http://heart0foak.livejournal.com/ (
heart0foak.livejournal.com) wrote in
tampered2006-08-09 08:42 pm
Log, Incomplete
When; Shortly after this
Rating; God knows. PG-13?
Characters; Mister Norrington (
heart0foak) and Captain Davy Jones (
deadnordying
Summary; Like a doomed fool, Norrington goes out to the Flying Dutchman to attempt a parley with Davy Jones. Dreadfully sorry if there have been spoilers, but you've all had plenty of time to see it now. :P
Log;
Strolling across the sands, red naval coat slung nonchalantly over one shoulder, James Norrington seemed the very picture of arrogant self-assurance. In truth, he was almost crapping himself in fear. He'd agreed to meet the pirate other pirates were scared of, the bogeyman of the ocean deeps, and he had no idea what was going to happen. Fear was an ally, though, he knew that. It kept a man on his toes. A man without fear on the high seas was dead in a very short time. And death, well, death he'd stared in the eyes so many times they were practically on a first name basis..
He reached the docks that had materialised with the Going Merry and found the Black Swan's longboat tied up there. It was a difficult craft to handle alone, but he'd managed before. After a quick look around to check that no-one had followed him to try any additional heroics, he clambered over the side and took up position on the bench, before shipping the oars and untying the painter. As the boat floated out beyond the two vessels, he scanned the horizon. Up on the deck of the Swan, something glinted in the mysterious sunlight that shone inside a building. That made him smile.
However, there was one thing missing from this idyllic afternoon. The Dutchman. As the little jolly boat rocked gently on the tide, Norrington shaded his eyes and peered into the distance.
Then, he felt something began to rumble in his feet, and the vibrations continued up through his feet. The water around the boat began to rumble. Norrington dived into the bows, partially to make sure the boat had less of a chance of capsizing on him, and partially out of abject terror. Sadly, this meant he missed a hundred feet of rotting, dripping, barnacle-festooned wood emerging from the briny depths in a great shower of spray, like a great and terrible leviathan of old, and coming to rest a few yards away. Heavily drenched by the salty blast from the Flying Dutchman's appearance, Norrington sat up, choked briefly on the stench of old seaweed, then fished out the oars and paddled over to align himself with the port side of the monstrous vessel. He peered up from below at the mass of wooden spikes, the overly pointed prow, and the tattered and hanging sails, coated with the caught up flotsam of centuries. It was a huge battleship of a boat, a mighty command, probably relatively slow with the size of it, but with some astonishing firepower. He was impressed.
As the longboat bobbed by the vessel's keel, Norrington stood up carefully and swung his coat over his shoulder again. He put a hand to his mouth and face up above him towards the deck.
"Jones! Permission to come a.."
A rope ladder thumped unceremoniously into the boat next to him. He frowned at it, shrugged, and began to climb...
Rating; God knows. PG-13?
Characters; Mister Norrington (
Summary; Like a doomed fool, Norrington goes out to the Flying Dutchman to attempt a parley with Davy Jones. Dreadfully sorry if there have been spoilers, but you've all had plenty of time to see it now. :P
Log;
Strolling across the sands, red naval coat slung nonchalantly over one shoulder, James Norrington seemed the very picture of arrogant self-assurance. In truth, he was almost crapping himself in fear. He'd agreed to meet the pirate other pirates were scared of, the bogeyman of the ocean deeps, and he had no idea what was going to happen. Fear was an ally, though, he knew that. It kept a man on his toes. A man without fear on the high seas was dead in a very short time. And death, well, death he'd stared in the eyes so many times they were practically on a first name basis..
He reached the docks that had materialised with the Going Merry and found the Black Swan's longboat tied up there. It was a difficult craft to handle alone, but he'd managed before. After a quick look around to check that no-one had followed him to try any additional heroics, he clambered over the side and took up position on the bench, before shipping the oars and untying the painter. As the boat floated out beyond the two vessels, he scanned the horizon. Up on the deck of the Swan, something glinted in the mysterious sunlight that shone inside a building. That made him smile.
However, there was one thing missing from this idyllic afternoon. The Dutchman. As the little jolly boat rocked gently on the tide, Norrington shaded his eyes and peered into the distance.
Then, he felt something began to rumble in his feet, and the vibrations continued up through his feet. The water around the boat began to rumble. Norrington dived into the bows, partially to make sure the boat had less of a chance of capsizing on him, and partially out of abject terror. Sadly, this meant he missed a hundred feet of rotting, dripping, barnacle-festooned wood emerging from the briny depths in a great shower of spray, like a great and terrible leviathan of old, and coming to rest a few yards away. Heavily drenched by the salty blast from the Flying Dutchman's appearance, Norrington sat up, choked briefly on the stench of old seaweed, then fished out the oars and paddled over to align himself with the port side of the monstrous vessel. He peered up from below at the mass of wooden spikes, the overly pointed prow, and the tattered and hanging sails, coated with the caught up flotsam of centuries. It was a huge battleship of a boat, a mighty command, probably relatively slow with the size of it, but with some astonishing firepower. He was impressed.
As the longboat bobbed by the vessel's keel, Norrington stood up carefully and swung his coat over his shoulder again. He put a hand to his mouth and face up above him towards the deck.
"Jones! Permission to come a.."
A rope ladder thumped unceremoniously into the boat next to him. He frowned at it, shrugged, and began to climb...

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Not another soul milled about him on deck, and though the former Commodore would be unable to assume as much through sight alone there were no other hands aboard. The Devil of the Seas had arrived in this world alone, with naught but his ship and the knowledge that his former crew had very likely been released from their contracts upon his own disappearance--death--whatever this had been. Nonetheless, Jones had more than enough experience on his side what with an eternity of sailing, though it was hardly difficult to man such a ship on one’s own when you had power over the seas themselves. So there he was, dripping with moisture as did the rest of the ship as he awaited Norrington’s appearance.
Before the other man succeeded in clearing half the length of the ladder, Jones was making his way back toward the very spot onto which the man would have to climb, coming to a halt just before it. The pincer which had long since replaced his left hand squeezed shut a single time as he gazed downward through narrowed eyes, the right appendage fixed upon the barnacle-encrusted cane that aided him in his step.
So soon as the other made his way to the deck, features contorted into the closest thing to a smirk they could muster in their mutated state. The dripping tentacles writhed as Davy began to speak, and even afterwords would not set idle.
“Welcome aboard the Flying Dutchman, Commodore,” he snarled, fingers tightening upon his crutch as the elongated tentacle (once his index finger) wrapped about the rotting wood.
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He bowed, politely, taking the opportunity to glance around the deck. No sign of the terrible crew, but then they could be aft, or below decks. "By your leave, Captain Jones. Here I am, as promised, now, will you parley?"
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Truth in exchange for truth, while deemed the Devil of the Seas himself Jones was not an entirely dishonorable man. Ruthless, cold, and whatever manner of things struck one thrust into such a bitter manner of eternity, but an accord was an accord, and he was hardly one to have them broken.
"A question for a question, Aye." His voice lowered. "Where is the heart?"
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The tone used when he did next speak lacked even the feigned humour. "I should like to see what you'll try with my heart, in any case--I do think I'll find out so soon as can." There was the sound of his cutlass drawn with a harsh tug from the scabbard at his side, though it was with surprising speed that he had the decaying blade poised and ready, coming to aim a blow quite directly at the man before him.
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Across on the Black Swan, something winked in the afternoon light.
He parried Jones' first blow, and then fell back towards the side under the onslaught. The pirate captain was an excellent swordsman, and it took most of Norrington's skill to keep him at bay. In a short while, he found his feet against the boards of the side of the ship, and Jones bearing down on him like a cat on a cornered rat.
Quickly, Norrington took a standing leap backwards, and caught himself on the edge of the hull. He parried another blow.
"Good afternoon, Captain Jones." He said. "Something I've always wondered: What exactly do you keep in your locker?"
And with that, he dived backwards into the briny depths. However, he wasn't quite fast enough to keep Jones from catching him a mighty slash across the shoulders, which made the dive less than delicately and precisely executed...
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"Perhaps, Commodore, you shall find out sooner than you think."