Disclaimer: I don't own it. Everything you recognise belongs to Disney.
No infringement
is intended and I'm certainly not making any money from this story.
Summary: My Jack and Elizabeth storyline continues... This follows "Fair
Weather Morning".
Author's note: Just wanted to say thanks to all who have commented on
the previous
parts, I really appreciate it and I'm very glad you've liked the stories!
Marchland
by Hereswith
When Jack first stood at the helm again, it was a noteworthy moment, even though
they lay
anchored outside Tortuga, and the Pearl could only respond to his bidding in
the subtlest
of fashions. Excited whispers and scattered murmurs of approval could be heard
among the
crew; to them, this was a sign that their Captain was well on the mend.
And so he was. Not completely healed, but less haunted, and he had a restive
air about him
that reminded Elizabeth of a bird she had seen, years ago, in a gilt-wire cage
at Lady Hatherley's
mansion, its entire body coiled tight around the desire to take flight. He would
spread his wings
soon, the sparrow would, and seek the reaches of the sky.
She crossed her arms, frowning. The setting sun made the colours rich and vibrant,
and the
scene before her near beckoned to be captured on canvas, with brushes and paint,
yet it
seemed to her that something, some important detail, was missing, and she could
not figure
out what, to begin with; then it struck her, and she hurried down below to get
the hat.
xx
She returned to the deck, slightly out of breath, and Gibbs gave her a nod,
as she approached,
and half a smile, when he spotted what she had behind her back. Jack, however,
did not
acknowledge her arrival. He was still in the midst of some deep and private
communion with
the Pearl and Elizabeth hesitated, watching the play of those slender fingers
along the spokes
of the wheel with an emotion very much akin to envy.
He had not touched her, on purpose or by accident, since the morning she had
woken in his
bed. And it was, to be honest, driving her to distraction. She was all edges,
on account of him,
prickly like needles and sharpened like swords, and not even solitude, such
as could be found
on the ship, brought her any measure of relief. Things clung, in the sweltering
heat: fabric of
clothing, tendrils of hair and the most wanton of thoughts.
Once, by the side of a roaring bonfire, he had laid his hand on her shoulder,
his thumb raised like
an unspoken question. She had been younger then and not precisely sober and
he, not precisely
sottish; and her affection for Will had doused the faint flickers of temptation.
It was different, this time. She wasn't a blacksmith's darling,
not a blacksmith's wife, and Jack
had asked her, plain and simple. Yes or no. But they had danced in circles around
each other
for so long that though her heart had stilled, in that instant, the rest of
her, caught up in the
motion,
had not been able to stop.
Her musings were suddenly and rudely interrupted by a parrot-shaped blur that
swept by, so
close she felt the rush of wind from its passing, and landed, with nary a wobble,
on the wheel.
Jack lifted his head, brows arching high. The bird did not budge.
"Fine," said Jack, stepping backwards. "But it's not to be a habit, savvy?"
Parrot's beak opened and closed, but no sound emerged.
Gibbs muttered an oath and Jack glanced over at him, before pinning Elizabeth
with a heavily
dark-rimmed gaze. And that particular embellishment of his person was also a
sign, of sorts, for
while his strength had failed him, he had forgone the use of kohl. "What's
that, then?"
"Well—" she began, strangely reluctant to part with the hat.
It had buoyed her, when she had
feared he was dead, the smooth leather bearing silent witness to both her anger
and her grief.
But
she looked at him—Captain Jack Sparrow, blessedly alive—and she
straightened,
determinedly, shrugging off the residue of pain. "I've decided I shan't
keep it," she continued,
holding out the tricorn. "It is yours, and I've no need of it, now."
"No?" He took the offered treasure. "I'm much obliged, love."
She almost flinched, and berated herself rather fiercely for it. He had called
her that so often,
wearing away at her initial dismay, little by little, and his tone had not changed.
It wasn't more
of an endearment than it had been in the past, and so, did not warrant such
a reaction.
Jack put the hat on, on top of the red bandanna and the odd assortment of decorations
and,
after adjusting it to his liking, proceeded to curl the ends of his moustache
upwards. "There!
What say you?"
"Shiver me timbers!" Parrot stated, and preened.
Gibbs barked out a laugh, rubbing his chin. "Aye," he agreed, "the
blasted bird has the right
of it. Ye cut a grand figure, lad, that's fer sure."
Jack bowed low, a peculiar gleam in his eyes. "Mrs. Turner?"
"Quite the pirate captain," Elizabeth managed, after a brief inner
struggle, and it wasn't the
reply that burned on her tongue, but it would have to do. She'd be damned
before she admitted
just how fetching he was, in that gaudy and utterly outrageous way of his, especially
with Gibbs,
and Parrot, within earshot.
But he knew. She could not hope to believe that he didn't, because—oh,
God—that grin.
He unleashed the white and the gold like he would have a blistering broadside
and there
was no mistaking the challenge or, indeed, which query it was he dared her to answer.
Yes or no, Lizzie. Aye or nay.
