bringmethatnpc (
bringmethatnpc) wrote2007-10-05 11:24 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Sayonara, Mr. Governor.
Their plans...are not proceeding apace.
"Bloody hell," Beckett murmurs, surveying what's left of the latest ship, "there's nothing left."
Mercer observes, "Jones is a loose cannon, sir."
There's a long pause: Lord Cutler Beckett is thinking. Finally: "Fetch the chest."
"And the governor?" Beckett looks over his shoulder at Mercer. "He's been asking questions about the heart.
Beckett's eyes narrow. "Does he know?"
Silence from Mercer is, apparently, a yes.
"Then perhaps," Beckett says peaceably, "his usefulness has run its course."
"Bloody hell," Beckett murmurs, surveying what's left of the latest ship, "there's nothing left."
Mercer observes, "Jones is a loose cannon, sir."
There's a long pause: Lord Cutler Beckett is thinking. Finally: "Fetch the chest."
"And the governor?" Beckett looks over his shoulder at Mercer. "He's been asking questions about the heart.
Beckett's eyes narrow. "Does he know?"
Silence from Mercer is, apparently, a yes.
"Then perhaps," Beckett says peaceably, "his usefulness has run its course."
no subject
Mr. Mercer accompanies Governor Swann in the second boat to cross, impassively surveying the wave-tossed wreckage in the waters around them. The blue of the Caribbean shines in the sunlight, warm and bright, in complete disregard of the number of seafarers who had so recently found themselves sinking into the sea's ultimately cold embrace.
no subject
Even more repulsive is the Flying Dutchman looming ahead.
"I really don't see why I have to go aboard," he announces to Mercer, who had the nerve to it right beside him, and not behind him. "The Admiral has no need of me."
no subject
"Obviously he does, Gov'nor," Mercer replies, turning to glance at him, "Or else you wouldn't be going aboard."
no subject
"Is the chest being left on board," he snaps, "or are you lot going to taunt that terrible thing with it?"
Governor Swann does indeed know more than he should.
no subject
Not that it will matter for much longer.
"It isn't taunting," Mercer says with a faint trace of a nasty-looking grin on his normally impassive face. "It's motivation."
no subject
He'd likely not speak with the same tone as he would with Cutler Beckett. Still the contempt would be there, just disguised slightly better.
no subject
"If it gets the intended results, it is." Though Beckett would probably just call it good business.
"To possess that chest is to control the Flying Dutchman. Sometimes its captain simply needs to be reminded."
no subject
"Hmmm. Yes, well," he mumbles, deciding to ignore Mercer for the time being. He's an uncouth murderer, after all, and beneath the Governor's station.
It's soon enough that the boats reach the Dutchman and Swann is helped on board by the soldiers boarding alongside. Mercer is completely forgotten.
Admiral Norrington is given charge of the ship, who Weatherby thinks is a far sight better than the creature currently captaining the vessel.
And then the chest is paraded past and soldiers stationed around it.
Once the crew is settled, Weatherby creeps into the cabin in which the chest has been placed under guard. He walks around it, nodding kindly to the frightened soldiers as he does.
He places a hand on the chest, as if to open it.
no subject
"Time to go, Gov'nor. There's nothing there to interest you."
no subject
He glances at the chest one more time, not moving his hand. Then he moves along.
Maybe the ship they're to meet will be close by now. He's ready to be quit of Mercer and his master.
no subject
"He seems to think your curiosity would get the better of you."
no subject
He follows along, not realizing they're going around the opposite way of where the boats are.
"He's probably right. I was wondering what would happen if that beastly heart were removed."
no subject
However, then piracy may turn out to be an inherited trait, after all.
"Thinking it'd be an easy way to get a ship of your own?"
no subject
no subject
"Only," he says, turning to the Governor, "the one who stabs the heart must replace that heart with his own. The Dutchman must have a captain."
no subject
"How ghastly."
It's about then, on this side of the ship where the noise and bustle is absent all of a sudden that he notices the lack of boats.
"Why have you brought me this way? The boats are on the other side, aren't they?"
no subject
The knife that Mercer keeps concealed about his person is always kept within quick reach. So it is only a split second later that Mercer is stepping close to plunge his knife through the thick layers of the Governor's clothes, striking just under the ribcage at an upward angle, to pierce the heart.
no subject
His mouth forms an "o" and he stares at Mercer, unbelieving.
He is aware, somehow, of the smell of the sea. It is sharp, salty, and tears form in his eyes.
no subject
The business of getting the boats ready for Lord Becket to return to the Company ship, mostly out of sight on the other side of the Dutchman, covers the sound of the splash neatly. Another body sinking to join those from the destroyed ship is of little note, as it is.
Mercer pulls out his hankerchief to clean his knife of blood as he steps away from the railing, heading back to report.
no subject
Elizabeth...
Caroline...
He's gone before his body hits the water.
When his eyes open, it's night still, but it's peaceful. Calm. The row boat rocks gently on the waves, and the stars illuminate the dark sky.
Caroline awaits him, but the journey to her is long yet. He patiently sits in his boat, no longer needing to catch his breath, and he waits.