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Chapter
Seven: The Black
Pearl
The
lamp was sputtering. It
wouldn’t last much longer. Not
that it mattered by this point.
Jack now knew every inch of the Revenge’s bilge, and was
on a first-name basis with every bilge rat.
He shuddered again.
At least that had been one good thing about the curse that
had afflicted the Black Pearl – no rats.
True, they’d probably infest his ship again the very next
time she made port, but it had been a pleasant few hours, sailing
on a rat-free ship. Even
the barnacles and shipworm seemed to have avoided the Pearl, Jack
had found as he had pored over her from stem to stern.
It almost made the curse worth having.
Almost.
No,
the sight of his darling, with those tattered black sails and
a layer of what could best be described as death and ashes coating
her sides…no, that wasn’t something he ever wanted to see again.
She had been a far cry from the beauty he had first seen,
that day ten years ago…
~~~
She
was the loveliest thing Jack had ever seen.
Looking back, he realized afterwards that that was the
moment he had fallen in love.
Which was bloody stupid, really, given that the ship he
had fallen in love with was manned by dozens of the Navy’s finest,
and was at that very moment swooping down on the Bloody Cutlass
like a stooping hawk.
She
wasn’t called the Black Pearl, of course, back then.
Captain Telford, standing on the pirate ship’s quarterdeck
had whipped out his spyglass and hollered out the ship’s name
to his crew, who were frantically hoisting every sail they had
in an attempt to escape their pursuers.
“’Tis
the Kingston Rose!”
Jack
had exchanged blank glances with O’Dell as they hauled on the
topgallant halyard. The
Kingston Rose? He
had never heard of her…
No, wait. Hadn’t
there been mention of an English galleon, newly commissioned for
the Navy, the last time the Cutlass had made port?
The something-Rose.
That must be her then.
Jack risked another glance over his shoulder at the ship
bearing down on them, while he tied off the line.
She
was wonderful. Black hull, white sails, and curves that could make a grown
man cry. The name
didn’t suit her at all.
She wasn’t a bloody flower – she was stronger than that.
Something to be treasured.
Like a pearl, maybe.
A black pearl…
A
galleon shouldn’t be able to move that fast, Jack thought as he
moved with O’Dell to the next set of lines.
She certainly shouldn’t be able to outrun the Bloody Cutlass,
one of the fastest little sloops in the Caribbean.
Nevertheless, there she was, happily ignoring all the laws
of physics as she came up behind the Cutlass and stole the wind
from the pirate ship’s sails.
It was at that moment, as the galleon moved alongside and
the first cannon shot breached the Cutlass’ hull, that Jack realized
two things. One –
their capture was inevitable.
And two – he had to have that ship.
~~~
The
battle was brief, bloody, and decisive.
Captain Telford died quickly, crushed under the mainmast
as it fell, cut down by one of the galleon’s cannon shells.
Bootstrap took a musket ball in the arm, but managed to
keep fighting with the other until an English Marine hit him over
the head with the butt end of his musket, and he too went down.
Jack didn’t have time to spare a thought for his old friend
though – he was too busy trying to organize the remaining pirates
into some kind of effective fighting force, while his mind searched
desperately for a plan – any plan.
In the end it didn’t matter – they had been outnumbered
and outgunned from the very start.
And so it was, less than a quarter hour after the Navy
men and Marines had first boarded, that Jack, limping from a cut
on his right thigh, found himself disarmed and shoved forward
with the other survivors to stand near the Bloody Cutlass’ starboard
rail.
Their
sloop had been aptly named, Jack thought bleakly as he watched
the blood running across the Cutlass’ deck and through the scuppers.
Half the crew were dead, or near enough to make no difference
– almost thirty pirates lay unmoving on the Cutlass’ deck.
Bootstrap was only semi-conscious, supported on two sides
by Halton and LaSalle, but at least he was alive.
For the moment.
This
was bad.
The
Naval Captain, a man of medium height with a slight squint, stepped
forward and looked condescendingly at the tattered remnants of
the pirate crew. He
sniffed slightly, then said:
“Who
is in charge here?”
Toffee-nosed
bastard, Jack thought bitterly, then shoved his anger to the back
of his mind. He had
to think, and to do that he needed to be calm.
“I
s’pose that would be me,” Jack said, glancing at the other pirates
to see if anyone would gainsay him.
No one did. Granted,
he had been First Mate prior to Telford’s death, but that didn’t
automatically make him Captain now – that wasn’t the way things
worked on a pirate vessel.
Still, it wasn’t as if anyone else were jumping up and
down to take on the job.
Neither did they have the time or inclination for their
usual vote - which put Jack squarely in charge, at least for the
moment.
Actually
it was the squinty-eyed Navy Captain who was in charge.
Him and all those large men with the guns...
Jack rubbed his throat.
He could almost feel the noose tightening about it.
Yes, this was very, very bad.
“And
you would be?” the Captain said, contempt lacing his every word.
It
was the contempt that made Jack throw his shoulders back and ignore
the pain in his leg. “I
might be the bloody
King of England,” he said mockingly, “but as it is, the name is
Jack Sparrow. Captain
Jack Sparrow.” He
rolled the new title around in his mind, trying it out and testing
the feel of it. It
felt good.
The
Captain nodded at the sailor nearest Jack.
The man reversed his musket and calmly slammed the butt
of it into Jack’s stomach. Jack doubled over and found himself with a close up view of
the deck beneath his feet, wondering if his lunch were about to
make a sudden reappearance.
If he were going to cast up his accounts, he decided through
the pain, he would aim for the Captain’s shoes.
The
man was talking again. “You,
Mister Sparrow, will
keep a civil tongue in your head or I’ll see that it’s cut out.”
He turned to the rest of the prisoners and spoke louder.
“I am Sir Granville Wells, Captain of His Majesty’s ship
the Kingston Rose. You
are all under arrest for piracy.
You will be transferred to my vessel where you will be
transported to Port Royal for trial and subsequent hanging.
Any attempt to escape will be met with immediate and lethal
force. Do I make
myself clear?”
Nobody
answered. Jack straightened gingerly, clutching his stomach.
“Clear as crystal, mate,” he said.
Wells
narrowed his eyes, then nodded once, briefly, before turning to
a nearby Lieutenant. “Williams, I want to see them all in irons before even one
of these… pirates…sets foot on my ship.
Understood?” He
grimaced, as if the word had brought a bad taste to his mouth.
“Aye
aye, sir.” Williams
in turn gestured to another man, who moved forward with the required
shackles.
Jack’s
mind was racing, even as he tried to keep his face impassive.
Once he had those irons around his wrists, he was as good
as dead. There had to be something he could do, some way out.
Unfortunately, his captors seemed to have the same idea.
As one, the Marines had all moved forward, training their
weapons squarely on the pirates.
One wrong move, Jack realized, and he would avoid the hangman’s
noose…by the simple manner of taking a musket ball in the heart.
This
was bad - on an astronomical level.
~~~
It
didn’t take long to shackle the surviving pirates, which was just
as well given the alarming way the Bloody Cutlass was listing
to starboard. She
must have taken a few cannon shots between wind and water, and
now her holds were filling with seawater.
The sloop was sinking fast and, with several pounds of
cold iron clapped around his arms, there wasn’t much Jack could
do about it. Besides,
he had other things to worry about.
Once he and the others were tossed into the brig of the
English galleon, it would only be a matter of time before he was
swinging from a gallows in Port Royal – or worse, an iron cage.
Definitely not the end he had in mind for Captain Jack
Sparrow. No, if he
were going to escape, he had to do it now, before he boarded the
other ship. Besides,
there was still the matter of taking the galleon – the Black Pearl,
as he was calling her now in his mind.
Despite the impossibility of his situation, he hadn’t given
up on that idea. If
anything, his intent had been strengthened.
She was meant to be his.
He could feel it as surely as he could feel the sea-spray
on his face and the late afternoon sun beating down on his back.
They were supposed to be together.
So, all he had to do was escape from the cream of the British
Navy, remove the irons from about his wrist, and take the ship
single-handedly. No
problem, right?
After
all, he was Captain Jack Sparrow.
It
wasn’t until Jack was crossing one of the planks the sailors had
set up between the galleon and the listing sloop, that an idea
finally hit him. Granted,
it wasn’t much of an idea, and it entailed a fair amount of risk
– okay, to be honest with himself, it fell just short of suicide,
and would quite probably be the stupidest thing he would ever
do – but it was an idea.
And the only one he had.
With no hesitation, Jack pulled his hat from his head,
clutched it securely in one hand…
…and
dove off the plank into the narrow space between the two ships.
He
hit the water cleanly, knifing through it like a seal, as shouts
and musket fire erupted around him.
Once in the water, he kept going, swimming downward as
quickly as he could. He
couldn’t risk being crushed between the two ships, and he had
to take into account the deeper draught of the galleon.
Actually,
down wasn’t really a
problem. The weight
of the irons, coupled with the strength of his dive, had sent
him plunging deeper rather more rapidly than he had expected.
The sea was already beginning to darken…and his lungs were
beginning to politely request that he get them some air.
Surely
he was far enough down by now?
Jack glanced up but couldn’t make out the keel of the Pearl.
He must be partway underneath her.
Fortunately the ocean currents were on his side, taking
him in the direction he wanted to go, toward the stern.
But the irons were still dragging at him and his lungs
were becoming more insistent.
He managed to kick off first one boot, then the other,
lightening his load a little, but his descent nevertheless continued,
albeit more slowly.
The
polite request from his lungs had turned into an unrelenting clamour.
Up. Now.
Jack tried, desperately, but his chained arms were next
to useless and he was forced to rely on his legs only.
It seemed to take an age, but at last he began to rise,
thought not fast enough.
Not nearly fast enough.
The surface was still too far away.
His chest was on fire now, red-hot knives slicing through
him as he fought the urge to inhale. His heart and head were pounding, desperate for the oxygen he
was denying them, and pain shot through every labouring muscle.
Drowning hurt, Jack discovered.
A lot.
Maybe
this hadn’t been the best plan after all.
It
was the sea itself that came to Jack’s aid.
Perhaps it was the current, or maybe he hit a patch of
water with a higher salt content, but whatever it was, Jack suddenly
found himself shooting upward like a cork from a wine-bottle…straight
toward the Black Pearl’s bottom. He cracked his head against her keel with such violence that
he would have seen stars – if they weren’t already flashing across
his eyes due to the lack of air.
He had a single moment of terror that the barnacles would
rip him to pieces before he realized that there were none.
This ship was still so new the creatures hadn’t had a chance
to fasten onto her keel.
Then, vision blurring and heart ready to explode, he half-swam,
half-felt his way out the last few yards and surfaced at last.
Jack
tried to breathe quietly, still acutely aware of his danger from
above, but for the first few moments he could do little besides
suck in great gasps of air as fast as possible and try to muffle
the coughing fit that threatened to overtake him. Breathing had never felt so good, he realized distantly.
Even if Wells’ men plucked him out of the ocean and hanged
him from the Pearl’s highest yardarm, or shot him dead where he
was, it would surely be better than what he had just gone through.
“So
help me, I am never going to die by drowning,” Jack swore to himself between breaths.
“Or by keel-hauling.
Especially keel-hauling.”
Eventually,
his heart and lungs settled down and his vision cleared.
Blinking away the seawater, Jack looked around…and his
spirits lifted. He was exactly where he had wanted to be – right underneath
the Pearl’s stern, hidden beneath the high overhang of her aftercastle.
Fortunately, the Cutlass was much shorter in length than
the galleon, so there was no chance anyone might spot him from
the other ship. On
the other hand, his “plan” still left him chained and treading
water beneath the Black Pearl.
If he couldn’t find something to hold onto, and soon, she
would leave him behind…or he would sink.
He could keep himself afloat for a while but eventually
he would get tired – well, more
tired – and down he would go, straight to Davy Jones’ Locker.
And if he stayed where he was, Jack was in danger of being
pulled under the ship, or caught up in her rudder.
Time
for a new plan.
He
could try to climb up the rudder chain and crawl through one of
the sternchaser’s gun ports, Jack thought as he peered upwards.
It wouldn’t be easy, especially with his hands tied, but
it was better than the alternative.
And it had the added benefit of being done before.
He wouldn’t be the first pirate to board a ship that way.
No, the real question was whether there would be any crew
still manning the guns.
After the broadside that had scuppered the Bloody Cutlass,
the Pearl’s gun decks would be full of smoke, but not so thick
that the crew wouldn’t notice one slightly soggy pirate climbing
through a gun port. And
even though the Cutlass was beyond hope, the gunners would probably
be still at their posts, until ordered otherwise.
And after that there would be the cleanup, readying the
guns for their next action.
No.
Better to wait. Which
still left Jack with the problem of where, precisely, to wait
and somehow avoid both detection and
drowning. He
couldn’t hear much from above, but it sounded like the crew were
preparing to hoist the sails even now.
He didn’t have much time.
The
Pearl’s stern drew his gaze again.
She was intricately carved, with patterns and designs etched
into her wood. Nothing
that would slow her down or interfere with her movement, but carvings
nonetheless. And
there, just above him – one corner of a design that reminded Jack
of a stylised seahorse.
Its tail jutted upward, just a little.
It wouldn’t be much of a handhold but it would have to
do. It was high enough
above the water line that he wouldn’t have to worry about the
rudder, but still far beneath anyone’s prying eyes. Reaching it, and holding onto it though – those would be the
real challenges. The
ledge was at least three feet above his head and already his legs
were beginning to protest as he struggled to keep himself afloat.
Jack wasn’t sure he would have the strength to hold on
once the ship began to move.
Actually, at nine knots or more, he knew
he wouldn’t. But…there
were still the chains around his wrist.
A tired grin began to pull at Jack’s lips, his gold teeth
glinting in the shadows. Maybe he should thank Captain Wells for clapping him in irons
after all. Because
the chains might just save his life and
help him steal the ship.
Life
was nothing if not ironic.
~~~
The
next hour or so pretty much redefined pain for Jack.
He had managed, after two or three attempts, to loop the
chains around the tail of the seahorse design, and after that
it had simply been a matter of hanging on. Or rather, simply hanging there while clinging to consciousness
with everything he had.
The ship had set sail quickly, leaving the Bloody Cutlass
wallowing on her side behind them.
Jack hadn’t seen his old ship go down, and he was glad
of it. It was painful
enough watching any ship sink, let alone one that had been his
home for several years.
No, he had been too busy trying to keep his arms from being
torn out of his sockets as the galleon had gained speed.
He had managed to brace himself against the ship for a
while, but eventually his strength had given out and he had ended
up being dragged.
The
Pearl was definitely fast.
He had known that on one level as the black galleon had
swooped down upon the Cutlass out of nowhere.
But being pulled along behind her while she raced through
the waves brought it all home on a much more - profound – level.
Fortunately the seas were smooth, and, just as fortunately,
the Cutlass had been captured late in the day.
The sun was already sinking, colouring the sea pink and
crimson. Soon Jack
would have the cover of darkness he needed.
Assuming his arms were still attached, that was.
Still, best not to worry.
He had done all he could.
Now he just had to hold on.
And wait.
And
hope.
Praying
might not be a bad idea either.
~~~
In
the end it was all surprisingly easy.
True, climbing the rudder chain with arms that felt as
if they had been set on fire wasn’t the most undemanding thing
Jack had ever done. And
he didn’t so much climb through the gun port as fall through it,
certain bits of his anatomy coming into hard and painful contact
with the cannon stationed there.
Luckily there had been no one nearby and he had had a few
precious seconds to writhe silently while the pain subsided.
The
first man he encountered, a Marine guarding the lower decks, had
fallen quickly and quietly after Jack hit him over the head with
a lantern. Once armed,
though still chained, the pirate had crept silently toward the
brig where his shipmates were incarcerated.
There, LaSalle had been able to use the knife that Jack
had appropriated, to pick the lock of the door – and not inconsequentially,
the irons around everyone’s wrists, including Jack’s.
And then they had taken the ship.
Oh,
it hadn’t been as easy as that.
The pirates were greatly outnumbered, and some of them,
including Bootstrap, were wounded. Nevertheless, taking the blustering Captain Wells hostage,
along with a few clever bluffs and Jack’s final threat, delivered
in a steely voice, to blow the gunpowder in the decks below and
so take the sailors to the deepest level of hell along with the
pirates – well, all that had taken the wind out of the Navy’s
sails. The sailors
had been persuaded to take to the boats and leave their ship behind.
The last view Jack had was of Captain Wells, still in his
nightclothes and shaking his fist furiously, while Jack sailed
the man’s ship away.
No.
She was his ship
now.
Jack
took a long deep breath then tucked the pistol he had stolen into
his waistband before turning from the wheel to where Bootstrap
had been propped up nearby.
Dried blood stained William Turner’s shirt and his left
hand was tucked into his belt, to avoid jarring his shoulder.
Jack shot him a quick look.
“You
going to live, mate?” he asked.
Bootstrap
hesitated then nodded. “Probably.
You?”
Jack
took stock. His leg had begun to hurt again.
The saltwater hadn’t done the wound on his leg much good,
and his shoulders were still sore from hanging from the ship’s
stern, but overall he was in good shape.
In fact, he was better than good.
For the first time he let himself look around, running
a caressing hand over the ebony wood of the wheel.
A grin he could no longer contain lit his face.
“She’s
a beauty, isn’t she?”
“They’re
going to call you soft, you know.”
Jack
gave Bootstrap a questioning glance.
The other man nodded toward the stern, where the galleon’s
boats were slowly disappearing over the horizon.
“They’ll say you should have killed the crew, not set them
free.”
Jack
shook his head. “No. We were outnumbered.
Had we shot even one of them, the rest would have known
their only hope was to rush us.
They’d have retaken the ship and we’d be dead.
‘Twas better this way.”
“Better?
Better for that Captain, and probably half the ships in
the British fleet to come chasing after us?
You call that better?”
Jack
threw back his head and laughed.
“Let them come. We’ve got the fastest ship in the Caribbean now.
She’s all ours.”
Bootstrap
snorted. “All yours, you mean.
You know they’ll vote you Captain.
I’ll eat O’Dell’s hat if they don’t.”
Captain
Sparrow. Captain Jack Sparrow of the Black Pearl.
God, that sounded good.
“The
what?”
He
must have said that part out loud.
Jack turned to Bootstrap, his smile widening.
“The Black Pearl.
It’s her new name.”
Bootstrap
paused, turning the name over in his mind, then he too smiled.
“I like it. Good
name for a pirate ship.
So, Captain,
what are your plans now?”
Jack
straightened and settled his hat a little more firmly on his head,
then took the wheel, feeling the ship respond instantly to his
touch. “Now,” he
said firmly, “we sail for Tortuga and take on more crew.
After that…” He touched the compass still dangling safely
from his belt, reassuring himself that it was still there.
“After
that,” he continued, “what do you say to a visit to Isla de Muerta?”
~~~
The
pirates had indeed voted him captain, Jack remembered with a smile,
even though there had been some question about his youth.
He was only twenty-four at the time, after all.
But he had saved them from certain death, and had managed
to steal the Pearl out from under the nose of the Navy.
Better yet, he had promised them gold.
The treasures of Isla de Muerta would be enough to make
them all rich men and now that he had his own ship, the time was
finally right to fulfill the compass’ promise.
Of
course, it had all gone horribly wrong.
The memories came quicker now, flickering through Jack’s
mind. Tortuga.
Signing on more crew.
His monumental mistake in hiring on Barbossa.
Giving the bearings to Barbossa three days into the sail.
And that night…the mutiny.
It
was hardly surprising, really.
When had anything ever gone right for him?
Even now, mere hours after regaining the Black Pearl and
escaping from Norrington, here he was, worse off than before.
Jack sighed and stared gloomily at the bilge water that
was now nearly at the top of his boots.
Maybe he should just accept the fact that he was doomed
to fail, that he was never meant to have the Black Pearl…
Like
hell.
He
had escaped certain death before and he would do it again.
Somehow.

Chapter 8
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