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Chapter
One: Taken Prisoner
A tattered blanket of cloud looked down on the black ship ploughing
its way through the warm Caribbean waters. The majority of the
crew were below hatches getting some much-needed rest. Above,
only two watchmen and the bosun's mate at the wheel were witness
to Jack's roving. He had been prowling the ship for hours now,
checking every cabin and storeroom, every rope, every plank, until
his crew began to grumble. But this was his ship, and he wanted
to see what harm she had taken from Barbossa and his unholy crew.
His fingers caressed the wooden rail under his hand, sliding sensuously
along the polished surface. Ah, but she was beautiful. The poor
old girl had taken a battering from Barbossa, but his crew had
worked hard to keep her seaworthy. Below decks, water seeped in
slowly despite their running repairs, keeping their progress slow,
but Jack wasn't worried - in a day or two they would reach a safe
harbour and he could see to her refit. What was a little water
on board compared to the troubles his darlin' had seen? Though
if things got really tight they could stop off at Shandling Bay
and effect sturdier repairs. He didn't like the idea much - the
Navy knew all about that shallow inlet, but it was an option -
and he was all for keeping his options open.
From the moment he had stepped foot on board the Black Pearl,
Jack had been filled with a sense of security long missing. He
knew the feeling would be transitory. It wouldn't be long before
Norrington came looking for him, but for now he was enjoying the
oneness he felt with his surroundings.
He made his way to the poop deck, nodding to Cotton at the wheel,
and headed for his favourite spot. Had anyone seen him at that
moment they would have wondered at the steady gait, for here,
on board his ship, his movements synchronised perfectly with the
pitch and yaw under his feet. With a sigh he stretched out, one
arm beneath his head. He had spent too many hours cooped up behind
bars just lately; he needed the wind on his face and the sense
of space all around him. As the moon peeped out from between the
clouds Jack found himself holding his breath, waiting for the
moonlight to find him. He held up one hand in the sudden pearly
glow and sighed in relief. Real flesh and blood cast a shadow
across his features. He flexed his fingers, wiggling them in the
faint light, a delighted self-satisfied grin on his face.
Pulling his battered hat down over his face, Jack let his senses
begin to drift. Under his back the hard wooden planks moved with
every swell of the ocean. The familiar slap of the waves against
the hull was comforting. It seemed a veritable age since he had
slept on the Black Pearl's deck with the tang of salt in every
breath he took.
The creak of wood, the snap of canvas as the wind bit into the
sails, were all so very familiar
but something didn't feel
quite right. Something, and he had no idea what, distant yet increasingly
insistent to his senses, disturbed his rest. Slowly Jack pushed
himself upright, moving his hat to sit securely on his head. Standing,
he made his way forward and let his eyes scan the dim horizon.
His ship was running dark. No light shone from any portal. Only
the tiny flicker of a half-hidden lamp was to be seen and then
only when Cotton needed to check the compass.
"Something ain't right," Jack murmured softly, as though
he were speaking his thoughts out loud. "The Pearl, she's
talking to me now." Jack trusted his instincts, trusted the
ship beneath his feet. He didn't have much faith in anything else,
but his gut never lied. "Something's coming."
Cotton gave Jack a strange look, but his captain had already
moved to the rail. Jack looked up at the deepening blanket of
cloud and sniffed the air. There was a storm gathering - he could
feel it in the way the breeze blew against his face and in the
building tension in the atmosphere. Though that tension might
just as easily be within him. Something was making his spine tingle
with anticipation, and not in a good way. Jack searched for another
break in the clouds where the moon might peek through and light
the vista around him. Moving slowly, he kept his eye on the distant
horizon, waiting for the moon to show itself between the clouds.
She didn't disappoint. A faint glimmer of white from astern was
all he needed - the moon reflected off the white canvas of a ship
coming up behind them. Keep calm, he adjured himself. No way it
was Norrington on his trail already. He'd seen the capitulation
in the man's eyes that would give him a good day, maybe two, head
start - or so he hoped.
Each time the moon peeked out from behind the clouds, the following
ship seemed to be a little closer. Her lines were familiar - and
very unwelcome. Right now Jack would give anything to have Barbossa's
crew on board to man the oars and put a bit of speed onto the
Pearl's stuttering gait.
He gazed up at his own rigging and cursed the crew for having
replaced the black sails. Each time the moon showed her face the
sails lit up like a beacon, pinpointing them for all to see. First
thing he would do, if he got out of this one, would be to dye
those pristine sails black once more.
His stomach tensed as he thought of the last time he had seen
the chasing ship's sails and remembered the promise her captain
had made when they had parted.
He lingered for one last gaze, assuring himself he was not mistaken,
then flew down the stairs, barrelling through the doors and down
to where his crew rested.
"Lively now, boys." Jack's voice clarioned over the
assorted snores and grunts. "Up, lads," he exhorted,
shaking shoulders, kicking at backsides. "If you value your
hides get up in the rigging; all sails now and get the wind full
in them. Covenant's right behind us."
Gibbs was staggering to his feet, dragging a hand across his
eyes to brush the dregs of sleep from them when Jack's words brought
him to a halt.
"You sure, Jack? I thought you put Covenant down five year
ago now. He's not been in these waters since before we met."
Jack's apologetic grimace and the eloquent shrug of his shoulders
told its own tale. "What can I tell you?"
Gibbs shook his head in exasperation, pushing his way past his
captain to rally the crew.
"AnaMaria, get the guns run out, load them with whatever
we have
" Her furious gaze brought Jack to a halt.
"Ain't nothing left to put in the cannon, Captain. Barbossa
left us with nothing; not one cannon ball - almost as if he knew
we'd come to this. We're sitting ducks."
Jack couldn't believe it. His ship - unarmed. Covenant would
blow them out of the water. Nor would Harry care what happened
to the Black Pearl's crew - it was Jack he would be after. The
leaden boom of a cannon being fired close by was swiftly followed
by the splash of a cannon ball hitting the sea. Jack raced back
to his place on deck, noting that Covenant's vessel was closing
the gap rapidly. The Pearl was within range of his guns now. Another
shot soared towards them and hit water just in front of the Pearl's
prow. Harry's gunners wouldn't miss unless instructed to, which
gave Jack hope that it wasn't the sinking of Jack's ship Harry
wanted, but Jack himself.
"We can't outrun him, Jack!" Gibbs called from the
rigging. "We have every sail unfurled. She's taking all the
breeze there is and he's still gaining on us."
If it had been just his neck on the line Jack wouldn't have hesitated
to trust to his luck, but looking round at his ragtag crew, good
people the lot of them, he couldn't ask them to fight this battle.
If he gave himself up, Covenant might be more likely to be lenient
with the others. Jack had nothing left to fight with, no harbour
close enough to run to, no weapons save his quick wits - and they
wouldn't stop the cannon being aimed at his ship right now.
Setting his hat more firmly on his head, he shouted up to his
first mate. "Put up a white flag, Gibbs, and get you and
the others below."
"What are you doing lad? Covenant'll string you up for sure."
Jack's grin had lost some of its insouciance. "He can try,
mate. Others have before him and here I am!" He stared over
at the ship, now coming alongside his own, her gun ports open
and aimed at the Black Pearl's already battered sides. Would Harry
sink the Pearl? He might, and there was nothing Jack could do
to stop him. Jack's dark eyes lit with apprehension as he realised
that Gibbs and the crew had ignored his orders and were standing
just behind him - waiting.
Jack's eye caught the new name emblazoned on the sloop's hull
- Revenge - and wondered just how the hell he was going to get
out of this.
~~~~
Jack had been the first to cross to the Revenge, his crew tagging
along reluctantly. They all stood in a ragged group outside the
open door to the main cabin. Around him ranged some familiar faces.
He tried an ingratiating smile, only to be met with stony looks
and less than encouraging grins. From within, Jack could see the
Revenge's captain sitting in solitary splendour upon a gilt chair.
He tried another smile. It had no effect.
Covenant eyed Jack and his crew with a baleful eye. With a wave
of his good hand he dismissed the handful of crew that had been
aboard the Black Pearl.
Gibbs voice called back to him as his crew were escorted, none
too gently, to where a plank still linked the two ships. "I'm
sorry, Jack!"
Jack took a moment to lock his gaze with the old man's. He nodded
his head once in understanding then returned his attention to
Harry who was watching him with an anticipatory look in his eye
that Jack really didn't like.
"Shall I sink her for you Jack? Add a few more holes to
that battered hull? No - I think it's more fitting that she sails
away from you under a new captain - again. One who'll take better
care of her?"
For once Jack could find no words, his throat constricting uncomfortably
and once again he had the depressing knowledge that his ship would
shortly be sailing away without him.
"Cast them off, lads." Covenant's voice was filled
with a bitter satisfaction. "Take a good look, Jack Sparrow,
for that's the last time you'll ever see your darling Black Pearl."
Jack watched the black hulk edging away from him, ignoring Harry's
words. His ship would survive - he knew that with a certainty.
She'd been through all kinds of hell, literally, and come out
the other side. So maybe this wasn't his time to be her captain
- but one day
"Bring him in here!"
Ungentle hands grabbed his arms, dragging him into the main cabin
until he stood in front of the Revenge's captain.
Covenant's voice dropped into the silence that had settled in
the room. "It's been a while, Sparrow. You're looking well."
Jack couldn't say the same for Captain Covenant. The burn-scarred
face with one good eye watched him with a coldness that could
freeze the salt water under the hull. The man's left hand was
clawed where burned skin had not healed properly, and when he
rose to pace around his prisoner, his right leg dragged significantly,
even with the use of a silver-handled cane.
Jack grimaced at the sight, and understood why Covenant had renamed
his ship. There was no way he would let Jack go
given that
Jack was the one who had brought him to this.
"I'll give you till dawn, Sparrow. I've had five long years
to anticipate this moment - I'll give you till the sun comes up.
Then I'm going to string you up to my yardarm and watch you dance."
Even when he had been standing on the hangman's dais, listening
to his crimes being read out, Jack had not been this aware of
his mortality. Something always came along to give him an edge,
a way out. He didn't want to resign himself to a quick drop for
Harry's amusement, but he was damned if he could see a way out.
He chanced a look at the weather-beaten faces surrounding him,
some familiar some not, but could see no glimmer of sympathy in
any of them. Turning back to his captor he tried in his best wheedling
voice. "Now, Harry, you don't really want to do that! Can't
we come to an accord? There must be something I can offer you
that's worth my life? Treasure perhaps? I know just the place
"
Harry took a step forward, his cane tapping hard on the wooden
floor. "The only thing I want from you Jack is a fair jig
in the morning breeze."
Suddenly Covenant took a shaky step forward, his cane lashing
out to catch Jack a telling blow to the side of his head. Lights
flickered in front of Jack's eyes as he reeled backwards. Behind
him, someone aimed a savage kick at his legs, sending him tumbling
to the floor, then something hard cracked into Jack's ribs, whooshing
the air from his lungs. For a moment he lost consciousness, blackness
taking him hostage.
As his mind began to work once more, Jack was aware of hands
under his shoulders and his feet dragging on the rough planks.
A creaking from ahead indicated a door being opened. Jack opened
his eyes warily and dropped his gaze. Below him gaped an open
trap door, through which Jack could make out the faint sound of
water sloshing against the hull.
"Enjoy your stay, Captain Sparrow," a coarse voice
chortled from above him, then the hands let him go and he tumbled
into the bilge with a splash.

Chapter 2
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