Between the last update and this, Oda in his infinite capriciousness, decided to finally let us know the year of the current timeline. Turns out, I was off by 17 years. I have gone ahead to rectify that but I just thought I'd share. At least this information came before I invested too much time into my worldbuilding document for this fic.
Read, review, rant and all that jazz. Constructive criticism continues to be welcomed and appreciated.
Huge thanks to Wrighteous, Lincoln859, dachdecker69, and Forzarismo for beta-ing this chapter.
Enjoy.
Alubarna, Alabasta Kingdom, Grand Line
The Den Den Mushi sat on the table like a patient servant, its shell painted in muted browns and grays. I lifted the receiver and began dialing, watching the snail's eyes blink open as the connection established.
Three rings. Then a click.
"Gilder speaking." The voice that came through was smooth, oiled by years of brokering deals in shadows. A man who operated out of Water 7 with the kind of quiet efficiency that kept the World Government's eyes conveniently elsewhere. We'd done business before. Crocodile had, anyway. The memories were mine now, and with them came the understanding that Gilder was the sort of contact you kept at arm's length and treated well.
"It's me." I let the words settle, taking a slow drag from my cigar. The smoke curled lazily toward the ceiling fan.
A pause, then a low chuckle. "Well, well. Didn't expect to hear from you so soon, Sir Crocodile. Last I heard, you were after an Emperor's head." There was the rustle of papers on his end, the clink of glass- whiskey, probably. Gilder always drank while working. Said it helped him think. "What can I do for you?"
"Enlighten me first." I tapped ash into my camel-shaped tray. "What's the climate like in Paradise right now? I've been focused on local matters. Need a broader picture."
"Ah." The sound of liquid pouring. "Well, post-Roger chaos is settling into new patterns. Paradise is crawling with fresh crews trying to make names for themselves. Some of them are competent. Most aren't. The ones that are? Either looking for work or looking to die trying to carve out territory."
"And current events? Anything I should know about?"
Gilder hummed thoughtfully. "Depends on what you're looking for. Bet you're already aware of the big ones. Flevance is the big tragedy everyone's whispering about, Amber Lead finally did what the doctors said it would. The whole country's collapsing. Government's quarantined it, shot anyone trying to leave. Messy business. Lots of refugees trying to slip through, if you're in the market for desperate labor."
I exhaled slowly. Flevance. The White City. In a year or so, a certain boy with spotted skin and a death wish would crawl out of that hell to later claim a power that could unmake the world. But right now, it was just a tragedy in progress. Useful information, but not immediately actionable.
"Noted," I said. "But that's not why I called."
"Figured as much. You're not the humanitarian type." I could hear the smile in his voice. "So what is it? Arms? Information? Personnel?"
There it was. The opening.
I leaned back in my chair, letting the silence stretch just long enough to be deliberate. "All three, potentially. But let's start with personnel. I'm going to need people- competent people. Not foot soldiers. I'm talking about specialists. Middle management types who can handle operations without constant supervision."
"Trustworthy middle management is expensive, Crocodile. And rare." Gilder's tone shifted, became more businesslike. "Most people with that kind of competence either work for the Government or one of the Emperors. The ones who don't usually have good reasons for staying independent."
"Then find me the ones with the right reasons." I rolled the cigar between my fingers, watching the ember glow and dim. "I'm not asking for saints. I'm asking for professionals. People who understand that loyalty is a transaction, and I pay well for quality."
"Fair enough." More rustling. "What kind of timeline are we talking?"
"Flexible. I'm laying groundwork now, but I don't need bodies until the foundation's set. A few weeks, maybe months." I paused. "What about arms?"
"Guns, blades, cannons- standard stock from North Blue factories, mostly. Nothing exotic unless you give me lead time and deeper pockets. I can also source some East Blue steel if you want quality over quantity."
"Keep it in mind. I'll let you know the specifics when I'm ready to place orders."
"Understood. And information?"
I took another drag, considering my words carefully. "Devil Fruits. I want to know about any that surface in Paradise. Confirmed sightings only- I'm not interested in rumors or painted pumpkins."
A low whistle. "That's a tall order, Croc. Devil Fruits don't exactly advertise themselves, and the ones that do get snapped up fast. Governments, Emperors, ambitious pirates. Everyone's hunting them."
"Which is why I'm willing to pay premium rates for good intelligence." I let steel enter my voice. "I'm not asking you to acquire them, Gilder. Just tell me when and where they appear. I'll handle the rest."
"Alright, alright. I'll add it to the list." Another sip of whiskey. "Anything else?"
I considered mentioning specific fruits- Flame Flame, Op Op, Hobby Hobby- but decided against it. Too specific. Too revealing. Better to cast a wide net and filter later.
"That's all for now. I'll be in touch when I'm ready to move forward. Start putting out feelers for personnel. I want names and backgrounds when we speak next."
"You got it. Oh, and Croc?" Gilder's voice took on a more serious tone. "Whatever you're building out there in the sand... make sure it's worth the investment. The Grand Line doesn't forgive half-measures."
I smiled, sharp and cold. "Neither do I."
I placed the receiver down before he could respond, and the Den Den Mushi's eyes slid shut, retreating into its shell.
Standing, I walked to the balcony window. The sun had fully come out and started its bright journey, painting Alubarna in shades of amber and gold. The city sprawled below, alive with commerce and ambition. Somewhere out there, King Cobra sat in his palace, making decisions that shaped this kingdom. And soon, very soon, I'd be sitting across from him, offering my own brand of assistance.
But first, I had to wait for him to make the first move.
I crushed the cigar foot in the ashtray and turned back toward the room, settling onto the couch with the day's newspaper.
Time to see how long it would take for the King of Alabasta to summon the Desert King.
The knock came two days later, in the grey light of early morning.
I was already awake. Crocodile's body didn't seem to need much sleep, another peculiarity I was still cataloguing, sitting at the small desk by the window, reviewing a ledger of current assets. The numbers were simultaneously impressive and disappointing. Crocodile had money, certainly more than most pirates, but not the kind of wealth that built empires overnight.
"Enter."
The door opened to reveal a young man in palace livery, his expression carefully neutral despite the sweat beading on his forehead. Messengers who dealt with men like me learned quickly to control their fear. This one had learned well.
He bowed, just deep enough to be respectful without scraping. "Sir Crocodile. I bring a message from His Majesty, King Nefertari Cobra."
I gestured lazily with my hook. "Let's see it."
He crossed the room in quick, precise steps, placing a cream-colored envelope on the desk before retreating just as swiftly.
I picked up the envelope, turning it over to examine the seal. Blue wax, pressed deep with Alabasta's royal crest. Official. Formal. And almost certainly not a social invitation.
I raised my hook, the golden curve catching the morning light, and slid the point beneath the wax seal with deliberate care. The seal cracked cleanly, splitting along the impression, and I unfolded the parchment with my other hand, the paper thick and expensive beneath my fingers
The script was elegant, written by a professional scribe:
Sir Crocodile, Warlord of the Sea,
Your recent activities within our borders have not gone unnoticed. While we acknowledge your status under the agreement between the World Government and the Seven Warlords, the Kingdom of Alabasta maintains sovereignty over its lands and the welfare of its citizens.
We invite you to an audience at the Royal Palace to discuss your intentions and explore potential arrangements that may prove mutually beneficial.
We await your response at your earliest convenience.
Signed,
His Majesty, King of Alabasta, Guardian of the Ancient Line, Protector of the Sandora, Sovereign of the Desert Kingdom,
Nefertari Cobra
I read it twice, noting what was said and, more importantly, what wasn't.
No accusations. No threats. But no warmth either. "Recent activities" was diplomatic speak for "you've been killing people in our capital, and we'd like to know why." The mention of sovereignty was a gentle reminder that Warlord status didn't make me immune to local authority. And "mutually beneficial arrangements" was the carrot dangling at the end of a very polite stick.
Cobra was smart. I'd known that from the source material, but that was just ink and exposition. This- this careful dance of words and unspoken threats- was the real thing. He wasn't trying to strong-arm a Warlord or posture about his authority. He was inviting dialogue, establishing boundaries, and leaving room for negotiation.
I could work with that.
I set the letter down and looked up at the messenger, who was still standing at attention near the door, probably hoping I wouldn't shoot the messenger literally.
"Tell His Majesty I accept his invitation. I'll present myself at the palace in three days' time."
The young man bowed again. "His Majesty will be pleased to receive you, Sir Crocodile. Shall I arrange for an escort?"
"No." I waved my hand dismissively. "I'll make my own arrangements."
Relief and confusion warred on his face before professionalism won out. "As you wish, sir. The palace will expect you three days hence."
"I'll be there. Expect me at dawn."
He bowed one final time and departed, closing the door with a soft click that somehow sounded loud in the quiet room.
I turned back to the letter, reading it once more. Three days. Enough time to prepare, to think through my approach, to decide exactly what kind of relationship I wanted to establish with Alabasta's throne.
The original Crocodile had played the long game; years of reputation building, all to position himself for the perfect backstab. But that game had ended in Impel Down's darkness, all his carefully laid plans unravelling in a single afternoon.
I wasn't going to repeat his mistakes.
If I was going to build something in this kingdom, it would be built on something more stable than deception. Not altruism, I wasn't deluded enough to think I'd become some kind of hero. But perhaps... pragmatism. A genuine alliance, where both parties benefited and neither had to constantly watch their back.
Revolutionary concept, that.
I stood, stretching until my spine cracked, then moved to the closet. Three days meant three days of preparation. I needed to look the part- not threatening, but not submissive either. Powerful but approachable. A Warlord who could be reasoned with.
I pulled out the fur coat, running my hand over the fabric. Expensive, dramatic, unmistakably Crocodile. It would do.
Outside the window, Alubarna was waking up. Merchants opening their stalls, workers heading to their trades, the city's heartbeat beginning its daily rhythm. In three days, I'd be sitting across from the man who ruled all of this, negotiating the future.
I smiled, sharp and anticipatory, and reached for a fresh cigar.
"Let's see how reasonable a king can be."
Three days passed in a blur of preparation and quiet calculation.
I spent the time refining my approach, rehearsing talking points that walked the line between cooperation and independence. How much to reveal, how much to withhold. What concessions to offer, what boundaries to establish. The meeting with Cobra would set the tone for everything that followed. Rush it, and I'd look desperate; overplay my hand, and I'd seem threatening.
By the time the appointed day arrived, the decision I'd made felt even more right than when I'd first settled on it: pragmatic partnership with clear mutual benefit. No hidden agendas, no elaborate schemes. Just two men discussing how to make a dangerous world slightly less dangerous for their respective interests.
Simple. Clean. Sustainable.
Boring, whispered a part of me that still remembered being Crocodile- that still craved the thrill of outmaneuvering opponents, of holding all the cards while everyone else played blind.
I crushed that voice beneath my heel and focused on the present.
The carriage I'd hired was modest; no ornate designs, no military escort, just well-maintained wood and canvas pulled by a pair of sturdy camels. Its only decoration was Alabasta's national symbol painted on the side panel, colors bright, proud and carefully maintained.
I couldn't help the snort of mild amusement that escaped me.
Patriotic.
The driver was a local named Rashid, a weathered man in his fifties who'd spent decades ferrying travelers between cities. Technically overkill for what amounted to a neighborhood drive- the palace sat well within Alubarna's walls, after all- but Rashid's reputation had preceded him. When I'd hired him for the week, he'd asked no questions, merely quoted his price and confirmed the schedule.
Professional.
That was worth paying for.
I settled into the cushioned seat as Rashid called out to the camels, and the carriage lurched forward with a gentle sway. The streets of Alubarna rolled past the window- merchants already hawking their wares despite the early hour, children chasing each other between stalls, the eternal bustle of a capital city waking to another day.
The district gates passed overhead, solid and functional, their sandstone arches marking the boundary between Alubarna's administrative heart and its surrounding districts. Beyond them, the cityscape shifted.
I lit a cigar and watched the landscape transform.
The carriage rolled through Alubarna's streets at a steady pace, moving from the commercial districts toward the administrative heart where the palace stood. We passed through neighborhoods of varying wealth- craftsmen's quarters with their workshops open to the street, merchant homes with their shuttered windows and private courtyards, then the broader avenues where government officials and nobility kept their residences.
The road was well-maintained here, smooth stone rather than packed earth. Other carriages passed by infrequently, some flying noble crests, others plain like mine. Alabasta's administrative lifeblood flowed along these streets, and everyone knew it.
Which made even short journeys targets for the desperate or stupid.
I almost groaned when my Observation Haki prickled- a dozen presences converging from side streets and alleys, spreading out to block the road ahead.
I didn't move. Didn't call out to Rashid. Just took another drag from my cigar and waited.
The ambush was textbook amateur hour: too many bodies, too much noise, too eager to reveal themselves. They emerged from between buildings in a rush, weapons drawn and faces covered with ragged cloth. Twelve men, maybe thirteen. Mix of swords, clubs, and a few rusted firearms that looked like they'd explode if fired.
Rashid pulled the camels to a halt, his voice tight with controlled fear. "Stay calm, honored passenger. I'll handle—"
"Don't bother." I didn't look up from my cigar. "They're already dead."
One of the bandits- their leader, judging by the slightly better sword and louder voice- strode forward with the swagger of a man who'd done this before and lived.
"Out of the carriage!" He punctuated the command by slamming his blade against the wooden frame. "Noble carriages mean noble gold, and we're collecting today's taxes!"
I exhaled smoke through my nose, watching it curl against the window.
Noble carriage. Idiots.
"Last chance!" The bandit chief's voice cracked slightly, bravado warring with uncertainty. "Out now, or we drag you—"
"Sables."
The word left my lips barely louder than a whisper.
Sand
peeled off me, unraveling into streams of gold and beige that poured through the carriage window like smoke. The grains spread wide, multiplying as I generated more, feeding the flow until a cloud of my own substance gathered in the air outside.
Then I compressed it. Spun it.
Commanded it.
The tornado formed in an instant, tight and controlled, a whirling pillar of pressurized sand that erupted from the seemingly empty air beside the carriage. Every grain was mine, generated from my body and responding to my will with absolute precision.
The bandits had maybe half a second to process what they were seeing before it struck.
Bodies flew. Weapons scattered. Screams cut short as the concentrated storm swept through their formation, lifting grown men and hurling them against walls and cobblestones. The sand scoured exposed skin, ripped cloth, and sent consciousness fleeing before overwhelming force.
I sat perfectly still in my seat, cigar still between my teeth, watching through the window as my sand did its work.
Five seconds. Maybe less.
When I released the technique, the sand dispersed, some falling to the street, some flowing back through the window to rejoin my body with seamless ease. The street was clear save for the scattered bodies lying unconscious across the cobblestones.
None dead, which had been the point. I wasn't interested in adding corpses to Alubarna's streets. Just sending a message.
Choose your targets more carefully.
I took another drag from my cigar, savoring the burn as the last grains of sand settled back into the folds of my coat.
Rashid hadn't moved. His hands were still locked on the reins, knuckles white, eyes wide and locked on the devastation outside. When he finally turned to look at me through the small window separating driver from passenger, his expression was a fascinating mix of terror and awe.
"Sir Crocodile..." His voice came out hoarse. "That was—you just—"
"Saved us some time." I flicked ash down to the carriage floor, watching it drift down to join its countless siblings. "The palace, Rashid. We're expected, and I dislike being late."
He swallowed hard, nodded once, and snapped the reins with shaking hands.
The camels, bless them, were either too well-trained or too stupid to care about the supernatural violence that had just occurred. They simply leaned into their harnesses and resumed walking, hooves crunching over sand that moments ago had been a weapon.
I settled back into my seat, watching the buildings roll past.
Behind us, the bandits would wake eventually- bruised, battered, and with a story they'd tell in taverns for years. About the carriage that didn't need guards, and the man inside who commanded the desert itself.
Let them tell it. Let the story spread.
By the time I finished my business with Cobra, I wanted every criminal within the capital to know exactly what happened when they crossed my path.
The palace appeared on the horizon thirty minutes later, its white stone walls gleaming like a mirage against the endless gold of sand and sky.
Rashid pulled up to the main gates without incident this time, and palace guards in crisp uniforms approached with the kind of professional courtesy reserved for dangerous guests they couldn't turn away.
One of them- a captain, judging by the slightly fancier uniform- stepped forward and bowed with mechanical precision.
"Sir Crocodile. His Majesty King Cobra awaits you in the throne room. If you'll follow me?"
I stepped down from the carriage, boots hitting stone with a solid thunk. The palace loomed above, all elegant architecture and carefully maintained power.
"Lead the way."
The Captain nodded and turned, and I followed him through gates that had stood for centuries, into the heart of Alabasta's power.
Time to see if a king and a pirate can find common ground.
Behind me, Rashid watched with the expression of a man for whom it just clicked that he'd been sitting three feet away from a natural disaster in human form.
I made a mental note to tip him well.
The palace grounds were a study in controlled opulence.
We passed through the outer gates into a courtyard where fountains- actual
fountains, in a desert kingdom- splashed water into marble basins shaped like lotus flowers. Palm trees provided shade over meticulously maintained gardens, and servants in crisp livery moved with practiced efficiency between buildings.
The Captain led me through it all with the same mechanical precision he'd displayed at the gate, boots clicking against polished stone. We crossed a bridge over a decorative canal, passed beneath an archway carved with protective symbols, and entered what was clearly the palace proper.
The temperature dropped immediately. Thick walls and clever architecture kept the interior blessedly cool, and the sudden relief from the desert heat was almost jarring.
We were maybe halfway down a long corridor, walls decorated with tapestries depicting Alabasta's history, when a figure emerged from a side passage ahead.
Chaka.
I recognized him immediately. One of Alabasta's two guardian deities, the Jackal. A Zoan user, powerful, loyal to a fault, and currently looking at me like I was a scorpion that had crawled into his king's bedroom.
The captain stopped and bowed. "Guardian Chaka. Sir Crocodile, as requested."
Chaka's sharp and assessing eyes swept over me once before he nodded curtly. "I'll take it from here, Captain. Return to your post."
The captain saluted and departed without a word, leaving me alone with a man who clearly wished I was anywhere else.
"Sir Crocodile." Chaka's voice was clipped, professional, but cold enough to frost glass. "His Majesty is waiting. Follow me."
He turned without waiting for acknowledgement and began walking. Not quite rude enough to be openly hostile, but making it clear this wasn't a friendly escort.
I followed, boots echoing against marble as we moved deeper into the palace.
"Pleasant weather we're having," I offered after a moment, more to see how he'd react than any real interest in small talk.
"Indeed." Flat. Emotionless. The conversational equivalent of a brick wall.
I smiled slightly and let the silence stretch.
We passed more guards, all watching me with the same wary professionalism, and climbed a wide staircase that curved upward with elegant precision. More tapestries. More history. Alabasta had been a power for centuries, and the palace made sure visitors never forgot it.
Chaka stopped before a set of massive doors, each one carved with intricate reliefs of desert animals and ancient symbols. He knocked twice- solid, authoritative sounds that echoed through the corridor.
"Enter." The voice from within was calm, measured, carrying the weight of authority without needing to shout.
Chaka pushed the doors open and stepped aside, gesturing me forward with a terseness that suggested he'd rather be gesturing me off a cliff.
"Sir Crocodile, Your Majesty."
I stepped through.
The throne room was exactly what you'd expect from a desert kingdom with money and taste: high ceilings, white marble columns, windows designed to let in light while keeping out heat. Banners bearing Alabasta's crest hung from the walls, and the floor was polished stone that reflected everything like dark water.
At the far end, elevated on a dais, sat King Nefertari Cobra.
He was younger than the version I remembered from the manga: mid-thirties, maybe, without the grey that would eventually streak his hair. But the bearing was the same: dignified, thoughtful, the kind of presence that commanded respect without demanding it.
To his right stood Pell, the other guardian deity. The Falcon. His expression was marginally less hostile than Chaka's, but only marginally. Both men were positioned to intervene if I made any sudden moves.
Flanking the throne were three men in stuffy looking official robes- advisors, clearly. Legal minds brought to witness whatever arrangement might be struck here. One of them was taking notes, quill scratching against parchment.
I walked forward, my coat dragging slightly behind me, cigar smoke trailing upward in lazy spirals. The click of my boots against marble was the only sound in the room.
I stopped at what felt like an appropriate distance- close enough to be respectful, far enough not to seem threatening- and inclined my head slightly. Not a bow, but an acknowledgment.
"Your Majesty. Thank you for the invitation."
Cobra studied me for a long moment, his expression unreadable. Then he gestured to a chair that had been placed at the base of the dais.
"Please, Sir Crocodile. Sit."
I settled into the chair with deliberate ease, crossing one leg over the other and taking a slow drag from my cigar. Playing it relaxed. Confident but not aggressive.
Cobra leaned forward slightly, fingers steepled before him.
"You've been active in Alubarna recently," he began, his tone diplomatic but probing. "Clearing out criminal elements. Protecting merchants. Making quite the impression on my citizens."
"Someone needed to." I exhaled smoke through my nose. "Your city has a pirate problem. I simply addressed it."
"Without consulting local authorities. Without coordination with my guard." His voice remained calm, but there was steel underneath. "You understand why that might concern me."
"I understand completely." I tapped ash into a small tray one of the advisors had wisely had a servant rush to place beside the chair. "A foreign Warlord operating independently in your capital could be seen as either protection or provocation, depending on one's perspective."
"And which is it?"
I met his gaze directly. "That depends on what you'd prefer it to be, Your Majesty."
Silence stretched between us. Cobra's expression didn't change, but I saw the subtle shift in his posture- interest, cautious but genuine.
"Explain."
I took another drag, organizing my thoughts. This was the pitch. The moment that would set the tone for everything that followed.
"The world has changed since Roger's execution," I began, keeping my voice measured. "The Great Pirate Era isn't a wave, it's a tide, and it's still rising. Paradise is flooded with crews looking to make names for themselves. Most are incompetent, but the competent ones are dangerous. And they all need to pass through kingdoms like yours to reach the New World."
One of the advisors shifted uncomfortably. Cobra remained still, listening.
"Alabasta is wealthy," I continued. "Trade routes, resources, strategic position. That makes you a target. Your guard is competent, but they're stretched thin protecting a kingdom this size. You've already seen the increase in pirate activity along your coasts. It's only going to get worse."
"And you're offering to help out of the goodness of your heart?" There was the faintest hint of dry amusement in Cobra's voice.
I smiled, sharp and honest. "I'm offering to help because our interests align, Your Majesty. I have no desire to see Alabasta destabilized. Chaos is bad for business, and I prefer stable operating environments."
"Operating environments." Pell spoke for the first time, his voice hard. "You make it sound like a commercial venture."
"Because it is." I turned my attention to him briefly before looking back at Cobra. "I'm not pretending to be a hero, Guardian Pell. I'm a pragmatist. Alabasta benefits from security, and I benefit from having a stable base of operations. Simple exchange of value."
"What exactly are you proposing?" Cobra asked, his tone carefully neutral.
"A loose alliance." I leaned forward slightly, holding his gaze. "I'll handle the undesirables- pirates, smugglers, anyone causing problems for your kingdom. I'll do it quietly, efficiently, and with minimal disruption to your citizens. In exchange, you grant me operational freedom in a city of my choosing. Somewhere I can establish a presence, conduct business, and exist without constant oversight."
"What kind of business?" One of the advisors, a thin, nervous-looking man spoke up.
"Legitimate enterprise. Trade, hospitality, security consultation. Nothing that would embarrass the crown or violate your laws." I paused deliberately. "Of course, having a Warlord operating openly in your kingdom sends a message to other pirates. Free deterrent, if you will."
Cobra's fingers tapped against the armrest of his throne, a subtle tell that he was considering the offer seriously.
"And if we refuse?"
I shrugged, the movement casual. "Then I continue doing what I've been doing- operating independently, handling threats as I see them, and hoping our paths don't cross inconveniently. But I'd prefer cooperation. Cleaner for everyone involved."
The unspoken threat hung in the air like my smoke:
I'm already here. You can work with me or work around me, but you can't ignore me.
Chaka's hand moved fractionally toward his weapon. Pell's eyes narrowed. But Cobra's expression remained thoughtful, calculating.
"Which city?" he asked finally.
"I haven't decided yet." A careful lie. "Somewhere with commercial potential. Somewhere that benefits from additional security. I'd want to survey options before making a final choice, naturally."
"Naturally." Cobra leaned back, studying me with those shrewd eyes. "And this arrangement. How long would it last?"
"As long as it remains mutually beneficial." I met his gaze steadily. "I'm not looking to put down roots permanently, Your Majesty. But while I'm here, I'd prefer we understand each other."
Another long silence. Then Cobra looked to his advisors, a subtle gesture that invited their input.
The thin one leaned in, whispering rapidly. The second advisor- older, calmer- murmured something that made Cobra nod slightly. The third simply watched me with the expression of a man trying to calculate acceptable losses.
Finally, Cobra raised a hand, silencing them.
"Your proposal has merit, Sir Crocodile. But I'll need specifics before agreeing to anything. Which city you're considering, what kind of operations you intend to run, assurances that your presence won't destabilize local governance."
"Reasonable requests." I stood smoothly, taking it as the dismissal it was. "I'll prepare a formal proposal and submit it through proper channels. In the meantime, I'll continue my current activities… unless you'd prefer otherwise?"
"Continue." Cobra's voice was firm. "But understand, Sir Crocodile: Alabasta tolerates your presence because of your status and your actions thus far. But tolerance is not carte blanche. Step outside acceptable bounds and, Warlord or not, you'll answer for it."
I smiled, genuine respect flickering beneath the calculated confidence.
"I wouldn't expect anything less, Your Majesty."
I turned to leave, then paused, glancing back over my shoulder.
"One more thing. There were a couple bandits who attacked my carriage on the way here. They're alive but unconscious on Merchant's Avenue. You might want to collect them before they wake up and embarrass your city guard further."
Cobra's expression didn't change, but I caught the faintest twitch at the corner of his mouth. Amusement, maybe. Or exasperation.
"Thank you for the information. Chaka will see you out."
The Jackal stepped forward, his expression still cold but perhaps fractionally less hostile than before. Or maybe I was imagining it.
I followed him back through the corridors, past the guards and tapestries and carefully maintained power, until we reached the courtyard that led to the palace gates.
Chaka stopped at the threshold, turning to face me one final time.
"The King is a good man," he said quietly, voice still clipped but carrying weight. "Don't make me regret not killing you where you stood."
I met his gaze, cigar smoke curling between us.
"I'd prefer you didn't have to, Guardian Chaka. Makes for awkward working relationships."
He stared at me for another long moment, then turned and walked back into the palace without another word.
I was halfway across the courtyard, boots clicking against stone as I made my way back toward the outer gates, when I heard it.
A child's laughter, high and bright, echoing off the palace walls.
Then rapid footsteps- small ones, running.
I turned just in time to see a blur of blue hair and white fabric come tearing around a corner, tiny legs pumping with the single-minded determination only children possess. She couldn't have been more than two years old, arms outstretched as she chased something I couldn't immediately see.
A butterfly. White wings with blue spots, fluttering just out of reach.
The girl-
Vivi, I realized with a jolt- was so focused on her quarry that she didn't notice me standing in her path until she was three steps away.
She skidded to a halt, sandals scraping against stone, and looked up.
And up.
And up.
Her eyes- wide and impossibly blue- met mine, and for a moment we simply stared at each other. Me, the notorious pirate Warlord with a reputation for violence. Her, a toddler princess who'd just discovered a very tall obstacle in her butterfly-hunting expedition.
I waited for the fear. The tears. The running away.
Instead, she tilted her head, curiosity replacing surprise.
"You're tall," she announced, her voice carrying that absolute confidence small children have when stating obvious facts.
I blinked. "I am."
"Are you a giant?"
"No."
"Oh." She considered this, then pointed at my hook. "What's that?"
"A hook."
"Why?"
"Because my hand isn't there anymore."
"Why?"
I opened my mouth, then closed it. How exactly did one explain the sordid violence involved in losing a limb to a two-year-old?
"Accident," I settled on.
"Oh." She nodded sagely, as if this explained everything. Then she pointed at the cigar between my teeth. "That smells bad."
Despite myself, I felt a small smile tug at my lips. "It does."
"Then why—"
"Princess Vivi!"
A woman's voice, high and panicked, cut through the courtyard. A moment later, a middle-aged woman in servant's clothing came hurrying around the same corner Vivi had emerged from, her face flushed with exertion and worry.
Igaram's wife. His suspiciously similar looking wife. Terracotta, though most called her Terra.
She spotted Vivi standing before me and went pale, her steps faltering before maternal instinct overrode fear and she rushed forward.
"Princess, you mustn't run off like that! And bothering the honored guest—" She reached for Vivi's hand, bowing hastily to me. "My deepest apologies, Sir Crocodile. The princess is very spirited and—"
"It's fine." I waved my hand dismissively. "No harm done."
Vivi, seemingly oblivious to the tension radiating from her caretaker, was still staring at me with that intense, unblinking curiosity children have when they've found something fascinating.
"Are you a pirate?" she asked suddenly.
Terracotta made a strangled sound. "Princess—"
"I was," I said, cutting through the woman's panic. "Now I work for the Government."
"Oh." Vivi processed this. "Do you have a ship?"
"I do."
"Can I see it?"
"Vivi!" The lady's voice cracked with mortification. "You cannot simply invite yourself onto—"
"Maybe when you're older," I said, surprising myself with the answer. I crouched down, ignoring the way my coat scraped fully against the ground and put myself closer to her eye level. "For now, you should probably listen to your minder and stay where you're supposed to be."
Vivi's expression turned mutinous. "But the butterfly—"
"Will still be there tomorrow." I reached out with my good hand, patting her head once. Her hair was soft, still baby-fine. "And you'll be faster tomorrow. Better odds."
She brightened immediately, that mercurial emotional shift only children manage. "Really?"
"Really." I straightened, the movement fluid despite the bulk of my coat. "Now go. Before your father sends his guards looking for you."
Terracotta grabbed Vivi's hand with obvious relief, bowing again. "Thank you for your patience, Sir Crocodile. Come along, Princess."
"Bye, tall pirate man!" Vivi waved enthusiastically as she was led away, her earlier mission apparently forgotten.
I watched them go, Terracotta muttering worried admonishments while Vivi chattered about butterflies and ships and whether giants were real.
When they disappeared back into the palace, I turned and continued toward the gates.
Something tight had formed in my chest- an emotion I couldn't quite name. Protectiveness, maybe. Or regret for a future that would've come to pass. In the original timeline, Crocodile had tried to kill this kingdom. Had manipulated events to destroy everything that little girl would grow up to love.
Not this time.
Not this time.
I stepped through the outer gates into the streets beyond, where Rashid waited with the carriage.
"Everything alright, sir?" he asked, noting something in my expression.
I climbed into the carriage, settling into my seat with a long exhale.
"Fine. Just remembering something."
"Sir?"
"Nothing important." I pulled out a fresh cigar, lighting it with practiced ease. "The hotel, Rashid. I have work to do."
As the carriage rolled forward and the palace disappeared behind us, I couldn't quite shake the image of wide blue eyes and innocent curiosity.
I allowed myself a small smile.
First move made. Now let's see how the game plays out.
The hotel room was exactly as I'd left it; curtains half-drawn, the faint scent of tobacco lingering in the air, the ceiling fan turning its lazy circles overhead. I shrugged off my coat, draping it over the back of the couch, and moved to the balcony window.
Alubarna sprawled below, golden and alive in the afternoon sun.
I'd done it. Made first contact with Cobra, established parameters for cooperation, and walked out of the palace with more freedom than I'd entered with. All because of four little words: Warlord of the Sea.
The title was a marvel of political engineering when you thought about it.
I pulled out a fresh cigar, lighting it as I leaned against the balcony doorframe. The meeting with Cobra played back through my mind- his careful questions, his measured responses, the way he'd listened despite clearly having reservations. Any other pirate would have been arrested on sight, or at minimum denied audience entirely. But because I wore the Government's seal, because I'd been given legitimacy by the World Government itself, Cobra had to treat me as something between threat and ally.
The leverage was absurd.
I could walk into a kingdom's capital, kill criminals in its streets, and the local monarch had to
consider my proposal instead of simply throwing me out. The Government had essentially created a class of pirates who operated with impunity as long as they didn't cause too much trouble. And the kingdoms? They had to accept it, because refusing a Warlord meant potentially antagonizing the very organization that was supposed to protect them.
Brilliant. Cynical. Effective.
I took a long drag, exhaling smoke into the desert air.
The freedom was intoxicating. No Marine patrols harassing me. No bounty hunters trying their luck. No constant need to hide or fight my way through Government blockades. I could conduct business openly, make deals with legitimate authorities, and build something stable instead of constantly fleeing the next crisis.
This, I realized, was why Crocodile had kept the title even after establishing Baroque Works. The prestige was useful, but the
freedom was invaluable. You could accomplish so much more when you weren't constantly looking over your shoulder for Marine battleships.
Of course, it came with strings. Responding to summons, occasionally dealing with threats the Government didn't want to handle directly, maintaining at least a veneer of cooperation. But those were acceptable costs for the latitude it provided.
And I intended to use every bit of that latitude.
I turned from the balcony and moved back into the room, settling onto the couch. The meeting had gone well, but it had also crystallized something I'd been dancing around since arriving in this world: I needed to make a decision. A real one, not just vague plans and theoretical strategies.
Where was I going to build?
The question seemed simple on its surface, but the implications sprawled out like weed roots in the sand. The city I chose would shape everything that followed- what kind of organization I could build, what kind of relationships I'd forge, what kind of future I was committing to.
I'd narrowed it down to two options days ago, but now, fresh from negotiating with a king, the weight of the choice pressed down with new urgency.
Nanohana or Rainbase.
I stood, pacing the length of the room as I worked through it again. Sometimes thinking required motion.
Nanohana was the obvious choice in many ways. The port city was Alabasta's primary gateway to the outside world- every ship, every cargo, every whisper from beyond the kingdom's borders passed through those docks first. Control Nanohana, and you controlled information. You controlled trade routes. You had your finger on the pulse of everything entering or leaving the kingdom.
It was also relatively cosmopolitan by Alabasta's standards. Foreign merchants, sailors from a dozen different nations, a constant flow of new faces that would make it easier to blend operations into the background noise of legitimate commerce. I could establish a shipping company, a trading house, something that generated real, sustainable income while providing cover for less legitimate activities.
The infrastructure was already there too. Warehouses, established trade networks, connections to markets across Paradise and beyond. I wouldn't be building from scratch so much as inserting myself into an existing ecosystem.
I paused at the window, watching a merchant caravan pass below.
But Nanohana had one critical flaw: visibility.
The Marines watched port cities like hawks. Not constantly, not oppressively, but they were
there. Regular patrols, customs inspections, the occasional anti-smuggling operation. As a Warlord, I'd be tolerated, even welcomed in some circles. But everything I did would be noted, filed away, added to some bureaucrat's report that eventually made its way up the chain of command.
That kind of scrutiny was manageable, but it was constraining. And it meant I'd always be operating with one eye on the Government, making sure I didn't cross invisible lines that shifted with political winds.
Then there was the local power structure. Nanohana had money, which meant it had entrenched interests. Merchant guilds, shipping magnates, families who'd controlled the docks for generations. They wouldn't welcome a pirate- Warlord or not- muscling into their territory. I'd spend months, maybe years, navigating local politics and power struggles before I could actually accomplish anything meaningful.
Exhausting. Inefficient.
I resumed pacing.
Rainbase, on the other hand...
Rainbase was a different beast entirely.
The City of Dreams, they called it. Built on vice, gambling, and the eternal human desire to believe that fortune could change with the roll of dice. It wasn't quite lawless- Cobra's authority extended there the same as anywhere else in Alabasta- but it was
loose. The kind of place where authorities looked the other way as long as taxes got paid and violence stayed contained.
The city's entire economy revolved around separating fools from their money, which meant the power structure was fluid. Whoever had the biggest casino, the best shows, the most reliable games- they ran Rainbase. There was no old money blocking my path, no ancient merchant families whose approval I'd need. Just entrepreneurs and criminals, all competing for the same pool of desperate gamblers and thrill-seekers.
I could work with that.
More than that, I could
dominate that. Build the biggest, most luxurious casino Rainbase had ever seen, and suddenly I'd be the center of gravity around which the entire city orbited. Money would flow directly to me instead of through layers of middlemen and intermediaries. And the kind of people drawn to gambling dens- criminals, merchants with shady connections, information brokers, desperate souls with secrets to sell- they'd all come to my door voluntarily.
The Marine presence was minimal too. Oh, they had a token office, a handful of officers who collected bribes and pretended to maintain order. But they didn't care about Rainbase the way they cared about ports and trade routes. As long as piracy stayed off the coasts and gambling stayed in the city, they were content to let Alabasta handle its own internal affairs.
Freedom. Real freedom, not just the licensed kind the Warlord title provided.
But Rainbase had its own problems.
I stopped at the desk, running my fingers along the wood grain.
The city's economy was inherently volatile. Gambling booms and busts, winners and losers, fortunes made and lost overnight. Building something stable on that foundation would be like constructing a palace on shifting sand- possible, but requiring constant attention and adjustment.
And the very lawlessness that made it attractive also made it dangerous. Rainbase attracted exactly the kind of people who'd challenge a new power trying to establish itself. Rival casino owners, criminal syndicates, ambitious upstarts who saw me as either competition or opportunity. I'd spend my first year fighting off challengers and establishing dominance through force as much as business acumen.
Then there was the reputational cost. Alubarna was respectable, Nanohana was commercial, but Rainbase was
vice. Planting my flag there would color how people saw me, how Cobra saw me. It would be harder to maintain the "reformed pirate" angle when I was running what was essentially a glorified den of sin.
Not impossible, just harder.
I pulled out a chair and sat, doing my best imitation of steepling my fingers as I stared at nothing in particular.
Two cities. Two futures.
Nanohana offered stability, legitimacy, and access to global trade. It was the smart choice for someone planning to build a lasting commercial empire.
Rainbase offered freedom, immediate cash flow, and the kind of controlled chaos where a man with ambition could rise fast.
What did I need more?
I thought about the timeline I was working against. Fourteen years until Luffy set sail. Fourteen years until everything I knew from canon started moving like clockwork toward its inevitable crescendo. That sounded like a lot of time, but it wasn't. Not when I needed to build an organization, recruit key personnel, secure resources, and somehow position myself to survive what was coming.
I needed fast growth. Needed to establish power quickly enough to matter but carefully enough to avoid drawing the wrong kind of attention. Nanohana's steady, respectable growth was attractive, but it was also
slow. I'd spend years laying groundwork before I could leverage it into real influence.
Rainbase was faster. Riskier, but faster.
And there was another factor I kept coming back to: narrative weight.
In the original timeline, Crocodile had chosen Rainbase for his base of operations. He'd built Rain Dinners into the crown jewel of the city, used it as cover for Baroque Works, turned it into a symbol of his power. There was a reason he'd made that choice- the city's structure aligned perfectly with the kind of operation he wanted to run.
I wasn't planning to follow his exact playbook, but some elements were worth preserving. Rainbase
worked as a base of operations. It had proven itself viable even if the endgame had been flawed.
Besides, there was a certain poetic symmetry to it. Taking the same location but using it for different purposes. Proving that the problem wasn't the foundation, but what had been built on top of it.
I stood again, moving back to the balcony. The sun was lower now, painting everything in deeper shades of amber.
I had to decide.
I could play it safe, choose Nanohana, build slowly and carefully with minimal risk. Or I could embrace the chaos of Rainbase, move fast, and trust my knowledge and abilities to navigate the turbulence.
Safe versus fast.
Legitimate versus free.
I took a long drag from my cigar, letting the smoke fill my lungs before exhaling slowly.
Fuck it.
Rainbase. It had to be Rainbase.
Not because it was the smart choice- though it had merits- but because it was the
right choice for what I needed to accomplish. I needed cash flow now, not three years from now. I needed freedom to operate without constant oversight. I needed a power base that could grow quickly enough to matter when things started accelerating.
And honestly? Part of me wanted to prove I could take the same foundation Crocodile had used and build something better. Something that didn't end with me face-down in the sand, everything I'd worked for crumbling to dust.
The decision settled into my chest like a weight finding its proper place.
Rainbase. The City of Dreams.
I'd make it my City of Power instead.
Besides…
Becoming a Casino Mogul? There was certainly worse ways to spend a few years.
I settled onto the couch, letting my head fall back against the cushions. The weight of the day pressed down- the meeting with Cobra, the decisions made, the money about to be committed. My eyes drifted closed, not quite sleeping but not fully awake either, hovering in that liminal space where thought becomes hazy and formless.
My breathing slowed without conscious effort, deepening into a rhythm that felt almost meditative.
In that state, it was just all too easy to
feel.
The maid two rooms over, her presence a small, nervous flutter as she changed linens. Below me, the hotel staff moved through their routines, their presences filtering through my consciousness like distant music. Cleaning, cooking, managing the endless small tasks that kept a luxury establishment running.
I'd been using Observation Haki instinctively since arriving in this body- feeling presences, sensing danger- but this was different. This wasn't echoes of a forgotten instinct. This was
my awareness reaching out on its own, spreading like water finding its level.
My eyes opened slightly, and I stared at the ceiling with new understanding.
I'd never really
focused on it before. Never tried to push its limits or understand its full scope.
Now seemed like a good time to start.
I closed my eyes again, this time deliberately, and reached out with purpose. Past the maids and the staff in my immediate vicinity.
I pushed my awareness further, testing the boundaries. The street outside came into focus- not visually, but as a tapestry of presences woven together. Merchants hawking wares, their emotions bleeding through as ambient frustration and hope. Children playing, bright sparks of uncontained energy. A pair of guards on patrol, their presences more disciplined, controlled. I could feel the
shape of them, the texture of their intent. The guard on the left was bored, going through motions. The one on the right was alert, scanning for threats out of genuine concern rather than obligation.
Two blocks. Three. The presences became fuzzier at distance, less distinct, but still perceptible. A fight breaking out in an alley- two presences clashing, anger spiking like fever. A couple arguing in their home, emotions sharp and cutting. An old man sitting alone, his presence so still and quiet it was almost invisible.
Then I hit a wall. Not a physical barrier, but a limit. My awareness couldn't stretch any further without losing coherence entirely. Four blocks, maybe five at most when actively focusing. I pulled back, letting the awareness contract until it settled into a comfortable radius. This natural sphere of perception extended maybe a block in all directions- close enough to be immediately useful without requiring active concentration.
Room for improvement, but not bad.
I opened my eyes, exhaling slowly. The room snapped back into sharp focus, but I could still
feel the people beyond those walls, still sense them moving through their lives.
Another tool in the arsenal. Another advantage.
I moved to the desk and pulled out paper and ink. Time for a less mystical sort of taking stock.
First things first, I had to acknowledge the situation I had found myself in.
My finances aren't as healthy as I'd like.
Crocodile had accumulated roughly three hundred million Berries through villainy and various pirate ventures over the years, with another sixty million tied up in investments and holdings scattered across Paradise. Liquid assets that could be deployed almost immediately.
I wrote the number down, then immediately crossed it out and wrote what mattered more: the costs.
Rain Dinners could eat hundred to two hundred million just for construction and initial outfitting, maybe more. That wasn't counting staff, security, supplies, or the bribes that kept operations smooth in a place like Rainbase.
I stared at the number, frowning.
Building Rain Dinners from the ground up was a mistake. Not the casino itself- that was still essential- but starting there was putting the cart before the horse. I'd be bleeding money for a year or more, operating on fumes while trying to establish myself in a city I barely understood. No cash flow, no personnel, no infrastructure. Just an expensive hole in the ground and a target on my back from every established power in Rainbase who'd see a Warlord muscling into their territory.
Stupid. Inefficient.
And more than that- shortsighted.
Rain Dinners was meant to be the crown jewel, the iconic establishment that people thought of when they heard my name. But it was never supposed to be the
only jewel. I wanted more than a single casino in a desert city. I wanted an empire.
I wanted Rainbase itself.
Not through conquest or open rule- that would bring too much attention, invite too much interference. But through economic dominance. Entertainment capital of Paradise. The place where pirates and merchants and nobles came to spend their fortunes, where money flowed like water and every vice had a price. The Las Vegas of this world. A hot spot even more acclaimed than the Gran Tesoro.
And I would be the power behind it all. The final boss at the top of the pyramid, with Rain Dinners as my palace.
But you didn't build an empire by constructing a palace first and hoping the kingdom grew around it. You built the kingdom first, piece by piece, until the palace became inevitable.
I needed a different approach.
I set down the pen and leaned back, thinking. Rainbase wasn't some frontier town waiting for development- it was an established market with existing businesses, existing networks, existing cash flows. Gambling dens, brothels, entertainment venues, merchant operations. Small to mid-level enterprises that were already profitable, already staffed, already integrated into the city's ecosystem.
Why build from nothing when I could acquire what already worked?
The idea settled into place with satisfying logic. Take over existing businesses. Not through obvious force- that would unite opposition against me- but through leverage. Debt, protection, strategic pressure. Find owners who were struggling, overextended, or vulnerable to the right kind of persuasion. Make them offers they couldn't refuse, or shouldn't refuse if they were smart.
Integrate them into my organization, keep the original management in place where competent. Use their expertise, their connections, their understanding of Rainbase's market. And most importantly, use their cash flow to fund the real prize.
Rain Dinners wouldn't be built on my money alone. It would be built on theirs. And when it opened, it wouldn't be competing with other establishments- it would be the flagship of a network that already controlled them.
I picked up the pen again, sketching out the revised approach. Start with reconnaissance- identify viable targets, businesses that were established enough to be valuable but vulnerable enough to acquire. Gambling halls would be priority; they aligned with the ultimate goal and generated reliable revenue. Entertainment venues second; they brought in crowds and information. Merchant operations third; they provided legitimate cover and trade connections.
With this approach, I'd obtain several key advantages. Operating capital without draining my own reserves. Experienced personnel already familiar with Rainbase's dynamics. A foothold in the local market before announcing bigger ambitions. Intelligence networks through existing customer bases and legitimate business fronts for less legitimate operations.
The previous owners- if I played this right- would become part of the foundation rather than obstacles. Keep them on as managers, give them stakes in the larger vision, make them invested in Rain Dinners' success because their own operations would feed into it. Some would resist, certainly. Those could be replaced. But most people, when offered a choice between ruin and partnership with a Warlord, I reckon would choose partnership.
I tapped the pen against my chin, considering timing. First spend a few weeks observing and identifying targets, understanding the local power structure. Then begin acquisitions, one at a time, careful not to move so fast it triggered organized resistance. Build quietly, consolidate carefully.
Each business I controlled was a brick in the foundation. And once I had enough bricks, once I controlled enough of Rainbase's entertainment and vice economy, Rain Dinners would rise as the inevitable culmination. Not an outsider's vanity project, but the crowning achievement of the city's most powerful figure.
And from there? Expand. Elevate. Transform Rainbase from a desert stopover into a destination. Attract bigger names, bigger money, bigger opportunities. Make it the kind of place where Emperors' crews came to blow off steam, where merchant princes negotiated deals, where information flowed as freely as alcohol.
Make it a place where my whispers at the top would transform into quakes throughout the city.
Because who would move against the man who controlled the economic heart of Paradise's most profitable vice city? The man every pirate, noble, and merchant depended on for their entertainment and secrets?
It would take patience. But I was ready. The original Crocodile had displayed phenomenal prowess in this virtue. Patience now meant power later. The kind of power that came from controlling the systems people couldn't live without.
My pen hovered over the paper as another thought struck me.
This approach solved the personnel problem too. I wouldn't need to recruit strangers or take chances on unknown quantities- not initially, anyway. The businesses I acquired would come with people who already knew their jobs, who understood Rainbase, who had connections I could exploit. If I found a gambling hall with a sharp floor manager? That's my casino operations specialist. A merchant operation with a clever accountant? That's my finance person. A brothel with enforcers who knew how to handle trouble quietly? That's my initial security team.
Quality would vary, certainly. Some would need to be replaced eventually. But it gave me a talent pool to draw from immediately, and time to identify who was worth keeping long-term.
And the beauty of it was legitimacy. Take over a few businesses, run them well, show that working with me was profitable? That made future recruitment easier. People would come to me, looking for opportunities, wanting to be part of something successful. The reputation would build itself.
Not as a pirate or a villain, but as a kingmaker. The man who made Rainbase matter.
I set down the pen finally, flexing my fingers as I looked over what I'd written. The timeline stretched across the page in surprisingly neat handwriting- phases, goals, contingencies. A roadmap that was ambitious but grounded in reality. More importantly, grounded in how things actually worked.
Money made money. Power consolidated power. Start small, build carefully, let momentum carry you toward bigger ambitions.
The sun had dipped lower while I'd been writing, the room growing dimmer. I stood, stretching until my spine popped, and moved to light the oil lamp on the desk. The warm glow pushed back the encroaching shadows, illuminating the papers spread before me.
I should have felt satisfied. The plan was sound- better than sound. It was methodical, sustainable, built on principles that actually worked rather than desperate gambits for ultimate power. This was how you built something that lasted.
But even as I thought it, doubt crept in at the edges.
Economic power was real power, yes. Control the money, control the flow of information and vice, and you controlled more than most pirates ever dreamed of. But it was also... soft. Indirect. The kind of power that worked right up until someone with bigger guns decided it didn't.
What happened when an Emperor's crew rolled into town and decided they didn't care about my economic networks? When the World Government decided my influence had grown too inconvenient? When some upstart with a Mythical Zoan and a grudge decided to challenge me?
I could be the richest, most connected man in Paradise, and still get crushed by someone with the raw strength to ignore everything I'd built.
The thought gnawed at me more than it should have. I was strong- very strong. A Logia user, a Warlord, someone who'd earned their reputation through violence and victory. But strength was relative in this world. There were monsters out there. Whitebeard. Kaido. Big Mom. Admirals who could reshape islands. And that was before accounting for whatever else lurked in the shadows- ancient weapons, lost kingdoms,
the Abyss.
Economic dominance gave you influence. It gave you options, resources, leverage.
But it didn't give you the kind of overwhelming, undeniable force that made people think twice before even considering you as a target.
The kind of force that made you truly untouchable.
The pen started moving again in rhythm to my thoughts.
My hands shook with pressure, the letters growing heavier on the page even as my conscious attention remained fixed on the problem at work in my mind. Military assets. Force projection. Something to anchor the economic power with the kind of hard strength that couldn't be negotiated away.
Because in a world where bright-eyed teenagers could shatter carefully laid plans through sheer determination, raw ability isn't enough.
You needed mastery. Control. The kind of strength that didn't rely on tricks or loopholes.
What I need…
I looked down at the page at the figure my pen had scratched out.
PLUTON
The word stared back at me, written twice in heavy strokes. Circled. Underlined with such force the paper had nearly torn.
I hadn't even realized I'd been writing it.
… could the power of an Ancient Weapon.
My fingers traced the letters slowly, feeling the indentations in the paper. The ancient weapon. Sleeping somewhere beneath Wano's closed borders, if the original timeline held true. A battleship capable of destroying islands with a single shot. Power on a scale that made Devil Fruits look like parlor tricks.
Crocodile had been obsessed with it. Spent years hunting it, built his entire operation around the belief that Alabasta held the key to its location. Had convinced himself that possessing Pluton would solve everything- make him strong enough to challenge anyone, even the World Government itself. Strong enough that no one would ever dare touch him.
A country of unmatched military might. Utopia.
And where did that get him?
I should have been able to dismiss it easily. Crocodile's obsession had been his downfall, a single-minded fixation that blinded him to better options and more sustainable paths. I knew how that story ended- face-down in the sand, defeated by a teenager in a straw hat, all those carefully laid plans turning to ash.
I knew better. I
was better.
And yet.
The appeal was still there, wasn't it? That seductive pull of absolute power. No more careful planning, no more building influence brick by brick, no more worrying about what happened when someone stronger came along. Just overwhelming, undeniable force. The kind of weapon that redrew the balance of power by its mere existence.
I could feel it in my chest- that same hunger he must have felt. Not quite my own, but not entirely foreign either. An echo of Crocodile's ambition resonating with something in me that wanted the certainty, the safety, the sheer
finality that came with possessing something like Pluton.
It made sense, didn't it? All the economic power in the world didn't matter if you couldn't defend it. And what better defense than a weapon that could sink Marine fleets before they reached your shores? That could level Marineford if they ever decided you'd become too inconvenient? That made even Emperors think twice before testing you?
With Pluton, I wouldn't need to play political games or build influence networks. I could simply
be the power that others had to account for.
The thought was intoxicating.
Also completely impractical.
I set the pen down deliberately, forcing my hand away from the paper. The weapon was in Wano- a country that had been closed off for decades, controlled by Kaido, a monstrous figure that would come to be known as the
Strongest Creature in the World. Even if I could get there, even if I could locate it, I'd need the blueprints to operate it. Blueprints that were with Tom in Water 7, or would be passed to Franky eventually. And even if I somehow acquired both the weapon and the knowledge to use it, deploying it would paint the biggest target imaginable on my back.
The Five Elders didn't tolerate threats of that magnitude. They'd bring everything they had- Admirals, CP0, the full weight of their military might. And I was strong, yes, but not
that strong. Not yet. Maybe not ever.
It was a fantasy. A powerful one, admittedly, but still a fantasy.
And yet I couldn't quite let go of it.
My eyes lingered on the word, on those heavy underlines. The rational part of my mind catalogued all the reasons it was a bad idea- the impracticality, the impossibility, the way it would derail every other plan I'd made. Building Rainbase into an economic powerhouse was achievable. Sustainable. It played to my strengths and the opportunities available.
Chasing Pluton was madness.
But god, the appeal of it.
I understood the original Crocodile better now, I think. That desperate hunger for something that would make him untouchable. He'd been defeated before- by Whitebeard, in a way that clearly left scars beyond the physical. And in a world of monsters, when you'd tasted defeat at the hands of the truly strong, the idea of possessing something that put you beyond their reach...
Yeah. I understood.
I pulled a fresh sheet of paper over, covering the one with Pluton written on it. Out of sight, if not quite out of mind.
I had to focus on what's achievable. The economic empire. The network of influence. Training until my Haki and Devil Fruit mastery put me in a league with the real powerhouses. Building something that lasted not through overwhelming force, but through being too valuable, too connected, too entrenched to uproot.
That was the smart play.
But even as I organized my notes, preparing to turn in for the night, I didn't throw away the paper underneath. Didn't cross out the word or tear it up. Instead, I slid it into the stack with the others, filed away with my timelines and acquisition targets.
Shelved, but not forgotten.
Because maybe there was a middle ground. Maybe, years from now, when I'd built everything else, when I was strong enough and connected enough and positioned properly... maybe then it would be worth revisiting. Not as a desperate gamble, but as the final piece. The ultimate insurance policy for everything I'd built.
The thought settled something in my chest- acknowledging the interest without letting it consume me. Yes, I wanted it. Yes, I could see the appeal, understand why the original had been so fixated. But I also had the perspective to recognize it for what it was: a long-term possibility, not an immediate solution.
First, build the foundation. Make myself indispensable. Create something that worked without needing ancient superweapons to sustain it.
And then, maybe, when the time was right...
I shook my head, forcing the thought away. That was a problem for future me. Present me had businesses to acquire and a city to conquer through more mundane means.
I lit a cigar and took an indulgent breath. Tomorrow I'd set out for Rainbase. See it with my own eyes. Begin the real work of building something that lasted.
But tonight, I allowed myself a moment of satisfaction. Two weeks in this world, and I'd already negotiated with a king as an equal, secured the beginnings of a legitimate operation, and charted a course that didn't rely on desperate gambles or doomed schemes.
I moved to the balcony, cigar in hand, and looked out over Alubarna. The sun had fully set now, the city transformed into a constellation of lamplight and shadow. Somewhere out there, Rainbase waited. My future empire, still unaware of what was coming.
The desert wind carried the scent of dust and distant spices. Dry against my skin. Serene.
I took a long drag from the cigar, letting the smoke curl into the night air.
"I have time."
For the first time since arriving in this body, in this world, I felt genuinely confident about that. Not the manic certainty of a man chasing impossible dreams, but the steady assurance of someone who knew exactly what they were building and how to get there.
It was a good feeling.
I took one last drag of the cigar, stubbed it out, and headed inside. Tomorrow would be a long day, and I'd need to be sharp for it.
The papers sat on the desk, plans and timelines and carefully calculated risks. I glanced at them one last time before extinguishing the lamp, letting darkness claim the room.
"To foundations," I murmured into the quiet. "May they prove stronger than sand."
Rainbase wouldn't know what hit it.