Meanwhile...

Meanwhile...
I love all creatures. I consider them, all of them, to be sentient beings... I write thrillers, fantasy, mysteries, gothic horror, romantic adventure, occult, Noir, westerns and various types of short stories. I also re-tell traditional folk tales and make old fairy tales carefully cracked. I'm often awake very early in the morning. A cuppa, and fifteen minutes later I'm usually writing something. ;)

Monday, May 29, 2017

What REALLY Went Into The Creation Of Jack Sparrow???...

An initial costume concept for Jack Sparrow before Depp's ideas took hold
Depp wears a dreadlock wig in a rock-and-roll approach to a pirate aesthetic.[35] He wears a red bandanna and numerous objects in his hair, influenced by Keith Richards' habit of collecting souvenirs from his travels;[36] Sparrow's decorations include his "piece of eight".[4]Sparrow wears kohl around his eyes, which was inspired by Depp's study of nomads, whom he compared to pirates,[37] and he wore contacts that acted as sunglasses.[38] Sparrow has several gold teeth, two of which belong to Depp,[39] although they were applied during filming. Depp initially forgot to have them removed after shooting The Curse of the Black Pearl,[40] and wore them throughout the shooting of the sequels.[8] Like all aspects of Depp's performance, Disney initially expressed great concern over Depp's teeth.[12] Sparrow wears his goatee in two braids. Initially wire was used in them, but the wires were abandoned because they made the braids stick up when Depp lay down.[41] Sparrow has numerous tattoos,[4] and has been branded a pirate on his right arm by Cutler Beckett,[3] underneath a tattoo of a sparrow.[2]
Depp collaborated with costume designer Penny Rose on his character's appearance, handpicking a tricorne as Sparrow's signature leather hat; to make Sparrow's unique, the other characters did not wear leather hats. A rubber version was used for the scene in Dead Man's Chest when the hat floats on water.[42] Depp liked to stick to one costume, wearing one lightweight silk tweed frock coat throughout the series,[43] and he had to be coaxed out of wearing his boots for a version without a sole or heel in beach scenes.[44] The official line is that none of the costumes from The Curse of the Black Pearl survived, which allowed the opportunity to create tougher linen shirts for stunts.[45] However, one remains which has been displayed in an exhibition of screen costumes in Worcester, England.[46] It was a nightmare for Rose to track down the same makers of Sparrow's sash in Turkey. Rose did not want to silkscreen it, as the homewoven piece had the correct worn feel.[47] Sparrow wears an additional belt in the sequels, because Depp liked a new buckle which did not fit with the original piece.[48]
Sparrow's weapons are genuine 18th century pieces: his sword dates to the 1740s and his pistol is from the 1760s. Both were made in London.[38][49] Depp used two pistols on set, one of rubber. Both survived production of the first film.[50] Sparrow's magic compass also survived into the sequels, though director Gore Verbinski had a red arrow added to the dial as it became a more prominent prop. As it does not act like a normal compass, a magnet was used to make it spin.[51] Sparrow wears four rings, two of which belong to Depp. Depp bought the green ring in 1989 and the gold ring is a replica of a 2400-year-old ring Depp gave to the crew, though the original was later stolen. The other two are props to which Depp gave backstories: the gold-and-black ring is stolen from a Spanish widow Sparrow seduced and the green dragon ring recalls his adventures in the Far East.[52] Among Depp's additional ideas was the necklace made of human toes that Sparrow wears as the Pelegosto prepare to eat him,[53] and the sceptre was based on one a friend of Depp's owned.[54]
During the course of the trilogy, Sparrow undergoes physical transformations. In The Curse of the Black Pearl, Sparrow curses himself to battle the undead Barbossa. Like all the actors playing the Black Pearl crew, Depp had to shoot scenes in costume as a reference for the animators, and his shots as a skeleton were shot again without him. Depp reprised the scene again on a motion capture stage.[38] In At World's End, Sparrow hallucinates a version of himself as a member of Davy Jones's crew, adhered to a wall and encrusted with barnacles. Verbinski oversaw that the design retained Sparrow's distinctive look,[55] and rejected initial designs which portrayed him as over 100 years old.[56]

Tia Dalma...


Tia Dalma (Calypso)
Pirates of the Caribbean character
220px-Tia Dalma-1-.jpg
Tia Dalma (Calypso)
Portrayed byNaomie Harris
Appearance(s)Dead Man's Chest
At World's End
Information
GenderFemale
OccupationObeah sorceress, Hoodoo practitioner, Voodoo Queen
Ship(s) served onBlack Pearl
Tia Dalma, played by Naomie Harris, is a fictional character from the movie Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest and Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End. It is revealed in At World's End that she is the sea goddess Calypso.

Name

The name implies several linguistic possibilities stemming from Portuguese to Spanish.
Tia is both Portuguese and Spanish for "aunt". Dalma could be a reference to the colloquial Caribbean Spanish del mar, "of the sea". It could also be a reference to Spanish de Alma, or Portuguese da alma, which means "of the soul". It could be derived from "Hypatia" meaning "highest, supreme".
However, it is an anagram of Dalmatia, a region in modern day Croatia infamous for its pirates who were mostly active during the 9th and 10th century.[citation needed]

Character history

Prior to the films

Prior to the events of the films, Tia Dalma was known as the goddess Calypso. Davy Jones, a human, fell in love with her. Calypso gave him the task of guiding the spirits of the dead lost at sea, and Jones accepted the task out of love for her. Jones was granted immortality on the condition that he could return to shore once every ten years. However, when Jones returned to shore after ten years of service, Calypso failed to appear.
Feeling betrayed, Davy Jones made a secret agreement with the Pirate Lords. He showed them how to bind her to human form using Pieces of Eight; and thus, at the first Brethren Court, the pirates captured Calypso and bound her to a human body. Her binding tamed the seas and satisfied Jones's desire for vengeance. This entrapment could only be reversed if the Brethren Court reassembled, resubmitted the original nine Pieces of Eight they used to bind her, and burned them. Until the events of At World's End, she was unaware of the crucial role that her former lover had played in her imprisonment. After she was bound in human form, Tia Dalma began to practice Voodoo and Obeah magic.
It was thought that Tia Dalma and Sparrow became lovers at some point during the latter's adult life; Sparrow confessed to having "known" her at a time when they had been "inseparable". Tia Dalma provided him with his compass; a mysterious device that pointed to that which its user truly wanted.

Dead Man's Chest

When the events of Dead Man's Chest begin, Jack Sparrow returns to see Tia Dalma after many years, in need of her assistance. Pursued across the Caribbean by Davy Jones's Kraken, he plans to find the Dead Man's Chest. This chest contains Jones's heart, and offers the only means to kill him. A series of trades takes place, leaving Jack with the location of the Flying Dutchman and a jar of dirt to protect him from Jones, while Tia Dalma gains possession of an undead monkey belonging to the late Captain Barbossa.
Jack's crew returns to Tia Dalma's shack after Jack is dragged to Davy Jones's Locker by the Kraken. Tia has foreseen this eventuality, and informs the mourning crew that there is a chance to save Jack. She reveals that she has resurrected Barbossa, who will help lead the rescue mission.

At World's End

Tia Dalma joins Barbossa, Will, Elizabeth, and the rest of the Black Pearl's crew as they travel to Singapore. There, they infiltrate Sao Feng's headquarters to acquire the navigational chart needed to sail to World's End and Davy Jones' Locker, barely escaping the clutches of the East India Trading Company. On the journey, she explains to Pintel and Ragetti that Jack Sparrow cannot be resurrected the same way Barbossa was because Sparrow was "taken" by the Kraken while Barbossa died from normal, earthly causes. When rescuing Jack from the Locker, Tia Dalma flirts with him and references a presumed past romantic relationship.[1]
As the group searches for an escape route back to the mortal world, they encounter numerous souls adrift in the water. Tia Dalma tells the group the story of Davy Jones and Calypso, but does not reveal her identity. While caressing her locket, she reminisces that Jones was once human.
Later, is revealed that Tia Dalma is Calypso, bound into human form. Her true motives for resurrecting Barbossa and Jack are unveiled when it is learned that both are Pirate Lords of the Brethren Court. Each has their respective "Pieces of Eight", the talismans necessary to free Calypso. She resurrected Barbossa to obtain his piece, and rescued Jack because his Piece went with him to Davy Jones' Locker. Upon arrival at Shipwreck Cove, she reminds Barbossa of her power by gripping his hand and temporarily rendering it skeletal. She warns him that it was only by her power that he is alive again and that he must fulfill their agreement to release her. If he failed, she would kill him.
Tia Dalma and her estranged lover, Davy Jones, briefly reunite while she is locked in the brig of the ship. Calypso says she still feels deeply for Jones. She responds to his anger by saying that Jones never would have loved her if not for her uncontrollable and unpredictable nature. Calypso also chastises him for abandoning his duty to ferry souls to the other world. It was because he neglected his charges that Jones became a monster. Calypso is also furious that the Pirate Lords trapped her in her human form. Thus, her true motives are revealed: she plans to use her powers against the current court in revenge for the original act of turning her into a human. She will also fully give her love to Jones, and it appears they reconcile. When she touches Jones, he momentarily transforms back into the man he once was. Jones's parting words betray that his heart will always belong to her.
As the battle between the East India Trading Company and the pirates looms, Barbossa and Ragetti release Calypso from her human form. Before Calypso is fully freed, Will tells her that it was Davy Jones who betrayed her by revealing to the first Brethren Court how to bind her into her human form. Bound by ropes, she grows to nearly sixty feet high, towering over the crew. Barbossa asks that she fulfill their agreement and use her powers to aid the pirates. Calypso breaks free, transforming herself into thousands of small crabs that engulf the ship and flee into the sea. Her fury then creates a violent maelstrom that becomes the battlefield between the Black Pearl and the Flying Dutchman. Instead of aiding a particular side, her wrath is directed both at the pirate lords for imprisoning her and at Davy Jones for his betrayal.

Personality and appearance

In Dead Man's Chest, Tia Dalma appears to be quite mysterious and enigmatic. Her personality is flirtatious and playful, alluding to the belief that Calypso was a seductress. She speaks in Jamaican Patois with a typical West Indian accent. Harris's mother, a Jamaican immigrant, was her accent coach for the films.[2]
The movie-based comic series of the same name depicted Tia Dalma barefoot, which was seen in At World's EndThe Kingdom Keepers book series also described her as perpetually barefoot, which was a plot point in "The Insider".

Hector Barbossa's Best Quotes (Part 2) - [He is the most dastardly eloquent pirate of them all, of course, after Captain "Black" Sam Bellamy]...

Hector Barbossa's Best Quotes, - [Part 1]...

My Favorite "POTC" Character & Favorite Villain, - Hector Barbossa...

"What ARE you doin'?!...  No, - what ARE YOU DOIN'???!!!...  NO, WHAT ARE YOU DOIN'??????!!!!!!" --- Hector Barbosa, when Jack Sparrow declares that he is the Captain Of The Black Pearl.
Hector Barbossa
Pirates of the Caribbean character
Barbossa in Pirates of the Caribbean At World's End.JPG
Portrayed byGeoffrey Rush
Brian George (video games)
Appearance(s)Film series
Video games
Legends of the Brethren Court books
The Price of Freedom book
Kingdom Hearts II
Information
Gendermale
OccupationPirate Captain
Pirate Lord of the Caspian Sea
Formerly:
First mate
Privateer
FamilyCarina Smyth (daughter)
Ship(s) served onCobra
Black Pearl
Hai Peng
HMS Providence
Queen Anne's Revenge
WeaponryKnife
Cutlass
Pistol
Hand grenades
Sword of Triton
Bounty10000 Guineas
Captain Hector Barbossa is a fictional character in the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, portrayed by Australian actor Geoffrey Rush. Barbossa was first introduced in the series' first installment Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) as the villainous and treacherous captain of the Black Pearl after committing mutiny against the ship's previous captain, Jack Sparrow. Having met his demise in the climax of the film, his character is revealed to have been resurrected at the end of Dead Man's Chest (2006). In the third film At World's End (2007), it is shown that Barbossa is also one of the nine pirate lords in the Brethren Court, the Pirate Lords of the Seven Seas. In the fourth film On Stranger Tides (2011), he has become a privateer in the British Royal Navy and is ordered to accompany Sparrow on an expedition for the Fountain of Youth. Barbossa also appears in the fifth film, Dead Men Tell No Tales (2017).

In the "Becoming Barbossa" featurette on the "Lost Disc",
 Geoffrey Rush shared his personal take on Barbossa's history: his family was noble but poor, and he ran away from home when he was 13. He went to the sea, and seeing how well the captains and officers lived, decided to become a captain himself. At first, he wanted to be an honest seaman, but quickly recognized that piracy was easier and more lucrative.

Background ---
Barbossa's first name, "Hector", was revealed in a director's commentary on the Curse of the Black Pearl DVD, but no character says it until the third film of the series (when the heroes rescue Jack Sparrow, and Barbossa greets him, Sparrow says: "Ah, Hector! It's been too long! Hasn't it?"). 
In Pirates of the Caribbean: The Price of Freedom, Barbossa is the pirate captain in the Caribbean. After his schooner, the Cobra, is attacked and destroyed by the infamous rogue pirates, he goes to Shipwreck Cove to inform the Pirate Lords of his disaster.[2] With the help of a young pirate Jack Sparrow, Barbossa discovers that the leader of the rogues is Borya Palachnik, the Russian Pirate Lord of the Caspian Sea. After he was captured and sentenced to hang, Borya gave his Piece of Eight to Barbossa, thus making him the next Pirate Lord of the Caspian Sea.
Hector Barbossa is fond of apples, which appear throughout the first film. He offers one to the captive Elizabeth and later tells her that once the curse is lifted, he wants to eat a whole bushel. There are also apples in his cabin, and when Jack is taken to the brig, Barbossa grabs the apple Jack was eating and throws it in the water in anger. When he dies at the end of "Curse of the Black Pearl", an apple rolls from his hand; he brought it to eat as soon as the curse was lifted. His cameo appearance at the end of Dead Man's Chest shows him biting into his favorite fruit. In At World's End, he is shown eating one apple when aboard the Black Pearl. In On Stranger Tides, he is seen eating apple slices aboard his ship.
According to the audio commentary from the first Pirates of the Caribbean DVD (featuring the scriptwriters), Hector Barbossa is skilled with a sword, and is considered one of the finest swordsmen in the Caribbean. According to the commentary, Barbossa's skills are equal to James Norrington (Jack Davenport) and exceeded only by Will Turner. His prowess with a blade is evident in his duel with Jack Sparrow, and in the maelstrom battle against the East India Trading Company. In the first film, the Black Pearl crew were hesitant to attack Hector Barbossa, even simultaneously. The only person known to have survived a one-on-one duel with him is Jack Sparrow, in the treasure caves of Isla de Muerta—and even that was with the aid of a pistol. Geoffrey Rush comments that Hector Barbossa supposedly used a sword from a very young age, possibly as early as 13.
He uses the same flag as the notorious pirate "Calico Jack" Rackham.

Hector Barbossa's Jolly Roger, which was originally the flag of pirate Calico Jack.
In Pirates of the Caribbean: The Visual Guide, Hector Barbossa is described as being attentive to his appearance, as his elaborate clothing shows. He wears a large ring bearing a lion's head symbol and has purplish blue ostrich plumes and a pheasant feather in his hat. His coat buttons are made from recast Incan silver, and his pistol once belonged to a Spanish pirate, won in a duel.[3]

Sunday, May 28, 2017

"Pirates Of The Caribbean," - Johnny Depp Make Up, - [Interesting]...

Women Go West, - Saloon Girls & Pioneer Women, - [I'm working on my story "High-falooting Frontier", a novel set in the Old Wild West]...

Pirate Drinks, - Part 2, - [Plus recipes!!!]...

Image result for images of pirates

"Why is the rum always gone???" ---  Jack Sparrow.

...Did you know that pirates would sometimes put red pepper juice and gunpowder in their rum???...  Alexander Exquelmelin wrote about a unique drink in his famous book, "History Of The Buccaneers":
"Of the said potatoes also they make a drink called Maiz. They cut them into small slices, and cover them with hot water. When they are well imbibed with water, they press them through a coarse cloth, and the liquor that comes out, although somewhat thick, they keep in vessels made for that purpose. Here, after settling two or three days, it begins to work; and, having thrown of its lees, is fit for drink. They use it with great delight, and although the taste is somewhat sour, yet it is very pleasant, substantial and wholesome. The industry of this composition is owing to the Indians, as well as of many others, which the ingenuity of those barbarians caused them to invent both for the preservation and the pleasure of their own life."  [Below are more recipes for famous pirate drinks.]
____________________________________________________________

Glögg (scandinavian, early medieval origin)

3 dl of water
1 spoon of cardamom
5 cloves
2 pieces of cinnamonroll
1/2 dl of raisins
10 almonds
1-2 dl of sugar
2 bottles of red wine
4 dl of vodka (brännvin if you´re in Sweden)
2 dl of port

Boil the water with spices, raisins and almonds.
let it boil for 5 minutes and then turn off the heat and leave
it for 1/2 an hour. then strain off the spices.
mix the water with the sugar and let the sugar melt.
pour all the alcohol into the water and heat it up.
serve hot in small cups with almonds and raisin at the bottom
perfect for those chilly nights on the poop deck.
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Ginger Rum 
Take a big glass jar. Fill it halfway up with fresh ginger, pour white rum to the top and put the lid on. Let it stand for about two weeks and "roll" the jar two times a day. After two weeks the rum turns a lovely golden color.  This means that it is ready.  Serve straight, in small glasses
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Grog
Water and rum mixed together was often called Grog. A dram (a small amount) of rum was often added to a sailor's water ration. A proper grog often included lime juice to help to stave off scurvy and a measure of cane sugar to help kill the bitterness of the water.
__________________________________________________________

Bumbo
Rum with water, lemon juice, sugar and nutmeg was known as bumbo and was more popular with pirates and merchantmen. 
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Rumfustian
Rumfustian consists of sugar, sherry, ale, egg yolk, lemon peel, gin, cinnamon stick, nutmeg and several cloves.  Sounds yuck to me, but so what???
__________________________________________________________

Sangaree
Sangaree is a type of mixed drink common in the West Indies and usually featuring wine or fortified wine and spices, similar to sangria.
Sangaree is now known as sangria, and it's a very popular modern drink. The ingredients are: red wine, oranges, limes, peaches, cherries or any other fresh fruit, sugar and pieces of lemon peel. 
__________________________________________________________

Flip
12 oz Ale
1 oz Brandy
1 oz Lemon Juice
1 Egg yolk
1 tbsp Granulated Sugar
1/4 tsp ground Ginger

Heat lemon juice, ginger, sugar, and 2 ounces of ale in a saucepan over moderate heat until the sugar has dissolved. In a bowl, beat the egg yolk into the brandy. Pour the lemon juice mixture into the bowl with the egg. Beat with whisk until well blended. Transfer mixture into a beer mug. Add the rest of the ale, stir well, and serve.

Pirate Drinks, - Part 1...

Image result for images of pirates

Alcohol was both a GodSend and Devil's Torment on board Naval and Pirate vessels. Thanks to Captain Billy Bones in the book Treasure Island, the alcoholic beverage most associated with pirates is rum. Of course, rum has a long association with the British and American navies because both navies had liquor rations and that liquor was usually rum.   Rum is a distilled alcoholic beverage made from fermented molasses. At one time it was all the rage in the Colonies as well as Caribbean because of its inexpensive means of production. 

Because water had a tendency to go bad onboard ships, due to bacterial growth, rum or other spirits was sometimes added to kill the taste. A dram (a small amount) of rum was often added to a sailor's water ration to kill the taste of the rancid water. This was called grog. This also explained coffee and Tea. Of course this was not just something that happened aboard ship. It also happened anywhere water tasted bad. 

Rum would often be the downfall of many pirate crews. Unlike military and merchant ships where some kind of authority measured out the rum being consumed, a democratically run pirate ship, with its weakened code of discipline, sometimes led to a complete disregard for sobriety. There are several accounts of pirate ships easily being boarded because the ship was too drunk to fight One of the best known examples was the capture of Anne Bonney, Mary Reed, and Calico Jack Rackham.  Even Bartholomew Roberts, the tea totaling pirate, was unable to stop his crew from drinking. 

Besides rum, ale was sometimes available on ship but ale, like water would turn bad after a period of time. Of course, the bad tasting water could still be drank. The bad ale could not, not unless you constantly wanted to be running to the ship's head, the lavatory. 

Port wine was often available to officers as a substitute for or in addition to a rum ration. Port first became popular among the English when they went to war with France, and could obtain French wines. Unlike normal wine port it is fortified by adding grape brandy during the fermentation process. This makes it more stable during temperature changes and allows it to last longer during sea travel.   Madiera wine was also popular among pirates because it didn't lose it's flavor in the hot tropical Caribbean, unlike many wines; it remained delicious, even when opened and allowed to let sit.  

It should be noted that Royal Navy Rum was a high quality rum and remained so until it was no longer issued as a ration in the British Navy. 

On a side note, whereas the Royal Navy had rum the Her Majesty's Army had gin. Legend has it, the Army in India had a problem with malaria and the cure for the disease, quinine tasted really bad. To get the soldiers to take their medicine, it was mixed with the liquor ration. Thus gin & tonic was born. 

It should also be noted that within the U.S. Navy, while it lasted (until 1854), the liquor ration was just as often bourbon or other whiskeys as it was rum. The amount of alcohol was determined by Congress and then left in the hand of the ship's captain.

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

From My Novel "PIRATE HEART", - Ellie Meets Wild Jack O'Leary...

Image result for images of pirates

 “Iffin you have the price me ship the Finola be taking you there almost fast as a gull flies!”

Ellie scooped some golden coins from her pouch, putting them in Jack’s hands.  

He blinked a few times, long black lashes sweeping his bright eyes.  “Ah, the sound o’ gold ringing in me pocket has great charms!  You gots yourself a ship and a smashing good cap’n.”  He stood, tall as Will.  He put out a lean brown hand.  “Jack O’ Leary, Wild Jack some calls me.  We leaves immediate after I gives Alice me attention.”

“Oh, of c-course, ---n-naturally, ---s-sure, --- ah, y-yes!,” Ellie babbled.

Jack rushed into the shack.  Jeremiah looked at Ellie, puzzled, as she sat down heavily on the wooden crate, puffing her cheeks.  Ellie took a few gulps of ale from the mug that Jack set on the ground .  Jeremiah suddenly drew back, his eyes huge.  He had seen Ellie’s shirt and jacket gaping for a moment showing the roundness of a breast.  “Lord Almighty, you’re a girl!”

Ellie grinned up at him.  “Woman.”

“Why are you hiding your pretty self in boy’s clothes?”

“Because it’s safer to travel alone disguised as a boy.”

He rubbed the back of his head.  "Your femaleness won‘t matter to Cap‘n O‘Leary considering how rich you be.”

“Not if he’s a pirate and I think he is!”

Jeremiah laughed.  Jack came through the doorway, Alice’s arm in his.  “Me dearie, give this sailor a final buss, aye?”  He pursed his lips comically and leaned down to her.  She reached up, throwing her arms around his neck.  “Jack, you be the sweetest man!”

“Alice, dinna let anybody destroy your natural beauty o’ spirit, most generous you be.”

“A bit aged.  They calls me Ancient Alice.”

Jack frowned.  “The old puglouses, that be harsh!  The oldest violins plays the most beautious music!  You be a tropical Stadivarius.”

Alice kissed his cheek.  “Will you be shipping out soon, Jack?  I never knowed a handsome rolling stone to stay put.”

“I be leaving today with these gentlemen.”  He waved toward Ellie and Jeremiah.

Jeremiah grinned.  “Cap’n, look closer at Elwood.”

Jack stepped back a little, pushing up the brim of his hat, grinning  “Ha!  You be a bit strange and large in the chest for a boy and pretty round lower down.  Be you done by some roguish swain and moving along to sweet motherhood, lass?”

Ellie looked at the ground.  “Yes.”

Jeremiah backed up a couple of paces, fear in his eyes.  “You’re gonna have a baby?  When?”  

Ellie laughed.  “”In about five months.”

“You be big for as far along as you be, lass.”

“Oh, you know so much about it, Jack?”

“I been at more than one woman’s lying in.  Could you possible be having twins?”

Ellie gasped.  “What?”

“You heard me, lass.  Twins runs in some families, like mine for instance.”

Ellie had a sneaking suspicion.  “Your family?”

Jack grinned, the sun sparkling furiously off his gold tooth.  Ellie noticed gray pearl studs in his ears too.  “Aye, me half brother Timmy were a twin, only one o’ them what survived birth, but he died o’ consumption when he were but a tyke.  ‘T was shortly after me ma hanged.  I heard o’ that, but did nay see it.  I been in Newgate set to die meself for stealing a sack o’ potatoes.  I escaped though, obvious, for here I stands a man, hale an’ hearty.”

Ellie squinted at him.  “Do you have a half brother Will?”

“Aye, me younger brother Will.  He been me ma’s legal child, her being married to Clive Burton.  I be the son o’ Liam Curry, a by-blow and proud o’ it for me da were a kind man, but that Clive Burton be a wicked old maggot, even with his lordly background.  Me ma were a raging beauty, her flashing eyes dark secrets, her hair a shining black river and her skin like buttery toffee.  Will went to sea too, must be the wild blood in the whelps o’ the lovely Mary O’Leary!”

Jeremiah looked excited.  “You’re a pirate like your brother Black Will!”

“Sure.  Say, you dinna look so well, Missy.”  Jack grabbed Ellie’s arm as she swayed on her seat.

“I’ll be alright.”

 "What be your name?”

“Ellie Strickland.”

“Howdy-do, Miss Ellie.”  He bent over her hand.  His velvety lips touched the back of it.  Just like Will’s, the beautiful eyes were dramatically set over broad and high cheekbones.  “Let me help you up,”  He put a gentle hand under her elbow.  “Sometimes a woman with child faints.  Does you want me to carry you?”

Ellie brushed her shirt down over her belly, picked up her jacket.  “No, I can walk.”

“You knows me brother well?”  His eyes went to her belly.  

Ellie lifted her chin proudly.  “I do.”

Alice came toward them holding three foaming glasses of ale.  Ellie accepted her’s gladly.  Jack and Jeremiah drained theirs completely.  One taste and Ellie did the same.  It was the best ale she’d ever had.  Alice grinned.  “I makes that.  It be how I mostly supports meself, selling it to taverns.”

“It’s delicious, Alice, many thanks!”

“Shaw, Miss, you be too kind.  I uses me granny’s recipe.  She were from Bavaria where they be genius about beers.  I has five sons, no daughters.  I could nay help overhearing ye talking about Will.”

Ellie sighed.  “Yes, I’m trying to catch up with him.  That’s why I need a fast ship.”

Jack picked up a long musket leaning against the shack.  “We be going.”  He slung it behind his big square shoulders, one knobby wrist hanging over each end.  Alice gave him a last kiss and Jack practically galloped off.  Ellie and Jeremiah had a hard time keeping up with him, but they saw his broad brimmed hat, it’s mass of colorful feathers bobbing through the open air market. 

Soon they were standing in front of Jack’s orange ship.  He put his hands on his hips, and laughed.  “The color o’ me Finola be a bit original.  I had three buckets of paint, nay enough o’ one color so I mixed them together and they covered her just fine!”

Jeremiah's eyes danced as he watched the activity on deck the bare-chested, barefoot crew swarming all over the Finola. 

“Let’s go!”  Jack strode up the gangplank.  He told his men they’d be leaving soon and some of them went to get extra provisions. 

“Our heading, Cap’n?”

“Santa Catalina, Mister Pettigrew.  This be Ellie Strickland and Jeremiah Potts.”  Jack rubbed his chin.  “There be no private quarters for females here.  Me crew sleeps under the stars.  Being exhausted by the day’s work some will nay bother you, but I can nay guarantee the behavior o’ such rowdy sea dogs.  You be welcome to share me cabin.”

Ellie eyed him suspiciously.  He chuckled.  “I swears I will nay touch you, at least I’ll nay this even.”

Ellie kicked his shin.  He jumped back, rubbing his leg.  “You dinna had to do that!”

“I did!  Keep your place, Captain O’Leary, and I accept your offer of space in your cabin.”

Jack put out both palms as if to fend her off.  “Forgive me.  And, come this way, Queenie.”

Eliie narrowed her eyes at being called ‘Queenie’, but she nodded.  “Thank you.”

Jeremiah pulled her arm toward him.  “You don’t have to stay with him.  You can sleep next to me on the deck.  I won’t let any pirates get you.”

Ellie was touched.  She patted Jeremiah’s shoulder.  “You’re a good friend, but I can handle myself.”

Jeremiah looked at Jack’s wide back as he walked away carrying Ellie’s sack.  “I hopes so.”

Ellie smiled.  “Don’t worry.”

Jack opened the door to his cabin.  Ellie stepped inside.  It was very different from Will’s elegant quarters on the Sea Wife.  There was only a cot with several blankets and a stool nailed to the floor. A journal, pot of ink and a quill were on the floor.  A big chest stood upright against the wall, a mug and a wooden board with a few crusts of bread and a stone bottle on it.  A tin bucket was in the corner.  In a wooden crate were neatly folded clothes.

“I’ll get you a cot, Miss Ellie.  The cooks rings a bell fer meals.  You can eat your share on deck or bring it here.  I has me duties as cap’n now.”  Jack gallantly swept his hat off his head and left.  Ellie sighed, sitting on the cot.

“AWKK!”  A scarlet macaw jumped from behind the chest, strutted across the cot arrogantly, turned and gazed at her with his cold white eyes.  “AWKK!”  The parrot spread his wings threateningly, bobbing his head up and down.  “CLAM BRAIN!  COW PIMPLE!  RUN HER THROUGH THE GIZZARD, LADS!”  

Ellie rushed out the door, slamming it hard.  She ran to Jack, grabbed his arm.  “There’s a huge parrot in your cabin!”

Jack turned.  “Oh, you met Fury.  He be me first mate although since he be avian the crew thought I should make it honorary-like.”

“Maybe Fury could stay on deck while I’m traveling with you.”

Jack rubbed his chin.  “Nay, ' t would upset him.  Besides, Fury be good company.  He talks, does tricks.  I been trying to teach him polite things like, thank you and howdy-do, but he nay wants to learn them.  Guess he gots a black heart!  I picked him up on Martinque, came right down to me hand, sweet boy!  The crew thinks he be tamed before because he be so gentle.”  Jack laughed.  

“Gentle!,” Ellie mumbled.  “You actually have a parrot!.”

Jack frowned.  “Aye.  Where does you think I gets feathers for me hat?”

“From Fury.”

“You think so?”

“Don’t mock me!  Do you want me to kick you again?”

“Damn me eyes, you be an evil-tempered wench!”  He stepped back.  “Me brother Will dinna try to train the obstinate out o’ you?”

“He tried.”

“He was nay too successful.”

“Not very.  Jack, does Fury bite?”

“Sure, he bites all sorts o’ things, fruit, seeds, nuts.  He be a fool for pineapple and he relishes his morning tea.  He nay be tasting fingers usual, but watch your digits around him even so!”  Jack laughed and laughed.  Ellie DID want to kick him again!