Deep in a bayou near the mouth of the Pantano River, a wooden shack sits among twisted vines, high roots, and still, stagnant water. Moonlight illuminates the scene, and the shack is lit from within by what seems like hundreds of candles. A single lantern at the entrance beckons all those who dare to step over the threshold
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They've already been here for half an hour . Still no Will.
She hasn't answered any questions yet. When she does, she's tempted to let ‘sea turtles’ be her only explanation.
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"Quite a show, disappearin' like that."
He's smiling, even as he moves closer to both Elizabeth and Tonks.
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"Captain Reynolds!" she exclaims, voice shrill with her surprise. Very nearly overturning her chair and knocking her forehead against a bottle containing what looks to be lizards, Elizabeth jumps up and forward, craning her neck to get a look at the room beyond Mal.
It looks just the same as it did before.
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Mal turns his head to follow Elizabeth's gaze. "He opened the door to lead me here, and followed me through. I don't know what happened."
Looking both Elizabeth and Tonks up and down, "You alright? You both? Seein' you two disappear -- I found Will, 'n came with."
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Thunk
Barbossa emerges from the shadows, a dark half-grin on his face, taking a deep breath of the thick, humid, swampy air and a slow look around.
Thunk
He speaks to no one in specific. THis is a man who likes the sound of his own voice, all right.
"Here we are, then. Let's just hope the others arrive soon so we can start with the terrible task at hand."
He truly believes that. It's terrible, having to bring Jack back from the dead.
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Her tone leaves no room for argument. Now that they have returned, Elizabeth is bound and determined to make sure no one backs out.
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"Ah, miss Swann. Do you have any doubt that therrible trials, true ordeals in fact, lie ahead of us? That we few, we happy few, we band of brothers won't be tested through the metaphorical fires of Hell to prove whether we are worthy to bring a man back from beyond the gates of Death itself?"
He regards her with those sickly yellowing eyes, his lips curled in a derisive little scowl.
"Are you really that naïve stil?"
Because, you know, that's the sense in which he used the word 'terrible'. Not at all ny other, no way. He? He'll love to bring Jack back to life.
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By the way people in the cabin regard his presence, it seems like not too many people were expecting him either.
"Hi."
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"Captain Reynolds! Reinforcements, specially those of a professional nature, are always welcome, even if not expected precisely by all of us."
And here he gives the others a meaningful look. Okay, who invited the weird guy to the party?
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A figure brushes up against his shoulder, and if Mal looks down, he'll see a delighted, dark smile glitter up at him, and a mug held out to him. It's uncertain what might be in the mug...but it isn't tea.
Perhaps no one else was expecting him, but it rather seems like this one woman was.
Or maybe that isn't true, either.
"Captain."
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Will isn't surprised when the trees get closer and the light gets darker, and the fresh clean air is replaced with incense and musk and smoke. He is relieved however.
The silver plumb around his neck taps cold against his skin beneath his shirt, and he glances around urgently.
"Elizabeth?"
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With such close quarters in the shack, it's inevitable that Elizabeth shoulders someone aside to reach Will, though she does not notice who bears the brunt of her haste. Her eyes are trained on those of her husband to be, impatiently searching for answers to questions that have not yet been asked. Weaving around a chair, she comes to an abrupt halt, stiff and still, and simply stares.
She's painfully aware of their audience.
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Now he's found her and he remembers the last time he saw her, as well as how he felt the last time he was in this shack.
How she mourned the death of the man she loved.
He stops, and doesn't approach her any further.
"So we're all here?"
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"One by one we've all returned," she answers tonelessly. "Except for Tonks and I. We unintentionally arrived together."
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It's hard to say just when she arrives; she may have been lurking in a room just off the main one, hidden by a screen of beads and the dim, dusty light of her hut...
or she may have come late.
It hardly seems to matter.
Tia Dalma steps past a few hanging jars full of...something, and delicately pats a coiling snake on its jewel-coloured snout. Even in the orange half-light of flickering candles, her eyes are brilliant, and eager, and laughing with some secret delight.
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Not that she shared this expectation with anyone; she has kept her own counsel for at least a quarter hour, poised on the edge of her chair like the coiled snake across the room.
She stands, unfurling herself from the chair with surprising speed, and plants herself in the woman's path.
"Tia Dalma," is her only greeting.
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"Little miss," she says, entirely unsurprised by the influx of people to her hut.
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"Captain Reynolds," and there's a vague gesture in Mal's direction, "...says the lake turned into ocean and the Pearl disappeared."
Her tone is just short of demanding.
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