CHAPTER NINETEEN

Freedom’s Price

WHEN THE SENTINEL REACHED CALABAR, Jack was escorted off the ship with his hands in manacles. The East India Trading Company maintained its own small but sturdily built jail for employees who were caught stealing, or committing other illegal acts. Miscreants were incarcerated there until they could be sent back to England for trial. Four burly marines from the Sentinel escorted him to the jail and saw him placed behind bars.

There were no other prisoners currently in residence. Jack’s jailer was an old sailor who’d lost an eye and an ear. His name, Jack eventually discovered, was Joseph. He slept in the office of the little building, and his daughter, Kate, provided meals for the prisoners. Kate worked as a washerwoman at Cutler Beckett’s house. After sampling his first meal as an EITC detainee, Jack decided that Kate must be a better laundress than she was a cook.

Joe the Jailer proved to be a fascinating source of sea tales and gossip—but he knew nothing of Jack’s misadventures, and he didn’t want to know. Cutler Beckett did not appear. Nor did Mercer. Jack began to wonder whether he’d be conveniently “forgotten” and left to languish here until he died of old age or hung himself with Amenirdis’s sash. He reminded himself of all the other times he’d been incarcerated, and how something had always managed to turn up just when things looked their bleakest. That thought cheered him.

One of the worst things about being imprisoned was the lack of rum—or, indeed, any type of spirits. Jack was thankful that he’d been living a “cleaner” life since he became a merchant captain than he ever had as a pirate. Otherwise he might have been in real trouble. He’d seen some sailors who, when deprived of drink, had gotten the shakes, hallucinating and sweating. The main thing Jack experienced, when suddenly he’d had to switch to plain water, was the inability to sleep. He had managed to go nearly a week in the Sentinel’s brig, unable to sleep more than a few minutes at a time. That was one of the main reasons he’d begun exercising.

After counting off the paces around the perimeter of his new cell, Jack made himself walk five miles every day. He figured out a way to chin himself on the top of the cell door. It became a challenge to figure out how to stay as fit as possible in the little cell. If his moment ever came—and surely, at some point, Joe the Jailer would grow careless, or someone would come to take him out of there for some reason—Jack wanted to be ready to run.

In time-honored prisoner tradition, he found a small shard of stone on the floor of his cell, and used it to mark off the days as they passed. He’d done the same thing while in the brig, so Jack kept a running tally.

It had been thirty-five days since his capture when they brought Robby Greene into the jail, and locked him up in the cell next to Jack’s.

Jack and Robby gripped hands through their common bars, then stood there grinning at each other. “I’m glad to see you, mate,” Jack confessed, “though it’s a terrible thing to admit. I’d hoped they let you go.”

“No such luck,” Robby said. “They just locked me in the brig on a different ship, and I got to go with the Larkspur when they went searching for Kerma. Of course I couldn’t see much, from the brig, but I saw enough to be sure they’ve changed the illusion, Jack.”

“I told Amenirdis to,” Jack said. “Did you feel anything?”

“No. All I could find out from the cabin boy, who had the responsibility of looking after me, was that they tried for five days to sail east from your bearings, and they never saw a thing. They came back to the basic bearings several times, then headed out again in overlapping directions, but found nothing. There were three ships, all crossing and recrossing each other’s wakes, sailing in circles.”

“A hopeful sign, then,” Jack said. “Maybe nobody will ever find Kerma. Do you know what happened to the Wench?”

“They put one of the mates from another ship aboard her and sailed her back to Calabar, Jack,” Robby said. “She’s tied up at the dock. I saw her when they brought me off the Larkspur.”

“Any hints as to what Beckett has in store for us?”

“None.”

“Well, all we can do is make the best of it, mate,” Jack said. “Stay in the best shape we can, in case we get a chance to make a break for it. I suppose we’ll have to steal some money. I haven’t even a ha’penny on me.”

“I have lots of money, Jack,” Robby whispered.

“You do?” Jack whispered back.

“Yes. I buried my share of the pharaoh’s reward here in Calabar. I’ll tell you exactly where, in case I don’t make it out, Jack.”

“We’ll both make it out, Robby.”

Jack’s spirits improved, now that he had someone to talk to. He and Robby talked for hours, over meals, while they walked their five miles, and when they were just sitting there, waiting for something to happen.

“Have you thought about what we should do if we get out of here, Jack?” Robby asked, one day, just after Jack had scratched off day fifty-three on the wall of his cell.

Jack shrugged. He dropped his voice, even though Joe the Jailer was at least twenty feet away, and appeared to be sound asleep, rocked back in his chair. The snores were convincing, at any rate. “Presuming we can dig up your largesse, mate, we should probably split up. Make us harder to find.”

“But Africa, Jack,” Robby said. “Where can we go?”

“Hard question, mate,” Jack cogitated. “We might try working our way up the Western Coast, possibly catching a ship out of the nearest port north of Calabar. I’d need to look at a map.” He thought for a moment. “Assuming we do make good on our escape, where would you like to go, more than anywhere else?”

Robby’s blue eyes grew dreamy. He rubbed at his beard thoughtfully. “I guess…I guess I’d want to be back on a farm,” he said. “There is enough money for me to buy a little farmstead of my own. I’d get some geese, and ducks, maybe some turkeys…chickens, of course. Couple of pigs. I love bacon and ham. And a mule for plowing, and some milk cows.”

Robby smiled as he built his vision. “I’d grow apples and peaches. I wouldn’t eat anything but fresh fruit, fresh vegetables, and fresh bread, grown from my own wheat, Jack. No more biscuit you have to soak before you can get it down, lest it break your teeth!”

“And who would bake that bread, mate?”

“I’d find a wife. A nice girl, country born, country bred. She’d have cheeks as pink as the blush on a ripe peach, and all her teeth. She’d be the kind of girl that didn’t nag, or complain, but was a cheerful sort. With a nice shape,” Robby’s hands described curves in the air before him. “Not skinny, and not fat, either. Just a little plump, maybe, in the right places.”

“Stop it, mate, you’re torturing me,” Jack moaned, covering his eyes with his hands. “I’ve been cursing myself for a thousand kinds of a fool that the last time I saw Amenirdis, we didn’t—” He broke off, and cleared his throat. “Never you mind.”

Robby laughed. “Sorry, Jack. I’ll talk about religion, that’s sure to cool your blood. I’ll be a deacon, maybe. M’wife would sing in the choir. We’d take the little ones to services every Sabbath.” Robby stretched, then sighed. “If only we could get out of these wretched cells!”

Jack sat down beside him, on the other side of the bars, cross-legged. “You know, Robby, you might think about taking orders. You’d make a very good vicar.”

Robby turned to him, his eyes widening. “Me? A vicar? Ministering to the souls of a flock? Oh, no, Jack. You have to have an education for that. Go to a seminary, or something. The idea appeals to me, but I couldn’t do that. I’m not…fit.”

“I’ve never met anyone more fit, Robby,” Jack said. “Look at what a good influence you’ve had over me, these past five years.”

“Good influence!” Robby shook his head. “Jack, you still drink like a fish, gamble, and I long ago lost track of the wenches. Or, in the case of Esmeralda and Ayisha, ladies.”

“Ah, but think of how wicked I would have been if I hadn’t had you to slow me down, mate.”

Robby threw up his hands.

“You really should think about it, mate,” Jack urged. “You can get a country, what do they call ’em…parish. You could still have the cow, and the chickens, and”—he waved a hand—“all that. Who knows? You might be giving your sermon one Sabbath, and look out over your congregation, and there I’d be, sitting in the front pew, listening intently.” Jack grinned impishly. “And when the service is over, you can bring me home with you, and Mrs. Greene can serve me a splendid Sunday dinner. I’ll get to meet your offspring. Your stalwart sons, and your lovely daughter…”

“Jack, I would wall the poor girl up in the cellar before I’d let you within fifty feet of a daughter of mine. Or my wife, either,” Robby stated, with an edge in his voice.

Jack realized that if they weren’t sitting in their cells, and they were still pirates, Robby would have placed a hand on the hilt of his sword. He raised both hands in a placating gesture. “Hold hard, come about! Robby old lad, I was joking.”

Slowly, Robby relaxed. Jack sat back. “I can’t believe it,” he said. “Five years of living in each other’s pockets, and all the scrapes I’ve gotten us into, and you, Robby Greene, finally lose your temper over trying to protect the virtue of a daughter you don’t even have!”

Robby stared at him in complete bewilderment. “I don’t know what came over me, Jack.”

The friends regarded each other for a long moment, then, simultaneously, they both began to laugh. Robby whooped until his ribs obviously protested, and he fell limply over onto his back. He lay there, gasping and laughing, his legs waving feebly like an overturned beetle’s.

Jack laughed too, so hard that he had to wipe his eyes with the back of his hand. He didn’t dare look at Robby, or he knew he’d go off again. Instead he sat there, wiping his eyes, still sputtering occasionally.

It was at that moment that Cutler Beckett’s men came for them.

* * *

After so long inside, Jack stared in wonderment at the Calabar River, and the vegetation on either side of it, as the Sentinel glided toward the Atlantic. Their hands were bound in front of them, but otherwise, they had not been ill-treated, merely locked into this small cabin on the gun deck. At least it had a porthole.

He wondered where he was being taken—and why. Had Cutler Beckett decided to simply drop them into the water, thus ridding himself of two problems?

Jack pushed his hair back from his face. It had gotten quite long while he was in the cell, and he now had a respectable beard. Robby was in like case, but he was so fair, it didn’t show as much.

He could tell when they reached the Atlantic by the change in the color of the water. The ship glided to a halt, and hove-to—or perhaps she dropped anchor. The water was fairly shallow here, within a mile of shore.

Mercer opened the door and beckoned the two of them to come along. Six EITC marines accompanied him.

Jack walked up onto the weather deck. It was good to smell the ocean breeze, he decided, after so many days of breathing the air of the jail.

His nostrils caught a whiff of smoke—something very strange for the deck of a ship. As Jack looked around, searching for the source, he saw Cutler Beckett standing over by the ladder leading to the quarterdeck. He also located the source of the smoke. There, on the port side deck, resting on a pile of stones mixed with sand, was a small charcoal brazier. A long rod was thrust into the center of the handful of glowing coals.

Jack’s mouth went dry, and he glanced at Robby, who shared his reaction. This did not look good. Not at all. He swallowed, and looked off to starboard—and froze.

The Wicked Wench was anchored not far way—perhaps three or four hundred feet. Her chestnut-colored sides with the pale gold trim gleamed in the light of the afternoon sun, and her ivory sails were neatly furled. Jack’s heart began to pound, and he was suddenly as frightened as he had ever been in his life.

Cutler Beckett nodded to Mercer. “Dismiss your men for a moment, please, Mr. Mercer.”

Mercer nodded, and the six marines moved away, heading up toward the bow, out of earshot, though they could still see the captives.

Beckett strode toward Jack. Gone was any attempt at false friendliness, or subterfuge. His gray eyes were bright with fury, and he was holding a sheet of parchment in his hand.

When he reached Jack and spoke, his voice was low and intense. He radiated anger. “Jack, this letter arrived yesterday, from Lord Penwallow, my former patron. In it, he chastises me for not delivering his cargo.”

Jack shook his head. “People aren’t cargo, mate.”

Casually, Beckett slapped him across the face, then went on as though there had been no interruption. “He also writes to me of an incident related to him by his overseer at his estate in New Avalon. It seems that someone impersonated his son, Baron Frederick Penwallow. Lord Pen-wallow doesn’t have the faintest idea who that person was…but you and I do, don’t we, Jack?”

The little man was quivering, he was so angry. “Everything I’ve worked for, here in Calabar, enduring this hellish climate, getting this coast operating smoothly…everything, all that work…wasted. Gone. My chance at a title. My possible advancement. The regard of my superior in the EITC hierarchy…gone. All of it, gone. Because of you, Jack Sparrow.”

Beckett paused, as if waiting for Jack to say something. Jack didn’t think there was anything he could say, and his last remark had gotten him slapped, so he remained quiet.

“Oh, and by the way,” Beckett crooked a finger at Mercer, “your cabin was searched, Jack, once you were no longer occupying it. Would you like to guess what we found?”

Jack’s heart sank as Mercer carried a sack over, and began emptying it in front of him. There it was, all of the Zerzuran treasure, everything he’d—

Jack blinked. Actually, it wasn’t all there. They’d evidently missed one of the hiding places—the one located in the bulkhead of his cabin. It wasn’t a big hidey-hole, so he’d used it to secrete mostly coins and gems.

Beckett was silent, then suddenly, Jack felt his hand seized. “I should have noticed this before!” the EITC director said. Ruthlessly, he yanked at Amenirdis’s ring, pulling it off, despite Jack’s effort to curl his finger over it. Briefly, he examined it. “Zerzuran work. Of course…you got this when you went there, didn’t you, Jack? You lying, scheming scoundrel! You…you…pirate!” He cracked Jack across the face again, this time with the back of his hand. It wasn’t a very hard blow, as such things went, but it rocked him, and it stung. Jack shook his head, trying to focus.

“My captains,” Beckett said, still examining the ring, turning it in his fingers, “have informed me that they have been sailing fruitlessly in circles for days now. Kerma is there, it must be there, but they can’t find it. But you found it. Damn you, Sparrow!”

He spat in Jack’s face.

Jack felt the thick, hot spittle hit him, perilously close to his eye, and was grateful it wasn’t another blow.

Beckett held the ring up. “Who gave this to you? That ugly old crone, that seamstress? I’ll bet you charmed her, Jack. I’ll bet you did anything it took to get her to take you to Zerzura. You probably seduced her, seduced that hideous black thing, Jack, because you have no integrity, no decency, no honor. You disgust me.” With a casual flip of his wrist, Beckett tossed the ring over the side of the ship.

Jack closed his eyes, grieving, bereft. Now he’d never find Kerma—or Amenirdis—again. His lovely, courageous princess…He’d never again kiss her sweet mouth, or hold her in his arms. He’d never again hear her laugh….

He took a deep breath, and it hurt. After a moment, Jack opened his eyes to find Beckett just standing there, staring at him, as if somehow realizing that something significant had occurred—but of course he didn’t understand what he’d done.

Beckett motioned to the marines, and they returned to the captives. Then he nodded to Mercer. “Mr. Mercer, it’s time. First, we warn the world of what Captain Sparrow truly is. Then we punish him.”

Mercer nodded at the marines, and two of them stepped over to grasp Robby’s arms. “Cut their bonds,” the Scotsman instructed. “Just in case they decide to go over the side to save us the trouble of hauling them back to England, and prison.”

Quickly, Jack and Robby’s hands were freed. Two marines held Robby and the other four clustered around Jack. Three held him, while the fourth used his knife to cut Jack’s shirt, then, with a sudden yank, ripped it off him. Mercer went over to the brazier. Picking up a rag, he grasped the end of the rod, lifting it from the glowing coals. Jack saw that the end of the brand was the letter “P.”

Oh, no. No…Jack thought. He could smell his own fear, rank in his nostrils, and for a moment he was afraid he would disgrace himself—plead, or weep, or wet himself. But from somewhere he found the strength to stand there, silent, although he couldn’t stop trembling.

“Now everyone will know what you really are, Jack,” Beckett said. “I’m doing the world a service.”

Mercer walked toward Jack, and Jack could tell that the operative was enjoying every moment. As the Scotsman walked past Beckett, the EITC director suddenly reached out and grabbed his black sleeve. “Let me,” he said, his voice low, and thick. He sounded…avid. Greedy. Excited. “I want to do it myself.”

Grasping the brand, Cutler Beckett approached. The “P” was glowing as yellow as the sun. The marines held Jack’s right arm, keeping it as still as if he were bound in iron chains.

Cutler Beckett touched the iron to Jack’s forearm. Jack smelled burned hair, then burned flesh. He heard the sizzle. The iron pressed harder, harder, sinking into Jack’s flesh, hissing like the cobra monster from the labyrinth. The pain was so intense that for the first moments, Jack couldn’t catch his breath enough to make even a faint sound. Agony erupted in his flesh, running up his arm, engulfing it. Jack’s knees sagged, and only the grasp of the marines kept him on his feet. He sucked in air, and screamed.

Jack didn’t even notice when Beckett finally pulled the brand away. He was somewhere else, lost in a world of pain, and his only conscious thought was a wish that he’d pass out. But he didn’t.

Mercer approached, and dumped a bucket of seawater over Jack’s arm. He studied the results, then nodded at Cutler Beckett. “A good, clean, job, Mr. Beckett. Nice and deep.”

Finally, the marines let Jack go. He slumped to the deck, then sat there, cradling his arm as the all-engulfing pain finally ebbed. His arm still hurt, and the sight of the blackened “P” nearly made Jack sick to his stomach, but the pain receded to a manageable level. He was able to look up to see what had happened to Robby. His friend hung in the arms of the marines, looking nearly as limp as Jack felt.

“And now, Jack,” Cutler Beckett said, “it’s time for your punishment.” He smiled as if he were quite enjoying himself. “I confess that I’m going to miss the old hulk, but really, she’s not worth all that much. It’s not like she’s a new ship. It’s worth losing her to see you suffer, Jack.”

He nodded at Mercer. “Order them to fire. Use the carcass charges.”

Mercer nodded, then disappeared down the ladder leading to the gun deck.

Jack scrambled to his feet. “What?” he blurted. “What’s going on?”

“Oho, so you finally speak,” Beckett said. “I was beginning to think the cat had gotten your tongue, Jack.”

Jack looked over at the Wicked Wench. “She’s just a ship,” he said, wonderingly. “Made of wood, and canvas. You’re going to destroy your own property? Just to get back at me?”

“She’s not just a ship to you, Jack,” Beckett said. “And yes. That’s precisely what I am going to do.”

Jack stared at Beckett. “You’re like a child,” he said, letting the contempt he felt show. “An overgrown, angry child. Just because you can’t have what you want, you do this. It’s…twisted. Mad.”

Beckett looked at Jack. “And what is it that I want, Jack?” he asked, sounding genuinely puzzled, as though he really didn’t know.

Jack looked at him. “Fear. Love. Respect. None of which you will get from me,” he replied.

Beckett’s face darkened. His hands tightened into fists. “You—”

Three cannons roared, at nearly the same time. Jack saw the projectiles heading for the Wicked Wench, lying innocently, peacefully at anchor. He knew what “carcassed” ammunition was. It was a thin casing surrounding flammable material—designed to start a fire.

Mercer ran up the ladder just as two of the projectiles struck their target. The third overshot it. The Scotsman laughed. “She’s got bales of dried straw, soaked in oil, on her weather deck and main deck,” he said. “She’ll go up like paper.”

“No…” Jack whispered. The explosions echoed inside him, hurting worse than the brand. I have to get to her!

He lunged towards Sentinel’s gunwale. Hands grabbed him, but he was a wild thing, fighting as he had never fought in his life, filled with berserker rage, punching, kicking, even biting to get free. Two of the guards were down. Jack slammed his fist into the third guard’s jaw, and then he was free, bolting for the railing.

Someone moved to cut him off—Cutler Beckett himself, yelling, his face distorted with rage. He’d picked up a cutlass, and was waving it. Jack didn’t even slow down. Knocking the weapon out of his hand, he grabbed the little man by the collar and pitched him headlong over the railing.

While Beckett was still in midair, Jack leaped to the top of the rail, then dived off, arcing out, heading for the Wicked Wench.

The touch of the cold water felt good, though the salt awakened the brand. Jack surfaced with a powerful kick, ignoring the fire in his arm. Behind him he could hear Mercer yelling orders.

Maybe Beckett will drown before they can fish him out.…

He began swimming, then a hand grabbed his left shoulder. Jack turned, fist raised, to find Robby beside him. “Come on, Jack,” his friend panted. “It can’t be more than a mile to shore. We can make it. I’ll help you if you need it. When we get there, we’ll get the Zerzuran gold—and then we’re free.”

Jack shook his head. “You go,” he said. “I’m going after the Wench.”

“But Jack, she’s on fire!”

Jack turned to find it was true. Flames spouted from the weather deck, amidships. “They used straw,” he said. “I can push it overboard. I have to try.”

“No! Jack, don’t! You’ll die for nothing.”

Jack kicked off his shoes. They were weighing him down. “Then I’ll die,” he said. “I still have gold aboard. If all else fails I’ll get that.”

“Jack, please!” Robby looked frantic. “Please, come with me!”

“No!” Jack shouted. “Swim, damn you! Get your gold. Buy your farm. Earn that vicar’s collar. Marry that pretty girl. That’s an order, Robby.”

“No, Jack. I’ll come with—”

Robby broke off with a grunt as Jack’s bare foot kicked him hard in the stomach.

“I don’t have time to argue!” Turning away, Jack started swimming, ignoring the pain in his arm, kicking, stroking hard. He wasn’t far from the ship now…

Then he was there, at the ladder, his hands finding the wood rungs. Jack hauled himself up the ladder, clawing his way up. By the time he got to the top, and climbed over the rail, flames had engulfed the foremast, climbing the wood as agilely as any top man.

With a gasp that was half sob, Jack turned, heading for his cabin. He was too late to save his ship. But if he was lucky, he might be able to save the gold. And then, by all that was holy, he’d buy a ship.

As he pelted across the weather deck, he saw that it had been stripped of everything of value. The guns were gone. The Wench was nothing but an empty hulk.

Jack glanced left, and saw a small figure, swimming, heading for the shore. Robby had obeyed orders, one last time. He’d escape, if there was any justice in this world.…

Reaching the door to his cabin, Jack yanked at it, but it was locked.

He felt around for the key, but it was gone. Feeling heat across his back and beneath his feet, he saw the fire was roaring like a hungry monster. It was already past the main cargo hatch.

“Dammit!” Jack yelled. He threw himself at the door, once, twice, three times. He kicked it, hard, making him yell from the pain in his bruised foot. Then he threw himself against it with all his remaining strength. The lock gave.

Jack scrambled into his cabin and shut the doors behind him. There were so many things he wanted, but wouldn’t be able to save! His sea chest….

Running over to the bulkhead, Jack felt around for the catch that would open the panel he’d had installed by a carpenter in London. It clicked, then opened. He began pulling things out, throwing them onto his bunk. Two small golden goblets, some jewelry, then a handful of coins and the loose gems…

Frantically, Jack ran his hand around the inside of the hiding place, making sure there was nothing left. Heading over to his sea chest, he tossed out his old clothes, then wrapped the bigger pieces in a couple of ancient shirts. Then he stuffed the coins and jewelry into his best pair of stockings. Slamming it all back into his sea chest, Jack realized that he had no way to lock it. Hastily, he grabbed his baldric, discarding his cutlass—not without a pang—and put the heavy leather strap around it, tightening it as much as he could.

The Wicked Wench screamed, then groaned. His ship’s cry sounded almost human. Jack dashed tears from his eyes, then grabbed the chest, and stood up with it in his arms.

Heading over to the wrecked door, Jack put out a hand to touch it, then jumped back. It was hot to the touch. Smoke trickled in beneath the doors. He coughed.

Coughing, Jack retreated, back to the stern windows. Could he get out that way?

Those windows weren’t very big. Chamba had been a skinny, half-starved kid when he’d pulled him through. Jack was a grown man.

If I smash them all out, he thought, I can jump....

Jack put down the chest and ran over to pick up his sword. He began smashing out the glass in his windows with the hilt, hammering at it.

The ship lurched, and rolled, and suddenly Jack realized the surface of the water looked a lot closer. The Wicked Wench was going down.

Jack looked around his cabin, realizing he was trapped. There was no way out. His ship lurched violently, and everything in the cabin started to slide, first one way, then another. Jack crawled toward the window, dragging the chest. Somehow, he’d force himself through it.

Just as he reached the windows, Jack realized that he’d been incredibly stupid. If he jumped, holding the chest, the gold was heavy enough to carry it—and him—to the bottom.

He’d have to abandon the chest.

The entire cabin was thick with smoke, now. The ship heaved and rolled again, knocking Jack off his feet. He slid across the deck. Jack tried to crawl toward the window, but he was disoriented, his lungs screaming for air. And somehow, he was still dragging the bloody chest with him. He couldn’t seem to make his fingers let go of it.

Where were the windows? He couldn’t see them.…

The deck jumped and lurched. Everything slid around again, including Jack. He fetched up against the door, and the chest slammed into him. A tongue of flame erupted through the door, and suddenly his left sleeve was on fire. Yelling, gasping, Jack tried to beat out the flames with his right hand.

He heard another hideous groan, and glanced up, just in time to see the overhead skylight collapsing, coming down on top of him.

Mercifully, Jack blacked out for a little while.

When he opened his eyes, he was no longer aboard the burning ship. He seemed to be somewhere else…somewhere as featureless as his smoke-filled cabin had been, but…elsewhere. He could tell because there were no flames, and he could breathe fine.

If indeed he was breathing.…

Jack wasn’t sure of anything, right now. He could feel his body, feel the pain from his burned left arm and his branded right arm, but it was distant, muffled, as though he’d gulped half a flask of rum. The really good stuff.

Jack sat up, then managed to get to his feet. He was able to stand, but that was strange, because there didn’t seem to be a solid surface beneath him.

Where the devil am I? Jack wondered, turning his head. His sea chest was there, with him. Somehow he must have managed to hang onto it.

The word “devil” resounded in his mind. And then, suddenly, he knew where he was. He was wherever Davy Jones met up with dead or dying mariners. Any moment now, Old Squid Face himself was bound to appear. He’d call Jack’s name…and that meant it was all over.

But it can’t be, he thought. There are so many things I want to do!

Jack stood there. After a moment he shifted his weight and looked around again.

It’s bloody rude to keep a chap waiting, he thought.

But maybe he didn’t have to wait. Maybe he could summon Jones? He’d seen the Pirate Lords do it, after all. And there were whispers…rumors…that Jones would sometimes negotiate, make deals, with mariners brave or brazen enough to confront him, then stand up to him. He’d faced Jones before, hadn’t he?

Jack was desperate enough to try anything. He closed his eyes, recalling the words. He’d have to adapt them a bit. Not for the first time, he wondered what that stuff about “binding the queen in her bones” was all about.

Clearing his throat, Jack spoke aloud: “Davy Jones…I, Jack Sparrow, kin of a Pirate Lord, call you. I entreat you by your alliance with the Brethren of the Coast. You gave those mortals powers over the sea, binding the queen in her bones, and I am of their blood. I entreat you. Come to me, Davy Jones. I summon you. I summon you. I summon you.”

He peered into the blankness, but there was nothing there. No monstrous shape. Nothing but the blankness. Bloody hell. I’ve failed.…

Jack blinked…and he was there.

He’d forgotten how dreadful that grayish-white countenance was.

The tentacles stirred, reaching out for him. Jones’s little eyes had a greedy spark as he regarded Jack.

Swallowing hard, Jack steadied himself, assuming an air of confidence he didn’t feel. Placing his hands together, he bobbed a bow at the unearthly captain. What title had the Pirate Lords addressed Jones by? “Your Squidliness” probably wouldn’t do.

Jones’s expression changed, his eyes narrowing with suspicion as they peered through the squid-flesh that served him in lieu of human features. “You are not of the Brethren Court!” he exclaimed. “Who are you, audacious boy, to summon me thus?”

Jack bobbed another bow. “I’m Captain Jack Sparrow…sir.”

“Ahhhhhh…I remember you now. Teague’s whelp.”

Jack nodded.

“You are young to be a captain, boy,” Jones observed, studying him.

“Thank you, Captain Jones,” Jack said. “I’m really quite good at it, I assure you. And I’d like to remain a captain.”

“Why have you summoned me, Sparrow?” Was Jack mistaken, or did he see a tiny flash of what might have been amusement in those beady little eyes?

“Captain Jones,” Jack said, marshaling all his considerable negotiating skills, “the fact that I’m here, talking to you, means that I’m, er…either dying or dead, correct?”

“Dying, yes.”

“That is just really unfortunate,” Jack said. “I’m too young to die. I haven’t accomplished half what I wanted to do. Maybe not even a third.”

“They all say that.” Jones clicked his lobster claw impatiently. “Get on with it, boy.”

“Well, I’m a capable, experienced mariner,” Jack said. “Very good hand. I can do anything aboard a ship. If it floats on the water, and has sails, I can sail it. I suspect I’d be very useful to you, Captain Jones.”

Davy Jones eyed him, while Jack held his breath, waiting.

Finally, Jones said, “What is it you want? And what have you to trade for it?”

“Well, I have my immortal soul,” Jack said. “At least, I’m pretty sure I didn’t misplace it somewhere along the way.”

Again that glint in the tiny eyes that might have indicated amusement. “Go on, Sparrow. What is it you want?”

“Well,” said Jack, “that will take a little while to enumerate, but I’ve got it all worked out. Do you mind if I sit down? I’ve had rather a rough day, all things considered.…”

Without waiting for permission, Jack sat down, cross-legged, on nothing. “That’s better. Now, as to what I want. First of all, there’s the matter of my ship.…”