipped at his ear,
catching the lobe and stinging, followed by the
hot swipe of tongue and an ardent whisper. "Very
accommodating, even now."
The pirate
began that wonderful, slow wriggling motion that
Norrington remembered from before... It was novel
to be on the receiving end this time. He finally
had a better idea just what it could inspire,
let alone accomplish.
"Do it," he gritted
out.
"Ask for it, and you might get it,"
Jack murmured.
Shit, Norrington thought,
the penny dropping now. So this was where Jack
used that charm of his to take what he wanted.
"Please, harder," he managed.
"Can't hear
you properly, mate; you'll 'ave to speak up,"
Jack said, a note of amusement creeping into his
voice. He kept the pace slow and stoking, only
enough to keep his partner on the
edge.
"Please!" Norrington exclaimed.
"Damn you! Stop teasing and just get on with it,
please!"
"Music to me ears, at last. Was
that really so difficult?" Jack's grin colored
his reply, but he did increase the
tempo.
"Oh, fuck," Norrington gasped, as
Jack's length moved in and out of him, removing
every remaining scrap of doubt from his
consciousness: the man was a devil.
A
true devil of a pirate. No one else could fuck
with all the abandon of a common whore, all the
passion of a lusty wench, and the surety and
strength of a hard-bodied soldier all at once -
and still deliver just the right combination of
measured care to a bed-fellow who was virgin to
the experience.
Hammered into him, driven
into his core, taken and used like any lass
who'd ever begged him for it, he finally found
his release. It boiled up with sizzling slowness
of a damp fire, the edge pounded away from his
earlier completion, and his body yet hungry for
it once more. Jack had tuned him like a fine
instrument. And straining for the edge, he
reached it at long last and tumbled
over.
As the waterfall rushed over him
and pulled him down, he hadn't expected it to be
so complete. The white, rushing roar of desire
attained, only to discover that it still was not
enough and never could be, even as he was lost
in it.
When he regained his sense of who
and where he was, he grew aware of Jack's arms
holding him close about his body, and Jack's
rhythmic breathing against him. They were still.
Unaccountably, the pillow beneath his face was
slightly sodden.
He didn't want to break
the silence. He hoped Jack would not
either.
It was over too
soon.
***
Jack sighed against the
lust-sheened skin his cheek was pressed into.
The recently educated Commodore was very quiet.
Jack hoped there wouldn't be histrionics.
Couldn't abide those; terribly unnecessarily,
really. He was a sure thing, after all. And he
was relatively certain that he hadn't hurt
him.
It had been far better than he'd
expected, and the whole thing had gone down far
better than he'd hoped.
Which was good,
because they'd only just got started. He was
committed to educating his Commodore Norrington
on several other interesting
positions.
Norrington's sated comment was
enough to assure him there wouldn't be any
histrionics after all. "I'm glad to know you
give as good as you get."
Jack idly
traced his fingers over the unmarked, pale
shoulder in front of him. "That's because I'm as
good as it gets."
Norrington replied
thoughtfully, "I suppose you are, at that. I
never would have guessed."
Jack wasn't
sure he wanted his Commodore to enlighten him
about what he was referring to.
"With
some men, and women also, the swagger and swank
hides a neophyte."
Jack couldn't agree
more, but he didn't respond, mostly because he
was a little taken aback at the perceptivity his
Commodore was suddenly showing, about his own
little self. All right, a lot; a lot taken
aback. It was unnerving.
At that point,
he looked up and saw the telltale trail that
still marked his Commodore's face and Jack
frowned. That was even more unnerving. Suddenly,
the idea of tormenting and leading the man on
was about as unnecessary as trying to excite his
own self to commit acts of piracy. He could
afford to be lenient.
Gathering himself
up, he drew a breath and leaned close, pressing
a kiss to the wet cheek, and whispered, "You're
right, love. But you know, you did save me life.
You've come a long way, so you
have."
Norrington blinked several times.
Wryly, he replied, "I guess I have, haven't I?
I'd hardened my heart to the point of letting go
of the woman I loved."
"Aye, you loved
her, but did you really -love- her," Jack asked.
"The things you love are different from the
things you -really- love."
Norrington's
reply was troubled however. "I'm not sure I
understand your distinction."
Jack
smiled, slowly. He was never one to ignore an
opening when someone kindly offered one. Or to
take one when he saw it, even if it might upset
others. "Take the idea of a ship, for example.
We both love ships, we do. But now take the
Pearl," Jack continued, pausing for effect. "I
-really- love the Pearl."
"Then I loved
Elizabeth, but I -really- loved the idea of her
more than anything else."
"Lot easier to
love an idea," Jack agreed. He sank his head
down and sighed, contentedly. "The idea of
freedom. Or love."
Norrington tensed
under him. Jack winced. He hoped this wasn't a
prelude to those histrionics.
But his
Commodore surprised him again, saying only, "You
don't fit my idea of a pirate, and yet you
complete it. You're a conundrum."
Jack
considered this, his brow wrinkling slightly. It
didn't exactly sound flattering. "I assure you,
I was a pirate before you were born."
"I
don't doubt it," Norrington said, amusedly. "I
suppose because of you, I'm having to reassess
my definition."
There was something
distinctly different about Norrington's attitude
towards life. There'd always been the potential,
of course. To be a free man. Not bound by the
rules that governed those who preferred to be
governed.
Jack kissed the smooth back
under him and ran his hand back up to his
Commodore's shoulder, enjoying the contrast of
the colors of their skin. "Saw it in your eyes,
you know. When we met."
Norrington seemed
to understand his cryptic comment perfectly. "I
know." Then, he revealed the first hint of
awkward vulnerability. "I may have come to need
this too much."
Jack grinned behind him
and squeezed slightly. "Not all treasure's
silver and gold."
"Then I'm as much a
pirate as you are, and I'm living by
double-standards."
"Don't start beating
yourself up, love. Life will do that just as
well."
"Was it for treasure, then, that
you were waiting off Exuma in that bay where my
ship is sunk?" Norrington hesitated. "Don't
patronize me, Sparrow, and just tell me the
truth."
Jack lifted his head, a little
scandalized. "Patronize? Me? You're patronizing
enough for a fleet of British all on your
ownsie, Commodore."
"Don't mince words
with me," Norrington said, mildly. "You can tell
me the truth for once."
"And where's the
fun in that?" Jack was sincere. After all, if
they didn't have anything to discuss, the voyage
would get boring very quickly. In between
shagging, and duels, and drinking rum and
singing, that is.
And attempting to
ascertain the Naval ships' courses, and headings
and positions.
Jack chuckled atop his
Commodore, who sighed, guessing at that moment
that Jack's thoughts were turning once more
towards ever-more complicated intricacies of
manipulation and revelry; and he wasn't
wrong.
- fini -
***
[Next Chapter: 3 - A Pair of Particularly Pretty Pirates]
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