Veronica Rich ([info]veronica_rich) wrote in [info]jackwill,

New POTC Fic: "Moving On"

"Moving On"
RATING: NC-17, 17+, MA, take your pick
PAIRING: J/W, implied W/E and J/E
DISCLAIMER: Not mine. Belongs to the Mouse, though I like my own idea well enough in it.
SPOILER WARNING: If you haven’t seen “Dead Man’s Chest,” you may not understand it. (Hell, even if you have, you may not.)
ARCHIVE: Go for it.
SUMMARY: Being noble gives way to mortal considerations



He’d followed the Hero Formula to the letter:

STEP ONE: ORPHAN
Abandoned by his father’s disappearance and his mother’s death, Will Turner had started early fulfilling the path some self-righteous god with a sense of humor had laid out for him. True to form, he’d grown up poor, honest, hard-working, and largely unnoticed.

STEP TWO: CHANGELING
The boy’s formative years had been filled with back-breaking work, which he alternated with learning blades and his letters. He found the object of what would become his Heroic Quest, an outspoken young lady born too high for him. This meant, of course, that he would eventually have her, only having to traverse Hell’s borders and back – and her father’s disapproving stare – to get her.

STEP THREE: HERO
Having found his hero’s feet at last, Will had moved in them swiftly, but never quite shook off the clay anchoring his soles – which might have explained why they slowed and, eventually, mired to such degree that he had to slip out and run for his very sanity.

STEP FOUR: _____________

Bitterly, Will stared at the page, the harsh black line he’d drawn and traced over several times. There was no such thing as a fourth step, it seemed; this was why all the stories ended at the good place.

Slamming the journal shut, he set his jaw and nodded when the serving girl signaled for another ale. While he hadn’t quite taken up Gibbs’s level of imbibing, Will Turner had finally learned the value of alcohol and partook regularly. He forced a smile as she brought it over, shyly setting the overflowing tankard before him, trying to force eye contact before his reticence and dismissive posture – and a coin – sent her away.

*****

Not thirty minutes later, Will pulled on his coat and stepped out into the blustery night. Unlike everyone else dodging sparse snowflakes, he paused, turning his face up into the cold. Too long he’d existed in that Caribbean hell, melting beneath the sun and humidity; here in the Colonies, he was relearning the pleasures of winter, anonymous and sharply painful. Already he was forgetting everyone’s faces.

That night, he treated himself to a bath in one of his few indulgences, a spacious tub which he’d bought with a space beneath for heated rocks. First, he washed out his clothes piece by piece, hanging each over the clothesline above his anvil, then he slid into the tub and took advantage of the mostly-clean water, which had cooled enough by that time to be bearable on his skin.

He was half asleep when some jingling and the rustle of fabric made him crack an eye to his left. Will supposed he ought to be surprised to find Jack standing there, but he was less jarred than annoyed. “What,” he said simply, curtly, closing his eye.

“You know how dif’cult you are to find, mate?”

Will ignored the way that rumbling, gravelly voice made his skin prickle all over. “If I wanted to be found, I’d have put out a shingle,” he answered. “You’re awfully far off course. Don’t you turn into a snowman below seventy degrees?”

“I’ve been looking for you for three years.”

“Congratulations. There’s some rum in the cabinet. Take it, get out.”

A soft, yet harsh, chuckle. “You don’t make it easy on a man, do ye?” Will ignored the comment, hoping his silence conveyed his contempt.

But Jack got something else entirely from it. “You’ve tucked yourself away here all this time,” he began. “Avoiding the real world. Avoiding any of us.”

“Figure I’m entitled to what I want, seeing as I’m the reason you’re all still alive and going your merry ways,” he snapped, unable to keep the bitter edge from his words. “I’d really like you to leave.”

“Can’t do that, mate.” He felt a presence, and cracked his eyelid again as Jack settled on his knees next to the tub, peering over the side. “Didn’t come all this way t’ take orders from you.” He paused. “Came t’ save you.”

“I don’t need saving,” Will automatically answered, weary. “Didn’t then; don’t now. Can do it myself if I do. Goodbye.”

The pirate sighed. “Aren’t you just a bit tired of bein’ the strong, silent type who rides in to ever’one’s salvation? Wouldn’t you rather be interesting?”

“Jack, get the fuck out of my home.” Will’s words were hot. “It’s not much, but I’ve had enough of you making little of it.”

“Get up and throw me out.” Jack waited quietly; Will could hear only the in and out of his breathing. “You won’t do it. You’re too proper an’ mannerly to do that. You couldn’ even do what you should’ve, and either hit me or told Lizzie to screw off, or both. So, you left without a word, hidin’ yourself.”

Will leaned his head back against the tub’s lip. “You got your ship back, Norrington got his life, and Elizabeth got out from under society’s thumb. Even Father got to move on,” he murmured, remembering how relieved the elder Turner had been to simply die and accept whatever place he was due in the afterlife. “I’d say everyone came out just dandy, Jack.”

“You like this life? This minimalist, isolated, lonely existence?” Will tried to ignore him. “Enough that you won’t even take a bit of company from a serving girl when she’s practically jumpin’ into your lap?”

“Get out.” Will moved quickly, gathering his feet and standing almost as fast as he could speak. “I want you gone, Jack.” When the man backed up only a few paces and stopped, staring, Will scowled. “What?”

Slowly, Jack raised his eyes, raking Will’s body, and paused at Will’s fierce gaze. “Just enjoyin’ the view, love.”

Will narrowed his eyes sharply, then his expression relaxed. “Ahh, I see,” he nodded, stepping out of the tub and reaching for the towel to swipe at his skin. “Everybody wants to fuck Jack Sparrow, right? Nobody escapes the legend.” Tossing down the towel, he used his body to back Jack against a post. “Well, tell me, then; how was she?”

“Huh?” He was highly pleased to note Jack looked uncomfortable; apparently the Hero wasn’t allowed to find and use his own (admittedly ambiguous) sexuality, even if the Damsel could.

“Since I didn’t get to fuck Elizabeth and you did, you tell me how she was.” Will ignored the heat rising in his own body, the way the cuffs of Jack’s coat brushed his chest as the man’s hands lifted as if to ward off the blacksmith. “Was it good? Did she come all over you?”

“William-“

“Better, you can show me.” He covered that damned incessant mouth, pushed at Jack’s greatcoat, and nearly laughed with contempt when he found no resistance.

*****
Each morning, Will woke with Jack pressed to his back, or his face in Jack’s neck or hair. He never inhaled deeply, never woke the man for lovemaking, and never lingered beyond what it took to come to full alertness. Too much work to do, largely for himself. He didn’t know what Jack did during the day – he’d leave the shop, come back, sit somewhat hunched over some parchment or foolscap and a quill or charcoal, unmolested by Will until such time as one of them took a notion to fuck.

The smith didn’t consider it odd, what they did, nor what they didn’t do. His fiancée’s little liaison with the pirate hadn’t inspired in him the urge to beat the shit out of Jack, after all – he expected the man to seize opportunity at every turn, to be loyal as the moment suited him. After all, as he himself had pointed out, Captain Jack Sparrow was a legend to be added to, to be known briefly and then talked about for years after. Will was simply playing satellite to Jack’s star, and he knew as much.

After a few weeks, Jack broached the idea of Will joining his crew. Will shrugged, then went back to his work – this, too, would pass.

A few days after that, little gifts began to crop up. First, Will found a rather good likeness of himself at work, the paper tucked beneath a project he’d been finishing up for the constable’s eldest son about to be commissioned. Other sketches would appear, as would small objects such as tools and small gems, or a bit of candy.

One night, as he buggered Jack, he leaned over the man’s shoulder, into his ear. “Quit stealing from the townsfolk,” he gritted, hands hard on Jack’s hips.

“Didn’ steal … a thing,” the pirate responded, gripping the edge of the tabletop.

“Oh, so stuff just wanders in here on its own?”

“I work for it, you arse,” Jack snapped mildly, more interested in pushing his back onto Will. “Trade art … Jesus buggery, anyhow. Not stupid ‘nough to pilfer from me own back yard.”

Will believed him. It would be too easy to prove him wrong, and as yet, nobody had showed up with pitchfork and torch demanding Jack’s head on a pike. In fact, he’d been disconcerted with just how well the citizens of this small burg had taken to Jack. The few with whom Will had had contact since Jack’s arrival thought the pirate – newly bathed and more subtle in appearance than his usual high-seas countenance – was an eccentric relative staying with the blacksmith, a vastly amusing uncle from the Old Country or some such. Good thing I keep the shop door latched, he mused, recalling the time he’d insisted Jack bend him over his own anvil.

“So,” he mused aloud some time later, when they were both staring up at the ceiling on Will’s bed, “why all the gifts, then?”

The other man was quiet a moment. “Why does one usually present gifts to a prospective mate, hmm?”

“Are we monkeys, Jack?”

“Don’t mention simians.” The quick comeback made Will laugh, for more than a few seconds, the first time in an awfully long stretch of time. It felt good, to say the least. Jack waited until the smith was quiet again, then repeated, “Why would I give you gifts, William?”

“You want me to go with you when you leave.” There’d never been any question about whether Jack would stay – this was land, after all, and cold at that.

“Aye, and you sort of shrugged a’ me.” Jack turned onto his side to look at Will. “Never gave an answer.”

“Why does it matter, anyway? She’s late getting back, by what you told me when she’d be here.” Jack said nothing, and it was Will’s turn to swivel his head toward him. “Right?” He wondered if something was wrong; Jack claimed to be able to listen to the blessed (literally) ship, and while Will hadn’t believed him, he secretly wondered if there was something to it. “Is Pearl alright?”

Jack kept studying him a few seconds longer, then answered. “Made port a week ago. Told Gibbs to set sail again, come back in a month.”

Will nearly asked why, but was quieted by the intensity of those onyx eyes. “You ought to’ve said something,” he chided.

“I’ve no desire to have someone by force, love. Persuasion’s fine, but ‘s got to be the pleasant kind.”

Something in his voice made Will shift to his side to face him. One time, Jack had offered to talk about Elizabeth, but he’d had no desire – or, rather, he’d quashed it. “Tell me what happened with her,” he sighed. “All of it.”

“Lass told ye the truth.” He recalled that Jack had been standing not far in the background the last time he’d seen his ex-fiancée. Elizabeth had been by turns angry and resigned, oddly resolute as she’d confessed everything done to ensure Will’s safety, to avenge him.

“Maybe you have a right to be angry,” she’d finally nodded. “I’m not perfect; I did what I could think to, at the time.”

Will had laughed more harshly than he intended, biting off each word as he’d faced her. “By resorting to sex?” He’d shaken his head. “Why did you want to learn the sword and pistol, and dagger, if you were just going to fall back on the tricks every other woman has?”

“That is precisely it!” she’d snapped. “Because I have them-“

“Doesn’t mean you should always use them!” he’d finished.

She’d narrowed her eyes. “You have no idea what it’s like being a woman.”

“Rather glad of that,” he’d retorted, “if it means I’ll never have to rub up against someone to get my own way!” Before she could speak, he’d shaken his head. “No, Elizabeth … just, no. I’ve done everything for you, and now I’m the one who’ll lose everything. You have a father to go back to, a country – for you, this life is a whim, a choice. For me, it’s a certainty, now. That’s the difference between us that you’ve never understood.” He’d glanced between her and the pirate standing several feet in the background, pretending to find his own dirty fingernails fascinating. “Or you can go with him. Sure Jack can always use another able-bodied hand.”


The last thing he remembered of Elizabeth was that expression of consternation at his double entendre as he turned away – even then, he’d known her archest desire wasn’t a supporting role or to have Jack Sparrow. He hadn’t actually addressed his real source of anger about the whole fiasco: Shackling Jack to his own ship like prey food for a dragon. Jack was an obfuscating son of a bitch, but never one who’d deliberately left either of them for dead. “You expect me to believe that.”

“Have I ever lied t’ you under direct questioning?”

“Did you or did you not have relations with my fiancée? Wait-“ Will shook his head. “Let me rephrase: Did you, or would you have, if given better opportunity?”

“Unfair questioning tactics,” Jack grumbled, and Will had half his answer. “Didn’ do a thing with the strumpet that couldn’ take place above decks in full view of God and ever’one.”

Will turned onto his back again. He was still just naïve enough to admit he’d hoped Jack would tell him there’d been no feeling between him and Elizabeth, but this was Jack, after all. And Elizabeth had always been restless. And had he really been surprised at that kiss? “All right; I’ll go.” Truthfully, he’d been getting restless, wondering what the rest of the world was up to in his absence. “On the condition that I get my own space for a forge – you savvy?”

“Think we might be able t’ find a spot for ye,” Jack assented, tucking closer to Will’s side.

“I mean it, Jack. I’m not a bloody cabin boy.”

“Aye, love,” the older man chuffed, something like fondness in his rumbling tone. “How well I know.”

*****

STEP FOUR: _____________

Will stared at the creased page in his journal the next morning, sitting up in bed with a mug of tea next to his new captain, still asleep. Carefully, he filled in the blank: Being human.

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  • 27 comments

[info]ref_1985

July 17 2006, 16:35:57 UTC 5 years ago

I'm liking this new Will - I mean he really had in tough in both movies, so I'm glad that he's finally had enough. Well done chuck.

[info]veronica_rich

July 17 2006, 16:40:10 UTC 5 years ago

I like the new Will, too. You know, the second movie makes me scream, but it did great things for character development - Jack's a coward, Liz is a whore, Norrington's bitter, and Will's ... well, like Will-PLUS from the first movie, with better muscles. Unfortunately, boy's gotta fall sometime, and I think we'll see it in the third movie.

Thanks!

[info]balletvamp

July 17 2006, 16:38:18 UTC 5 years ago

Aww that was so cute! I really liked it!

[info]veronica_rich

July 17 2006, 16:40:49 UTC 5 years ago

Danke schoen!

[info]justawench

July 17 2006, 17:00:41 UTC 5 years ago

That's great! I love placating!Jack. :) It's great to see Will being forceful.

[info]veronica_rich

July 17 2006, 17:05:48 UTC 5 years ago

When I first started reading/writing/thinking about these two together 3 years ago, I just assumed Jack would always be the Top and Will the Bottom. It wasn't long after that that I realized neither could stand to be their "role" for very long, at least in my fic. *G*

Thanks for reading!

[info]secret_smile19

July 17 2006, 17:14:50 UTC 5 years ago

It's great. Love how he "falls" but it's not like weepy, oh woe is my life (can't see Will doing that anyway). He's not really bitter, but there's a tinge of it with anger and it makes the whole thing beautiful.

[info]veronica_rich

July 17 2006, 17:27:22 UTC 5 years ago

No, I think Will already went through his "damn, my life sucks and so do I" phase, which I really didn't want to write, earlier before this story. But I can't imagine copious quantities of tears were involved, either. *G*

Glad you like!

[info]starrdust411

July 17 2006, 21:17:51 UTC 5 years ago

This was great. It's a strange AU version of the film and although I would have liked to see how you thought up Jack not dying (or coming back from the dead), I liked the fact that Will just said "fuck all of you" and left. I would have done that a long time ago.

“Aren’t you just a bit tired of bein’ the strong, silent type who rides in to ever’one’s salvation? Wouldn’t you rather be interesting?”

I think that is my favorite line :)

“Why did you want to learn the sword and pistol, and dagger, if you were just going to fall back on the tricks every other woman has?”

Definetly a nod to all the discusions about Elizabeth's actions and role in the movie. Definetly put thing into light. I hope someone asked Disney a similar question. It's almost sexist to show a woman who is trying to liberate herself by using her body. (to me at least)

[info]veronica_rich

July 17 2006, 23:40:03 UTC 5 years ago

It's almost sexist to show a woman who is trying to liberate herself by using her body.

AFUCKINGMEN.

[info]scifiroots

July 18 2006, 01:07:03 UTC 5 years ago

Absolutely lovely! I love the use of the qualifications/steps of hero-dom. Totally reminds me of a tongue-in-check creative project I did in an English class about Romantic heroes (started off from Billy Budd... ugh I hated that book).

You write Will so beautifully with real emotions and strength. I appreciate his "to hell with all this" attitude when things wrapped up and that he confronted Lizzie. That girl needs a talking to. (She had so much potential and then suddenly things fell downhill regarding my opinion of her as the movie closed. o.0;; )

[info]veronica_rich

July 18 2006, 01:10:41 UTC 5 years ago

Elizabeth's a great character. It's really too bad the writers apparently don't know what to do with her if she's not hooked to some man for any length of time, especially since she strikes me as a woman who'd *like* to spend some time on her own for a while trying to figure things out about the world.

[info]scifiroots

July 18 2006, 01:20:25 UTC 5 years ago

Elizabeth has a lot of potential so I'm always on the look out for stories where she's not bastardized for the sake of slashing the boys--one of my biggest petpeeves of fanfic, lol.

And I agree that she's definately more of the independent type. That's why I really like her role for most of the movie since she got to run around in boy!clothes and figure out a way to get to Tortuga... I even thought it was hilarious during the long 3way fight where she got fed up with them and started hurling rocks (with awful aim, I must say) at the boys. *g*

Then again, I'm also glad that Will's naive, perfect image of her is broken. It's a large part of what annoyed me in the first movie. Well, here's to hoping there's more good fic to be had in the upcoming months!

[info]veronica_rich

July 18 2006, 01:27:24 UTC 5 years ago

Then again, I'm also glad that Will's naive, perfect image of her is broken.

This is one of the few reasons I can accept that kiss and what Elizabeth did, only for that reason. I just hope HE isn't broken as a result of it - I'd hate to see him be so weak he goes mad without her, or some such. I'd like to think he's a stronger character than that.

[info]the_mogget

July 18 2006, 04:54:26 UTC 5 years ago

This has been the best fic I have read in a while, in any fandom (which is rather saying something, due to the breadth of my fandoms and how I almost started to feel that I was becoming *gasp* disenchanted with slash). So, cookies for you.

I liked that Will pointed out that Elizabeth didn't need to use her body then turned the tables on her about Who-didn't-know-what-about-whose-life.

And then this: /Good thing I keep the shop door latched/, he mused, recalling the time he’d insisted Jack bend him over his own anvil.
Sent me all a-dither, it was... Yeah.

[info]veronica_rich

July 18 2006, 05:24:29 UTC 5 years ago

You know I aim to please with the dithering. *BG* And the dickering.

Best you've read, huh? I am flattered, I must confess. Thanks!

[info]the_mogget

July 18 2006, 05:54:51 UTC 5 years ago

First off, your icon makes me chuckle.
Secondly, 'twas nothing, it was just an awesome mix of teh hawt and the AWWW WILL! without uber-graphic-ness. Nor a nipple-fixation. So, you win big points.

[info]veronica_rich

July 18 2006, 06:15:34 UTC 5 years ago

Sometimes I like to do uber-graphic. *G* But I confess I'm not up on the nipple-fixation. You see that a lot with Will?

[info]the_mogget

July 18 2006, 06:30:13 UTC 5 years ago

I do like the uber-graphic upon occasion, but it just seemed that I had been running across a lot, and some of it rather sub-par.
And maybe I just really felt Will's character well in this one and that is why I liked it so.

The nipple thing was sort of a recurring thing in all my fandoms and I just got tired of it (there are so many other good and interesting body parts one can fixate on). And I prefer mention of nipples in a more humorous context.

[info]the_mogget

5 years ago

[info]metalkatt

July 18 2006, 05:33:28 UTC 5 years ago

*rubs hind end, glares at Ver* Wanker.

As I was saying, the wording on your icon seems to come from the piece she and I did together called Shining (Part 1 and Part 2). Ultimate icon love, by the way.

[info]the_mogget

July 18 2006, 05:46:14 UTC 5 years ago

*is afraid to know what happened to your hind end* o_O

Thank you for the love. The words just came to me while looking at that picture, his face screams "being molested by Will". And now I may have to go and read that. :) *skips off*

And your icon is le sex. They need to do that.

...

NOW.

[info]destrokker

July 20 2006, 21:36:37 UTC 5 years ago

Quite enjoyed this! Although I hate the fact most J/W fics will now contain a J/E mention, I love how bitter Will was towards Jack at the beginning of this story. The style of this story is excellent, and it also makes me think a lot about the third movie. Like someone else already said, at least now Will's image of Elizabeth qualified for sainthood is gone, which makes me laugh. I think you definitely touched upon that bit wonderfully.

[info]veronica_rich

July 20 2006, 21:54:45 UTC 5 years ago

I know what you mean. The only J/E mention I ever had in my stories before was conversation and mild threats from E to deprive J of some pleasure from his boy parts should he not take proper care/heed of Will. (I think it's a good possibility here, too, that Jack is fucking with Will by letting him think something more happened than what he saw.)

How could anyone marry someone they've put up on a pedestal? Nobody's perfect, and to realize that AFTER the wedding can be a major disaster. At least Jack is filthy and scruffy and dissolute upfront. *G*

[info]lulabel

July 22 2006, 00:54:23 UTC 5 years ago

I enjoyed this new story a great deal - Will has changed and grown so much, but in a totally logical way, based on the story we know so far. Emotionally rich characterizations, balanced with humor and a lovely sense of irony.

I also have to say that I absolutely love your epic masterpiece, the Contradictions series. Easily the best POTC fic I've read.

Also wanted to dive into the discussion over Elizabeth and her sexed-up role in DMC. While she certainly is not admirable in much of her behavior, I actually didn't get particularly riled up at her sextoy behavior. I think I saw her acting in that way not as a "traditional" femme siren thing, but as emulating Jack the Flirty Pirate. Afterall, he's the one who starts things off by inviting her to his cabin where he has no dress for her to wear. She's known to have a naive/romantic view of pirates, and clearly covets the wildness and freedom of the pirate way. I see her brazen, manipulative sexuality as a result of her desire to be just like a pirate - ie Jack. This certainly does not excuse her behavior - I'm just seeing it from a different angle.

I think the other reason I didn't get tweaked by her behaviour (in terms of it being sexist) was because I enjoyed the subtle subversiveness of her coming on to Jack while wearing boy clothes. It's got that Marlene Dietrich-in-a-mansuit sort of vibe. I think I saw someone else comment somewhere on how this interaction underscores Jack's ambiguous sexuality, which of course appeals enormously to a slashfan!

[info]veronica_rich

July 22 2006, 01:04:25 UTC 5 years ago

It's got that Marlene Dietrich-in-a-mansuit sort of vibe. I think I saw someone else comment somewhere on how this interaction underscores Jack's ambiguous sexuality, which of course appeals enormously to a slashfan!

I can see your point (and others have mentioned this, as well), but the problem for me on that is that she is so obviously not a boy and doesn't even appear such in her boyclothes - once she was on the Pearl, she didn't bother to keep her hair tied back or anything. And I'm probably the only person who wondered why the crew of the Edinburgh didn't notice her pouty lips and feminine facial bone structure. *G*

As for her being flirty like Jack. Jack doesn't have a fiance who would totally take it all the wrong way were he to find out (Will wouldn't do a thing to her, obviously, but I don't think he'd quite understand, especially since he went to pains to teach her how to use weapons) - he doesn't have anyone at all. He can flirt and play as much as he likes without hurting anyone's feelings, really.

I'm glad you liked the Slash Epic that-didn't-start-out-to-be-an-epic, LOL! It started as a couple of stories, one from Jack's POV and one from Will's to sort of bookend, and then ... well, plotbunnies feed on slash. That's all I'll say. :-P
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