It is long past midnight, but Commodore Norrington does not sleep.
He has had to write another letter todaythe fifteenth so far.
He prays to God this is the last one. At least this time he can
honestly tell the grieving parents or wife or sweetheart that the
young man died a hero in the service of others. The elimination
of Barbossa and his murderous crew will bring blessed relief to
the entire Caribbean. Not that this knowledge will provide any comfort.
But sometimes Norrington needs to know that this mowing down of
the flower of British youth makes some difference, that the tears
that fall are not in vain. Tonight he could almost envy the men
who have served their country with their deaths. The strain of serving
with his life seems an unbearable burden.
Tomorrow he will be present at another hanging. He has never
relished hangings as some of his men do. They are merely part
of his bitter responsibility to make this territory safe and productive
for the law-abiding citizens who live and do business here. If
he could rejoice in this wholesale dealing of death, now would
certainly be the time, for he has never condemned a more merciless,
murderous lot of cutthroatsbut he merely feels an exhausted
desire for the whole sordid business to be over. He wishes that
at least these executions could be privatesober, just retributionnot
the carnival deterrents for the mobs entertainment that
they must be.
Absentmindedly, he shuffles the paperwork for his next days
schedule. A name catches his eye, and he flips back through the
pages. Jack Sparrow. Oh. Not one of Barbossas lot tomorrow,
then. One month ago, that name would have meant nothing more nor
less to him than Barbossas name. A pirate. One of that vile
and dissolute lot of men it has been his goal to eliminate. His
duty still demands the mans execution. This is what Elizabeth
refuses to understand.
Slowly he rereads the list of crimes of which Sparrow has been
convicted, trying to regain that surety he felt the first time
he placed that eccentric pirate in chains. Piracy, smuggling,
impersonating an officer of the Spanish Royal Navy, impersonating
a cleric of the Church of England. The corner of James
mouth quirks ever so slightly. What he wouldnt give to know
the stories behind those last two. The moment of good humour is
fleeting. The truth behind these charges will forever be beyond
human reach shortly after dawn. Sailing under false colours,
arson, kidnapping, looting, poaching, brigandage, pilfering, depravity,
depredation, and general lawlessness.
Norrington cant help noticing the glaring absence of one
charge. Murder. Surely that is an oversight. The man could not
have amassed such a record without once being convicted of murder.
It does not matter to the law. Any one of those crimes with which
Sparrow is actually charged carries the penalty of death. But
it matters to the commodore. If, indeed, the man is not a murderer,
it leaves Norrington free to regret the necessity of the morrows
business.
Even more bitterly, he regrets his inability to persuade Elizabeth
not to attend that hanging. No possible good can come of it, of
that he is sure. It is bad enough that ladies attend such events
at all, but for a girl to see a friend die such a death . . .
James shivers. There is nothing pretty about a death by hanging.
In fact, he expects Sparrows death to be particularly ugly.
The pirate is not a heavy man.
He knows that gallows will stand between Elizabeth and himself
forever, an upraised and flaming sword, as his consent to abandon
Will Turner already does. He never imagined being betrothed to
the woman of his dreams could be so painful. Her eyeshe
can scarcely control a flinch when he meets that dark agony. Will
he ever be able to lose himself in those beautiful eyes? Or will
he always find his judge and executioner in them? She has accused
him, questioning the morality of any act that a man does not wish
a woman to witness. And his conscience writhes. She has defended
Sparrow, flinging at James the terrors she has endured and from
which the pirate has rescued heras though James memory
of his inability to save his love were not already carved on his
heart. She has begged him; the proud Elizabeth Swann has humbled
herself to the dust for the sake of that pirate. Oh God, how he
wishes it were within his power to give her anything she asks
of him.
And he curses Jack Sparrow for ever entering their lives, even
as he knows that if the pirate had not been there, Elizabeth would
be dead and Barbossa would still have unimpeded power in the Caribbean.
It galls Norrington to be obliged to execute a man to whom he
must also be eternally grateful.
The list of debts they owe to Sparrow superimposes itself in
shadowy script over the bold, black lines of the charges for which
the pirate will answer with his undefended flesh on the morn.
Where does the balance of justice lie?
A slender shaft of pale gray light sifts through the shutters.
Outside his window, birds begin their morning hymn. Dawn. One
line of the text on his desk is illuminated: And for these
crimes you have been sentenced to be, on this day, hung by the
neck until dead. May God have mercy on your soul.
May God have mercy on your soul, Jack Sparrow. May God have mercy
on mine.
~.~
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