Experience Tumblr like never before
Just... wow.
If you write for him, could I ask for Sir Crocodile who is absolutely WHIPPED for reader? I loveee when he’s portrayed as a hopeless romantic for his partner and it’s even better when reader is the same way towards him ♡ sort of like Mortica and Gomez ^^ (I’m not normal about him I’m sorry LMAOWJDB)
苦⠀⠀⠀℘𝗈𝖾𝗆𝖺𝗌⠀𝐞⠀⸺⠀𝒮ilenci̲o̲s⠀⠀٫
Pairings. Sir crocodile x fem!reader
summary. Whipped
— (a/n): i am so so super excited for that request, in fact I was waiting for crocodile for so long but got no idea.
⠀⠀ ⠀ ︵‿⭒ ⠻ ❀ ⠟
— He is devoted, not desperate.
Crocodile does not chase love—he does not stumble over himself to prove his worth, nor does he fall into the reckless behaviors of men who do not understand the meaning of control. He is not a man ruled by whims, yet when it comes to you, something inside him changes. He does not worship as poets or fools do; rather, he loves you as a man who fully understands what he owns. His love is deliberate, a silent force that weaves itself into your life without request, without question. He is not a beggar at the altar of your love—he is the altar itself, the ground upon which your love is built. His devotion is not a weakness; it is a law—unspoken, absolute, and completely unbreakable.
— Actions over words.
Crocodile is not a man who speaks in vain, nor does he waste his time on great declarations. Words are cheap. He has been a man of power for a very long time to believe in beautiful phrases and fleeting emotions. What he truly believes in is consistency. A gloved hand touching yours—not by accident, but because he wants to feel your presence. The way he ensures you walk on the safe side of the street, a silent habit that has become part of his nature. He watches over you not because he doubts your strength, but because the idea of something happening to you is not a possibility he can accept. Loyalty is not something he gives easily. But you? You hold his loyalty in a way no one else does, and even if he never says it out loud, you will know. You will always know.
— He indulges you—but only you.
Crocodile has no patience for fools. His subordinates know well not to waste his time, and he rarely engages in unnecessary conversations. But with you? His attention is yours alone. It does not matter if you are talking about something important or simply enjoying the sound of your own voice—he listens. He listens in a way that seems indifferent, reclining with a cigar in hand, occasionally letting out a hum or a low chuckle, but he does not miss a thing. He notices every change in your tone, every glance, every small smile that tugs at your lips. And when you turn to him expecting a reaction, he meets your gaze with that same knowing look—because of course he was listening. He remembers details no one else notices and indulges your whims in ways that are so subtle yet so profound that you do not realize how much he spoils you until you think about it.
— The little things he does to take care of you.
If you fight, your weapons are always in perfect condition—not because you asked, but because he made sure of it. There is no spectacle in the way he takes care of you, no unnecessary words or dramatic displays. He simply does. If you forget to eat, he will not scold or argue with you—he will place a plate in front of you, and he will not take no for an answer. If you are hurt, the entire world stops until it is taken care of. His hands—so accustomed to violence—become incredibly gentle when they touch you, his gloved fingers lifting your chin to examine even the smallest wounds. He does not make a fuss, does not overreact, but the tight set of his jaw says everything. His concern is silent but suffocating, woven into the very fabric of your life.
And if someone was the cause of your pain? That is an entirely different matter.
— His temper is controlled, but his rage is not.
Crocodile is not a man who acts on reckless emotion. He does not explode, does not waste his energy on unnecessary outbursts. His anger is quiet, cold, and patient. One glance from him can freeze a man where he stands, and a slow drag of his cigar is the only sign that he is deciding how to handle the situation. If someone hurts you—physically or emotionally—they will not know the moment they sealed their fate. There will be no warning. No second chances.
— He does not threaten. He does not need to.
Instead, things simply happen. Business partners disappear. “Accidents” occur. A man who dared to speak ill of you suddenly finds himself without allies, his empire crumbling beneath him. Revenge for him is easy, simple, effortless. He does not just remove problems—he erases them from existence as if they were never worth acknowledging in the first place.
And you? You do not even need to ask. By the time you mention the offense, it has already been dealt with.
— When he expresses his affection, it is with purpose.
Crocodile is not a man who wastes words. He does not say things he does not mean, and he certainly does not indulge in flowery phrases. But when he speaks to you, when his words are slow and measured, laced with something meant only for you—they carry weight.
“You are the only one who matters.”
Said in the dead of night, when the world is silent and his walls are at their lowest. His voice is rough, weary, but certain.
“I do not trust easily. You know that.”
A simple sentence, but the meaning behind it is undeniable.
And when he says “I love you”—on the rare occasions he does—it is never empty. Never casual. It is a statement, a fact, as unshakable as the empire he has built.
— He lets you in—truly in.
No one sees him as you do. No one sees past the Warlord, the businessman, the criminal. No one else knows what his silence truly means, what lingers behind those sharp amber eyes when no one else is looking. He is a man who does not trust, a man who has built his entire life on control, on keeping people at a distance.
— But you? You are different.
You see the rare moments when he is unguarded, when his head tilts back, eyes closed, exhaling a long breath as the tension drains from his body. When his hand—always gloved, always composed—finds its way to your waist, gripping just enough to remind himself that you are real. When he allows himself to sleep beside you, something he never does unless he is completely at ease.
To the world, he is untouchable. But to you? He is simply yours.
@velgryd15 here is ur request ☆
Vampires and ASL? More likely than you think. Just some self indulgent art...
That 'loveable dummy' calls to me so~ 🩵v🩵
Hi! Hope you have a nice day. If it's okay with you, may i request something for the charming firefly, ace?
Something like ace is vv oblivious to the reader's flirting, just thinking everything just a coincidence, like their seat on the dining table are next to each other, or when he's thirsty or hungry, the reader will always have a drink or snack/food ready. While actually it's happening because of the reader and their observations.
Sorry if it's too long, thanks for your time for reading this! (Completely okay if you're not ok with writing this, i just wanna say thank you)
a/n: wahh! thiss is soo cutee! hope u like thiss ><
Ace doesn’t realize the reader’s affection is behind every perfect coincidence—until one finally clicks.
Ace X gn! reader
tags: fluff, sfw, flirting, ooc, ace being oblivious
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ffs a bit cringe
word count: 1.1k
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
It was always a coincidence.
At least, that’s what Ace thought.
Every meal, every shared moment, every little “accident” that placed you beside him was chalked up to fate, luck, or the universe just being weirdly nice to him that day.
Like this morning.
The Moby Dick rocked gently with the waves, and the crew had begun their daily scramble to the galley. Ace, still half-asleep with bedhead and one sandal barely on, made his way to the table. As usual, the crew’s chatter filled the room with the kind of loud, familial chaos only the Whitebeard Pirates could manage.
And, also as usual, the seat beside you was the only one open.
“Hey,” Ace greeted, plopping down with a yawn and no suspicion.
“Morning,” you replied, already pushing a glass of orange juice in his direction without a second thought.
He blinked. “Whoa, you read my mind. I was just thinking I was thirsty.”
You smiled. “Coincidence, I guess.”
Ace grinned, utterly unaware of how long you’d been keeping track of the way he always reached for juice in the morning, never coffee, never water. Just juice. Always.
After a minute, he added, “Also kinda hungry… I forgot to grab a roll or somethin’.”
You wordlessly slid a small plate of warm bread and butter closer to him.
He gasped, delighted. “Seriously, you’re magic! You always have just what I need!”
You bit your lip to hide the fond curve of your smile. “Lucky timing, huh?”
Lucky timing.
That’s what he called it the other day when he tripped coming down the deck stairs and nearly face-planted—only to find your hand catching him in time. It’s what he called it when he accidentally left his hat on the upper deck and you “just so happened” to come by with it a few minutes later.
You didn’t mind. Not really.
It was kind of… endearing. In an Ace-way. He wasn't cold or careless—he just genuinely didn’t see it. The thought that you might be observing him, remembering the things he liked, and subtly trying to show him how much you cared? It never even crossed his mind.
You watched as he messily buttered a piece of bread, crumbs falling on the table. He looked content, humming a tune and swinging his feet like a child in a giant’s chair. And when he caught you watching, he gave you a bright smile—one so open and warm it made your stomach flutter.
“Y’know,” he mumbled around a bite, “you’re always around. It’s kinda nice.”
“Kinda?” you teased.
He nodded, mouth still full. “Mm-hmm. Like, comfy.”
The word hit somewhere soft in your chest. He didn’t even realize he was flirting back.
Later that day, a few of the crew were setting up for poker in the corner, but you were more interested in the commotion coming from the training area. You leaned against the railing, watching Ace spar with Marco. He was shirtless, flames licking at his fingertips as he dodged and laughed, clearly having fun.
Your gaze lingered on him. How could it not? He was strong, fast, alive with every movement.
And when he collapsed on the deck in dramatic defeat—Marco having pinned him with a blue-flamed armbar—he wheezed out, “Water… I need water…”
By the time Marco released him, you were already at his side, bottle in hand.
“Holy crap,” Ace said between breaths. “You’re, like… everywhere.”
“I told you,” you said casually, helping him sit up. “Lucky timing.”
He chuckled, leaning back on his palms and chugging half the bottle. “At this point, I’m starting to think you’re my guardian angel or something.”
You raised a brow. “You think your guardian angel would watch you get elbowed into the deck before offering water?”
Ace grinned. “Gotta build character, right?”
You rolled your eyes, but your chest was warm with something fond and frustrating. How could he be so oblivious?
The truth was, you noticed everything about him. The way he only got grumpy when he was too hot or too tired. How he always tried to hide his hiccups when he laughed too hard. How he made sure the youngest crewmates never felt left out during meals, even if it meant giving them the last piece of meat on his plate.
You didn’t just like him. You admired him.
So yeah, maybe you rearranged your seat every meal to end up next to him. Maybe you kept his favorite snacks in your jacket pockets during long shifts. Maybe you started carrying an extra bottle of water—just in case a certain fire fist decided to exhaust himself in a sparring match.
He never asked. You just… wanted to.
And he just… didn’t notice.
It wasn’t until one particular night, under the stars, that things finally shifted.
You were both sitting on the edge of the deck, feet dangling above the sea. Most of the crew was asleep or out of sight. Ace had a blanket wrapped around his shoulders, and you handed him a second one without saying a word.
“Man, it’s like you read my mind,” he said for the hundredth time.
You sighed softly. “Maybe your mind is just easy to read.”
He looked at you, puzzled. “Huh?”
You gave a small, nervous smile. “I mean… I always seem to know what you need, right? I guess I just pay attention.”
There was a pause. The kind of pause where your heart beats a little faster, wondering if maybe, finally, he might catch on.
Ace blinked. “Oh. So you’ve got like, observation haki or something?”
You stared at him.
Deadpan.
“…Yeah. Sure. Let’s call it that.”
He beamed. “That’s so cool!”
You dropped your face into your hands.
But then—something changed in his tone.
“…Wait.”
You peeked up through your fingers.
Ace’s smile was still there, but it was… slower. Thoughtful. You could practically see the gears turning in his head. Every juice, every meal, every seat, every snack.
And then, like someone lit a match under his brain, realization bloomed across his face.
“…Wait.”
You watched the faintest red spread over his cheeks. He sat straighter. “Are you—? Have you been—? This whole time—?”
You tilted your head, lips twitching. “You’re cute when you put the puzzle together.”
He gawked. “So it wasn’t just coincidences?!”
You snorted. “Ace, I’ve been flirting with you for weeks.”
He opened his mouth. Closed it. Opened it again.
And then he laughed. It was loud, a little embarrassed, but full of warmth.
“I’m such an idiot.”
“A lovable idiot,” you corrected, nudging his shoulder.
“…So does this mean,” he said slowly, “you like me? Like, like like?”
You raised a brow. “Only if you like me back.”
He leaned in, pressing his forehead gently to yours with a shy, crooked grin. “Well, now that I know… I’m definitely gonna start paying attention.”
You chuckled, nudging the bottle of water into his hand again. “Start with drinking water. Then we’ll work our way up to romance.”
Ace laughed, and this time, he didn’t call it luck.
sashii my love! this event is so cute omg may i have day 12 + chocolate with Ace, please? Fem! or GN! reader is fine 🥺 thank you so much, bby i love youu ❤️
Hi my lovely Lari!!! So here I am with this little scenario of the freckled sunshine for you! 💖 I hope you enjoy and have a wonderful holiday season!! (despite the blazing hot summer that we have to endure 😂). Love you lots! 💖
tw: none. some red eyes perhaps. based on Ace's favorite food being ghost pepper spaghetti. Peperoncini is the Italian term for ghost peppers, aglio e olio is the Italian term for garlic and oil. The image I chose for the banner was specifically chosen cause I wanted to portrait Ace's face while he looks at reader (I know he was looking at Sanji, but we are not here to discuss Ace's likings, at least not rn hahah)
wc: 828
“She is so pretty… she is working hard to cook an amazing meal, what did I do to deserve such an amazing lover?” Ace thinks, while resting her chin over his hand. He looks at her with eyes of pure love, of pure adoration. He, Ace, never thought of someone loving him, less taking care of him, or even spending Christmas with him.
But there she is, making him his favorite food for dinner…
You read a little diary Garp-san said it was Ace’s mom’s. She had written the recipe for “ghost pepper spaghetti” there and even if Ace never tasted hers, for some reason that exact same dish turned out to be his favorite. And you sweat, what if you do it wrong? it’s gonna be the first time he tastes your cooking, cause after all you’ve never been good with it. Not even Sanji-kun’s tips were able to help you. Ace never cared, but you did.
Several pots were already on the stove, boiling water for the noodles, a frying pan ready for you to sauté the aglio e olio and the peperoncini resting right over the cooking table to be cut in halves. All according to Rouge annotations. And it didn’t seem so difficult, yet you realize there is a missing ingredient over the table; parsley.
“What an idiot” you mumble, taking your hand to your forehead. “What’s wrong babe? Do you need help?” Ace immediately asks from the table. You asked him not to come closer since this was going to be a surprise for him. “Oh no, nothing darling! It’s ok! Go sit in the dining room, food is about to be ready!” you act as everything was alright, and indeed it was, but you pressure yourself a lot when doing this…. after all, what if Rouge is looking at you from the sky, facepalming at your incompetence?...
You quickly run to the pantry for the damn parsley, because everybody has it in their houses, right? “It’s like a common spices, come on” you whisper, while looking for the damn little jar that has that name on a tag. “What does it even look like?” you mumble, at this point hysterical.
And all of a sudden a certain smell comes wafting to your nose…
“FUCK! THE HEAT!!” you shout, running to the remains of a ghost pepper sauce that more than red now looks carbon black. You throw the pan to the kitchen sink to cool off the stupid pot and take your hands to your face. Instant tears sprout from your eyes. “I’m an idiot” once again, you mumble.
Ace comes to the rescue, “What’s wrong baby?” he asks, hugging you tight from behind. “I’m a failure” you say, in between sobbing. “What? You aren’t! You are my perfect love, don’t ever say that!” he tells you, kissing your head and slowly turning you around.
You rest over his chest, without taking your hands off your face, but enjoying his warm embrace. “I can’t even cook this; I tell you I am” you mumble. “Listen, I don’t even know what parsley looks like, don’t worry” he says, poor man, he was trying to help you out, but made it worse. “WHAT IS IT ABOUT THE DAMN PARSLEY?” you grunt and rub your eyes to wipe your tears away.
But… Do you remember rule number one when cooking with peppers that Sanji told you? “Name-swan, remember to use gloves or be extra careful if you cut ghost peppers barehand, do not take your hands to your eyes or they will burn”
You begin to squirm, to jump and soon run to the sink. “AHHHH MY EYES!!!” “WHAT BABY, WHAT???” “MY EYES, BURN!!! THE FUCKING PEPPERS!!!”...
Some hours later…
“Make some space, baby!” Ace tells you while bringing the Big Macs you ordered with a big smile, as bright as the sun and those freckles like a starry sky. He places the tray over the table, and hands you your order. Outside it’s snowing heavily, and the lights from the streets blink in between the snowflakes. The fast-food restaurant isn’t packed at all on Christmas eve, but there are some more people enjoying some burgers. Your eyes, a little red still, with no makeup, reflect over the windows of the place. Ace sits next to you, and jokes about putting some hot sauce on his burger.
“I’m sorry I burnt the dinner” you tell him, still sad. “It was your mom’s recipe”. “Don’t be sorry, my love. What about us trying to cook it again tomorrow? Together?” he tells you, with one of his cheeks puffed by the food. “But I fucked up, look… we are eating on a Mc Donald’s on Christmas eve”. “It doesn’t matter where, it doesn’t matter what I eat… the only thing that matters is to be right next to you” Ace says, kissing your forehead.
“Merry Christmas, baby. I love you” “Merry Christmas, Ace. I love you too”
ㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤ~ ❤ ~
Amazing, you hit my interest boxes 💖 👏🏻
req: You wanted an Ace request? 👀
How about Ace with a zoan mythical devil fruit reader that never really changes into their devil fruit form or variables of it because she felt like it would scare them or something, but when Ace is near death, the reader comes in full force and saves him
I don't know what type the zoan will be, but can you have it be a big creature like a dragon? I just love the trope of a person going ape shit for their beloved/crush
a/n: omg i love that trope too ;;0;; i love any trope that involves one person losing control in order to protect someone else dat shit Hits also oops i think i got a bit overenthusiastic with the descriptions of reader’s body changing so i hope it’s not too much for anyone :0 !
ALSO MORE ACE REQUESTS PLS AND THANK U MUAH
contents: somewhat gory descriptions of bodily harm(? but nothing too gross i don’t think), some angst, fluff, hurt/comfort!!
wc. 1.8k
wanna be on my taglist?
despite being your boyfriend for nearly two years now, Ace still doesn’t know what your full Zoan form looks like. he knows you have the Dragon variant of Devil Fruit but that’s pretty much the full extent of his knowledge, aside from the rare occasion you use your hybrid form to fly but even during those moments you move so fast his eyes can barely keep up
Ace would be lying if he said he wasn’t a tiny bit upset he’s never seen your full form–back when he was a fresh member of the crew he’d even pestered you quite a bit in hopes you’ll cave in and show him–but he understands why you’re hesitant to use it
“you do know it hurts her, right?” Thatch said out of the blue one day when Ace had nothing better to do and decided to watch him cook to kill time.
“what does?” the second division commander replied through a mouthful of bread.
“transforming into her Zoan form,” the head chef continued. “i’ve seen it myself only twice but both times it was kind of hard to watch.”
the more Ace listened to Thatch’s descriptions of the sounds of your bones cracking and flesh tearing as your human screams gradually turned into monsterish roars that shook the very earth, the more guilty he felt for all the times he’d asked you to show him. he’d seen Marco transform so many times, he ignorantly assumed the process was just as easy and painless for you.
“the last time she did it,” Thatch added, “she scared some civilians by accident and they got hurt trying to run away. i think that fucked her up a bit for quite a while.”
it’s safe to say, he stopped asking you to transform after that. though the suddenness of it all surprised you, it was nice being able to hang out with him without worrying about being asked to show your Zoan form. a few months afterwards, you even end up dating him–something your past self never would have considered
Ace still is very interested in what your full form looks like but he can see himself spending the rest of his life with you so he’s sure he’ll see it one day–and soon he learns he’s right, he just never thought it would be under such dire circumstances
for the first time in a long time, Ace finds himself panicking on the battlefield. his heart pounds painfully against his ribcage and no matter how much air he tries to inhale, his lungs are constantly begging for more air. Ace’s vision blurs but he refuses to lose consciousness, blinking rapidly to clear his sight as he stares down at his blood soaked hands.
he’s not wounded, though. you are.
lying on the dirt in front of him as the two of you take cover behind an abandoned cottage, you gasp for air as fresh blood slowly pools beneath you; the red, hot substance pouring out from the bullet wounds in your torso and legs.
what was supposed to be a simple recon mission turned out to be an ambush by the marines.
“stay awake, you hear me?” Ace shouts as he tilts your head to look at him, staining your cheek with your own blood from his hands. “give me one minute and i’ll be back. i just need a minute and we’ll be safe, okay?” his words are confident and firm, in stark contrast to his teary eyes and trembling hands; but you trust him with your life so you simply nod.
from where you lay, you can see most of the battlefield. you watch as he burns down the endless waves of marines almost effortlessly, like he always does, and you nearly break your promise as you’re nearly lulled to sleep by the familiar sense of security he brings you. in fact, you’re on the brink of dozing off when you’re startled awake by the sound of Ace screaming.
your eyes snap open as you frantically scan the area, bile rising up your throat as you struggle to find Ace. when you do finally see him, it takes all of your willpower not to puke out of fear.
at the feet of what looks like a Vice Admiral, he lies near-motionless, the only sign of life being the faint rise and fall of his chest and the hacking cough that tears its way out of his blood-filled mouth. the Marine orders his remaining soldiers to fall back and to “leave them to me.” with a sadistic smile painted on his face. he speaks to Ace briefly though you’re unable to catch what he’s saying and then, with a haki-imbued kick, he sends your lover flying across the battlefield in your direction.
wheezing and coughing as tears drip down his grimacing face, Ace reaches out to you with a trembling, blood-covered hand. his fingers brush against your own tear-stained face and with all the remaining strength left within him, he smiles at you.
“i… i’ll protect you… no matter what.” he mutters as you watch the Vice Admiral close the distance, taking step after step towards the back of your lover.
it’s in the moments that follow does Ace learn that Thatch’s description of your Zoan transformation did little justice to the real thing.
he watches helplessly as you begin to scream while you lift your upper body off the ground and at first he thinks it’s from the pain from your wounds but once your skin starts to turn into scales, he realises it’s so much worse. as your body grows in size, your limbs crack and shift and massive wings sprout out of your spine. your head’s tossed back as you shriek to the heavens while your eyes turn a golden yellow and your pupil transforms into a slit.
the ground trembles as your voice transforms into a deep roar that shakes even the faraway trees of the surrounding forest. too wounded to turn himself around, Ace can only guess the looks of terror on the marines’ faces from the sound of their panicked shouting and uncoordinated gunfire. he watches in awe as the bullets that reach your body fall uselessly to the ground.
Ace feels the hairs on the back of his neck stand up as his instincts scream at him to get away from the looming threat still approaching him from the back. under normal circumstances, he’s sure he’ll be able to get away from the Vice Admiral through sheer willpower alone, escaping death is nothing new to the young man–right now, though, he knows he’s safe when you lower one of your massive wings to shield him from the rest of the world.
he listens as the cries for mercy gradually die down into a peaceful silence composed of the evening wind, insects chirping and the crackling of small fires that are soon to fizzle out. although Ace can tell he’s not fatally wounded, his body hurts to the point where it feels hard to move–arrogance always was the achilles heel of logia users.
the setting sun shines on him once more as your wing retracts while you slowly transform back to normal. he calls out your name but you don’t respond and for a moment, he feels the same sense of panic from before rising up in his chest. his poor heart only settles once he has your unconscious body cradled in his tired arms. you’re still badly wounded but your chest rises and falls steadily as you rest in his embrace.
Marco finds the second division commander and the Whitebeard Dragon asleep in each other's arms surrounded by nearly hundreds of dead marines, all burnt to a crisp. though most would naturally assume Firefist Ace was the main culprit, Marco suspects–just by looking at the faint scaly pattern still lingering on your skin–that you might have done all the work this time
Ace wakes up first, not in an infirmary bed like he thought he would but still on the battlefield, face-to-face with his close friend who’s leaning over to pull you out of Ace’s arms. it takes both men a second to realise the true extent of his protectiveness over you; and it takes another second before Marco starts making fun of the younger man for being so whipped
it takes a long time for you to wake up even after Marco uses his Devil Fruit abilities to help heal most of your wounds. “it takes a bigger toll on her than normal Zoan Devil Fruit transformations would,” the doctor had explained to a distraught Ace, “her body goes through a lot to become something so massive, y’know?”
being patient was never Ace’s strong suit but he has zero complaints while waiting for you to wake up. for weeks he stays by your bedside, talking to you about his day, playing with your hands, and taking naps whilst curled up by your feet. the other crew members who come in to check on you daily constantly poke fun at him and yet it’s these same people who leave snacks, drinks and comics for him to use while waiting by your side.
almost a full month passes by before you wake up to the feeling of something warm and heavy resting on your chest; and moments later, Ace is roused from his nap when he feels your fingers brushing through his hair.
“hey,” he whispers, head still resting in the valley of your breasts, tilted up just enough for his eyes to meet yours. his legs are tangled with yours as the infirmary bed blanket lays uselessly on the floor.
“hey,” you reply, voice hoarse from the dryness of your throat.
“you’re really cool,” Ace says, eyelids forming into crescents as he smiles–the simple expression almost infectious in the way you feel the corners of your own lips tugging upwards in spite of being reminded about the sheer agony of your Zoan transformation.
“it must’ve been shocking, huh?” you ask, “watching me transform? i’ve heard some people say it’s gross and scary–”
“no!” he cuts you off, eyebrows furrowing, “it was amazing.” Ace runs his warm fingers up and down your bare arms before trailing downward to meet your hands, all the while staying laid on top of you with his eyes locked onto your own. “you were amazing. i’d never felt safer in my life.”
you can’t help but sniffle as you feel your eyes begin to burn with tears. “it wasn’t disgusting? i… wasn’t disgusting?” shaking his head, Ace inches forward until the tip of his nose brushes against yours.
“you were beautiful,” he murmurs, “you are so beautiful.”
gen taglist: @irethepotato @i-reblog-fics-i-like @grierpilots @appalost @hyper-fic-ation @dressycobra7 @38lyra38 @chaseyui @paraparakiss @krooschl @teewon @olliesoxenfree @misstraffy @riftmage27 @aletch
😤when u gotta give that silent treatment🤭
hii can i request silent treatment with sabo, law, and ace? like the one you wrote before! i love reading it sm i wanted to see how they (sabo, law, and ace) would react if they received/ gave silent treatment !
Characters: gn reader x Sabo, Law, Ace Cw: everyone involved being a bit of an orange flag Total word count: 4k
Silent Treatment
Oh sweet sweet Sabo. He didn’t even realize his offhanded joke in the meeting had offended you. He didn’t think about how you and Koala were the only ones not laughing about the jokes the officers said. He didn’t notice how you and Koala immediately left the room fuming as soon as you could.
He had to run to catch up with you after the meeting, and you showed no sign of slowing your pace.
“Hey!” he called out, trying to get to you. “I’m gonna go out with the guys for a bit, I’ll catch up with you soon?”
“Do whatever you want,” you shot back. “The men know best after all, right?”
He must not have heard the sarcasm and anger laced in your voice, because he just gave you a wink and a peck on the cheek and ran off with some of the other leaders.
Koala gave you a side smirk. “They’re clueless, I swear,” she laughed.
“We never get the credit,” you grumbled. “I can’t do it anymore, Koala! I’m so fed up with this!”
“Have you talked to him about it?”
“So many times!” you cried. “We’re treated the same professionally but socially-”
“It’s a commanders club,” she finished for you. “Maybe we should make a separate club?”
“Rule One: No talking to them until they apologize.”
Sabo was surprised to find that you weren’t waiting for him in bed when he got home. You weren’t in the spare room, either.
He finally found a note on the kitchen that was short and to the point. “Sleeping at Koala’s.”
Confusing, but he was slightly drunk, so he opted to go to bed and figure it out in the morning.
When morning came, he was disappointed to find that the coffee hadn't started. He went to grab his overnight oats from the fridge, but you hadn’t made that for him either, which was strange. Usually when you stayed at Koala’s, you prepped all that stuff ahead of time. But last night you hadn’t. He’d have to ask you about that before the meeting this morning.
He arrived late to the meeting since the coffee took longer than he thought it would and he had to make breakfast. You were already sitting when he got there, you and Koala talking to each other quietly. Normally you saved a se at for him, but today all of the seats had been filled, and he was left with one at the end of the table.
He kept trying to catch your eye, but you refused to look at him. He finally caught Koala’s at one point, and mouthed “What’s wrong?” but she simply rolled her eyes and turned her attention back to Dragon.
If Koala was mad at him, that meant you were mad at him. He racked his brain the entire meeting, trying to think of what he would’ve done to make you upset. But he couldn’t think of anything.
He tried to catch you after the meeting, but you and Koala made a beeline for the door and ignored his calls after you.
“Just let them go, dude,” Jiron said to him. “Those two never want to hang out with us anyway.”
Shit. It all clicked together. The jokes made in the meeting yesterday, him going out with the boys without asking if you and Koala had wanted to come.
“Maybe if you treated them with a little respect, Jiron, they would.” Sabo’s words came out in a low, threatening hiss.
“Look, I know you’re close with them,” Jiron said. “But they’re not very nice to us either. They’re kind of…”
“Kind of what?” Sabo edged, his blood starting to boil.
“Well…bitchy.”
Sabo wasn’t really sure what happened next. He didn’t remember doing anything, but the next moment, Jiron was on the ground holding his nose. Blood was leaking out through his fingers onto the ground.
“Don’t use that word to describe either of them ever again. Got it?” Sabo growled the words, looking around the room.
“What the FUCK, Sabo?” Jiron cried, but Sabo was already pacing toward the door, desperate to get to you as soon as possible.
He caught up with you and Koala quickly and jumped between the two of you, wrapping his arms around your alls shoulders. You tensed at his touch, but once you realized it was him, you just scoffed and shrugged him off.
“Go away, Sabo,” Koala sneered as she shoved him away.
“I’m sorry!” Sabo jumped in front of you all, trying to block your path. “Please, I’m sorry I laughed at those jokes yesterday and even made one myself. That was really shitty of me.”
“Sabo,” you sighed, shaking your head.
He fell to his knees and looked up at you, begging. “And please teach me how to use the coffee machine! And make overnight oats! I’ll make it from now on. I’m starving and I’m sorry.”
His apology made you giggle, and you took his hands and helped him to his feet. Once he was standing, you laced your fingers through his. “You’ll really make the oats?”
“If you want me to.”
“Deal.” You smiled, and gave him a soft kiss to seal his promise. “Can’t go back on it now.”
“And how are you going to make it up to me?” Koala pouted.
“Oh,” Sabo suddenly got very bashful. “I punched Jiron, I think.”
“You WHAT?!”
You bounded into Law’s office, excited to tell him the news. “Law! Shachi just caught-”
“Hang on,” Law mumbled, flicking through his book. He was always looking for something. You were always interrupting him.
After a few minutes, he looked up at you. “Okay, go ahead.”
“Shachi just caught an electric eel! A massive one!”
The moments the words left your mouth, Law was back to looking back at his book. “Interesting. Is that all?”
“Well, I just thought-”
“Hang on,” he mumbled again, already lost on another tangent in his head.
“Don’t worry about it.” You left the room before he had a chance to respond, though you doubt he even noticed your absence.
He got like this sometimes, and you tried not to get hurt by his sudden coldness. It’s just what happened when you were with the Surgeon of Death. A few hours later you had all but forgotten the encounter. There was an island coming up, and you ran to alert him.
“Law!” You slammed his door open, ecstatic. “Law! Guess-”
“Do you mind?!” His loud and hostile voice made you take a step back. “I’m trying to do something and you keep interrupting me!”
You pushed down the lump that was in your throat, but you could feel your lip trembling, threatening to give you away. You couldn’t look weak in front of him.
“Sorry,” you whispered, rushing out of the room.
Shachi found you first, furiously wiping the tears from your face. “I told you, you’re too good for him! Maybe you should give him a taste of what it’s like to lose you.”
“Like how?”
A devious grin grew on Shachi’s face. “Silent treatment.”
“Hey captain.” Bepo peeked in the door nervously, knowing there was tension about to be caused. “We’re heading off to the island.”
Law looked up from his book, confused. “Island?” You always told him when you were about to approach an island.
“We docked about a half hour ago,” Shachi chimed in from the hallway.
Law could hear something in his voice. “Where’s Y/N? Are they going?”
“They're going,” Shachi said, grabbing the door handle.
“Well, can you-” Law’s words were cut off by Shachi slamming the door shut.
That was Law’s first indication of something stirring. Shachi always took your side during squabbles, and he seemed livid today.
Law meant to go talk to you. He wasn’t sure what he needed to apologize for, but he knew it was something. But then he found an interesting article about poisons, and he got sucked into reading. Before he knew it, the sun had set and he had to turn on a lamp to keep reading.
Shachi, on the other hand, kept your mind busy. He took you out on the town, dragging you into every clothing shop and making you try anything on that even might look good on you. He pulled you into dessert shops and trinket stores and forced you to go on a beach walk with him. He was your best friend for a reason.
“What if he doesn’t apologize?” you asked him, watching the sun sink. “Then you don’t talk to him, no matter what,” Shachi responded.
Law was still shut away in his office when you returned, and your heart felt a soft ache. He hadn’t even noticed your absence.
“Come on,” Shachi said gently. “You can sleep in our room.”
“I should go talk to-”
“No,” Shachi said firmly. “He always does this. He needs to learn his lesson.” So you slept in the crew bunkhouse for the first time in months. Nobody asked questions, everyone just accepted it. You suspected Shachi had filled them in.
It took Law a few minutes to realize what was wrong. He had come into his room silently and brushed his teeth in the dark before bed like always. It was quieter than usual. And when he went to lay down, the bed was still made. As he pulled the covers back, he couldn’t help but notice how unnatural it felt. But he couldn’t place why.
It was too cold, he realized. And he quickly flicked on a light in the room to find it empty. Thoughts raced through his mind. Where were you? Had you gone missing? Had the Navy or someone else captured you to turn you in for a bounty?
He quickly walked to the shared common room, where he found Penguin and Ikkaku sitting. “Did you go to the island?” he asked, scanning the room. It was too late for you to be up, but he had to double check.
They both nodded, and Law tried not to panic. “Did Y/N come back?”
“Yeah,” Penguin affirmed. “We had dinner with them and Shachi, and we all walked back together.” He gave Ikakku a nervous glance before continuing. “I think they’re sleeping in the shared bunkhouse.”
“What?” Law hissed. “Why?” But Ikkaku and Penguin both shrugged, and Law turned and stormed out the door, making a beeline for the bunkhouse.
He flung the door open, searching for you. He quickly found you in the bunk below Shachi, and he walked over to where you were sleeping.
“What are you doing?” Law said, shaking you lightly. “Come to bed.”
You groaned in your sleep and pushed him away. You never slept well in the bunkhouse. You were a light sleeper, any type of noise made you wake up.
“Y/N,” Law said, shaking you harder. “Let’s go.”
“Law?” Your eyes finally opened, your voice full of exhaustion and sleep. Once you realized it was him, you slapped a hand over your mouth. Silent Treatment.
Law could see the hurt and anger in your eyes when you recognized him, and his heart constricted when you turned away from him.
“Can we talk about what’s going on? Please?” he begged. He was trying not to disturb others, but you could hear them beginning to stir.
You almost caved, but Shachi came to your rescue. He hopped down from his bed and put himself between you and Law. “You can talk in the morning,” Shachi said. “Y/N wants to be here, so let them sleep here.”
Law tried to look past Shachi to you. “I know you can’t stand sleeping here. Just come to bed. Please.”
“Captain.” Shachi’s voice was on the verge of dangerous defiance. “Leave.”
Law stared at him, not sure what to make of Shachi’s protectiveness over you. His gaze was almost challenging, but Shachi refused to back down. He could hear the others in the room starting to stir, and he knew he was only embarrassing you, so he conceded. “I’m coming back first thing.”
“That’s fine,” Shachi said. “If Y/N wants to talk then, you’re welcome to have a conversation.”
Law slept horribly that night. His fingers kept reaching out for you. The bed felt too big, the covers weren’t warm enough. He finally got up and started reading. He was too anxious to sleep.
So were you. You were tossing and turning every 20 minutes, trying to get comfortable. You couldn’t sleep without Law’s heartbeat thrumming in your ears. But Shachi made you promise to never admit it.
Law was sitting in the hallway outside the door when you went to get breakfast. You almost tripped over him, and when he saw you, he immediately stood to his feet. His tired gold eyes pierced into your soul, and you could see he was in rough shape. “Can we talk now?” He tried to keep the desperation out of his voice, but you could hear it loud and clear.
You gave a panicked look to Shachi, but he only gave you a smile and a small nod, encouraging you on.
You gave Law a nod in agreement. You still weren’t ready to talk to him, but you could listen.
“I did something yesterday,” Law said, closing the door to his office as you walked in. “I snapped at you when you were excited about something. I prioritized my studies over you and I’m sorry.”
You watched him closely, making sure his words were genuine. Law had a tendency to apologize when he knew you wanted to hear it, not when he actually felt bad about it.
“I’ve been doing that a lot lately,” he continued. “I tend to get obsessed with my work, and my relationships hurt because of it. And I know it’s not fair to ask you, but I need you to tell me when I’m hurting you. Because I don’t want to hurt you. That’s the last thing I want. So please…tell me. Yell at me. Smack me. Just don’t…don’t disappear on me. Please.”
Your heart melted at his words. You walked over to him and wrapped your arms around his neck. “And you won’t get mad?”
“I promise I won’t.”
You gave him a mischievous grin. “Even if I smack you really hard?”
“I feel like I’m going to regret saying that,” he groaned.
You giggled and gave him a soft kiss. “Too late, Captain.” You rested your head on his shoulder, his familiar scent making your eyes start to droop. “Can we go back to bed now?”
“Bed would be nice,” he mumbled into your hair, already pulling you toward his private room.
Fifteen people in the bar, and your boyfriend had flirted with every single one.
Friendly. That’s what he always called it. He was just being friendly. But you saw the way those commoners looked at him, the lust in their eyes. Getting with a pirate would be thrilling, they’d whisper when his back was turned. He never seemed to hear them talk about him, but he’d always be around them. Convenient.
“You shouldn’t be bothered,” he’d always say. “You know that I’ll always choose you.”
But you were bothered. You hated the pit of jealousy that formed in your gut every time a new person walked up to him. They were always so touchy, rubbing their hands along his shoulders, and the daring ones would even venture down his chest. Like he was their plaything. But he didn’t belong to them.
He was yours. Just not in this bar. Or any bar.
Maybe it was time to give him a taste of his own medicine. You were certain he wouldn’t be able to stand the thought of you flirting with another man.
Your eyes met an attractive man across the bar, and you decided it would be a good theory to test.
Seeing what you were about to do, Marco grabbed your wrist, pulling you back down into the seat. “Wait,” he muttered.
“Stay out of it, Marco,” you hummed softly. Your voice was pleasant, but there was a threatening undertone to it.
“If you want to make him jealous that will end in a fight and change nothing except the intensity of your makeup sex, go for it.”
Your cheeks brightened at his words, and you finally broke your eye contact with the random man to look at the commander. “Marco-!”
“But if you want to make him panic and stay by your side from now on, listen.” Marco’s voice got low. “Ace looks over here at least once every five minutes. He’s checking on you. I’m guessing jealous sex is his-“
“MARCO!”
“Anyway, I guarantee if you vanish, it’ll make him sweat. Just go back to the Moby Dick, and crash in my room for the night if you want. Give him a bit of the silent treatment. Don’t lean into what he wants. Push away, and I know he’ll stop.”
“How?”
“Because he’s head over heels for you, dummy. Even right now, all he wants is your attention. Don’t give it to him and you’ll cut the bad habits.”
It was worth a shot, and you wouldn’t have to talk to any sleazy guys to test the theory.
“You’re the best, Marco.” You flashed him a grin and stood, giving Ace one last glance. “But never talk about my sex life again.”
“Oh please,” Marco scoffed. “You have no idea what the commanders talk about during shower time, do you?”
Your eyes widened in horror, but Marco just laughed. “Relax! It was a joke!”
“It better be!” you hissed. “Or I’ll skin that boy alive.”
You gave one more glance to Ace. He was caught up in some conversation with a woman, giving her most of his attention. You rolled your eyes, jealousy panging in your chest, and slipped out the door.
The first two times Ace glanced over at your table, he wasn’t worried about your absence. But the third time, he started to get a bad feeling. You had been gone for too long.
He wandered back to the table, trying to appear casual and unbothered. “Hey Marco,” he said, bringing him another beer. “Where’s Y/N?”
Marco knew he was using the beer as a bribe, but took it anyway. “Not sure, they walked out about thirty minutes ago. Hasn’t been back since.”
“What?” Ace could feel himself sobering up, worried about your safety. “Where’d they go?”
“They seemed tired,” Marco said, watching Ace carefully.
“But they always tell me when they’re going home,” Ace grumbled, looking around. “I’m gonna head back too. Kind of over this whole scene.”
Marco chuckled, reading through Ace’s words, but he didn’t say anything further. He watched Ace walk out the door and back to the ship without so much as a goodbye to anyone in the bar, and he knew his plan would work.
Ace tried not to panic when you weren’t in his room. Sometimes you slept in other places, like the common room or the bunkhouse. Especially on drunken nights, you always seemed to find some random place to pass out. But you always told him when you were going to bed.
He didn’t sleep well. He wandered around the ship several times, trying to appear unbothered. But he was searching every nook and cranny, desperately looking for where you had landed yourself.
He didn’t see you again until the next morning, sitting at the breakfast table with Marco and a few others. You were completely surrounded by people, but Ace stopped by your seat on the way to the breakfast line.
“Hey.” He touched your shoulder and you stiffened at the contact, which was odd. Normally you leaned into his touch. You always looked up at him full of love, silently begging him for a morning kiss. But this morning you didn’t even bother to look his way. “Where’d you end up last night?” he asked.
“My room,” Marco answered for you, laughing. “That sure was a shock to walk into!”
You laughed, shoving Marco slightly. You still refused to acknowledge Ace, though it was starting to get difficult. “Hey Thornton, you left shortly before me. Where did you end up?”
“I swear I could’ve made it back to my room if I wanted to!” he bellowed, and everyone laughed.
“Right!” you laughed. “I bet the deck all night sure was cozy!”
You were ignoring him. Ace was sure of it. Had something happened between you and Marco…no. The two of you had only ever been friends, so close you might as well have been siblings.
He finally left you alone, his brain in overdrive trying to figure out what had made you so upset since the last time he spoke to you.
“You flirt too much,” Marco said, joining him in line.
Ace looked back at him, confused. “What?”
“You’re wondering why Y/N is ignoring you, right?” Ace shrugged, trying not to show that it was bothering him too much, but Marco clicked his tongue in disapproval. “Drop the act, man. You should care. And I know you do. I can practically see the steam coming out of your ears trying to figure it out.”
“I just like to talk to people,” Ace defended. “What’s the harm in that?”
“The harm is you don’t just talk. You flirt.” Marco chuckled, shaking his head. “I know what you’re doing, dude, and I don’t blame you. But you’ve got a good thing. Don’t lose it because you want to…talk.”
Ace frowned, annoyed with being called out so personally, but he thought about it while he ate his breakfast alone. He knew how much you hated the way he treated local islanders when you all went out. But he loved the jealous, possessive side of you. He loved watching you fight for him, even if you were fighting with him.
He found you lounging on the deck, reading a magazine. He walked over to you and sat on the edge of the lounger. He saw your eyes flick up and then immediately back to the magazine, and he could’ve sworn the air temperature dropped 10 degrees.
“Hey,” he cooed, his hands dancing up your legs, finding the spots he knew you were ticklish.
You tried to move your legs, but there weren't many places to escape to without getting up and walking away.
“Please talk to me,” he pouted. He leaned against you, pushing your magazine out of the way and resting his head on your chest, looking up at you with his signature puppy dog eyes.
You turned your head away from him, trying your best to ignore him even though he was physically on top of you, pinning you down.
“Pleaseeeee,” Ace begged. His hands came up and playfully squished your cheeks, and you struggled to keep a straight face. He was so good at making you smile.
“Go away,” you finally said, trying to push him off of you. It was useless, but you had to try.
“You speak!” Ace cheered, and you rolled your eyes. You were tired of his antics. You wanted an apology.
“I’m so lonely without you, babe,” Ace sang offkey, his fingers tracing along your shoulders. “Please come back to me, my loveeeee.”
You didn’t react, but you could feel your vision starting to get blurry. He was too stubborn, but you couldn’t keep doing this. You couldn’t keep being humiliated and forced to watch Ace live the best of both worlds.
“I’m sorry,” Ace finally whispered when he saw your eyes starting to get watery. “I know I’m a little insane.”
You finally looked at him, still silent. Waiting for more.
“And I’m sorry I’ve been hurting you for so long,” he said. “I don’t want to lose you. So no more flirting with random people in bars. You’re mine. And I’m yours.”
“Promise?” you whispered, your voice breaking.
“I promise,” he said, nuzzling into your chest and hugging you tight. He’d hold you close and never let you slip away again.
THAT damn face-
🔥HOT DAMN🔥
TW: Slight blood. (Part 1) (Part 2 here!) (Masterlist)
Tagged: @vespidphoenix and @marvelsgirl4ever
When Love Grows Quiet
Four different loves — each unraveling in its own way, where silence cuts deeper than swords and love isn't always enough to stay.
shanks x reader | zoro x reader | law x reader | mihawk x reader | ONE SHOT tags: angst, sfw, heartbreak, emotional neglect, falling out of love, hurt/no comfort, isolation, miscommunication a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ff a bit cringe, akward, and confusing word count: 2.5k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
SHANKS
The bar was loud, filled with the buzz of half-drunken laughter, tankards slamming against tables, and music that you once loved but now loathed. You sat in the farthest corner, away from the warmth of the crowd, clutching a half-empty glass of something you didn’t order. The ice was melting fast — like the slow disintegration of what used to be your heart.
Shanks was at the center of it all.
Again.
He always was.
“Another round!” he bellowed, raising his cup high in the air as the Red-Haired Pirates cheered. The crew adored him. They should — he was charismatic, fierce, warm, and generous with his attention.
Just not with you. Not anymore.
Your gaze lingered on him. His hair, a fiery halo in the dim light, his grin — that same one that once made you feel like the most important person in the world — now belonged to everyone else.
He didn’t even notice you when you walked in.
“Y/N, there you are!” Lucky Roux called from across the bar, waving at you with his usual cheer. “C’mon, join us!”
Shanks looked over his shoulder, eyes falling on you for a split second. There was recognition — maybe even guilt — but it was gone too fast. He raised his cup in your direction. No words. No movement. Just a lazy toast.
You forced a smile, then looked away.
You’d been with him for two years. It had started with stolen moments under stars, whispered promises between waves. “When this is all over, I’ll settle down. With you,” he’d say, voice dipped in warmth, hand on your cheek. You believed him.
But it never ended. And you stopped asking.
There were always more islands to visit, more allies to meet, more enemies to fight, and more nights he stumbled back to the ship reeking of rum and adrenaline, too tired to remember your name.
You stayed because you loved him.
Or maybe you stayed because you were afraid of what your life would look like without him in it.
But tonight felt different.
You pushed your glass aside and stood, your legs numb from sitting too long. You crossed the room, weaving through sailors and crewmates until you reached him.
“Shanks.”
He looked at you, surprised. Like he hadn’t expected you to speak first.
“Can we talk?”
His smile faltered. “Now? Can it wait? We’re just—”
“No,” you said, quieter, firmer. “It really can’t.”
He followed you outside without protest. The night air was cool, the moonlight bathing the ship in pale light.
You turned to him. “Do you remember what you promised me?”
He blinked. “Which one?”
You almost laughed. “That says everything, doesn’t it?”
“Y/N…”
“You told me we’d settle. That you’d come back for me. That I wasn’t just another stop along your journey. Do you even realize how long I’ve been waiting?”
“I know,” he muttered. “But it’s complicated.”
“No. It’s not. Not really. You just never made space for me.” Your voice trembled. “I don’t need riches or islands. I don’t even need peace. I just needed to know I mattered.”
He took a step forward. “You do matter.”
“Do I?” You looked up at him. “When was the last time you asked how I felt? When was the last time you chose me over adventure? Over your crew? Over another drink?”
He opened his mouth, but no answer came.
You continued, softer now, each word heavy. “I used to believe I was lucky to be loved by you. But now I realize… maybe I was just convenient. Someone to come back to when the world wasn’t enough.”
“That’s not fair,” he said, jaw clenched.
“Neither is loving someone who only loves you when it suits them.”
A silence settled. Heavy. Final.
He looked away. “What are you saying?”
You took a shaky breath. “I’m leaving.”
His eyes snapped to yours. “You don’t mean that.”
“I do. I have to. Because if I don’t now, I never will.” You paused. “I loved you so much, Shanks. But I’m tired of waiting for you to love me back in the way I deserve.”
You turned before he could say more, before the tears spilled.
The crew watched you go. No one stopped you. Maybe they knew too.
Shanks didn’t follow.
Maybe he couldn’t.
Maybe deep down, he knew you were already gone.
And this time, no promise would bring you back.
ZORO
The clatter of blades in the training room echoed through the ship like thunder.
Again.
You stood outside the door, hand hovering just above the wood, listening. Zoro had been in there since sunrise. The sun was beginning to set.
You pressed your palm flat against the door. It was warm.
He didn’t hear you. He never did when he was training.
You opened the door anyway.
He stood in the center, shirtless, sweat clinging to his skin, his chest rising and falling with exertion. His swords were laid neatly on the rack nearby, save for the one still in his hand — his favorite. Wado Ichimonji. His first love.
You didn’t speak right away.
He noticed you after a few seconds, green hair clinging to his face. “Oh. Hey.”
“That all you’ve got for me?” you asked, arms crossed.
He shrugged. “Been training.”
“You were supposed to meet me. Two hours ago.”
Zoro blinked. “Shit. Was that today?”
A beat passed. You tried not to let the disappointment crack through your voice. “Yeah. It was today.”
It wasn’t the first time.
Zoro wasn’t cruel. He wasn’t dismissive in the way that most would notice. He was just… focused. Sharpened, like his blades, honed only for one goal: to become the strongest swordsman in the world.
And you had once admired that. Loved it, even.
But lately, it felt like you were always chasing his shadow, always making room for his dreams, even if it meant shrinking your own.
You walked into the room, picking up the cloth he used to wipe his sweat, tossing it to him. “You forgot again.”
“I didn’t mean to,” he said, running it over his forehead.
“I know,” you whispered.
And maybe that’s what hurt the most.
The days blurred.
Dinner conversations turned into one-sided stories from you. Nights became silent, save for the occasional grunt as Zoro collapsed into bed, already half asleep. You missed the way he used to fall asleep beside you — not just near you — like you were a harbor in his storm. Now, he drifted in and out like a ghost, always just beyond reach.
You finally snapped one quiet night.
“Zoro, do you even love me?”
He looked up from cleaning his blade, brow furrowed. “What kind of question is that?”
You sat on the bed, fingers twisting in your lap. “One I keep asking myself.”
He stood up, face unreadable. “Of course I love you.”
“Then why don’t I feel it?”
The silence that followed was thick. Not awkward — just empty. Like a room without furniture.
“I’m doing this for us,” he finally said. “Everything. My training. My dream.”
“No, you’re doing it for you. And that’s okay, Zoro.” Your voice broke. “But stop pretending I’m part of that dream when I’m just an afterthought.”
“That’s not fair,” he said.
“I used to think that too,” you whispered. “But you keep showing me otherwise.”
The next morning, you packed.
Not everything — just what you needed. You didn’t want to make a scene.
When you turned to leave, he was there. Leaning against the doorframe, arms folded.
“You’re leaving?” he asked, voice rough with sleep and disbelief.
You nodded. “Yeah.”
He stared for a long time. “Why now?”
“Because if I stay, I’ll start hating you. And I don’t want to hate you.”
Zoro opened his mouth, then closed it again. “I never meant to hurt you.”
“I know.”
He took a step forward. “Don’t I get a chance to fix it?”
“You’ve had a hundred chances,” you said, gently. “I gave you all of them.”
He looked down, the tension in his body visible.
You moved past him. He didn’t stop you.
Not physically.
But god, you wished he would.
You heard the sound of blades again as you walked down the corridor, echoing from the training room.
Zoro was already back at it.
Maybe it was easier for him to fight with steel than with words.
And maybe that’s why you couldn’t stay — because you needed someone who could choose you the way you kept choosing him.
Even if it broke your heart.
LAW
The Polar Tang was quiet at night.
Most of the crew had gone to sleep, their laughter faded into distant echoes through the metal halls. You sat alone in the infirmary, the light above flickering in tired pulses, casting shadows across the empty bed beside you.
It used to be your place. Your shared space.
Now it was just another cold room.
The door slid open with a mechanical hiss. Law stepped inside, coat trailing, his presence commanding — but not unkind. His face was the same as always. Calm. Collected. Impenetrable.
You didn’t turn to greet him.
“You’re still awake,” he said, voice low.
“So are you.”
He paused. “Long day.”
“Every day is a long day with you.”
That made him pause longer than usual. You saw it — the subtle twitch of his hand, the way his gaze lingered on you before shifting to the medical charts on the wall, as if reading them gave him a reason not to face you.
You finally stood, arms crossed. “You didn’t even ask how I’m doing.”
“You’re not injured,” he replied, like that explained everything.
You laughed bitterly. “You think that’s all that matters?”
He looked at you now. Really looked.
“You’re not bleeding,” he said, “so I assumed you were fine.”
“And that’s the problem, Law,” you snapped, “you only know how to fix things you can see. But what about everything else?”
He was always distant. He didn’t mean to be — it was just how he survived. You knew that going in. Law was brilliant, brave, and wounded in ways most couldn’t see. He didn’t wear his pain on his sleeve; he buried it deep, under layers of strategy and silence.
You once thought love could bring him peace.
Instead, it made you feel invisible.
He sat on the edge of the bed, removing his gloves with surgical precision. “If you’re upset, just say it.”
“I’m always saying it,” you said. “I say it in every look you don’t return, every time you walk out without a word. I’m screaming it, Law, and you don’t hear me.”
His brow furrowed. “I’m trying.”
“No, you’re managing. There’s a difference.”
You took a step forward, throat tight. “Do you even want me here?”
He didn’t answer.
Not for a long time.
When he did, it was quiet. “I don’t know what I’d be without you.”
“That’s not the same as wanting me.”
You turned away, swallowing the burn behind your eyes. “I need more than this. I need to be seen. Heard. Held.”
“I’m not good at that.”
“I know,” you whispered. “And I’ve been patient. God, I’ve been so patient.”
He stood. “Then what do you want from me?”
You turned back to him, tears finally slipping down your cheek.
“I want to stop being the person waiting for you to feel something.”
There were so many things he could have said. So many things he didn’t.
No promises. No pleas. Just silence.
You left the room, footsteps echoing down the corridor. He didn’t follow. You didn’t expect him to.
Law wasn’t cruel. He was just… unreachable.
And you couldn’t keep drowning in his silence.
Later that night, he stood in the infirmary, alone, looking at the chair where you always sat.
He didn’t cry. He didn’t break.
But he whispered your name once — as if it would echo back.
It didn’t.
MIHAWK
Perched on the windowsill of Kuraigana Island's cold, stone castle, you watched the sun slip beneath the horizon. Even the sunset here felt distant — as if the colors were afraid to bloom fully, like the love you once thought lived within these walls.
Behind you, the quiet hum of Mihawk’s sword being cleaned was the only sound.
You didn’t turn. You didn’t speak.
Neither did he.
You’d once thought the silence between you was peaceful — now it felt suffocating.
When you first arrived, you mistook his quiet for serenity. Mihawk was a man of discipline, of stillness, and you found comfort in his control. He didn’t make empty promises, didn’t raise his voice, didn’t falter. It made you feel safe.
Until the days stretched long and the silence became unbearable.
You would speak to him at dinner, only to be met with the clink of cutlery. You would try to initiate conversation, only to find him more engrossed in wine than words.
You once thought you were an oasis for his loneliness.
Now you realized you were just another presence he tolerated.
“You haven’t looked at me once today,” you said finally, staring out at the orange light dying over the sea.
Mihawk paused, the cloth in his hand stilling on Yoru’s blade. “I saw you this morning.”
“That’s not what I meant.”
No response.
You stood slowly, turning to face him. He was sitting in that grand, throne-like chair by the fireplace. His posture was perfect. Controlled. Remote.
“Do you even care that I’m unhappy?”
“I care,” he replied after a beat. “But unhappiness is inevitable.”
You blinked. “That’s your answer?”
“I do not pretend to be something I’m not,” he said, voice even. “You knew who I was when you came here.”
“I knew who you seemed to be,” you said sharply. “But I thought — I hoped — that underneath all of this control, you might want to be known. That you might let me in.”
“I have let you in.”
“To your house. Not your heart.”
The air crackled.
Mihawk stood, moving with quiet authority. “I do not offer affection like others. I offer stability. Loyalty.”
“I never wanted gifts. Or flattery. I just wanted to feel chosen.” You laughed, bitter. “But all I’ve felt is... tolerated. Like I’m just another item in your collection of things that don’t rust or change.”
He said nothing.
You stepped closer. “You haven’t said you love me. Not once.”
“I do not speak lightly,” he said, almost offended.
“I’m not asking for flowery words. I’m asking for anything that tells me you feel something when you look at me.”
He stared at you — intense, golden eyes sharp as any blade.
“I would not have allowed you to stay if I did not value you.”
A pause. And then your voice, quiet, almost broken:
“That’s not love, Mihawk. That’s possession.”
The silence that followed was vast.
And it said everything.
You turned away, heading for the door.
“You’re leaving.”
“Yes.”
“You may find no comfort in the world beyond this place.”
“Maybe not,” you whispered. “But at least I’ll feel something.”
He did not follow. He did not stop you.
And that hurt worse than any goodbye.
Later, long after you’d gone, Mihawk stood alone in the great hall, Yoru resting silently on the stone altar. A storm gathered beyond the window, wind rushing over the sea like a howl.
He did not weep.
But he looked at the spot where your chair had been pulled out, slightly askew — and he didn’t move it back.
hello! I saw some of your posts and was wondering if u could wright something with sanji from one piece where the reader is also a chef? Like escoffier from genshin impact. But like she has the same looks and vibe cause I was looking at her trailer or something and she only scolded the male cooks when they did bad and I LOVED that PLEASEE try to make this! Established relationship pls, thank u!
this sounds nice! im not quite familiar w the charac mentioned, tho i looked her up, soo its not much but hope u enjoy this!
Fire in the Kitchen, Heart on the Line
Being in love with a fellow perfectionist chef isn’t always easy—especially when your kitchen becomes a battlefield. But with enough butter, banter, and a little love, Sanji and his fiery girlfriend might just make it through the heat.
sanji x Escoffier!reader | ONE SHOT tags: fluff, sfw, soft romance, ooc(?) a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ff a bit cringe, akward, and confusing word count: 1k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The kitchen on the Thousand Sunny was unusually quiet—until a sharp clatter echoed off the walls.
“You call that a brunoise?” your voice rang, sharp as a blade slicing through bone.
Usopp flinched, the knife slipping out of his hand. “I—I was just—”
“No excuses. These cubes are uneven enough to offend geometry itself.” You folded your arms, pristine gloves still white despite the chaos around you. “Throw it out and start again.”
Zoro, seated at the table with a skewer half-loaded with meat, muttered under his breath, “It’s a miracle you two haven’t killed each other in that kitchen yet.”
Sanji entered just then, whistling cheerfully, a towel slung over his shoulder. The moment he caught sight of you—your meticulously tied hair, that commanding glare you reserved only for the incompetent male cooks on board—his eyes lit up with hearts, and his feet nearly floated off the ground.
“Ma chérie~!” he sang, sliding behind you and planting a kiss on your cheek before dodging the spatula you halfheartedly lifted to swat him.
“Sanji,” you said in your signature calm-but-deadly tone, “I told you not to interfere when I’m teaching.”
“I’m not interfering, my love~ I’m admiring.”
“You’re lucky I like you,” you muttered, finally allowing the smile that had been threatening your lips to peek through. “Now get Usopp another carrot before I use his nose as a cutting board.”
“Right away~ Goddess of Gastronomy!” he said, twirling toward the pantry.
You sighed, pressing two fingers to your temple. Life aboard the Sunny was nothing if not chaotic.
And Sanji? He was the eye of your storm, and somehow the hurricane too.
It had been four months since you and Sanji had made your relationship official—not that the rest of the crew hadn’t seen it coming. From the moment you stepped aboard the Sunny, knives flashing and heels clicking like war drums, you and Sanji had danced around each other like rival chefs in a culinary showdown.
Your reputation had preceded you. Known in the South Blue as "Escoffier" your dishes were renowned for their flawless precision, complex flavor pairings, and an almost terrifying level of discipline. Especially toward men. Male chefs, in particular, bore the brunt of your cutting critiques. You didn’t hold back—and you certainly didn’t tolerate mediocrity.
But Sanji? He was different. He matched you plate for plate, idea for idea. And beneath all his dramatic fawning and over-the-top flirting, you had discovered something rare.
Respect.
He listened when you spoke about your work. He valued your opinions. And above all, he didn’t take it personally when you yelled at him for burning the beurre blanc.
(Well—he pouted, but only for a moment. Then he’d get right back to whisking.)
That afternoon, the kitchen was alive with rhythm. You and Sanji moved in tandem, a pair of dancers trained not in waltz but in whisk and flame.
“Ladle,” you said.
“Ladle,” he replied, handing it over.
“Temp check on the lamb?”
“Fifty-two Celsius. Medium-rare in five.”
You turned your head to glance at him, and the two of you paused, catching each other in the moment.
“You’ve got sauce on your cheek,” you said.
“So do you,” he answered, voice softer than it had any right to be.
He wiped your cheek with his thumb. You dabbed his chin with a towel. And then, just as naturally, he leaned in to steal a kiss.
Nami’s voice broke the moment. “Ugh, seriously? You two are gonna make me lose my appetite.”
You didn’t even look back. “Good. More for us.”
That night, Sanji insisted on preparing dinner himself, claiming he wanted to "treat the queen of his kitchen like the royalty she is."
You allowed it—reluctantly.
But as the aromas filled the galley—roasted duck with plum glaze, golden dauphinoise potatoes, and sautéed green beans with garlic and lemon—you couldn’t help but watch him closely from the doorway.
He had removed his jacket, sleeves rolled to his elbows, his golden hair tucked behind his ear. His focus was intense, his movements precise. You knew he was trying to impress you. Even now. Especially now.
And it was working.
When he caught you staring, he grinned. “Enjoying the view, darling?”
“I’m mentally rating your performance,” you replied, though the warmth in your voice betrayed you.
“Out of ten?”
“Six.”
“Six?!”
“You docked three points for putting the duck skin down too early. And one for letting the fond burn—again.”
He dramatically clutched his chest. “You wound me.”
You stepped into the kitchen, wrapping your arms around his waist from behind. “You’re lucky you’re cute.”
He turned his head, his lips brushing your forehead. “I know.”
Later that night, after the meal had been devoured and Luffy had fallen asleep mid-dessert, you and Sanji found yourselves alone on the deck.
The sea was calm, the moonlight painting silver trails across the waves.
Sanji sat with his back against the railing, you curled against his side, your head resting on his shoulder.
“Do you ever think,” he murmured, “about opening a restaurant together someday?”
You blinked. “Like… an actual building? Four walls? Guests?”
“Yeah. Something quiet. Cozy. Somewhere we can work together every day and still kiss between courses.”
You smiled. “And scold the interns together.”
His laughter rumbled in his chest. “I’ll be the bad cop this time. You can be the terrifying angel of death.”
“I always am.”
He kissed the top of your head. “You’re perfect, you know?”
“No one’s perfect,” you said quietly. “Not even me.”
“You’re perfect for me. That’s better.”
As you watched the stars, warm in his embrace, you thought about everything the two of you had built. Not just the food. Not just the flirtation. But the trust. The balance. The unspoken understanding of two chefs who demanded excellence—and gave each other grace when they didn’t quite reach it.
In the kitchen, you were a storm. Outside of it, he was your shelter.
And together?
You were a fire that never burned out.
© mariah for the divider <3
Hello, please can I request a Shanks young apprentice x reader apprentice where she has gone many days without sleeping, she is very tired and sleepy, he finds her in the library of the gold Jackson reading one of the books that the dark king forced them to read.
If you're sleepy, you should sleep. If the captain finds out you're not sleeping, he'll scold you. "I'm not sleepy," you whispered, getting up to put the book back on the shelf. When you turned around, you saw Shanks in front of you. "You didn't notice me, did you?" "Adjusting Rader's hair."Do you have nightmares?" "Yes," you whispered. Shanks hugged her tightly to his chest and whispered in her ear."Reader
Sleep, I'll stay with you. The girl fell asleep upon feeling his warmth and Shanks's heartbeat. Shank took her in his arms before she fell to the floor
this sounds cutee!
Where the Quiet Finds You
hanks finds his fellow apprentice in the library, battling exhaustion and nightmares, and offers her the comfort she's too afraid to ask for.
Shanks x fem! reader | ONE SHOT
tags: sfw, fluff, sleeplessness, nightmares, soft comfort,
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only so expect this ff cringe and oc word count: 1.7k
masterlist | ko-fi
The ship creaked and groaned with age and travel, a sound that had become a lullaby to those who called the Oro Jackson home. Moonlight poured through the round, salt-speckled window of the ship’s small library, silvering the spines of thick maritime tomes and adventure logs that lined the shelves like ancient guardians of knowledge.
You sat at the far end of the room, curled on a stool with your elbows balanced precariously on the table, chin resting in the hollow of your palm. A book lay open beneath your sleepy eyes, but the words blurred together like waves in a storm. You blinked, fighting the pull of sleep for what must have been the hundredth time that night.
The scent of old paper and salt hung heavy in the air. You shivered slightly, not from cold, but from the exhaustion that crept deeper into your bones with every passing hour. You had stopped counting how many days you’d gone without real rest.
Rayleigh had given both you and Shanks a thick stack of reading as part of your apprenticeship under their wing—navigation theory, sea lore, ship maintenance, historical texts. You didn’t mind the learning; in truth, you craved the structure it gave you. But every time you closed your eyes, the nightmares came creeping in—half memories, half monsters. Faces you couldn’t save. Voices swallowed by the sea.
You were so tired your body hurt.
Footsteps padded softly behind you. Not threatening, but curious. Familiar.
“If you're sleepy, you should sleep. If the captain finds out you're not sleeping, he'll scold you.”
You turned slightly, recognizing the warm, teasing voice instantly.
“I'm not sleepy,” you whispered, even though your voice betrayed you with how hoarse and small it sounded.
You pushed yourself up from the stool, cradling the heavy book like a fragile piece of cargo, and made your way to the shelf to put it back. As you turned around, you nearly stumbled into Shanks.
He was standing right behind you now, closer than you expected, his red hair tousled and sticking out in odd angles. He looked like he’d just rolled out of bed, his shirt half-buttoned and feet bare. There was a softness in his gaze, not the usual joking sparkle you were used to, but something quieter. Something that felt too big for boys your age.
“You didn’t notice me, did you?” Shanks murmured, reaching out without hesitation to brush a few strands of hair from your face. His fingers were warm.
You looked away.
“Do you have nightmares?” he asked gently.
“Yes,” you whispered, not trusting yourself to say more.
He didn’t speak again for a moment, just pulled you into him with a suddenness that didn’t feel rushed or awkward, just… instinctive. His arms wrapped securely around you, pressing your face into his chest. You could hear his heartbeat—steady and calm, like waves lapping against the hull. He smelled like salt and old parchment, and something uniquely him.
“Sleep,” he said softly against the crown of your head. “I’ll stay with you.”
You didn’t mean to, but your knees buckled a little, and before you could hit the floor, Shanks caught you. He scooped you up in his arms with surprising ease. You were light from not eating properly, worn down by sleepless nights. Your arms looped lazily around his neck as your eyes began to flutter shut.
“You’re not supposed to carry me,” you mumbled.
“I’ll tell Rayleigh I was rescuing you from literary drowning,” he teased, though his voice stayed soft, reverent.
He carried you down the corridor with care, the library door swinging quietly shut behind him. The ship’s wood was cool beneath his feet, but he didn’t mind. In the dim glow of the lanterns, he brought you to the shared cabin you and a few others used, but instead of laying you in your bunk, he sat against the wall, still holding you against his chest.
You didn’t stir.
Shanks looked down at you, eyebrows furrowed slightly. He’d noticed the signs—dark circles, the way your hands shook when holding your sword, how you’d drift off during training and then snap awake, eyes wide and frightened.
He hated seeing you like this.
“I get them too, sometimes,” he whispered, not expecting a reply.
But your breathing slowed, deepened.
You were asleep.
He rested his head back against the wood, holding you like glass. He didn’t know what the nightmares were about, but he didn’t need to. All he knew was that if you were with him, he’d make sure nothing hurt you—not dreams, not ghosts, not even the fear of being vulnerable.
The next morning, the sun broke over the horizon, its light spilling through the small round porthole in the corner of the room.
Rayleigh stood in the doorway, blinking down at the sight of the two youngest apprentices curled together like siblings shipwrecked on a safe shore. He said nothing, just gave a faint smile, turned on his heel, and closed the door behind him.
That evening, after the day’s duties and sword drills were over, Shanks sat next to you on the deck, your shoulders brushing as you shared a piece of bread and a flask of juice.
“You drooled on my shirt,” he said, smirking.
“I did not.”
“You did. Right here.” He pointed to a barely-there damp spot. “You owe me laundry duty.”
You rolled your eyes, but you smiled. For the first time in days, your limbs didn’t feel like anchors. You’d slept all the way through the night.
“Thanks, Shanks,” you said quietly, looking out at the sea.
He nudged your knee with his. “Anytime. You can always come find me, okay? Even if it’s the middle of the night.”
You nodded.
“I mean it,” he added. “And if the nightmares come back... I’ll scare them off with a wooden sword and my dazzling grin.”
You laughed. He looked satisfied with that.
That night, just as he was drifting off in his bunk, he heard your light steps by the door. You hovered there, unsure.
He didn’t even open his eyes.
“Come here,” he said simply, lifting the blanket.
You crawled in beside him, neither of you saying anything more. You nestled against his side, and he rested a hand over your shoulder.
In the quiet of the Oro Jackson, with the ocean humming softly below, you both found rest.
Not because the nightmares had disappeared.
But because you weren’t alone.
Question How do you think Marco the Phoenix would catch and defeat his girlfriend, Marin, so that she would give up her duties as a Marine? Do you happen to have a story about that?
Blue Fire, White Justice
Marco the Phoenix faces off against the woman he loves—a fierce Marine torn between duty and desire.
Marco the phoenix x reader
tags: fluff, sfw, secret relationship, light drama, oc
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ffs a bit cringe
word count: 826
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The sunset over Sabaody Archipelago bled into the sea, streaking the water with fiery gold. You stood near Grove 17, staring across the surf, coat whipping in the sea wind. The kanji for Justice blazed bold across your back—weighty and solemn.
You had known this day would come.
“He’s near,” you muttered.
Your partner, Lieutenant Commander Haru, glanced up from the comm transponder. “You’re sure it’s him?”
You nodded. “Marco doesn’t make landfall without reason.”
And you were the reason, weren’t you?
The World Government sent you to stop pirate resurgence near the archipelago. What they didn’t know—or didn’t care about—was your past with one of Whitebeard’s most notorious commanders. A man made of fire and regret.
Two nights earlier...
You met him at a decaying outpost near Grove 42, where silence clung to the ruins like moss. It had been your meeting place once, long before the war, when you still believed in middle grounds.
“You’re out of uniform-yoi” he said with a dry smile.
You didn’t rise to the bait. “You’re trespassing.”
He stepped closer, casual and radiant with heat. “Only because I need to see you.”
“You shouldn’t have come.”
“Too late-yoi”
You lowered your voice. “Do you know what they’d do to me if they found out we talked?”
He studied your face, all humor gone. “Do you know what they’re planning?”
You froze. “What?”
“I can’t give details-yoi. But your name’s come up. Some in high command are calling you a liability.”
Your stomach turned.
You stepped back. “Why would I believe you?”
He didn’t answer. He didn’t have to.
Now
He arrived under cover of night, his form descending from the clouds in a blaze of blue and gold flame. The Phoenix landed silently, his body cooling to flesh as he walked toward you.
You waited in the clearing, saber at your side.
“You came to fight?” you asked.
He stopped several feet away. “I came to bring you with me-yoi”
You laughed bitterly. “That’s not going to happen.”
He looked around. “No backup?”
“I told them I’d handle you alone.”
“Still protecting me?” he asked, voice low.
You gritted your teeth. “Still giving me reasons not to.”
The clash began in an instant.
You moved first, blade arcing toward his chest. He caught it with a burning forearm, skin searing, but regenerating in a flash of flame. He didn’t flinch.
“You’re hesitating-yoi” he said.
You shoved forward. “So are you.”
He dodged, fast as ever, sweeping you off your feet with a gust of phoenix fire. You rolled to your feet, haki igniting around your fists.
Your strikes were fast, precise. He met them with heat and patience, parrying without rage.
“You’re not trying to hurt me,” you panted.
“I’m trying to reach you.”
You froze for half a breath too long, and he closed the gap, gripping your wrist tightly—but gently.
“Let go,” you growled.
“I will-yoi. When you stop letting them own you.”
Flashback - A year ago
You sat beside him on a broken stone ledge of a forgotten island, legs dangling over the edge. The sea was dark, but calm.
“Ever think of disappearing?” you asked.
Marco smiled faintly. “All the time.”
You leaned against him. “I could run. Change my name. Burn the coat.”
“You’d miss it,” he said.
“Maybe. But I’d miss you more.”
You didn’t kiss him that night. You just sat there, feeling the weight of decisions neither of you were ready to make.
Now
You launched a furious assault, striking harder than before, tears clouding your vision. He blocked each blow but didn’t retaliate.
“You think I’m being used?” you shouted.
“I know you are.”
“I believe in what I do!”
“I believe in you,” he said.
The words hit harder than your blade ever could.
Eventually, he caught you—arms around your waist as you struggled, both of you breathing hard, sweat and ash clinging to your skin.
You slumped against him, exhausted.
“What do you want from me?” you asked.
“I want you to stop sacrificing yourself for people who see you as a tool.”
You shook your head. “I can’t leave. I can’t be like you.”
He stepped back. “Then don’t be like me. Just...be free.”
Later that night, you sat alone beneath a mangrove tree, staring at the white Marine coat folded neatly on the grass beside you.
Memories came in waves—training drills, missions, accolades. None of them felt like home.
But a quiet moment aboard a stolen dinghy, Marco laughing as you tried sake for the first time—that did.
At dawn, you stood on the same dock where the Phoenix first touched down. The air smelled of salt and smoke.
He stood by the water, waiting.
You approached slowly.
Then, without a word, you dropped the Marine coat between you.
He didn’t smile. He just stepped forward and took your hand.
“I’m not choosing you,” you whispered. “I’m choosing myself.”
He nodded. “Good. That’s who I fell for in the first place.”
Together, you walked toward the rising sun.
Hello, hello, how are you? Can I please ask you for a story? Marco from the Shirohige Pirates finds out by chance that he's going to be a father. 🤣
T/n is Ace's sister, a Marine, and a vice admiral. And Marco's partner, although they see each other occasionally. Marco found out. She had been acting strange the last time they saw each other.
Aunque se ofreció a examinarla, ella se negó porque, según ella, no sería objetivo con su diagnóstico. Días después, T/n se embarcaría en una nueva misión: escoltar a nobles mundiales.
T/n was leaning on her desk, feeling a little dizzy. It's lucky her assistant gives all the orders to the others while she's feeling ill. Not even her haki has been working well these past few weeks. Hello...
T/n dio un salto y casi tiró un vaso de jarabe para el mareo que le había traído el médico del barco. T/n retiró el vaso discretamente, pero Marco lo notó. Siempre estaba tan claro, pero yo no lo había notado.
Y/n, "Hey, what's going on here? I think our next appointment is in two weeks, don't you darling?" Trying to sound normal. Covering herself with her coat. A few folders were falling.
T/n tenía que proteger su secreto. Seguramente, si él lo descubría, la arrastraría. No peor. Probablemente se enojaría con ella por no haberle dicho nada.
Vice Admiral, we're ready. The doctor asks if she's feeling better yet. Seeing the pirate in front of her, Wait, Marco, don't do it. But Marco was faster. The man was already unconscious on the floor. Y/N got up worriedly to check on her subordinate, but Maco grabbed her wrist. She was even thinner than the last time he saw her.
sounds cool tried my best >< tis not much but hope u like it, i apologize in advance if its not that accurate lolol
Blue Flames and Baby Rumors
When you starts showing unusual symptoms, Marco begins connecting the dots—and ends up with the surprise of his life.
Marco the phoenix x reader
tags: fluff, sfw, secret relationship, light drama
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ffs a bit cringe
word count: 1k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The ship rocked gently under the pull of the current, but your head swam like you were being thrashed in a whirlpool. Vice Admiral or not, no amount of rank could prepare you for the unpredictable wrath of morning sickness.
Leaning on your desk, you pressed two fingers to your temple, squinting at a report you weren’t processing. Your assistant was already barking orders outside your office door—thank the heavens. You hadn't given a single command since sunrise.
Then, like a damn ghost in broad daylight—
"Hello."
You jumped, nearly upending a glass of syrup meant to settle your stomach. It sloshed dangerously before you caught it, hurriedly sliding it behind a folder.
And there he stood. Marco the Phoenix.
Golden hair, calm ocean-blue eyes, and a presence that had always made your heart ache in the worst and best ways. Your partner, occasional lover, and the last person you wanted to see right now.
"...Hey," you started, voice too casual. “What’s going on here? I think our next appointment is in two weeks, don’t you, darling?” You tugged your coat tighter over your chest as a few folders slipped off your desk.
Marco didn’t smile. His gaze flicked toward the now half-hidden glass. “Motion sickness?” he asked, and his tone was far too neutral.
“Long voyage,” you replied quickly. “The escort mission has been dragging through choppy waters.”
The look in his eyes made it clear he wasn’t buying that.
You forced a light laugh, walking around the desk to pick up the fallen papers. “I’m not made of sea-stone. Even Vice Admirals get woozy sometimes.”
“You wouldn’t even let me examine you last time-yoi” he said, stepping closer. “You said I wasn’t objective.”
“I stand by that.”
He tilted his head. “You didn’t even let me try.”
You swallowed. No way in hell were you going to talk about this. You were already gambling every inch of this mission by just standing here, trying to keep a secret from the one man who literally healed people for a living.
"Vice Admiral!" your assistant called from outside. "The nobles are waiting. The doctor asks if you're feeling better yet."
You could see the moment the dots fully connected in Marco's sharp gaze.
"Wait—Marco, don't—"
Too late. In one swift movement, Marco disappeared in a flash of blue and reappeared outside. You dashed after him just in time to see your medic crumple to the ground with a startled grunt.
"Marco!"
You dropped to check your subordinate’s pulse—he was unconscious, not harmed seriously—but Marco’s hand clamped gently but firmly around your wrist.
“You’re thinner than before-yoi” he muttered. “You’ve been exhausted. Your Haki’s off. And now motion sickness?”
You stared at him. “Marco, I swear, if you say it—”
“You’re pregnant.”
The words hung in the air like cannon smoke.
You looked away, breath caught in your throat. “It’s none of your—”
His grip tightened slightly, only to loosen as you flinched.
“I didn’t mean to scare you.” he said. “But you are, aren’t you-yoi?”
Silence.
Finally, you exhaled. “...Yes.”
He stepped back. “Is it mine?”
Your head snapped toward him. “What? Of course it’s yours! You—! We—! I haven’t been with anyone else, you idiot!”
Marco blinked. “I just—sorry. I wasn’t accusing. Just… processing.”
He ran a hand through his blond hair, the tension in his usually relaxed frame tangible now.
You crossed your arms, trying to look like the proud Vice Admiral you were instead of the world’s most irresponsible soon-to-be parent. “I didn’t tell you because I thought you’d drag me back to the Grand Line and throw me in a nest of phoenix feathers.”
“You were going to hide my kid from me-yoi?”
“I was going to figure things out myself first,” you said, quieter now. “I didn’t want you to worry. We barely see each other as it is.”
“Because we’re on opposite sides of the damn sea.”
“Exactly.”
A long pause. You shifted uncomfortably, ignoring the familiar twist of nausea.
“I get it,” Marco finally said. “But you should’ve told me-yoi”
You frowned, defensive. “You think I don’t know that? It’s not like I’m thrilled about this, Marco. I’m a Vice Admiral. You’re a pirate. Ace—Ace would’ve flipped if he knew.”
Marco smiled faintly. “Ace would’ve been smug as hell. He always said we’d end up together.”
That made your eyes sting, unexpectedly. “...Don’t do that. Don’t talk about him like he’s still here.”
Marco stepped closer, resting a hand on your shoulder. “You’re not alone in this-yoi.”
“You’re not exactly on call, either.”
“Then I’ll make myself available.”
Your brows shot up. “You’re serious?”
“Dead serious,” he said. “You’re having my kid. I might be a pirate, but I’m not irresponsible. I’ll be there.”
You stared at him, seeing not just the Phoenix, the First Division Commander of the Whitebeard Pirates—but Marco. The man who always showed up exactly when you needed him, even if you didn’t say it aloud.
He took your hand and pressed it to his chest. “You don’t have to hide anymore-yoi”
You let out a long sigh, finally allowing yourself to lean into his warmth. “I still have to finish this mission.”
He groaned. “Of course you do.”
You smirked. “I am a Vice Admiral.”
“You’re a pregnant Vice Admiral.”
“Don’t remind me.”
Later that night, you found yourself leaning against the rail of the ship, the cool breeze easing your nausea better than the syrup. Marco leaned beside you, arms crossed, watching the sea.
“So… how far along?” he asked.
“Almost two months.”
“...Was that before or after I gave you that weird seaweed stew in Alabasta?”
You snorted. “Definitely after.”
He grimaced. “I hope the baby doesn’t remember that-yoi”
You laughed, and for the first time in weeks, it felt real. “Thanks for coming, Marco.”
He turned his head slightly. “I’ll be back before the baby’s born. Promise.”
“You better be,” you replied. “Or I’m naming it Garp.”
Marco's face turned pale. “You wouldn’t.”
You raised an eyebrow. “Try me.”
He stared, then smirked. “...Fine. But I’m putting ‘Phoenix’ on the birth certificate.”
“Oh, absolutely not.”
shanks x reader with a cat-like or cat based zoan devil fruit?
sounds cool www
Claws, Cuddles, and Catnip Chaos
Shanks will do anything to win over the crew’s mischievous cat-like Devil Fruit user—even if it means competing with Benn and surviving a sneak-attack nap.
shanks x reader | ONE SHOT tags: fluff, sfw, light romance, nap cuddles, clingy antics, catnip a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ff a bit cringe, akward, and confusing word count: 991
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
There were exactly three things the Red-Haired Pirates learned about you very quickly:
You were a certified menace in a cat’s body.
You had zero respect for personal space—unless it was Shanks’s.
You absolutely, unapologetically favored Benn Beckman.
"She purrs for you, Benn?! I've fed her, I've scratched her ears, I even gave her that weird fish jerky from Dressrosa!"
Shanks was sulking—again—as you laid sprawled across Benn’s lap like a lazy feline sunbathing, flicking your tail with royal indifference while he casually stroked between your ears.
“She lets me pet her when she’s in a good mood,” Benn replied calmly, taking a drag of his cigar. “Maybe try not throwing her off your shoulder when she lands there mid-meeting.”
“She knocked over seven mugs in ten seconds!”
“I was clearing the table for snacks,” you muttered, not opening your eyes.
“You yeeted a map. Into the ocean.”
You rolled onto your back, belly up, tail flicking toward Benn’s arm. “Benny understands me. Right, Benny?”
Benn chuckled, slow and satisfied. “You’re a little gremlin, but you’re my gremlin.”
Shanks practically burst into flames from jealousy. “That’s MY gremlin!”
"Ownership implies consent," you said, still not moving.
“You SLEPT ON HIS DESK FOR THREE HOURS!”
“I was asserting dominance.”
Shanks’s eye twitched.
You’d sauntered into the war room mid-strategy meeting, tail high, whiskers twitching with curiosity. No one questioned it. You did this all the time.
Except this time, instead of knocking over a globe or licking a compass like a weirdo, you simply walked across the table, plopped down on Benn’s open map, and curled up into a ball.
Then you snored.
For three hours.
Shanks tried to nudge you off gently at first.
You bit him.
When Benn reached over and scratched your chin, you purred like a motorboat and flopped onto your side.
"Traitor," Shanks muttered.
"Alright, that's it," Shanks declared, standing on a barrel dramatically. "From now on, I'm enacting Operation: Make Cat Fall in Love with Me."
Benn raised an eyebrow. "That’s the name you’re going with?"
"YES," Shanks snapped. "Step one: catnip. Step two: fish. Step three: ultimate snuggles."
"She’ll see right through it," Benn said, but he was smirking.
You stretched and yawned loudly. “I can hear you, you know.”
“I’m not hiding it!” Shanks declared. “I’m wooing you.”
“Woo me and you die.”
“You’re saying that now,” he said, pointing dramatically. “But just wait.”
Step one was—predictably—catnip.
You were wise to his games this time, narrowing your eyes at the sprig he dangled like a bribe.
“I’m not falling for it again.”
“Come on,” Shanks wheedled. “Just a sniff.”
“Nope.”
Shanks leaned in, holding it under your nose like a shady merchant. “High-quality, imported, no sticks.”
You hissed and batted it out of his hand.
Then you lunged and stuffed it in your shirt.
“…I said I wasn’t falling for it, not that I was above stealing it.”
Shanks blinked. “...Fair.”
Shanks cooked. Personally.
The crew avoided the galley like it was on fire.
When you walked in, the smell of something vaguely edible reached your nose. Shanks stood with a crooked smile, apron inside out, face smudged with flour, and a suspiciously burnt fish in hand.
“For you.”
You sniffed it.
You stared.
“Did… did you use rum instead of oil?”
“I panicked!”
You padded over to Benn and took the jerky he always kept in his coat pocket.
Shanks’s soul left his body.
It happened completely by accident.
You were curled up on your usual sunspot near the helm, tail twitching softly as the Red Force cut through calm seas. You’d been lounging near Benn earlier, of course, but he’d gone to smoke and you felt… restless.
The sun was warm.
The wind was soft.
Shanks was lying in the hammock like a lounging idiot, one leg up, book on his face, softly snoring.
And for some reason, your legs just walked over. Your ears twitched. Your instincts went haywire.
And before you could even think, you leapt into the hammock like a heat-seeking missile and curled up on his chest.
Shanks woke with a loud OOF.
He froze.
He blinked up through his book… and found you, kneading his chest absentmindedly, eyes already half-lidded, clearly ready for a nap.
“Wha…”
“Shh,” you mumbled. “You’re warm. Good pillow.”
He nearly died on the spot.
She’s on me, he thought. She chose ME. Over Benn.
He let his arm slowly wrap around you like he was defusing a bomb. Then he just laid there, stiff as a board, trying not to breathe too loudly.
When Benn walked by and raised a brow, Shanks grinned like a victorious maniac.
“She came to me,” he mouthed.
Benn just puffed his cigar and said, “Try not to scare her off.”
“She’s purring,” Shanks whispered smugly. “She likes me now.”
“I give it five minutes before she sneezes and claws your face.”
You sneezed violently.
Your claws came out.
“OH GOD MY NIPPLE.”
You sat on the railing, brushing your tail as the moonlight washed over the deck. Shanks sat nearby, nursing his dignity and some scratch marks under his shirt.
“…Still worth it,” he mumbled.
You side-eyed him. “You’re a masochist.”
“I like a challenge.”
You flicked his forehead with your tail. “You’re annoying.”
He grinned. “But you like me.”
“…No comment.”
You hopped off the rail and stretched. Then, casually, you flopped down and laid your head in his lap.
He froze again.
“…Are you trying to kill me with happiness?”
You yawned. “You’re comfy. Better than your fish, that’s for sure.”
He beamed.
“You like me more than Benn?”
“Don’t push it.”
“But—”
You shot him a glare. “I will go scratch his beard and nap in his bunk again.”
Shanks shut up real fast.
“…I’ll take the win.”
Hello, good morning, I hope I'm not bothering you. But I can make a request for Whitebeard and Fem Reader, which is a story of forbidden love where he is a pirate we know and she is an admiral. Respected that they nicknamed her mother to those who go with them, they had a secret relationship a few years ago before Roger's death that he also knew but unfortunately A reader like her had a devil fruit that was mysterious and valuable that deals with control From the dreams, some powers similar to those of MLP's Moon or Maleficent. But she had to sacrifice herself to save her men whom she considers sons. Against a pirate who was a Yonko who was protected by the navy And that devastated Whitebeard and those who knew her, but after a few years Whitebeard met a boy who was his son and reader Only he was raised with Garp who is practically the adopted brother of Ace Luffy and Sabo
Oh, I dreamed it and I swear I woke up crying. But I said it would be interesting to read. Take your time thank you ❤️
sounds cool anw tried my best>< tis not much but, hope u like it!
When the Sea Dreams of You
A powerful admiral, once known as "Mother" to her men, sacrifices herself to save them—leaving behind a secret love and child with Whitebeard. Years later, fate delivers the boy back into his father's world.
whitebeard x fem! reader | ONE SHOT
tags: slight angst, sfw, ooc, major character death, grief, oc
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ffs a bit cringe and akward
word count: 1.1k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The sea remembered her name even if the world had tried to forget it.
She had once stood atop warships with the wind billowing her cape, marines at her side, and fear in the hearts of pirates. An admiral—respected, strategic, and maternal in a way that felt divine—earning her the nickname “Mother” from those who served under her.
But Edward Newgate had once called her something else. Something softer. Something forbidden.
“Y/N.”
Their love had bloomed like moonlight on water—beautiful, distant, unreachable to anyone else. Back when the world was simpler. Before Roger died. Before Yonko politics became tangled with Navy ambition. Before dreams became dangerous things.
She had eaten a devil fruit so rare that even the elders of Mariejois feared it: the Yume Yume no Mi, Dream Dream Fruit. It granted her the power to shape dreams, trap enemies in illusions, or soothe nightmares into serenity. Some whispered she could walk between minds in their sleep, learn secrets, or even leave part of herself behind in another’s subconscious.
The World Government had seen her as both an asset and a threat. So they used her… and then allowed her to die.
At least, that’s what the world believed.
.
.
It began in silence—after battles, beneath stars, stolen moments between two great forces who knew what their love would cost.
"You know," she whispered against his chest, fingers tangled in his wild blond hair, "this can never be more than a dream."
Whitebeard chuckled, arms like mountains holding her close. "Then let’s never wake up."
They had found each other between skirmishes, on islands not marked on maps, during ceasefires no one else knew about. She would arrive wearing her navy coat, only to drop it at his feet like a surrender flag. He’d tease her, call her dangerous in more ways than one, and then hold her like the war would never reach them.
Only a few knew—Roger had been one of them. He had laughed when he found out, slapping Whitebeard on the back.
"You're crazier than I thought, Newgate! Falling for the Navy's ‘Mother’? You really wanna die, huh?"
But Roger understood. In his own way. And then he died.
And everything changed.
.
.
The pirate was brutal. A Yonko, protected by politics, feared by soldiers. He had come for her fleet—not her—and underestimated what a mother does for her children.
Her men had screamed for retreat. She stayed.
The battlefield twisted around her as she activated the forbidden side of her fruit. A nightmare realm bloomed into existence—a dreamscape that would swallow both her and the Yonko into an endless illusion, locking them in a dimension between sleep and wakefulness.
It was her final act. Her fleet escaped. Her body was never recovered. The navy quietly declared her dead, sealing all files. Honoring her in silence.
But Whitebeard knew the truth. He felt it—like a tear in his soul.
And he never forgave them.
Years Later
He appeared on Sphinx Island on a slow afternoon, knocking over crates trying to carry supplies. Hair as wild as the sea, grin just familiar enough to sting.
Marco had noticed first. “Oyaji, you might wanna come see this-yoi…”
The boy stood with a seagull feather in his messy hair and a Marine jacket tied around his waist like a belt. His laugh—loud and reckless—could’ve belonged to Ace. But there was something calmer beneath it. More… deliberate.
“What’s your name, brat?” Whitebeard asked, looming above him like a mountain.
The boy looked up. His eyes were her eyes.
“Hoshi.”
Silence fell.
“My full name’s Hoshi. Don’t really use my last name. Garp-jiji says it stirs trouble.”
Marco blinked. “Garp? As in—Vice Admiral Garp?”
“Yeah. He's kinda like my grandpa. I grew up with his other grandkids. We were like brothers.” He scratched his head. “But I don’t look like them much. People always said I looked more like… her.”
Whitebeard’s breath caught.
The boy looked up. “My mom was an admiral. ‘Mother,’ they called her. I know she’s gone. But Garp-jiji said she loved me. Said I was a dream she left behind.”
Whitebeard’s knees nearly buckled.
He whispered, “And your father?”
“Dunno. Garp-jiji wouldn’t say. But sometimes… I dream of a voice. Loud, laughing. Warm. It’s dumb.”
Whitebeard was trembling now. Marco placed a hand on his shoulder, steadying him.
“It ain’t dumb, brat,” the old pirate said hoarsely. “You ever hear the name Whitebeard?”
Hoshi tilted his head. “Course I have. Big ol’ sea legend.”
Whitebeard knelt down so their eyes met.
“I’m Edward Newgate. Your father.”
The revelation shook the crew to its core. Most knew of her in whispers and unspoken glances. Thatch remembered her as the admiral who once spared his life. Vista swore he saw Whitebeard smile softer the weeks after her visits.
Hoshi adjusted fast. He sparred with Marco, pestered Jozu for strength training, and charmed even Izo with his mischief. But some nights, he asked Whitebeard to tell him stories about her.
And Whitebeard did.
“Your mother used to make even the sea stand still,” he’d murmur, staring out at the tide. “She held nations in her hand, but always chose to cradle her boys instead.”
“Did you love her?”
“With every bone in this old body.”
.
.
One night, Hoshi woke screaming. The crew rushed in—swords drawn, ready to fight.
“She was there!” he shouted. “I saw her! She said my name. She held me!”
Marco looked pale. “A dream?”
Whitebeard stepped in. “No… more than that.”
The Dream Dream Fruit never truly dies. Some powers linger. Some souls too stubborn to fade.
That night, as Whitebeard slept, he dreamed of a silver shore, and there she stood—older, transparent, wrapped in moonlight.
“Edward,” she said, and his heart cracked open.
“I never stopped,” he choked. “You should have told me about the boy.”
“I was protecting him. The world wasn’t ready. You weren’t safe. I thought… if he had even a chance at peace, he deserved it.”
Whitebeard reached for her. His hand passed through light.
“Is this real?”
She smiled. “As real as dreams can be.”
“Can I bring you back?”
“No. My body is gone. My soul… remains here. The price of my power.” She cupped his cheek with fingers made of stars. “But I’ll watch over him. And you.”
He wanted to scream, but all he could do was weep.
“Tell him,” she whispered, fading, “that I loved him more than life itself.”
.
.
Hoshi grew into his power, showing hints of the Dream Dream Fruit awakening within him. He spoke of visions, soft voices in sleep, sometimes warnings.
He stayed with Whitebeard’s crew, not as a soldier, but as a bridge—between past and future.
And sometimes, when the moon was high and dreams felt close enough to touch, he would feel her again.
A lullaby in the tide.
A hand on his shoulder.
The sea remembering her name.
Espionage and Eavesdropping
You just wanted to surprise your Yonko boyfriend with something sweet. Shanks, however, misunderstands everything and thinks you're hiding a lover aboard.
shanks x reader | ONE SHOT
tags: fluff, sfw, chaotic
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ff a bit cringe, akward, and confusing
word count: 1k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
You should’ve known better than to try anything secretive on a ship full of pirates with nothing better to do.
But here you were, crouched behind a stack of rum barrels in the ship’s lower deck, notebook clutched in one hand, whispering into a den den mushi like you were planning a military coup.
“I just need it by Thursday,” you hissed. “And don’t forget the edible glitter! It has to sparkle like Shanks’s ego.”
The den den mushi blinked at you slowly, mimicking your furrowed brows. “Sparkle. Got it. Any other unreasonable demands?”
“Make it look dangerously romantic, but also incredibly cool.”
“Sounds like you want a wedding cake without the wedding.”
You paused. “…Don’t say that out loud. He’ll hear it and assume I’m trying to marry someone else.”
And two decks above you, curled beneath a conveniently placed hammock and eavesdropping like a man twice his age, Shanks the Red-Haired Yonko of the Sea, whispered into his own den den mushi.
“I think they’re marrying someone else.”
“What?” Benn Beckman’s voice was dry.
“I just heard them say ‘don’t say that out loud, he’ll think I’m marrying someone else.’ That’s exactly what someone who’s definitely hiding an affair says, right?!”
“Shanks—”
“I KNEW they were too beautiful to be loyal.”
“You’re the most dramatic man on this ship.”
“I’m going to fake my own death and see if they cry.”
The misunderstanding began three days ago, when you asked Lucky Roux to quietly sneak into town and pick up something discreet and delicate. You’d given him a long list with unnecessary glitter stars and bold underlines, swore him to secrecy, and told him, “Tell no one. Especially Shanks. Not even if he’s dying. Especially not if he’s dying.”
Unfortunately, someone else heard that.
And Shanks? He took it personally.
Now you were organizing a surprise celebration for his birthday (which he had claimed he didn’t care about, like a liar), enlisting crew members with the stealth of a sea cat, and every time Shanks looked at you, you panicked like a criminal caught red-handed.
So of course he thought something was going on.
You’d whisper to Yasopp, run away from Hongo, disappear for hours, and dodge Shanks with the finesse of someone avoiding a breakup talk. He started following you in secret, wearing a cape and fake mustache, hiding behind crates that were nowhere near his size.
Benn walked past him one day and muttered, “This is why we can’t have normal relationships.”
Day Four.
You were on the main deck, whispering into your notebook.
“Benn’s distracting him with fake wine. Hongo’s handling the fireproof sparklers. Yasopp is swearing on his son’s life not to tell. I just need to—”
“—tell me who you’re seeing.”
You jumped so hard you nearly tossed the notebook overboard.
“Shanks! What the hell—how did you sneak up on me like that?!”
He was squinting suspiciously, arm on his hip, shirt loose, and hair windblown in a way that made him look far too attractive to be pulling this level of paranoid nonsense.
“I have connections,” he said ominously.
“Okay?”
“Lucky Roux saw you give a note to a pigeon.”
“First of all, it was a cake-ordering pigeon, and second—wait, that’s not the point. What?”
“You’ve been sneaking around. Whispering into things. Saying suspicious phrases like ‘don’t tell Shanks even if he’s dying.’ What am I supposed to think?!”
“That I’m planning something nice?”
“That you’re cheating!”
You blinked. Then blinked again.
“…Cheating? Shanks. Darling. Love of my life. Who on this ship could I possibly be cheating on you with?!”
He pointed dramatically toward the horizon. “Someone from another crew! A beautiful stranger with a strong jawline and a charming laugh—”
“That’s literally you.”
“Wait. Is this a reverse surprise? Am I the stranger?!”
“No!” you laughed, smacking his chest. “I’m planning a surprise party for you, you idiot!”
“…Oh.”
You narrowed your eyes. “Did you… spy on me?”
Shanks hesitated. Then lifted one leg onto a crate like a theater actor mid-monologue. “I’ll have you know I was on a noble quest for truth, love, and the prevention of heartbreak.”
“You wore a mustache and tried to climb the rigging, didn’t you.”
He coughed. “Irrelevant.”
You groaned, laughing despite yourself. “Unbelievable. You thought I was cheating, so you started counter-spying?”
He nodded solemnly. “It was a matter of pride. Also, Benn said if I was wrong, I owed him all my sake.”
“…And were you wrong?”
Shanks looked at you. Then at the crew. Then back at you.
“…Maybe. But in my defense, you are very suspicious when you whisper.”
Cue Party Day.
Despite the chaos, the confusion, and the unnecessary disguises, the party was perfect.
The deck was transformed with string lights, stolen silk drapes, a truly dangerous amount of glitter, and a cake shaped like his own face (your idea, obviously). A very confused seagull in a bowtie delivered the final decorations.
Shanks walked into the surprise party pretending to be shocked—even though he’d definitely heard the band warming up from below deck—and laughed like it was the greatest moment of his life.
“You did all this for me?” he beamed.
You crossed your arms. “Yes. Even though you accused me of having a secret affair.”
He grinned, wrapping an arm around your shoulder. “Well, I would cheat on me for you, so I get it.”
“…That doesn’t make any sense.”
“It doesn’t have to. I’m handsome.”
He kissed your cheek before you could argue, then pulled you onto the dance floor—barefoot, wild, and surrounded by pirates singing off-key. At some point, Lucky Roux accidentally ignited the fireproof sparklers (which were not fireproof), and Benn had to douse the deck while muttering about retirement.
You and Shanks ended the night lying on a picnic blanket made from stolen tavern tablecloths, eating leftover cake straight from the tray.
“Next time you plan a surprise,” he mumbled, mouth full, “just… tell me it’s not a secret affair.”
You poked his cheek. “Only if you don’t go full spy-movie mode again.”
He smiled. “Deal. Unless you start whispering to birds again. Then all bets are off.”
The next morning, you woke to find Shanks crouched on the figurehead, holding a long telescope and muttering, “The pigeon is back. I repeat. The pigeon. Is. Back.”
You dragged a pillow over your face and groaned.
Some things never change.
Hi, could you write something about Fukaboshi (shirahoshi's brother) and a strawhat reader? And/or maybe something with Blackbeard (ik he's hated a lot, hell I hate him too, but uh he's like super powerful soooo...)
oohh, fukaboshi...hes so underrated, good looking among his brothers too wwww~ here's some fluff w fukaboshi, hope u like it! as for blackbeard...hmmm idk abt it yet, i dont really have an idea for the guy lolol
Shell Shocked
A peaceful shell collecting date on Fishman Island turns into a hilariously competitive (and surprisingly romantic) showdown between you and Prince Fukaboshi
Fukaboshi X gn! reader | ONE SHOT
tags: fluff, sfw, beach date, shell hoarding, goofy flirting, (post-fishman Island arc, straw Hats visiting for a break)
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ffs a bit cringe
word count: 845
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
You were supposed to be relaxing. That was the plan.
A peaceful afternoon on the sands of Fishman Island. Just you and Fukaboshi. No Luffy accidentally declaring war on someone. No Zoro getting lost. No Sanji turning into a nosebleed geyser.
Just shells. Sunlight. Maybe some hand-holding.
But no.
Because somewhere between “let’s go shell collecting” and “whoever finds the rarest shell wins,” the Crown Prince of the Ryugu Kingdom had decided this was combat.
“Twenty-seven shells and counting!” Fukaboshi shouted triumphantly, holding up a glimmering blue conch like it was the One Piece.
You scowled. “You tackled me for that last one.”
“You hesitated. The battlefield shows no mercy.”
“I blinked, you lunatic.”
“You blinked slowly.”
You hurled a clam shell at him. He caught it with one hand, smirked, and added it to his basket.
This had all started when the Straw Hats returned to Fishman Island for a celebratory visit after the chaos with Hody Jones. Fukaboshi had offered to show you around. You—being the only Straw Hat who actually knew how to relax without causing international incidents—agreed.
It was just supposed to be a beach stroll. Maybe a little flirting. Very light competition.
But you forgot one crucial fact:
Fukaboshi was insanely competitive. Even in a calm, handsome, princely way.
You’d said, “Let’s collect shells!”
He heard: “Let’s engage in psychological warfare, armed with nothing but beach debris and sexual tension.”
Now you were knee-deep in a tidepool while your royal date was wrestling an octopus to get to a rare cowrie.
“Fuka—babe, please,” you said. “That mollusk looks pissed.”
“I’m not afraid of a cephalopod,” he grunted, prying the shell free.
The octopus slapped him with a tentacle and slithered off in a huff.
You stared.
He held the shell up triumphantly. “Worth it.”
You sighed and tossed a coral chunk into your bucket. “I’m going to tell your brothers you lost a duel with a sea pancake.”
“They’ll understand.”
“No, Ryuboshi will write a song about it.”
“He would, too.”
You flopped onto a rock to eat the snacks Fukaboshi had packed—sweet kelp rolls, bubble-fruit, and some very smugly presented coral chips “for champions only.”
“Do you get like this during formal events too?” you asked, nibbling.
“Only when I care about the outcome.”
“Oh? And you care about shell collecting?”
“I care about beating you at shell collecting.”
You rolled your eyes but couldn’t stop smiling.
He noticed.
“Admit it,” he said smugly. “You’re having fun.”
“No,” you said flatly. “This is miserable.”
“You’ve been smiling for an hour straight.”
“That’s because I’m hallucinating from heatstroke.”
“Romantic heatstroke,” he corrected.
You snorted, nearly choking on your snack.
The chaos escalated when Luffy showed up.
“WHOA! Are you guys FIGHTING?!”
Fukaboshi and you exchanged a glance of pure dread.
Before either of you could speak, Luffy had launched himself into the tidepools, shouting, “I WANNA HELP Y/N WIN!”
Fukaboshi froze. “That’s illegal.”
“THERE ARE NO RULES!” Luffy cackled, slapping at the water like a hyperactive seal.
From a distance, you heard Nami shout, “DON’T ENCOURAGE HIM!” and Sanji yell something about “shells of love.”
You sighed and palmed your face.
Fukaboshi leaned over and whispered, “We need to relocate.”
“Agreed. Before he brings a sea king into this.”
Eventually, you found a quiet spot away from your crew’s chaos. Just you, Fukaboshi, and the sound of gentle waves lapping against coral sand.
You crouched by a tidepool and picked up a pink scallop. He leaned over your shoulder, the heat of his body warm even through the water.
“That’s a nice one,” he murmured.
“Better than anything in your bucket.”
“I disagree.”
He nudged his collection closer.
Your jaw dropped. “You have forty. Are you building a shell throne?”
“Yes,” he said seriously. “So you can sit beside me.”
You blinked.
“Oh,” you said, voice small.
He smiled. “Caught you off guard?”
“Just didn’t expect my boyfriend to flirt mid-shell war.”
“I contain multitudes.”
Later, as the sun filtered down through the water above, casting rainbows through the kelp canopy, you both sprawled out on the sand.
Tired. Salty. Happy.
“I think it’s a draw,” you said, yawning.
“No way,” he said. “I clearly won.”
“You got slapped by an octopus.”
“You fell into a crab pit.”
“You pushed me into it.”
“It was a tactical move.”
You threw a shell at him. He let it hit him in the chest and then dramatically collapsed like you’d slain him in battle.
You scooted closer, nudging him. “Still breathing?”
“Barely. Your power overwhelms me.”
You chuckled and rested your head on his arm. “Thanks for today.”
He turned to look at you, expression warm.
“Thanks for coming back,” he said quietly. “Fishman Island feels brighter when you’re here.”
Your heart did a little somersault.
“…You’re just saying that because I beat you at shell collecting.”
“You wish.”
You kissed his cheek, salty and sun-warmed. “Rematch tomorrow?”
He grinned. “I’ll bring blueprints for our shell fort.”
You laughed. “I’ll bring Luffy as a distraction.”
“Unfair.”
“All’s fair in love and mollusks.”
Hi! Could you write about katakuri and his childhood sweetheart. Like they were pretty close friends since childhood, she has been friends with him from when he didn't used to cover his face. But they never said 'I love you' to each other. And now that they've grown up, Big mom has asked(ordered) the reader to marry Cracker/Oven. She maybe confesses her love to katakuri, but him being the perfect son he is, doesn't want to disobey his mom, so he let the marriage happen.
I know requests are off, but if you like the idea, please do write about it, idc even if it takes like a month or two. I'm absolutely in love with your writing.
oohh! that is good! tis not much but, hope u like this!
The Sweetness We Never Tasted
You’ve loved Katakuri since you were kids. But Big Mom has chosen another path for you—and he won’t fight her to stop it.
katakuri x reader
tags: sfw, arranged marriage, childhood sweethearts, angst
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ff cringe, and akward
word count: 1.1k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The air in Totto Land always smelled faintly of sugar, but today it was too sweet—so sweet it made your stomach twist.
You stood in the rose garden behind the Chateau, the very place where you and Katakuri used to sneak pastries as children, hiding behind the candy-cane columns and daring each other to steal more from the kitchen. Those days felt like dreams now—soft, distant, and a little too painful to look at directly.
And now, you were waiting for him.
You clenched your fists, heart pounding. He was late. Or maybe he was avoiding you.
No. He wouldn’t.
“(Y/N),” a deep voice rumbled behind you.
You turned.
Katakuri stood there, tall as ever, shadows cutting across his face from the low afternoon sun. His scarf was on, of course. He didn’t show his mouth anymore. Not to anyone.
Except you—once.
"You're late," you said, forcing a smile.
"I came as soon as I could."
There was always something different in his voice when he spoke to you. A softness hidden under the gravel. He glanced around before walking over to stand beside you, close enough that his arm nearly brushed yours. He didn’t touch. He never did. Not anymore.
"So..." You stared down at your boots, trying to summon the courage that had kept you alive in this family all these years. "Have you heard?"
He didn’t answer immediately. The silence dragged between you like the end of a rope—fraying, tension snapping strand by strand.
"Yes," he finally said. “Mama told me.”
You swallowed hard. “She wants me to marry Cracker.”
He didn’t move. Didn’t react. Only a subtle clenching of his jaw beneath the scarf gave him away.
“I didn’t think she’d do it,” you whispered. “I thought… I thought she’d at least ask me. Or you would. Before it got this far.”
Katakuri turned his face away, eyes focused on something in the distance. Maybe he was looking at the horizon. Maybe he just couldn’t bear to look at you.
“I’m not surprised,” he said. “It makes sense politically.”
You laughed bitterly. “Of course. Because that’s what marriage is in this family. Strategy.”
Another beat of silence. Your voice shook when you said his name.
“Katakuri.”
He looked at you now. Directly. It hurt.
“I need to know,” you said, barely above a whisper. “Did you ever feel it too?”
His shoulders tensed.
“When we were kids… when we were teens… when we’d sneak out after dinner to watch the stars from the rooftops… when you showed me your mouth and told me I was the only one you weren’t ashamed around… Did that mean nothing to you?”
You didn’t mean to cry, but the tears came anyway—quiet, burning down your cheeks.
“I always thought we’d have time,” you said. “That one day we’d stop pretending and actually say it. I waited for you to say it first. I waited for years.”
He took a step toward you. His hands twitched like he wanted to hold yours.
“I wanted to,” he said.
"Then why didn’t you?"
"Because I knew this would happen."
You blinked. “What?”
“I knew Mama would never allow it,” he said, voice low. “She doesn’t choose based on love. She chooses for power, for bloodlines, for strength. Cracker is a biscuit soldier commander—strong, obedient. You’ve always been one of her favorites. Of course she'd put you with someone she trusts.”
“But you’re her favorite too. More than Cracker. If you’d said something—if you’d just told her we wanted—”
“I couldn’t,” he cut in. “I’m not just her son, (Y/N). I’m her soldier. Her perfect creation. I do not defy her.”
You stared at him. “Not even for me?”
His silence was louder than any answer.
You stepped back like he’d slapped you. “You would’ve let me go without a word. Without knowing.”
“I thought it would be easier,” he said. “If you hated me. It would hurt less.”
You covered your mouth, choking on the sound that wanted to escape. “You coward.”
“I know.”
“I would’ve fought for you,” you said. “I would’ve burned everything down for you.”
“I know.”
You turned to leave. You didn’t want him to see you fall apart.
But his hand caught your wrist.
“(Y/N).”
You froze.
“I love you.”
Your breath hitched. You turned to face him again, slowly.
“What?”
He stepped closer. “I loved you then. I love you now. I’ll love you after the wedding, and I’ll hate myself every day for not stopping it.”
You stared at him, heart breaking in slow motion. “Then stop it.”
He shook his head. “I can’t.”
“Why?” Your voice cracked. “Why not fight for once? Why not just—”
“Because if I do, Mama will kill someone,” he said. “Maybe Cracker. Maybe you. Maybe one of your crewmates. You think she wouldn’t?”
Your voice died in your throat.
“I can’t risk your life,” he said. “I’d rather lose you than bury you.”
You collapsed into his arms without thinking, fists pounding against his chest.
“I hate you,” you sobbed. “I hate you for not loving me enough to try.”
He didn’t say anything. Just held you, trembling.
The embrace didn’t last long enough.
The wedding day arrived too quickly.
You wore the gown Mama picked. Something ridiculous and pastel with lace up to your chin and jewels that dug into your collarbones. Cracker looked pleased enough, though he kept grumbling about how annoying formal events were. He barely looked at you.
Your mind was elsewhere anyway.
Katakuri stood near the front, expression blank. You couldn’t read anything behind that scarf and those crimson eyes.
You were numb as the vows were spoken. Your lips moved, but they weren’t your words. When the crowd cheered, it felt like your ears had gone underwater.
Your heart stayed behind in that garden.
That night, you sat alone on the balcony while the festivities carried on below. Cracker was off getting drunk with Opera and Snack, bragging about how ‘lucky’ he was to get someone like you. You felt sick.
Behind you, the door creaked open.
You didn’t turn. You knew the footsteps.
“Shouldn’t you be with your husband?” Katakuri asked quietly.
You didn’t answer.
“I shouldn’t have come.”
“Then don’t stay.”
He hesitated. You could hear the tightness in his breath.
“Did you mean it?” you asked.
“Mean what?”
“When you said you love me.”
“Yes.”
“Do you still?”
“Yes.”
You turned to him. “Then why did you let them take me?”
He looked like he wanted to shatter.
“Because I thought I was strong,” he said. “But I’m just her puppet, (Y/N). We all are.”
You walked up to him, slowly.
“I would’ve run with you,” you said. “I would’ve left everything behind.”
He looked down at you. “You still could.”
“No,” you whispered. “Not anymore.”
You leaned up and kissed the scarf covering his mouth, just once.
Then walked past him, back into the room.
That night, Katakuri stood alone on the edge of the island, staring out at the moonlit sea.
He didn't cry.
But if he had, the ocean might’ve wept with him.
I love shanks so much😭😭
Are you able to write a story where reader is a captain of another crew? Their crew isn’t super famous but aren’t weak either. Their crew is staying at some island and a tavern there when the Red-Haired pirates show up and think that they might try to fight, but reader dgaf and decides to flirt with shanks and stuff. Don’t know if your readers are Gn or female, but could the reader be described as “as beautiful as the ocean” please? I thought that would be cute!
Thank you!
🌊
thats interesting! its not much but hope u like this~~
Trouble Walks In, and So Do You
shanks x reader | ONE SHOT
tags: fluff, ocs, flirting, chaotic crews
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ff a bit cringe, akward, and confusing
word count: 1.2k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The tavern on Bellmouth Island had never known peace.
It was tucked into the port side of the island like a cozy scar—weathered, stubborn, and full of bad decisions marinated in rum. But even Bellmouth’s most seasoned barkeep hadn’t seen anything quite like The Siren’s Fang crew.
“Hey, Cap! Tall guy passed out again!” barked Kiji, the squad’s medic, gesturing to a pile of limbs slumped over a barstool.
“Is he breathing this time?” you asked lazily, twirling a glass of rum in your hand. You sat at the tavern’s center table, leg slung over the arm of your chair, adorned in sleek leather and gold-trimmed cloth, eyes half-lidded with amusement.
“Barely,” muttered Azel, your cook-slash-unofficial-grim-reaper, poking the unconscious man with a ladle. “He mistook my hot sauce for syrup. Natural selection.”
“His fault,” you sighed.
You were Captain [Y/N], the woman many whispered about as beautiful as the ocean—mysterious, wild, and just as likely to drown you as smile at you. The Siren’s Fang wasn’t a household name like the Straw Hats or the Emperors, but in the Grand Line’s undercurrent, your reputation had teeth. Rumors swirled of your crew taking down a fleet from Big Mom’s remnants and sinking a marine battleship like it was a toy boat in a bathtub.
Still, fame didn’t interest you. Fun did.
And Bellmouth was fun—cheap booze, rowdy locals, and just enough lawlessness to feel like home.
That was until the door slammed open.
Wind howled through the tavern. Bottles rattled. Even the drunks perked up.
The Red-Haired Pirates had arrived.
You didn’t need to look. You felt it. That magnetic, crackling air of too-powerful people walking into a space too small to contain them.
Shanks led the way, one hand on the hilt of his sword, the other resting on his hip as he scanned the tavern with lazy mirth. His crew spilled in behind him—Benn Beckman, Lucky Roux, Yasopp, the works.
Ten seconds passed. Then—
“Welp. Guess we’re fighting,” muttered Neri, your tactician, flipping her dagger.
“Can’t we go one week without a legendary crew showing up?” grumbled Hyun, your shipwright, who’d just managed to tape a window back together.
“Don't break my chairs,” called the barkeep, already ducking behind the bar.
You, meanwhile, took a sip of rum.
And then, slowly, gracefully, rose to your feet.
"Are we fighting?" asked Benn, eyes narrowing slightly.
Shanks tilted his head in your direction, gaze locking onto yours.
You didn’t draw your sword.
You smiled.
“No,” you said, voice like velvet. “But I do have something else in mind.”
The room collectively blinked.
You strolled toward them with the ease of a queen and the chaos of a siren in full swing. “You must be Red-Haired Shanks,” you purred, eyes scanning him with undisguised appreciation. “You're taller than I expected. That’s... hot.”
A pause.
Then—someone from your crew let out a wheeze of disbelief. Probably Toma. He’d bet two crates of rum you’d deck Shanks on sight.
Shanks arched a brow, lips twitching. “Not the usual greeting I get from a rival pirate captain.”
“I’m not your rival,” you said, stopping only a breath away from him. You craned your head up, voice dropping to a sultry whisper. “Unless you want me to be. Enemies to lovers? That your thing?”
Lucky Roux choked on his drink.
Shanks actually laughed, the rich, boisterous sound of someone genuinely caught off guard.
“Captain,” Benn said dryly, “I think we’re being hit on.”
“DAHAHA I know, right?” Shanks grinned. “This is way more fun than usual.”
Your crew was now in a full-on state of stunned chaos.
“I—she just flirted with a Yonko. Casually. Like she was ordering a drink,” Kiji mumbled.
“She’s going to get us killed,” muttered Neri.
“No,” corrected Hyun, “she’s going to get laid.”
“Pfft—HA!”
Meanwhile, Shanks tilted his head. “So what’s your name, Ocean Eyes?”
You gave him your full title, adding, “Captain of The Siren’s Fang. And yes, I live up to the name.”
“Mm.” He leaned in just slightly. “Should I be worried you’re trying to lure me onto the rocks?”
“I’m trying to lure you onto something, that’s for sure.”
Yasopp nearly fell off his stool.
Benn facepalmed. Lucky Roux laughed so hard he snorted beer through his nose.
“Join us for a drink?” you offered innocently. “Or are you too scared I’ll make you fall in love with me?”
Shanks held your gaze for one beat. Two. Then smiled.
“I’ve done dumber things.”
And just like that, the Red-Haired Pirates sat down with the Siren’s Fang.
Tension left the room like steam off hot rum. Chairs screeched. Drinks clinked. Somewhere, your sniper was trying to discreetly message your ship’s chronicler: CAPTAIN IS FLIRTING WITH SHANKS, SEND HELP.
“...And then the marine tries to arrest me, right? While I’m naked. In the bath!” Shanks crowed, halfway through a bottle of rum, hair falling into his eyes.
“Oh my god,” you gasped, clutching your side. “Please tell me you fought him like that.”
“I slipped! Broke his nose falling out of the tub!”
You and your crew howled.
A few tables down, Benn and Neri were having a quiet intellectual standoff that involved a lot of maps and dry sarcasm. Yasopp and Hyun were arguing over gun specs. Toma was getting arm-wrestled into oblivion by Lucky Roux. It was, in short, a tavern apocalypse.
“You’re fun,” Shanks murmured, voice low, only for you.
You tilted your head. “You expected me to be scary.”
“I expected you to swing first and ask questions never.”
“Ah. That’s just on Wednesdays.”
He chuckled. “You’re dangerous.”
“You like that,” you teased.
“I do,” he admitted. “But be honest. Is this all just to distract me while your crew steals our booze?”
You sipped your drink with a wink. “What do you think?”
From across the room, a yell: “WE’VE TAKEN THE BEER STORAGE!”
“DAMN IT, KOKO!”
Shanks stared.
You said nothing.
He grinned. “Marry me?”
“Buy me a boat first.”
“You already have a ship.”
“Yeah, but I want a red one.”
As the night wore on, chaos bloomed into something almost tender. The two crews, pirates feared across the seas, were now doing karaoke with a broken lute and a guy named Phil.
You leaned against the tavern doorway, watching the madness. The moonlight brushed your skin like seafoam, your hair tousled by the salt-laced wind.
Shanks joined you silently.
“You’re really not what I expected,” he said.
“Disappointed?”
He shook his head. “Enchanted.”
You turned your head to him, eyes soft now. “You’re pretty smooth for a pirate.”
“I’m usually drunker.”
You laughed, then reached up, brushing a lock of hair from his face. “You know, Red, if I weren’t a captain…”
“Yeah?”
“I’d ask you to run away with me.”
He caught your wrist gently, pressing a kiss to your knuckles.
“If I weren’t a Yonko,” he murmured, “I’d say yes.”
For a moment, it felt like the sea held its breath.
Then someone inside yelled, “THE CAPTAIN AND SHANKS ARE MAKING EYES AT EACH OTHER AGAIN!”
“TAKE PICTURES!”
“START THE WEDDING SONG!”
You and Shanks groaned in unison.
“Back to the madness?” he offered.
“Only if you dance with me.”
“Deal.”
And so the two of you dove back into the tavern storm, laughing, flirting, half-dancing, half-sparring with words, like the sea and sky in a constant, chaotic waltz.
No declarations. No promises.
Just two captains in the eye of a storm they both enjoyed far too much.
The Ones Who Stayed Silent
They thought you didn’t know—but you saw everything, said nothing, and walked away with a shattered heart and silent grace… only to be seen again, happy and healed, with someone who would never make you feel like the only one.
shanks x reader | sanji x reader | ace x reader | ONE SHOT
tags: angst, sfw, ooc, heartbreak, cheating, betrayal
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ff a bit cringe, akward, and confusing
word count: 3.9k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
SHANKS
The sea was always loud around the Red Force. Wind in the sails, waves breaking across the bow, laughter from the crew. And yet, in moments like this — with your head tucked beneath Shanks’ chin and his arm wrapped around your waist — it felt like the whole world stilled just to let you breathe.
“You always sneak into my bed when it’s cold,” he teased, voice low and rough with sleep.
You smiled against his chest. “Because your furnace body hoards all the heat.”
“Furnace body,” he repeated with a chuckle, fingers drifting slowly down your spine. “You really know how to charm a man.”
“Mmhm. That’s why you keep me around.”
“Nah,” he murmured, lifting your chin with a curled finger. “I keep you around because you make everything better. Even the cold nights. Especially the bad ones.”
Your heart tightened with warmth. “Shanks…”
He leaned down and kissed you slow. Deep. Familiar.
“Love you, baby,” he whispered, brushing his nose against yours.
You didn’t say anything at first. You just melted into him, eyes fluttering shut.
“I love you, too.”
You didn’t realize the first warning sign had come days earlier — a moment you almost forgot.
You had been leaning over the railing, watching the stars reflect across the ocean when Shanks walked up beside you, his presence easy and radiant as always. You’d barely noticed the woman trailing behind him — one of the newer crew members, tall and silver-haired, her laugh like syrup as it spilled from her throat.
She was laughing at something he said. You didn’t catch the joke.
You gave him a look. Not angry. Just questioning.
He smiled and curled an arm around your shoulder like it meant nothing. “She’s new,” he explained casually. “Still getting used to the crew.”
“She seems to be adjusting just fine,” you replied.
He pulled you closer. “Hey. Don’t go getting jealous on me, baby.”
“I’m not jealous.”
“Good.” He kissed your temple. “Because there’s no one else, alright? You know that.”
You nodded, even though a small part of you felt unsure.
He always made things feel safe again.
Three nights later, you brought him a drink in the captain’s quarters after dinner. He was at his desk, boots kicked up, talking with that same woman again — her knee pressed just slightly too close to his. They both looked up when you entered.
“Baby,” Shanks greeted, brightening immediately. “Perfect timing.”
She excused herself politely, offering a warm smile before slipping out the door. Shanks took the drink from your hand and tugged you into his lap without hesitation.
“She’s around a lot lately,” you said quietly.
“She’s an eager crewmate,” he shrugged, nuzzling into your neck. “What, you wanna get rid of her?”
“Don’t joke.”
“Hey.” His voice softened, and he turned your face to meet his. “There’s nothing going on. I promise. You believe me, right?”
“…Yeah.”
His lips brushed yours, slow and certain. “You’re the only one I want, baby. Always.”
You leaned into the kiss, letting the reassurance sink in.
Still, that night, you couldn’t fall asleep right away.
You started noticing more of it after that.
The way her eyes lingered on him when she thought you weren’t looking. The shared laughs during dinner. The time you caught her slipping out of his cabin early in the morning — she claimed she’d been dropping off maps.
You wanted to believe him. You tried.
But the ache in your chest started to bloom quietly. Slowly.
A small doubt that pressed harder with each soft “baby” he whispered — the very word that used to feel like a prayer now sounded like a lie.
Still, you said nothing.
You waited. You watched.
And then… you saw everything.
It was almost midnight when you approached his quarters.
You held a small cloth bundle in your hands — a gift you'd picked up from a small island earlier that week. A pair of rare sea-glass earrings. He’d admired them in passing. You wanted to surprise him.
You opened the door without knocking.
And there she was.
Her fingers tangled in his red hair. His lips trailing down her neck. His voice — low, teasing, affectionate.
“You feel so good, baby…”
You froze.
He didn’t see you.
You didn’t speak.
You just stood there. Long enough to burn the image into your mind. Long enough to feel your throat close, your heartbeat stutter, your entire body go numb.
Then, quietly, you closed the door.
You dropped the earrings into the sea later that night.
You didn’t sleep that night.
You sat on the edge of your bed for hours, staring at the moonlight bleeding through the porthole, your chest hollow, your limbs heavy. There were no tears. No rage.
Just silence.
You kept replaying his words — not the ones he said to her, but the ones he said to you.
“There’s no one else, baby. You’re the only one I want.”
Each lie sounded sweeter than the last.
You didn’t go to him. You didn’t want an apology. You didn’t want to hear his mouth twist the truth into something manageable. Because now you knew — every time he held you, he’d already chosen someone else.
So you wrote.
Your hand trembled at first. But as the words poured out, your chest began to lighten — like you were finally breathing again.
Shanks, I hope this letter finds you — though I know it will, because I’m leaving it on your bed. Right where I used to sleep. Right where she’s probably sleeping now. I saw you. I saw the way you touched her. The way you said “baby” like it still meant something. The same way you said it to me just days ago — when you kissed me good morning, when you laughed in my arms. It used to make me feel special. Now, it just makes me feel stupid. You told me not to worry. That she meant nothing. That I was the only one. You were so good at saying it. So gentle. So convincing. I wanted to believe you — God, I did. Because I loved you more than anything. More than reason. More than pride. But you looked at her the way you used to look at me. And I can’t forget that. So I’m leaving. Not because I want to hurt you. Not even because I hate you. But because I can’t stay and pretend I’m enough for you when you already decided I wasn’t. I hope the sea gives you peace. I hope you find what you’re looking for. And I hope — one day — you realize what you threw away. Because I would’ve given you everything. But now? Now, I’ll give myself the one thing you never could. Freedom. Goodbye, — Y/N
You left before sunrise.
The docks were quiet, the crew asleep, and your bag packed light. No goodbyes. No farewells. You just vanished — like mist over the sea.
Shanks woke with a lazy grin, his arm stretched across the bed to pull you closer—
But there was no one there.
Only the rustle of sheets. The ghost of warmth.
He sat up, rubbing at his eyes. Maybe you were getting breakfast. Or with the crew.
Then he noticed it: a small folded note on the pillow.
His name written in your handwriting.
His heart dropped before he even opened it.
And when he did…
The world collapsed.
He read every line once. Then again. Slower. Disbelieving.
“I saw you.” “You called her ‘baby.’” “You told me I was the only one.”
He was up in seconds, barefoot and shirtless, bursting through his cabin door.
“Y/N?!” His voice echoed down the corridor. “Y/N, wait—!”
No answer.
He stormed toward your room — empty. Searched the deck — nothing. Sprinted to the galley, the crow’s nest, the storage bay. Every familiar hiding spot. Every place you used to sit and smile at him like he was the only thing in your world.
“Have you seen Y/N?” he asked the crew, trying to keep his voice level.
“No, Captain,” came the confused reply. “Did something happen?”
He didn’t answer.
He barged back into the woman's quarter slamming the door behind him.
The woman — the one he’d betrayed you with — was still pulling on her coat lazily, as if nothing had happened.
“Hey, what’s all the noise—?”
“Get out.”
She blinked. “What?”
“I said get the hell out.” His voice was low, ragged, dangerous.
She laughed nervously. “Shanks, don’t be dramatic—”
“Out!” he roared, slamming his fist into the desk. The wood splintered. The room shook.
She scrambled, nearly tripping over herself as she fled.
And just like that, the silence returned.
He sank into the nearest chair, the note trembling in his hand.
You looked at her the way you used to look at me. I would’ve given you everything. Now, I’ll give myself the one thing you never could. Freedom.
Shanks closed his eyes, forehead resting on the crumpled page.
He tried to remember the last time he said he loved you — the last time you laughed in his arms. The last time you looked at him without doubt.
He’d called you baby with the same mouth that whispered it to someone else.
And now he couldn’t even call your name without shame.
The Red Force had never felt so quiet.
And Shanks had never felt so empty.
You found work on a merchant vessel at first. Later, you traveled alone. You didn’t speak of him. You didn’t speak of you. You let time do what it does best — wear grief down to a dull ache.
Until one day, someone else came into your orbit.
Dracule Mihawk was not the kind of man who chased after affection. But he noticed you — the quiet way you watched the world, the grief you wore like armor, the strength you didn’t flaunt.
He didn’t ask for your story. He just stayed long enough for you to offer it.
And when you did, he listened.
He didn’t make you promises. He didn’t call you “baby.” He simply treated you like you mattered.
He touched you with reverence. Looked at you with intention.
Loved you without lies.
And somehow, that was enough.
A Year Later
The festival lights painted the harbor gold, laughter echoing between stalls and taverns as music played softly in the distance. You walked beside Mihawk, his coat draped over your shoulders, your fingers laced with his.
You smiled — a real, easy thing — as he said something dry and clever under his breath, pulling a laugh from you. You leaned into him without thinking.
Then you felt it.
That weight. That familiar gravity.
You turned your head and saw him.
Shanks.
Standing beneath a lantern near the docks, cloaked in shadow but unmistakably there. His red hair tousled by the wind. His body frozen.
His eyes — wide, stunned, hollow — locked on yours like he couldn’t believe what he was seeing.
You didn’t flinch.
You didn’t look away.
You simply turned slightly toward Mihawk and pressed your lips softly to his cheek, your hand never leaving his. Mihawk didn’t ask. He didn’t have to. His grip on you tightened just slightly, grounding you.
Shanks took a step forward.
But then… he stopped.
His mouth opened like he might speak — but no words came. There was nothing he could say that wouldn’t arrive a year too late.
So you let the silence say it all.
You gave him one last look. Calm. Final. Then you turned and walked away, leaving him rooted to the edge of the world he once ruled.
He had seen a thousand sunsets at sea. Watched a thousand tides roll in. Weathered storms and battles and death itself.
But nothing ever gutted him like seeing you again — whole, radiant, untouchable.
You weren’t sad anymore.
You weren’t his anymore.
You had Mihawk. And Shanks could see it in every step, every touch, every soft smile you gave the other man — the peace he once swore to protect, now in someone else’s hands.
And the worst part?
You didn’t hate him.
You just didn’t care anymore.
And that, somehow, hurt more than any scream or slap ever could.
He stood there long after you disappeared into the crowd. Alone. Cold. Remembering the way your voice used to sound when you whispered, “I love you.”
And for the first time in his life, Shanks had no idea how to get something back.
Because you were gone.
And you weren’t coming back.
SANJI
The sun kissed the shores of a quiet island nestled along the Grand Line, where the Straw Hat crew had docked for rest and resupply. You sat on a small stone wall beside Sanji, a paper cone of roasted chestnuts between you, your legs swinging gently. His hand brushed yours now and again, but he never held it. You never said anything about that.
“Try this one,” he said, lifting a particularly dark, caramelized chestnut to your lips. You laughed and leaned forward to take it, but he tugged it back teasingly. “Say please.”
You narrowed your eyes. “Please, my oh-so-generous chef.”
“That’s more like it,” he grinned, letting you take it before resting his chin in his hand, eyes soft. “How did I get lucky enough to end up with someone like you, huh?”
The words stung.
Because you’d started to notice the way he said the same line to other women when he thought you weren’t listening. When he thought your back was turned. When you were supposedly out with Nami and Robin.
But you smiled. You always did. That’s what love looked like, didn’t it? Smiling even when your chest cracked.
Later that evening, the crew checked into a humble inn on the island’s edge. Nami and Robin wanted to browse the market, and they invited you along, but your head hurt and your heart hurt more, so you declined.
“Don’t wait up, we might stay out late,” Nami warned with a wink.
You waved them off and headed to your shared room with Sanji, telling yourself you’d rest, maybe write in your journal, maybe stop thinking about how the past few weeks felt like soft unraveling.
But Sanji wasn’t there. And the window was open. You stepped closer and overheard his voice—soft, but excited.
“…She’s out shopping. We should hurry before she comes back.”
Your heart dropped.
You froze in place, hand still resting on the windowsill. Another voice answered, female, flirty. You didn’t need to see her to know.
You sat on the bed and waited. You waited because you needed to see his face when he walked through that door. Needed to see what kind of lie he’d come up with. Needed confirmation for the truth you already knew.
It was nearly midnight when the door creaked open. Sanji looked surprised, almost guilty—but he caught himself too quickly.
“Oh—you're still up, my love?” he said smoothly. “Sorry, I thought you went out with the girls.”
You didn’t answer. You just looked at him.
He walked over and sat beside you on the bed, reaching out to tuck a strand of hair behind your ear. “You okay?”
Still, silence.
He blinked, then tilted his head in concern. “You’re quiet tonight.”
You smiled. That same practiced smile you always wore. “Just tired.”
Sanji kissed your forehead and stood to change into his nightshirt, humming something under his breath. As if nothing had happened.
You left the next morning.
No confrontation. No fight. No angry tears.
Just a note.
Sanji, You used to look at me like I was your world. I should’ve known you just liked seeing your reflection in mine. I don’t even know what to say. I thought I knew you. I thought we had something. I thought you were different. But I know now—don’t I? I heard your words—your promises. You said, “We should hurry, while she’s out.” I never thought you could do this. Not to me. Maybe I’ve always been too trusting. Maybe I’ve been a fool. You lied with the kind of smile that made me question if I imagined it all. But I didn’t. I’m not mad. I’m heartbroken—there’s a difference. And the saddest part is, I would’ve forgiven you if you’d just told me the truth. But you let me rot in love alone. Don’t look for me. This is me leaving. Goodbye, Sanji. — Y/N
He found the note before breakfast. He read it once. Twice. Then again, each time slower. Robin noticed his shaking hand. Zoro asked where you were. Sanji couldn’t speak.
By midday, he was running through the island streets. Every alley. Every stall. He asked locals. Showed them your sketch.
No one had seen you.
You were gone. Completely. Like you’d never been there at all.
One Year Later
Rain lashed the docks of a bustling medical harbor. The Thousand Sunny had taken damage, and they stopped at a renowned doctor’s island to repair and rest.
Sanji didn’t smile as much these days. He still flirted, but half-heartedly, like a ghost of who he once was. Everyone noticed. No one said much.
He stood at the market stalls, bartering for fresh seafood when his heart stopped.
Because he saw you.
Hair a little longer. A warm coat drawn around your shoulders. Eyes brighter than they had any right to be.
You were laughing.
And beside you stood Trafalgar Law, umbrella tilted above you both, hand casually resting on your back as he pointed to a bouquet of herbs.
Sanji dropped the fish.
He couldn’t move.
Couldn’t breathe.
He watched as you reached for Law’s hand, how he intertwined your fingers like it was second nature, like he had every right to. How you smiled at him like Sanji had only ever dreamed of.
Law said something, and you leaned into him, nodding, face soft with affection.
Sanji turned away.
He made it two steps before the weight in his chest buckled him. He stumbled into an alley and pressed a hand against the wall, gasping.
Tears fell freely.
He didn’t go back to the ship until sunset.
That night, there was another note. Not from you, but written long ago. One he’d found after too much wine.
A passage you’d once written in your journal, now burned into his mind.
“You called me baby like I was the only one. But I wasn’t. I was just the only one who stayed.”
ACE
Smoke curled into the sky like ghosts of promises you once believed. The air on Karavel Island was thick with ash and gunpowder—another battlefield in Ace’s chaotic, flame-laced life. But this was your life, too. You’d followed him here. Again.
“Over here!” Ace called, waving at you through the debris with a wide grin, flames dancing around his arms. “Bet you can’t beat my body count today!”
You rolled your eyes but jogged toward him anyway, heart tugging like it always did. He looked good with soot smudging his cheek and fire lighting up the storm in his eyes. Alive. Dangerous. The kind of man who kissed like the world was ending—and maybe it always was.
“You burn it all down yet?” you teased, reaching his side.
“Nah, was waiting for you,” he said, leaning in to kiss your cheek. “Where’s the fun without you?”
And for a second, it was perfect.
Until that second ended.
It was the small things. Always the small things.
The way he took longer and longer to return from missions. The way he stopped writing when he was gone. The way he still called you “baby,” but his eyes didn’t stay on yours for long.
You didn’t want to doubt him. Not Ace. Not the man who held you when you cried, who called you his home.
But then came the night at the underground tavern.
You were helping a wounded civilian upstairs when you heard it—his voice, muffled, laughing. A giggle answered him. A girl’s voice. Slurred. Familiar.
You paused on the stairwell, heart already sinking.
“…Come on,” Ace’s voice teased. “We don’t have much time.”
Your breath caught.
“I shouldn’t,” she whispered back.
“You’re the one who kissed me first,” Ace said, and your world tilted.
Silence.
Then another giggle.
Then the sound of lips meeting.
You didn’t move. Couldn’t. Not even when the world twisted inside you. Not even when the lantern on the wall flickered like it knew the fire inside you had gone out.
You didn’t say anything when he came back to your shared room that night.
He acted normal—like nothing had happened. Like he hadn’t just touched someone else and then come to lie beside you.
You stared at the ceiling until he fell asleep.
In the morning, you were gone.
Ace, You once told me that fire doesn’t choose what it burns—it just does. I used to think that was poetry. Now I know it was a warning. You burned me, Ace. Not all at once. Just a little every day until I didn’t recognize my own heart anymore. I heard you. I saw you. And I still kissed you goodnight. Do you know what that does to a person? I gave you all of me, and you gave little pieces of yourself to strangers. I don’t hate you. I never could. But I can’t love you for both of us anymore. Don’t come looking for me. This is goodbye. — Y/N
The message was short. But it broke him anyway.
Ace stood in the ruins of the tavern, your letter clutched in his hands, his body shaking in a way fire couldn’t fix. He lit it aflame. Watched it turn to ash like everything else he touched.
He ran. Looked for you in every port. Asked the Revolutionaries. Asked pirates. Asked anyone.
You were gone.
One Year Later
It was raining in Yamabuki Port, but Ace stood still in the downpour, unmoving. The Whitebeard Pirates were resupplying, but he couldn’t focus—not when he saw you through the mist.
You were laughing.
Your coat was soaked, and your hair stuck to your forehead, but you looked so alive. So whole.
And beside you stood Zoro.
The swordsman from the Straw Hat crew — his brother's crew.
He was holding a paper umbrella above your heads, a quiet look in his eyes as he listened to whatever story you were telling. When you stumbled slightly in the mud, he caught your elbow. You smiled at him with a softness Ace had never earned.
Zoro reached up and brushed your hair from your face like it was second nature. You leaned into his touch without hesitation.
Ace felt it all in his gut. Like a blade through fire.
He didn’t approach.
Didn’t call your name.
Didn’t move.
You glanced across the square and your eyes met.
Just for a moment.
There was no hatred in your gaze. No anger.
Only peace.
You looked away.
And Ace knew—he was watching a version of you he’d never get to meet.
That night, Marco found him sitting alone on the deck, soaked to the bone even though the rain had stopped hours ago.
“You saw them, didn’t you-yoi?” Marco asked quietly.
Ace didn’t answer. Just stared at his hands.
“I thought I had time,” he whispered. “I thought… I could fix it.”
Marco said nothing. There was nothing to say.
Because some fires don’t go out.
They just move on without you.
One Month With You
In the final month of your life, you cherishes fleeting moments with your crew, hiding a terminal illness until only memories—and a letter—remain.
red hair pirates x reader | whitebeard pirates x reader | strawhats x reader | ONE SHOT tags: angst, sfw, ooc, major character death, grief, terminal illness a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ffs a bit cringe and akward word count: 2.6k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
RED HAIR PIRATES
The sea was calm that morning, the kind of quiet that made even the waves seem to hold their breath. The deck of the Red Force was alive with chatter and light laughter, but you stood by the railing, letting the wind sweep through your hair. Your fingers curled around the wood, your gaze far off—not at the horizon, but somewhere past it.
One month. That’s what Hongo told you when he unknowingly confirmed your own suspicions. You’d been hiding the worsening symptoms for months—fatigue that sank deep into your bones, the relentless pain in your chest, the occasional blood you’d spit out into the sea, unnoticed.
You knew he’d figure it out eventually. He was too good not to.
But you hadn’t expected him to burst into your quarters the night before, shaking with barely restrained panic.
“What the hell is this?!” Hongo had yelled, thrusting a tattered medical report into your hands. “Why didn’t you tell me? Why didn’t you say something?!”
You couldn’t meet his eyes. “Because I didn’t want to be watched like a ghost who hasn’t died yet.”
Silence. Deafening.
“...You have a month, Y/N, maybe less. You’re—” His voice cracked. “You’re dying, and you're acting like it's nothing?”
“I have a month, Hongo,” you had said quietly. “Please… just let me have it. Don’t tell the others. Let me spend it with them. Please.”
He didn't answer for a long time. When he finally did, it was with a whisper: “You’re a fucking idiot.” But he pulled you into a hug and didn’t let go until your shoulders stopped shaking.
From that day, you lived more fiercely than ever. You laughed at Shanks’ dumb jokes and drank with him until the world blurred. You challenged Benn to silent stargazing contests, betting on how many shooting stars you’d catch. You dragged Limejuice to island carnivals and flirted shamelessly until his face burned red. You played cards with Hongo, even when your hands trembled too much to hold them.
They all noticed. The Red-Haired Pirates weren’t stupid.
“You’re real clingy lately,” Limejuice teased one night, bumping your shoulder with his. “You sure you’re not sick or something?”
You smiled, heart twisting. “Would you be mad if I said I might be?”
He laughed, oblivious. “Nah. I’d carry you myself if you keeled over.”
You didn’t say anything. Just leaned into his warmth.
Shanks was the hardest. He noticed too much. Noticed how often you disappeared below deck when the coughing fits hit, how your eyes stayed on the ocean longer than they should have.
“You thinking of leaving us?” he asked once, half-joking.
You swallowed the lump in your throat. “No,” you lied.
Benn just watched. Always watched. He didn’t say much, but you could feel his eyes lingering on you, searching. You gave him your brightest smiles.
The day you left, the crew didn’t know.
You made breakfast with Chef-level effort, joking with the kitchen staff, slipping kisses to Limejuice's cheek and hugging Shanks tighter than ever. You sat with Benn for hours on the deck, your head on his shoulder, watching the sun creep across the sky.
“I think you’re my favorite,” you whispered, teasing.
He snorted. “Don’t let Shanks hear that.”
He didn’t know that was the last time he’d feel your heartbeat against his side.
That night, you slipped away. A letter for each of them tucked under your pillow. A note for Hongo too:
"Thank you—for letting me pretend I wasn’t dying. I love you all too much to say goodbye."
Morning broke in chaos.
“Where the hell is Y/N?!” Limejuice shouted, tearing through the ship.
“They’re not in the galley, or the crow’s nest!” Benn called out, panic rising in his usually calm voice.
Shanks was quiet, unusually still, staring at the empty hammock where your scent still lingered.
The notes were found soon after. One by one, hands shaking as they read your last words.
You didn’t say goodbye, but each letter bled with love.
“To Shanks — Thank you for making me feel like I belonged in the stars.”
“To Benn — You saw through me. Thank you for not saying anything.”
“To Limejuice — Thank you for reminding me how fun life could be.”
“To Hongo — I’m sorry I made you carry this alone. Thank you for letting me be selfish.”
They thought you ran. Were taken. Benn demanded a search party. Shanks was pale, silent, gripping your letter so tight his knuckles bled. Limejuice punched a wall. Hongo said nothing—for two days.
And then, he snapped.
He threw your medical file onto the table during a heated meeting, eyes wild. “They didn’t leave!....They died. And...I let them.”
The room fell to a breathless silence.
“You knew?” Benn whispered.
“They had a month. They begged me to let them spend it with us, like nothing was wrong. And I let them lie.”
Shanks stumbled back, as if struck. “No. No, they were… they were fine.”
“They were dying, Shanks! They couldn’t breathe without pain, they were—” Hongo’s voice cracked. “They spent their last strength loving us.”
No one spoke.
Limejuice fell to his knees. “We didn’t even say goodbye.”
Later that night, Shanks sat by the railing where you always stood.
“I hope you’re watching the stars from up close now, Y/N,” he murmured, tears streaking his face. “Because we’ll never stop looking for you in them.”
WHITEBEARD PIRATES
You’d always imagined dying quietly, maybe on an empty shore, wrapped in salt and wind. But fate had other plans. Your end would come not with isolation—but surrounded by laughter, drink, and the stubborn, unbearable warmth of the Whitebeard Pirates.
The diagnosis came on a cold, cloudy day—so ordinary it felt like a betrayal.
You'd passed out during training. Woke up with Marco’s worried face looming over you. He’d examined you in complete silence. But his shaking hands and tight jaw told you everything.
“It’s not good, is it?” you asked, voice barely a whisper.
“No,” Marco had said, the word cracking as it left him. “It’s... terminal. A rare degeneration of the lungs and heart. I don’t—there’s nothing I can do.”
You didn’t cry. Instead, you laughed. “So, what—you’re saying I won’t outlive my goldfish?”
He didn't laugh. He looked like he’d been stabbed. “You have a month. Maybe.”
You made him promise to keep it secret.
Just him and Whitebeard.
When Oyaji found out, he sat beside your bed and gripped your hand with those massive, shaking fingers. “You are my child,” he rumbled. “And if this is your last voyage… then let it be the greatest of your life.”
You had never cried before. But you cried then.
From that day, you threw yourself into every moment.
Ace was all fire and impulse, but when he was around you, something softer flickered beneath the surface. He took to dragging you along for sparring matches, even when you claimed your muscles ached.
“I need a challenge,” he’d smirk, sweat glistening down his neck.
“You just want to show off,” you’d tease, raising your fists anyway.
He was always careful not to hit you too hard. Not that you said anything—but he seemed to know. When you tripped one day, coughing blood into your sleeve when he wasn’t looking, he’d jogged over, helping you up without a word. His hand lingered on your arm just a second too long.
That night, you sat beside him, both of you perched on the edge of the ship with your legs dangling into the air.
“You’re weird lately,” he mumbled, eyes on the moon.
You bumped his shoulder with yours. “Just thinking how lucky I am.”
He blinked at you. “To be with us?”
“To be with you,” you said, gently. And he froze, eyes wide, like he didn’t know what to do with that.
“…You’re gonna break my heart, aren’t you?” he whispered.
You smiled, because you already had.
Izo became your confidant without even knowing it. With every eyeliner flick and matching kimono, you gave yourself permission to feel alive. They would hum as they painted your face, hands warm against your cheeks.
“You’re glowing,” they said once, adjusting the red ribbon they tied in your hair.
“Death becomes me, huh?” you joked, and they slapped your arm, scandalized.
“You joke about dying too much.”
You didn’t mean to, but your voice cracked. “It’s easier than pretending I’m not scared.”
Their fingers paused, lips parting. “…Are you scared?”
You looked at them in the mirror, the shimmer of gold powder across your eyelids catching the light. “Yeah,” you said. “But not when I’m with you.”
They smiled then, a bit sad, and leaned in to kiss your temple. “Then let’s live like hell until we drop, dear.”
Thatch was joy personified. It was impossible to be sad around him for long, and that’s what made it hurt worse.
He caught you sneaking dessert at 2 a.m. once and acted like you’d committed a crime.
“Oh-ho! So this is where my pudding went!”
“Your pudding? I thought it had my name on it.”
“I’ll accept bribes in the form of kisses or cleaning dishes.”
You kissed his cheek, and he nearly dropped the bowl.
Every stolen moment in the kitchen became a memory—dancing while covered in flour, whipped cream fights, drunken baking experiments that ended in fire. You’d laughed so hard your sides hurt, even as your lungs begged you to stop.
“You’re making memories,” he said one night, tousling your hair. “That’s what this is. You’ve been clingy lately. Like you’re trying to make every second count.”
You froze, the spoon halfway to your mouth. “…Would you hate me if I was?”
He blinked. “Nah. I’d probably try to hold on tighter.”
You didn’t tell him then. Just leaned into his side and let him talk about his dream of opening a cake café after he retires.
You knew you’d never see it.
Marco was the one who saw the cracks, and it destroyed him. You kept him close because you trusted him most—and that made it hurt more.
You caught him once crying at your door. He didn’t think you were awake.
You opened it, silently wrapped your arms around him, and whispered, “I’m still here.”
“You shouldn’t be this calm,” he rasped into your shoulder.
“I’m terrified,” you admitted. “But I’d rather spend what time I have being loved than dying slowly in a bed.”
He pulled back, staring at you with reddened eyes. “You could have told them.”
“They’d look at me like I was already dead.”
He said nothing, and you reached up to cup his cheek. “Promise me… promise you’ll wait. Let me leave on my own terms.”
“…Okay,” he whispered. “But I’ll hate you for it.”
You kissed his forehead. “I hope you do.”
You left them on a quiet morning.
Then you slipped away, leaving only a bundle of letters on Marco’s desk.
Your final message was simple:
“Don’t let them hate me for this. Please. Just let them think I ran.”
The ship erupted into panic by nightfall.
Ace punched through a wall. “They’re gone?! What do you mean GONE?”
Izo ran through the corridors, calling your name until their voice broke.
Thatch turned the kitchen inside out like he expected you to be hiding in the cupboards, laughing.
Marco couldn’t speak.
He stood at the rail, gripping the wood so hard it splintered beneath his fingers.
Whitebeard stood behind him, silent, his massive shadow cast across the deck like a shroud.
“Do I tell them?” Marco rasped.
“No,” Whitebeard rumbled. “Not yet. Let them rage. Let them mourn in their own way.”
“But—”
“They wouldn’t understand it now,” he said. “Wait.”
A week passed. Then two.
No sign of you.
Your room remained untouched. Your absence echoed louder than any cannon fire.
They scoured islands. Questioned strangers. Considered kidnappers, Marines, even betrayal.
Ace refused to accept it. “They wouldn’t leave us! Not without a word. Not without—something.”
He went to Marco, desperate. “You know something. Tell me.”
Marco finally broke.
He gave Ace your letter.
Ace read it once. Then again and again. Then crumpled to the ground, screaming into his fists.
“They died?! All this time—they were dying?!”
Marco stood frozen, guilt crawling like acid beneath his skin.
“They didn’t want you to mourn them before they were gone,” he whispered. “They wanted to be loved, not pitied.”
Ace couldn’t answer. He just sobbed, curled around your crumpled letter like it could still warm him.
That night, Whitebeard gathered his sons and daughters.
He read your letters aloud. One by one. Each one aching with truth, memory, and love.
“To Ace — You made me feel alive, even when I was already halfway gone.” “To Izo — Thank you for making me beautiful when I felt invisible.” “To Thatch — You made every day sweeter, even the ones I didn’t think I’d survive.” “To Marco — Thank you for holding my secret when it crushed you. I love you most for that.” “To Oyaji — You gave me a family when I had nothing left. Thank you… for letting me die a Whitebeard Pirate.”
By the end, the deck was silent.
No sobs. Just breathless grief.
They didn’t throw a funeral.
They held a feast.
Not because they weren’t mourning—but because they knew you’d hate to see them broken.
They told stories. Passed your favorite drink around. Laughed, cried, and danced with ghosts.
And when the fire died down, Ace stared at the embers and whispered, “I hope you found peace, flame-heart.”
STRAWHAT PIRATES
You didn’t plan on dying at sea, but the Grand Line has a way of making plans for you. The first signs were subtle: a lingering fatigue you chalked up to busy days, aches you blamed on training, the dull pain in your side that you laughed off when Chopper asked if you were okay.
You knew before he did. Deep down, your body had been whispering the truth long before the words made it onto paper.
It wasn’t until you collapsed in the hallway between the kitchen and the infirmary that Chopper realized something was seriously wrong. When you woke up, it was to the sterile smell of the medical bay and his wide, terrified eyes.
“I ran every test,” he said, voice trembling. “And then I ran them again. It’s… it’s bad. Really bad.”
You nodded. Your throat was too dry to answer.
“I—I can’t fix it. Not with what we have on board. Maybe if we got to a major medical port, but even then, I don’t know if—”
You reached out, resting a hand on his tiny shoulder. “How long?”
He hesitated, ears flattening. “A month. Maybe.”
You didn’t cry. Not then. Not even when he begged to tell the others.
“No. Please. Let me have this. Just a month, Chopper.”
“They’ll never forgive me.”
“They will,” you said. “If they knew now, it’d ruin everything. I don’t want pity. I want memories.”
So you began to live. Fully, recklessly, as if the pain eating away at you was just a shadow at your back.
You started with Sanji. He was the easiest to be around, the one whose affection was loud and constant. Every meal became a moment: you insisted on helping in the kitchen, even when he protested. You chopped vegetables until your hands hurt, stirred sauces while leaning against him, snuck little bites when he wasn’t looking.
“You’re here a lot lately,” he said one afternoon, handing you a bowl of soup.
“I like watching you work,” you replied.
He grinned. “You trying to steal my heart, love?”
You leaned in and kissed his cheek. “Maybe.”
He went quiet for a beat. Then, more softly, “You look at me like you’re memorizing my face.”
You didn’t answer. Just smiled.
Zoro came next. You sparred with him almost every day now, ignoring the way your lungs burned, the way your legs shook. He didn’t say anything the first time you collapsed mid-match, just silently carried you to the infirmary.
“You’re pushing too hard,” he said.
“I need to,” you whispered.
“Why?”
You looked at him, really looked. “Because I don’t want to forget what it feels like to fight beside you.”
He frowned. “You’re acting like you’re running out of time.”
You forced a smile. “Aren’t we all?”
That night, he found you on the deck, staring at the stars.
He sat beside you, arms crossed. “You’re not saying something. I don’t like it.”
“I’m just tired.”
“I’d carry you, if you asked.”
Your heart ached. “I know.”
Luffy was harder.
He didn’t notice at first. You were careful around him—too careful. You laughed with him during meals, ran across islands with him, challenged him to stupid games on the deck. But he began to notice the way you lingered during hugs. The way you stared at him too long. The way your smiles didn’t quite reach your eyes.
One evening, you lay beside him on the figurehead, watching the horizon.
He turned his head toward you. “Are you gonna leave?”
You blinked. “What?”
“You look like you’re saying goodbye.”
You looked away. “I’m not. Not yet.”
He was quiet for a while. “I don’t want you to go.”
“I don’t want to either.”
He wrapped his arm around your shoulder and didn’t let go until you both fell asleep.
ou made time for everyone else too.
With Nami, you spent lazy afternoons in the library, pretending to study charts. She taught you how to draw maps. You traced the oceans of the world with your fingers and imagined places you’d never see.
“You’re getting good at this,” she said.
“I want to leave something behind,” you murmured.
She didn’t understand then. But she would.
Usopp was a light in the dark. You asked for bedtime stories, exaggerated tales of heroism and romance. He performed them with full sound effects, arms flailing, voice booming.
“You always laugh now,” he noted one night.
“It’s easy, when I’m with you.”
He blushed, scratching the back of his head. “You’re acting like I’m the best part of your day.”
You smiled. “You are.”
Robin gave you quiet comfort. She didn’t ask questions. She simply read to you, let you rest your head in her lap, brushed your hair back from your face.
“You’re calm,” you told her.
“You’re storming,” she replied.
You didn’t deny it.
Franky built you a swing on the back of the Sunny, facing the sea. You spent hours there, feet brushing over the waves, eyes on the endless blue.
“Super chill, right?” he said, adjusting the ropes.
You nodded. “It’s perfect.”
He caught your hand before he left. “You’re not okay.”
You looked up at him. “No.”
“Okay,” he said, voice tight. “You don’t have to be.”
Brook played lullabies for you. Sweet, simple things. You danced with him once, slow and clumsy.
“If I still had a heart,” he said softly, “I think it would ache.”
You rested your head against his chest. “Mine already does.”
Chopper was breaking. Every day, he looked at you like you were already fading. You caught him crying in the storage room once, holding one of your jackets.
“I can’t do this,” he whispered.
“You’re stronger than me,” you said, hugging him.
“I hate lying.”
“I know.”
You waited until they docked at a small island for supplies.
You left at dawn.
Left behind the stargazer chair. The flowered book. The slingshot. The meals. The love.
Left behind a stack of letters in Chopper’s room.
When the crew realized you were gone, Luffy panicked first.
“They wouldn’t leave! They’d never leave!”
Zoro was already on the dock, scanning the shoreline. Sanji lit a cigarette with shaking fingers.
They searched the island. They waited at the ship. They called for you until their voices cracked.
You didn’t come back.
That night, Chopper gathered them in the infirmary.
“I didn’t want to break the promise,” he said, voice trembling. “But… they’re gone. They were dying.”
No one moved.
“…What?”
“They only had a month. They asked me to let them live… without pity.”
Nami burst into tears. "They should’ve told us,”
Zoro punched the wall.
Luffy stood in stunned silence, until he screamed your name into the ocean wind.
They read your letters together. All huddled in the infirmary, hearts shattered.
“To Sanji — You made me feel wanted, even when I felt like a ghost.” “To Zoro — You were my anchor. I always knew where I stood when I was beside you.” “To Luffy — Thank you for being the sun. I needed the light more than you’ll ever know.” “To the Crew — You made me part of a family. You made me more than a dying story.”
They held a quiet vigil on the deck.
Brook played your song one last time. Robin scattered petals into the sea. Chopper lit a lantern and let it drift across the water.
They stayed on that island for days.
Then, they sailed forward—quieter, heavier—but with your memory in their hearts.
You were their nakama.
You were their heart.
You always would be.
sooo what if reader and shank,established relationship,and they keep their relationship pretty hidden for a long while until one day one of their crew m mates found them making out/kiss(?) by accidentally but that crewmate keeps that secret hidden but slowly teasers them during dinner(which made the others confused) but soon after they kind of reveal their relationship and the crew goes shocked or something
thats a nice idea~ hope u like this!
Six Months of Secrets, Five Minutes of Hell
Keeping a relationship secret on the Red Force is hard — especially when your crewmate catches you making out and decides to turn dinner into your personal hell.
Shanks x gn! reader | ONE SHOT tags: sfw, fluff, secret relationship, banter, chaotic crew, red hair pirates shenanigans, humor a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only so expect this ff cringe and oc word count: 1.7k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The Red Force rocked lazily on the evening tide, the low hum of laughter and clinking mugs filling the warm air. As always, dinner aboard the Red-Haired Pirates was less a meal and more a festival of chaos. Plates clattered, arguments erupted over who cheated at cards, and somewhere in the back, Lucky Roux and Bonk Punch were having a loud, messy food-eating contest that Makino would absolutely kill them for if she were around.
Amidst the noise, you and Shanks sat far apart — as usual. It had always been that way: yelling across the deck, trading jabs and insults like candy. To the crew, you were the ship’s resident cats-and-dogs duo: always ready to bite each other’s heads off, throwing punches (mostly playful, mostly), and causing drama like your lives depended on it.
Which made it the perfect cover.
Because behind closed doors — in stolen moments under the stars, behind barrels, in empty storerooms — you and Shanks weren’t fighting at all. In fact, if Lime Juice hadn't turned the wrong corner half an hour ago and seen his beloved captain pressed against you, hand tangled in your hair while your legs wrapped tight around his hips, he would still be as blissfully oblivious as the rest of them.
Instead, now he sat at dinner looking like a man who had seen the very fabric of reality torn apart.
You caught his eye across the table. He twitched violently and immediately looked away, face burning. Shanks, the bastard, just kept eating, hiding his smug smile behind a mug of sake.
It was going to be a long night.
Earlier That Evening
It wasn’t supposed to happen. You both knew better. But Shanks had looked at you a certain way, had that lazy, half-lidded, I'm about to ruin your life grin — and well, one thing led to another.
You were tucked away in the shadowy corridor near the storage rooms, your back to the wall, Shanks’ mouth trailing hot, open-mouthed kisses along your neck. Your hands fisted the fabric of his shirt, tugging him impossibly closer. His hand splayed along your hip, anchoring you there like he never planned to let go.
"You know," you gasped between kisses, "someone’s gonna catch us one of these days—"
"Let 'em," Shanks muttered into your skin. "I'll kiss you right in front of them."
The taste of him — rum, sea salt, and something recklessly him — made your head spin.
"we're really pushing our luck here." he murmured against your mouth, hands skating under your shirt to press warm palms against your lower back
You kissed him harder in answer, swallowing the grin tugging at his lips. "You’re the one who dragged me back here, Captain."
He hummed, low and pleased, nosing along your jawline before trailing hot, open-mouthed kisses down your throat. His beard scratched deliciously, making you shiver and clutch at his shirt.
"Couldn’t help it," he muttered, voice rough. "You looked too good tonight. Wanted to —" Another kiss, wetter, deeper. "— ruin you a little."
Your laugh dissolved into a gasp when he tugged you flush against him, hands greedy, mouth finding that spot just below your ear that made you tremble.
You twisted your fingers into the front of his open shirt, tugging him even closer, losing yourself in the heat, the hunger, the low rumble of approval he made when you bit his lip—
—and that's exactly when Lime Juice rounded the corner.
You barely had time to flip him off before you heard a yelp — a very familiar yelp — and the clatter of dropped crates.
You and Shanks snapped your heads around in unison.
Lime Juice stood there, frozen like a deer in headlights, mouth opening and closing uselessly like a goldfish. One of the barrels he was carrying had rolled away, leaking pickles everywhere.
"...Oh" he said faintly. "Oh no."
"Yo, Lime," Shanks greeted casually, still holding you scandalously close.
You elbowed Shanks hard in the ribs, making him grunt and finally step back. Lime Juice immediately spun on his heel and sprinted away, arms flailing.
You both stared after him.
"...Think he’ll keep his mouth shut?" you asked.
Shanks grinned, cocky and unbothered. "Depends. Might have to bribe him."
You rolled your eyes. "You're insufferable."
"You love me," he sing-songed.
You did. God help you, you really did.
Dinner — Lime Juice: Menace Unleashed
Dinner was supposed to be your safe zone. Laughs, food, and maybe some semi-violent card games.
Instead, you felt like you were on trial.
Lime Juice sat across from you, sipping soup very pointedly. Too pointedly. He kept darting glances at you and Shanks, grinning into his cup like he knew something the rest didn’t.
You felt sweat trickling down your back.
Shanks was no better. His fake casual air was cracking at the seams — his laughter a little too loud, his drinking a little too fast.
"Oi, [Name]," Lime Juice drawled suddenly.
You stiffened.
"If someone was, say, very... energetic... tonight, would it be because they had a good workout?"
"...Workout?" Yasopp repeated, confused.
You nearly knocked your plate off the table.
"You good?" Yasopp asked, raising an eyebrow.
"I'M FINE," you wheezed.
The crew blinked.
"Yeah," Lime said smoothly. "Like, I dunno. Someone looked... very physically satisfied coming to dinner."
You choked on your drink so violently that Benn Beckman actually looked concerned.
"Oi," Lucky Roux said, frowning, "what are you going on about, Lime?"
"Nothing~," Lime Juice sang innocently. "Just making observations."
Benn Beckman narrowed his eyes. "You’re being weird."
Shanks shot Lime Juice a murderous look. Lime Juice only smiled wider, sweet as poison.
"And you, Captain," Lime said innocently. "You seem... loosened up. Someone helping you relieve that tension?"
You squeezed your eyes shut. He's going to kill us. He's actually going to kill us.
Meanwhile, the others were getting suspicious.
"Something’s weird," Bonk Punch muttered.
"Maybe they're possessed," Hongo said wisely.
Beckman was watching you two now, sharp-eyed. "You’re twitchier than Shanks at a wine-tasting."
"I am NOT twitchy," Shanks snapped way too fast.
You kicked him under the table. He kicked you back.
Even Monster the monkey was looking at you weirdly.
But Lime Juice wasn’t done.
A few minutes later, while you were mid-bite, Lime leaned back and loudly said:
"Captain~ Been... getting lucky lately?"
The clang of Shanks dropping his fork was deafening.
You wanted to sink through the floor.
The table stared at him. Shanks cleared his throat, cheeks darkening.
"Just... lucky at cards," he said weakly.
"Riiiight~" Lime said with an evil wink.
Hongo scratched his head. "Is he drunk already?"
"I don't get it," Bonk Punch muttered. "What's Lime talking about?"
"Maybe he's implying Shanks got laid," Yasopp joked, laughing.
Everyone chuckled.
Except you and Shanks — who went rigid.
Lime Juice just smiled, swinging his legs casually like a cat about to knock over a full glass.
When dessert arrived, Lime Juice decided to finish you off.
"Say, Y/N," he said loudly, as you reached for a slice of pie. "Didn't realize you had a thing for redheads."
You froze, hand hovering mid-air.
The whole table turned toward you like vultures.
"...What?" you croaked.
"Redheads," Lime Juice said innocently. "They're so... passionate, right? Bit clumsy. Lots of scars. Missing limbs, sometimes."
He was describing Shanks down to the last goddamn freckle.
"So, Cap. Hypothetically," he said, voice dripping fake innocence, "if you were secretly dating someone hot and chaotic, who throws knives at you for fun... would you keep it hidden? Or would you, say, be caught making out behind the supply crates?"
Bonk Punch's fork clattered to his plate.
Yasopp’s eyes widened.
Lucky Roux gasped.
"Wait," Benn said slowly, staring at you both. "Wait a damn minute."
"LIME!" you hissed under your breath.
"WAIT," Yasopp said. "ARE YOU SAYING—"
Absolute silence.
Even Monster the monkey dropped his banana.
Shanks groaned into his hands.
You dropped your forehead to the table with a loud thunk.
Then —
Shanks groaned and buried his face in his hands. "Fine. You win. Whatever."
Lime Juice’s grin split his face.
"Wait," Lucky Roux said, slowly connecting the dots. "Are you two actually—"
"YES," Shanks barked.
"FOR SIX MONTHS," you added miserably.
Dead silence.
Then all hell broke loose.
"WHAT THE HELL—"
"HOW?!"
"WHEN?!"
"WHY DIDN'T WE SEE IT?!"
"I THOUGHT THEY HATED EACH OTHER!" Yasopp screamed.
"BECAUSE THEY ACT LIKE THEY WANT TO KILL EACH OTHER!" Bonk Punch yelled.
"That’s called foreplay, Bonk," Lime Juice said helpfully.
"WHAT THE FUCK?!" Bonk Punch yelled..
Beckman just sighed like a man sixty years too old for this shit and took a long drag of his cigarette. "I'm gonna need another drink. Maybe ten."
The Aftermath
"You threw a chair at him last week!" Hongo yelled at you.
"It was flirting!" you shouted back.
"YOU BROKE A WINDOW!"
"IT WAS A SEXY WINDOW BREAK!"
Shanks just slung an arm lazily over your shoulder, laughing so hard he was hiccupping.
"So what," Shanks slurred, grinning. "You guys are just mad you didn't notice how hot we are together?"
"I'M MAD I HAVE TO THINK ABOUT IT!" Yasopp howled.
Monster made gagging noises.
Lime Juice beamed with the pride of a man who had lit the match and dropped it into a fireworks factory.
You thought, maybe after the initial explosion, they’d move on.
You were wrong.
They would not shut up.
"So, Shanks," Yasopp smirked. "Who's on top?"
You hurled a bread roll at his head. He caught it and winked.
"Oh my god, did you guys bang in the crow’s nest?" Bonk Punch gasped.
"Don't answer that," Beckman muttered.
"You’re gonna answer that later, right?" Lucky Roux asked you, waggling his eyebrows.
"I’M LEAVING," you shouted, standing up so fast your chair toppled over.
Shanks caught your wrist, laughing. "Aw, come on, Y/N. You can't leave me alone to suffer."
"You’re the reason we’re suffering!"
"I call it mutual destruction, baby."
You kicked him lightly under the table. He kicked you back. Several of the crew made knowing noises.
Later — Peace (Sort of)
You slumped against the rail later that night, exhausted and mildly traumatized.
Shanks sidled up beside you, bumping his hip into yours.
"You still mad?"
"I’m plotting your death," you muttered.
He slung an arm around you, pulling you in.
"You love me."
"Unfortunately."
Across the deck, Lime Juice cupped his hands around his mouth and shouted: "USE A CONDOM NEXT TIME!"
You flipped him off so hard you nearly dislocated your wrist.
Shanks just roared with laughter, burying his face in your shoulder.
Maybe getting caught wasn't the worst thing after all. Not when you had this.
© ᵈᵒˡˡʸʷᵒⁿˢ ᶠᵒʳ ᵗʰᵉ ᵈᶦᵛᶦᵈᵉʳˢ <³
Hi! Can you please do a reader that has a beauty at the same level as Hancock, and like some big names in pirates and marines are in to her. ( It's like a harem) And by the way she's a straw hats. That's all, thank you 😋
ohh! this is a nice idea! i hope u like this!
Queen of Chaos?
At the Grand Pirate Festival, your legendary beauty turns the entire world — pirates, warlords, and marines alike — into a chaotic, simping mess.
var! one piece x reader | ONE SHOT
tags: fluff, oocs, sfw, harem, chaotic
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ffs a bit cringe
word count: 1.7k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The Grand Pirate Festival, held once a decade on the neutral grounds of Fullalead Island, was in full swing — a dizzying mess of fireworks, endless banquets, and drunk pirates staggering from booth to booth.
The Straw Hat crew strolled through the chaos, you right at their center, laughing at Usopp's drunken juggling and dodging Sanji's hearts floating around his head. Your beauty — infamous across the seas — was enough to stop even the wildest pirates in their tracks.
Tonight was no different. If anything, the chaos was worse. Because everyone was here.
And everyone was looking at you.
“Oi, Y/N, stick close, yeah?” Zoro muttered, eyes sweeping the crowds warily, hand lightly resting on his sword hilt. Even though he was notoriously laid-back, there was something in his gaze that said I’ll end you to anyone who dared look at you for too long.
You rolled your eyes, grinning. “Relax, Zo~. They’re just looking. Nothing to worry about.”
“You act like she's not the most gorgeous thing on the island,” Sanji swooned, literally spinning around you in a circle like a lovesick fool. “My sweet Y/N-chwaan! Let me be your guard, your knight, your eternal—”
You gave him a small, amused smile but said nothing. Zoro, however, wasn’t having it. He shoved Sanji aside, muttering something about “too much sugar in your system.”
“Back off, curly-brow,” Zoro grunted, tugging you closer by the wrist almost possessively.
You just laughed, amused by their antics.
But then the real chaos started.
“Oi, Luffy! DAHAHAHA”
A loud, cheerful voice called out. You turned — and saw a man waving a sake bottle.
Shanks.
The Red-Hair Pirates were approaching.
And Shanks' eyes, bright and mischievous, were fixed directly on you.
“Well, well, well,” he grinned lazily, stepping close enough you could smell the sake on his breath. “You didn’t tell me you had someone this stunning on your crew, Luffy.”
He bent down slightly, his gaze sweeping over you with clear admiration.
“You free later, sweetheart? I think the stars would look better with you under 'em.”
“Hey, that's not fair, captain, you’re hogging her already!” Lime Juice complained, elbowing past, his grin just as shameless. “Let me have a shot!”
“Feh,” Benn Beckman exhaled smoke, giving you a long, appreciative look. Even the normally stoic first mate cracked a half-smile at you. “Gotta admit, even I’m tempted to ditch the booze for a dance.”
You blinked, caught between laughing and being slightly overwhelmed.
Then it got worse.
From the opposite end of the plaza, a booming voice interrupted.
“MAMAMA~MA! WHO IS THAT BEAUTIFUL GIRL?!”
You could hear Big Mom’s voice booming from across the plaza, followed by the thunderous approach of her children. Perospero was the first to make his way over, his usual air of arrogance only intensified by his infatuation.
“Charmed, darling~! You’re a sight for sore eyes,” he purred, reaching out to offer you an impossibly large tray of sweets. “Care for some delicacies?”
“I’m good,” you said politely, although you couldn’t help but chuckle as he continued to follow you like a lost puppy.
Katakuri, who stood behind him, was much less vocal but clearly just as entranced. His gaze never left you, and even his calm demeanor was cracking. He awkwardly cleared his throat, still not able to tear his eyes away from you.
You caught his gaze and smiled playfully. “You’re not bad-looking either,” you teased, giving him a wink.
His face turned red for a brief second, before he turned sharply and walked away in a hurry, leaving a very confused Perospero behind.
You gave a tiny, apologetic smile, scratching your cheek. You didn’t mean to be a magnet for attention.
But it wasn’t over yet.
The Warlords were here too.
Mihawk, Doflamingo, Crocodile, and…
Boa Hancock.
You felt the intensity immediately.
Hancock’s stare burned holes through your head.
"Who dares…" she hissed, crossing her arms, glaring at you like you'd personally offended her. "Who dares to outshine me?! Do you know who I am?!"
You tilted your head, smiling lazily at her — completely amused.
You had no intention of competing with her.
But it was hilarious how serious she took it.
Hancock bristled visibly.
Meanwhile, Mihawk approached, his cape billowing dramatically behind him. He simply stood in front of you, staring, hawk-like eyes unreadable.
“You,” he said at last, voice deep, almost admiring.
“You have a dangerous aura, There’s something about you."
You tilted your head, giving him a soft, mysterious smile. “Maybe that’s just my natural charm.”
Doflamingo was far less subtle. his hands on his pockets as usual, eyes scanning your figure with a look that could only be described as both calculating and interested.
He threw an arm casually around your shoulders, laughing, ignoring Sanji’s shriek of rage from somewhere behind you.
“Fufufufu~… How about ditching the kiddie table and coming with me, babe? I’ll show you a real good time.”
He got a faceful of Zoro’s sword hilt and a furious Nami slapping his hand off you before you could even respond.
Crocodile stood back, eyeing you thoughtfully from under his cigar smoke, offering you a slow, thin smile like he was plotting something dangerous.
“Not interested in brats, huh?” he said smoothly. “Good. You deserve someone…seasoned.”
You had to bite the inside of your cheek to keep from bursting out laughing.
The Whitebeard Pirates weren’t to be left out, and soon, the unmistakable figure of Whitebeard himself appeared at the edge of the festival. His massive frame was a sight to behold, and behind him, his crew was just as loud and rowdy as ever.
“woah~ look at this beauty-yoi” Marco said, a playful glint in his eyes. “You’ve certainly got everyone’s attention tonight, haven’t you?”
You smiled, giving him a knowing look. “I guess I can’t help it.”
Ace, ever the charmer, spotted you almost immediately and made a beeline for you. “Well, well, looks like my brother's crew have a beauty among them,” he said, a teasing grin spreading across his face. “You’ve got everyone at this festival wrapped around your little finger.”
You laughed, shaking your head. “Seems like it. And I’m only getting started.”
“I can see why everyone’s after you, but they’d better step aside. I’ve already got dibs,” Ace continued, clearly enjoying himself.
Whitebeard himself gave a hearty laugh, slapping Ace on the back with enough force to send him stumbling forward.
And then there were the Beasts Pirates — or, more accurately, King and Queen, both leering from a distance.
“Pretty thing like that… should be on our side,” Queen slobbered, nudging King.
King just grunted, his red eyes glinting — but the stare he gave you was intense enough to count as flirting.
Heart Pirates weren’t any better.
“Trafalgar Law” tried to act cool, leaning against a wall, arms crossed.
But when you smiled at him, he actually choked on his own words and looked away, cheeks turning faintly pink.
Bepo padded up helpfully.
"Captain thinks you're very pretty!" he said loudly.
Law smacked him on the head, mortified.
"Shut up, Bepo!"
You covered your mouth to hide your giggles.
Even Eustass Kid, the angry, metal-covered mess, stomped over and glared down at you.
“Tch. Pretty people are annoying,” he grumbled.
But then he shoved a flower (a very crushed, mangled flower) into your hand and stomped away, muttering under his breath.
You stared at it, utterly bewildered.
Luffy howled with laughter.
And of course, your own crew was a disaster.
Sanji, in his usual fervor, was flipping out, his eyes barely visible behind his hearts. “Y/N-chwaaan! Please tell me I’m the only one worthy of your love!” he wailed dramatically, ignoring the fact that everyone was staring at you with hunger in their eyes.
Zoro just stood there, arms crossed, glaring at anyone who dared to approach you. His hand was on the hilt of his sword, ready to defend you at a moment’s notice. “You’re not getting anywhere near her,” he muttered under his breath.
Usopp was bouncing around, chest puffed out as if to say “I’ll protect Y/N from all these fools.” He was quick to start claiming that he, as the “Great Sniper Usopp,” was the only one worthy of guarding your heart.
Luffy — bless him — just laughed and slung an arm around your shoulders like it was the most natural thing in the world.
"She’s our nakama! You can't have her!" he declared proudly.
Nami, on the other hand, had already started haggling for a better deal on all the gifts you were getting. “Wow, you must be so useful,” she said to Mihawk, smiling as she held up a massive diamond necklace you’d just been handed. “Do you have more where this came from?”
Brook tried, too — asking you for your panties in his usual way — but you only patted his head like a grandpa, much to his disappointment.
The Marines were no better.
Smoker had a cigar nearly falling out of his mouth, jaw slack as he stared at you.
Kuzan gave you a lazy half-wave, actually bothering to open one eye and give a faint, approving “ararara~… a pretty girl...with bazookas.”
Kizaru practically teleported next to you, grinning like a devil.
“Whew~ you’re quite dazzling, aren’t you?~”
Koby, bright red from the ears down, could barely stammer out a hello without squeaking.
And from the shadows, a few SWORD agents watched you intently, whispering hurriedly to each other like gossipy schoolkids.
By the time night fell, you were absolutely buried in gifts: flowers, jewels, sweets, swords (from Mihawk?!), a flaming guitar solo (from one of the Red-Hair pirates), and a drunken marriage proposal (from Queen, who got punched by King before he finished the sentence).
You sat on a bench at the festival's edge, exhausted but laughing, surrounded by a mountain of unwanted trinkets.
Luffy flopped down beside you, grinning.
“Everyone’s weird. but you’re just Y/N, right? SHISHISHI”
You smiled at him — a real, warm smile.
“Right,” you said.
“Just Y/N.”
Across the festival, you caught Hancock staring at you still — seething, furious, clutching her fists.
You gave her a lazy wink.
She shrieked and turned to stone three random pirates by accident.
You just laughed and stretched your arms over your head, feeling the salty sea breeze wash over you.
It was chaotic. It was ridiculous. It was perfect.
Exactly the kind of night you wouldn’t trade for anything.
© ᵈᵒˡˡʸʷᵒⁿˢ ᶠᵒʳ ᵗʰᵉ ᵈᶦᵛᶦᵈᵉʳˢ <³
Y/n is part of the navy, a daughter of Roger's navy, Shirojige wouldn't allow it. He ordered one of his sons to capture her and bring her to him. The one chosen for this mission was his closest son, Marco. He had previously sent other ships. My sons, they all returned badly injured. Oh, he simply evaded them. That young lady had a bad temper. Shirojige laughed while drinking. Y/n was in her office on the ship. Her men had debarked for supplies. She stayed on the ship finishing some paperwork. Her next mission was to go to Mary Georgina. She was supposed to escort some world nobles. She got up and took two jugs, filling them with sake. I thought this time she would send Ace, but she sent her brightest jewel. Hello, I look at him, smiling. Drink and go, please. Tomorrow we'll set sail and I'll be very busy, darling.
turning his folder so he wouldn't see the information for his next mission
got a bit confused with some parts, i apologize if its not accurate, but i hope i delivered ur request well! 💝(˶˃⤙˂˶)
Chasing Embers
A Navy captain and Roger’s daughter, Y/N, faces off against Marco, Whitebeard’s fiercest son — but not every battle is meant to be fought with swords.
Marco the phoenix x fem! reader tags: fluff, slight angst, sfw, forbidden relationship a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ffs a bit cringe word count: 1k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The sun dipped low, casting an orange glow over the docked ship as the men scurried about, leaving their captain behind to handle "boring work," as they called it. Y/N stayed behind in her quarters, papers spread across her desk — reports, maps, and tomorrow’s orders, neatly organized. Her next mission was… delicate, and one she wasn't looking forward to: escorting some stuck-up World Nobles to Marijoa.
She let out a sigh and pushed the folder a little further from reach. No need for prying eyes.
Outside, the sea was too still. Too quiet.
It didn’t surprise her when a presence flickered at the edge of her Haki — steady, powerful, familiar in a way that made her chest tighten.
Another one of Whitebeard’s sons.
Again.
With an almost lazy motion, she grabbed two jugs, filled them with sake, and stood up, just as a shadow slipped inside through the open window like it was the easiest thing in the world.
"Yo," the man greeted smoothly, tilting his head with a slight, teasing smirk.
Marco.
Not one of the reckless ones this time. No — the one. Whitebeard's right-hand man. The one smart enough not to pick a fight first.
Y/N smiled sweetly, offering a jug out toward him. "I thought this time he'd send Ace," she mused, voice light, almost amused, "but no. He sent his brightest jewel instead."
Far across the sea, aboard the Moby Dick, Whitebeard let out a hearty laugh, a massive sake cup in hand, surrounded by his sons. "That young lady has a bad temper," he boomed, slamming the cup down with a grin that stretched wide across his weathered face. "You boys were too soft with her."
Marco chuckled low and warm as if hearing his father’s voice echo in his memory. Stepping closer, he accepted the jug from her with a brush of his fingers against hers. "Ace volunteered," he said simply. "Oyaji said no."
"Smart man," she said, tapping her jug against his before tipping it back for a long sip. "Drink and go, darling. Tomorrow we'll set sail, and I'll be very busy."
She moved casually, spinning her folder closed with a flick, keeping the classified orders out of his sharp blue gaze.
Marco’s eyes flickered briefly to the desk but didn't push it. Instead, he leaned his hip against the table, the wood creaking softly under his weight. His stare was steady, but there was no hostility there — only a quiet patience that made her skin prickle.
"You always this welcoming to people sent to kidnap you?" he asked, raising an eyebrow.
"Only to the pretty ones," she said, grinning.
Marco huffed a small laugh through his nose, amused but unconvinced. "Flattery won't save you-yoi."
"Wasn’t trying to save myself," she replied smoothly, leaning back against her chair. "Just trying to enjoy my last few hours of peace before everything goes to hell."
A silence settled between them, not uncomfortable, but heavy — like the weight of everything they both carried. Two people born into impossible legacies.
He swirled the sake in his jug lazily, glancing at her from the corner of his eye. "You're Roger's daughter."
"You sound surprised."
He shrugged a broad shoulder. "Not surprised. Just… funny-yoi. You ended up in the Navy, of all places."
Y/N smirked, taking another sip. "Thought it would piss more people off that way."
Marco chuckled again, the sound low and warm. "Definitely pissed off Oyaji," he admitted. "But he's more worried about you getting yourself killed-yoi"
"I can take care of myself."
"I know." His voice was serious now, no teasing in it. "That's the problem."
Their eyes locked, something sparking between them — raw, unspoken.
Y/N set her jug down carefully. "So," she said, her tone light but her fingers tightening around the edge of the desk, "what's the plan, Marco? Tie me up? Drag me kicking and screaming? Gonna knock me out?"
Marco finished his drink in one smooth pull and set the jug aside, pushing off the table to stand tall in front of her. He was close enough now that she had to tilt her head up slightly to meet his gaze.
"No," he said simply.
"No?" she echoed, narrowing her eyes.
He smiled — slow, confident, infuriatingly calm. "I'm gonna ask you nicely-yoi."
She blinked. "You're kidding."
"Come with me. We'll tell Oyaji you put up a good fight. Save you from the idiots who'll try again after me."
Her jaw clenched. Part of her wanted to laugh. Part of her wanted to throw the jug at his head.
"You think I can just walk away from everything? From my duty?"
"You think they'd hesitate if it was you in their way?" he asked softly.
It stung because it was true.
Marco took a step closer, close enough now that she could feel the heat rolling off him. His hand brushed her wrist, not grabbing, just… there. An invitation.
"You're not the enemy-yoi," he murmured. "You never were."
For a long moment, Y/N just stared at him, the weight of the decision pressing down on her chest. Her crew, her mission, her life — or the freedom that whispered at her through Marco’s touch.
"I can't," she whispered finally, voice tight.
Marco didn’t look disappointed. He just nodded, like he already knew.
"Then," he said, giving her a wry little smile, "I guess I'll have to carry you after all."
Before she could react, the window behind him shattered — a warning shot from one of her lieutenants returning with supplies. The crew was back. Reinforcements.
Y/N cursed under her breath, grabbing the hilt of her sword from behind the desk, while Marco just sighed like this was all mildly inconvenient.
"Guess that's my cue-yoi" he said, flashing her a grin.
"You’re not getting off that easy!" she snapped, lunging at him.
He dodged easily, the blue flames of his devil fruit flaring briefly around his arms as he vaulted back out the window, vanishing into the night.
But not before calling out over his shoulder:
"I'll be back for you,-yoi!"
Y/N stood there breathing hard, sword still in hand, heart hammering against her ribs.
Damn him.
Damn him and that stupid smile.
Confined Hearts
A routine supply run turns chaotic when you and Law get trapped below deck — but maybe being stuck alone isn't such a bad thing after all.
Law X gn! reader | ONE SHOT tags: fluff, sfw, secret relationship, trapped a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ffs a bit cringe word count: 1.4k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The steady hum of the Polar Tang was strangely comforting. Somewhere above, the Heart Pirates went about their usual routines: cleaning, charting, fixing whatever needed fixing after their last chaotic encounter with a Sea King. You lounged lazily against a stack of crates in the storage bay, a small smirk tugging at your lips as you watched Trafalgar Law pick through supplies, his brow furrowed in mild annoyance.
He looked… good. Way too good for your heart to handle.
Denim jeans that hung low on his hips, simple white t-shirt slightly damp from the humidity, his tattoos curling like secret messages down his arms and up his throat. You tried not to stare, but it was hard when you knew just how warm and soft that skin was under your fingers.
Not that anyone else could know. Not that the crew — bless their oblivious souls — had the faintest idea.
Being in a secret relationship with your stoic, sharp-tongued Captain was its own kind of dangerous thrill. One wrong move, one wrong look, and Shachi or Penguin would never let you live it down.
Law glanced over his shoulder at you, one eyebrow lifting ever so slightly.
"You planning to help, or just stand there like a useless lump?"
You snorted. "Bold talk from a guy who's been glaring at the same box for five minutes."
"Planning," he drawled, straightening up and cracking his neck. "Unlike you, who specializes in doing absolutely nothing."
You tossed a rag at his head. He dodged it with irritating ease, a faint smirk flashing across his mouth before it disappeared into his usual deadpan stare.
You fought a grin. God, you loved being able to push his buttons.
"Fine, Captain," you said dramatically, hopping off the crate. "Tell me what you want, and I'll do everything in my power to serve you."
There was the tiniest flicker in his expression — a shift only you would notice. The kind that made your stomach flutter and your mind race with all the things you could do if you weren't surrounded by supplies and crates and the whole damn crew upstairs.
Law turned back to the stack, voice low enough that you almost missed it. "Later," he murmured. "If you're good."
A shiver ran down your spine. You swallowed hard and tried to act normal.
You really, really hoped no one was coming down here anytime soon.
.
.
The moment it happened, it was pure chaos.
One second you were moving a particularly heavy crate like Law asked — the next, the ship rocked violently. Somewhere far above, there was a muffled shout and the shriek of metal. The crate slipped from your grip, slamming into the wall with a loud THUD.
Before you could react, the heavy storage door — that was supposed to stay propped open — swung shut with a bone-shaking bang.
You froze.
Law cursed under his breath, lunging for the handle. You rushed to help him, heart hammering in your chest.
He yanked on it. You yanked on it. Nothing.
"Locked," he growled, rattling it harder. "Dammit."
"No way." You shoved at the door uselessly. "We're stuck?!"
Law's face was grim. He jiggled the handle again, then pulled a Den Den Mushi out of his pocket. Static crackled. No signal.
"Great," you muttered. "Metal walls. Thick metal walls. We're basically in a fridge."
"It's temporary," Law said, though even he sounded annoyed. "Someone will notice we're missing."
"Yeah, after they realize we’re not up there helping fix whatever the hell broke!"
You leaned against the door, groaning. Being stuck alone with your secret boyfriend was not the worst thing in the world. But being stuck with Law, who was a menace when he got bored? Dangerous.
You felt his eyes on you and cracked one open.
"What?"
He was studying you in that way he did sometimes — silent, sharp, as if he was dissecting your entire existence.
"You panicking already?"
You huffed. "No. Just… strategizing."
"Mm."
You shifted awkwardly. "And you? Cool as a cucumber, huh?"
He shrugged. "Trapped with you? Could be worse."
You blinked, thrown off by the softness in his voice.
You opened your mouth to reply — but then he moved, striding toward you with that slow, deliberate gait that meant trouble. The kind that usually ended with you pressed against a wall, dizzy and breathless and wondering how a man so outwardly composed could make you feel like you were the only thing that mattered in the world.
Law stopped inches away, tilting his head slightly.
"No crew," he said lowly. "No interruptions."
Your pulse spiked. "Y-Yeah?"
He smirked — slow, devilish, rare.
"An advantage."
.
. Before you could react, Law's hand was sliding up your arm, slow and deliberate, sending sparks shooting across your skin. His other hand braced next to your head, caging you in.
"Cold?" he murmured.
"A little," you managed, your voice breathy.
He leaned in closer, nose brushing your temple, lips ghosting over the shell of your ear.
"Good," he whispered.
You shivered, and not just from the temperature.
His fingers traced lazy patterns on your arm, and you closed your eyes, savoring the rare moment. Law wasn't usually this openly affectionate — not where anyone could see. But here, with only the dim overhead lights and the smell of metal and salt around you, he was different. Softer. Greedier.
"You smell like engine grease," you teased, voice shaking.
He chuckled — a low, rare sound — and nipped lightly at your earlobe.
"Not complaining when you're the one who started this."
You laughed — and Law grinned, wide and boyish, before capturing your mouth in a kiss that stole every coherent thought from your head.
God, he kissed like he owned you. Deep, slow, unhurried. Like you had all the time in the world.
You wrapped your arms around his neck, pulling him closer, feeling the solid weight of him against you. His hands skimmed down your sides, lingering at your waist, before sliding under the hem of your shirt to rest against bare skin. You gasped softly against his mouth.
"Law…" you murmured.
He pulled back just enough to look at you — really look at you. His thumb brushed your cheekbone, tender.
"You okay?" he asked, voice rough.
You nodded. "More than okay."
He kissed you again, softer this time. Almost reverent.
Minutes slipped by — slow, honey-thick minutes where all you could feel was the heat of his mouth, the calluses of his fingers, the way his heart thudded against yours.
Eventually, you broke apart, resting your forehead against his.
"I can't believe we're stuck," you whispered, laughing a little.
He smirked. "Best damn accident this ship's ever had."
You laughed again, biting your lip.
Law tilted his head, studying you. "You think the crew suspects?"
You thought about it. "Honestly? They're either oblivious or think we're mortal enemies."
Law hummed thoughtfully. "Maybe we should give them a real show after this."
You gawked at him. "You? Public affection?"
He shrugged. "Shock value."
You grinned wide. "You're evil."
"And you love it."
"Yeah," you said, softer now. "I do."
Something shifted between you — something heavier, more real. Law's expression softened. He tucked a strand of hair behind your ear, gentle in a way he never was with anyone else.
"I love you too," he said simply.
Your breath caught.
Law rarely said it. He didn’t have to — you saw it in every careful look, every small touch, every stolen moment. But hearing it out loud still sent warmth flooding through you.
You cupped his face, smiling.
"Guess being trapped isn't so bad," you said.
He kissed your palm.
"No," he agreed. "Not bad at all."
.
. Hours later, when Shachi and Penguin finally managed to force the door open — sweaty, out of breath, and triumphant — they found you and Law sitting side-by-side on the floor, looking suspiciously flushed and suspiciously content.
"Uh, Captain..." Shachi said, blinking. "Everything good?"
Law stood up smoothly, brushing imaginary dust off his pants. "Fine," he said blandly. "Just trapped."
You fought the urge to giggle.
Penguin narrowed his eyes. "You two sure you didn’t kill each other?"
Law smirked — a private, dangerous thing — and tossed an arm around your shoulders with casual ease.
"Not yet," he said.
You caught the startled looks the two crewmates exchanged — and laughed all the way back to your shared cabin, tucked securely against Law’s side.
Maybe being trapped wasn’t such a bad thing after all.
Stuck on You
Some prankster superglues Marco’s hand to yours. You both pretend to hate it… but secretly enjoy staying glued together.
Marco x gn! reader | ONE SHOT
Tags: fluff, flirting, chaos, sfw
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only so expect this ff cringe and oc
word count: 3.3k
MINORS DNI!!
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
It all started with a prank.
A very bad prank.
One minute you were standing on deck, minding your own business, chatting with Marco about nothing in particular — and the next minute, someone (you had your suspicions) superglued your hand to his.
Literally.
Palm-to-palm.
Fingers intertwined.
"You have got to be kidding me-yoi," Marco muttered, staring down at your very stuck hands with the emotional range of a man who had survived actual wars but could not survive this level of annoyance.
You tugged.
Marco tugged.
Your hands stayed locked together like some sort of romantic death grip.
"…Well," you said, very eloquently.
"Well," Marco echoed, voice utterly dry.
From somewhere behind a barrel, muffled snickering erupted. You both turned in time to see a few crewmates (Ace, you would bet your next paycheck) sprinting away at full speed, laughing their asses off.
Marco sighed heavily. "Should've seen that coming, yoi."
You blinked up at him, wide-eyed. "You think they superglued us together… on purpose?"
Marco gave you a long look, deadpan as hell. "…No-yoi. It was a coincidence that someone left industrial-strength glue exactly where we were standing."
You snorted, trying to suppress a laugh. "Fair enough, Mr. Smartass."
He smirked, tugging lightly at your conjoined hands again. No dice. You were fused like some godawful romantic statue.
"Guess we’re stuck-yoi."
You both stared at your hands, at each other, at your hands again.
Slowly, you realized the entire deck was staring.
Crewmates leaned against rails, poked their heads out of doors, peered from crow’s nests. Watching. Waiting.
You could almost hear the bets forming.
You hissed under your breath, "Don't make a scene. Act natural."
Marco smiled, the slow lazy kind that made your heart do stupid cartwheels.
"You think we’re good at ‘natural' -yoi?"
You elbowed him (gently, because, you know, superglue). "Walk. Casual. Now."
He obligingly started walking, swinging your joined hands obnoxiously like you were newlyweds on a stroll. You tripped trying to keep up with his stupid long strides, and Marco had the audacity to chuckle under his breath.
"Oh, you're enjoying this," you accused, half-laughing, half-glaring.
Marco tilted his head innocently. "Why wouldn’t I enjoy being glued to such charming company-yoi?"
You blinked.
Heat flared up your neck.
Was that… flirting?! From Marco?!
You decided to play it cool. "Obviously, I'm the lucky one. Being stuck with the infamous cool guy of the crew."
He arched an eyebrow. "Cool guy?"
You nodded sagely. "Yeah. All mysterious and strong and… broody. You know. Classic heartthrob material."
Marco actually laughed, full-throated and amused.
"You've been spending too much time with Ace, yoi," he said, but his thumb was rubbing slow circles into your knuckles — absent-minded, soft — and he made no move to pull away.
You pretended not to notice.
The ship doctor declared the situation "temporarily incurable" unless you wanted to rip off some skin.
You did not want that.
So you and Marco were officially handcuffed together for the next few hours, possibly longer.
The announcement spread through the ship like wildfire. Everywhere you went, people tried to hide their snickering — and failed spectacularly.
At lunch, you had to sit next to Marco. (Technically, on Marco, because the bench was too narrow and you kept bumping into him.)
Passing plates was a disaster.
You dropped a spoon into Marco’s lap at one point, and he just gave you a look so dry it could set fires.
You grinned sweetly. "Oops."
"You’re doing this on purpose."
"Maybe," you sang, swinging your legs.
Marco grunted — but the corner of his mouth twitched upward.
After lunch, things got worse.
You tried to help Marco with paperwork.
Emphasis on tried.
"Hold still, yoi," he muttered, trying to shuffle through documents with one hand while your hand clumsily trailed after his.
"This is your fault," you whispered dramatically.
"You touched me first."
"You glued yourself to me!"
"You leaned into the glue puddle-yoi."
"You—!" you sputtered.
The tension snapped — you both cracked up, laughing so hard the pen rolled off the desk.
Sometime around sunset, you found yourself sitting on the figurehead of the ship, watching the ocean shimmer gold. Marco sat next to you, your hands still hopelessly, ridiculously intertwined.
The atmosphere shifted — soft, quieter.
A breeze tugged at your hair.
Marco turned his head lazily, regarding you out of the corner of his eye.
"You know," he said casually, "if you wanted to hold my hand… you could’ve just asked-yoi"
You almost fell off the ship.
"I did not plan this!" you yelped, cheeks burning hotter than a volcano.
Marco chuckled — that low, warm sound you could feel in your ribs.
"I know," he said, a little softer. "But still."
You glanced down at your hands — how perfectly they fit together, the way his thumb lazily traced circles over your skin without even thinking.
"…It’s not so bad," you admitted, voice small.
Marco smiled.
Not the lazy, cocky smirk he gave everyone else — a real, soft smile that made your heart flutter traitorously.
"Nah-yoi," he agreed, squeezing your hand. "Not bad at all."
When the glue finally wore off (courtesy of some miracle solvent the ship doctor whipped up late at night), you both sat there for a second.
Free.
Hands separated.
No excuse anymore.
Marco looked at you.
You looked at Marco.
Long pause.
"…We’re allowed to hold hands without glue, you know," you blurted, immediately wanting to jump overboard from sheer embarrassment.
Marco laughed — really laughed — and before you could hide your face, he caught your hand again, lacing your fingers together easy as breathing.
"No more excuses-yoi," he said, lips brushing your temple in a featherlight kiss.
You clung tighter.
Maybe being stuck together wasn’t such a bad thing after all.
Captain for a Day
When Smoker lends you his giant Marine coat to keep warm, you accidentally become G-5's newest "Vice Admiral" for the day — much to his horror (and secret amusement).
smoker x gn! reader | ONE SHOT Tags: fluff, sfw, G-5 chaos a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only so expect this ff cringe and oc word count: 938
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
You should have known better than to complain about being cold on a Marine base, of all places.
Especially near a certain grumpy, cigar-smoking, Vice Admiral.
It was a chilly morning on G-5 base, and you were standing awkwardly near the training yard, your arms wrapped around yourself. You hadn’t realized just how thin your jacket was until the cold ocean wind decided to slap you right in the soul.
"Cold?" Smoker's gruff voice rumbled from behind you.
You turned to find him standing there, arms crossed, two cigars burning away like little smoke chimneys.
"I'm fine," you said, teeth chattering audibly.
Smoker narrowed his eyes at you for exactly 0.2 seconds before shrugging off the massive white Marine coat draped over his shoulders — you know, the one with the fuzzy collar, the gold epaulets, the one that absolutely screamed Important Marine Guy.
Before you could protest, he was tossing it over your head like a blanket.
"Don't argue," he muttered, already turning away like it was no big deal.
You froze under the weight of the coat. It was huge. It practically swallowed you alive. The hem almost touched the ground. You could barely peek out from under the fluffy collar.
You stared after Smoker’s retreating back, then tugged the coat tighter around yourself.
Warm. Very warm.
You weren’t going to complain.
The first salute happened thirty seconds later.
You were shuffling across the training yard, trying not to trip over the coat, when a young Marine spotted you.
"VICE ADMIRAL, SIR!" he barked, snapping to a crisp salute so fast he almost gave himself whiplash.
You blinked at him. "Uh… what?"
The Marine’s face turned beet red when he got a closer look at your very not-Smoker face, but he'd already committed. He stayed frozen in salute until you awkwardly shuffled away, half-waving.
Maybe that was just one guy, you thought, chuckling to yourself. No big deal.
It was not one guy.
Within an hour, you had been saluted by no less than twenty Marines.
Two mistook you for some "new Vice Admiral from Headquarters" and started escorting you around the base like bodyguards.
One extremely nervous ensign offered you his lunch.
Another, somehow, asked if you needed a "cannon fired in your honor."
You tried to explain that you were just borrowing the coat.
You really tried.
But the moment you said "I'm just—", some recruit would shout "SIR, YES SIR!" and start sprinting laps around the yard to "impress" you.
At one point, you caught a glimpse of yourself reflected in a window.
The Marine coat — slightly too big, regal-looking, with the Justice kanji on the back — Your slightly confused but determined expression — The way you nodded politely whenever someone yelled "Vice Admiral!" —
You looked like a tiny, lost, but somehow commanding officer.
You laughed until you almost collapsed.
The situation escalated — fast.
At lunchtime, Marines cleared an entire table for you at the mess hall.
They nervously placed a "Reserved for Vice Admiral" sign (hastily made with a napkin and a fork) in front of you.
You tried to slip away quietly, but every step you took, another Marine would open a door, bow, or panic because "the Vice Admiral needs more soup!"
By the time you escaped to the courtyard, you were slightly dizzy from all the awkward attention.
This is getting ridiculous… you thought.
You needed to find Smoker and give his damn coat back before this turned into a full-blown military parade.
You found Smoker near the docks, yelling at Tashigi.
He noticed you instantly — hard not to, considering you were basically wearing his entire upper wardrobe — and his eyes narrowed suspiciously.
"You," he growled, stalking over.
You gulped. "Smoker, I can explain—"
Before you could say more, two Marines sprinted past, saluting so hard their hats flew off.
"VICE ADMIRAL! BASE SECURITY IS DOUBLE-TIGHTENED AS REQUESTED, SIR!" one of them screamed.
"I… didn't request that?" you said weakly.
Smoker stared at the chaotic scene unfolding around you. Marines were tripping over themselves trying to impress you. Someone started unfurling a "WELCOME, HERO OF THE SEAS" banner.
Another Marine dropped a crate of cannonballs at your feet, panting, "For your personal arsenal, sir!"
"… What the hell," Smoker muttered under his breath, smoke billowing furiously.
You gave him a sheepish little smile from under the fluffy collar.
"Maybe your coat's a little…too recognizable," you offered.
Smoker dragged a hand down his face, groaning.
Tashigi tried very hard not to laugh — she failed.
"You’re returning the coat," Smoker grunted five minutes later, practically yanking it off you himself. (Gently though. Very gently.)
"Aw, but it’s so warm," you teased, shivering dramatically once it was gone.
He huffed and — to your complete surprise — slung an arm around your shoulders to pull you close to his side, sharing body heat like it was no big deal.
"If you keep causing scenes like that, I'll have to promote you," he muttered gruffly.
You choked on your own breath. "Promote?"
Smoker shrugged, totally deadpan. "Captain, minimum. Maybe Commodore. Depends how many idiots you can wrangle."
You grinned up at him. "Does being Vice Admiral's favorite qualify me?"
His lips twitched, just slightly.
"Maybe."
.
.
Rumor traveled so fast through G-5 that by sunset, the base was convinced that Smoker was secretly training you to be his "successor."
You and Smoker both refused to confirm or deny it.
(Privately, Smoker started carrying a second coat around. "In case you get cold again," he said. Totally deadpan. Totally not flustered.)
(You kept stealing it anyway.)
Can you do Kuzan (aokiji) ?? Like, the reader was rumored witch and when he heard that, he goes excited suddenly and wanted to find that witch? ( You can do what ever you want with the ending. But please add a smut hehehe, thank you!!
hii this is a good idea!! i apologize, as of the moment, i don't plan on writing that includes s3x anytime soon:< but theres some kissing scene tho idk if kissing is considered as smut? dahaha but i hope you enjoy this! let me know what u think! ><
Frostbite and Witchcraft
When a bored ex-admiral hears rumors of a dangerous "witch" living near a chaotic port town, he can't resist hunting her down—only to find himself ensnared in a slow-burn game of teasing, ice, and forbidden heat.
Aokiji (kuzan) x fem! reader Tags: fluff, flirty, slow burn(?) neck kissing / collarbone kissing, minor bondage (ice restraints), a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only, so expect this ff cringe and oc word count: 1.5k MINORS DNI!!
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
It all started with a stupid rumor.
"The witch will curse you if you look her in the eye!" "She flies around naked at midnight!" "She turned Old Man Jeb into a chicken. True story."
The entire port town was drunk on gossip, and Aokiji—bored, freshly unattached to any real responsibility—found himself very interested.
"I dunno," he said lazily, nursing a drink at the local tavern, "sounds kinda hot."
The table of sailors stared at him like he'd grown a second head. "Hot?! She’s dangerous!"
Aokiji just grinned, finishing his drink and standing up. "Dangerous women are the best ones."
He tracked you down that same night.
Eventually, he found himself standing at the edge of a very cliché-looking creepy forest. A broken, hand-painted sign read:
"BEWARE: WITCH LIVES HERE. (also wolves.)"
Aokiji, grinning lazily, shrugged. “Eh. Wolves are fine. I’m here for the witch.”
He wandered in, hands in his pockets, whistling tunelessly. Half an hour later, after being chased by a very angry (and definitely not magical) goat, he finally stumbled upon a crooked little house. Smoke curled from the chimney, and wind chimes made from bones (probably fake… probably) tinkled eerily.
Your crooked little house at the edge of the forest was half-charming, half-terrifying, lit up with candles and what looked suspiciously like floating lights (actually just fireflies, but hey, let the idiots believe).
You were perched on your porch, barefoot, wearing a thin, flowy dress that clung to your body in the humid air, holding a cup of tea and looking entirely too smug.
“You lost, stranger?” you called, voice honey-sweet but laced with trouble.
Aokiji whistled low under his breath. Damn, the rumors didn’t do you justice.
Aokiji approached slowly, hands in his pockets. “Hey. I’m here for the witch."
You looked him up and down like he was a particularly stupid animal. "You the guy with more balls than brains?"
He laughed—a slow, deep rumble. "Depends who you ask."
You raised an eyebrow, sipping your tea. “And what if she curses you?"
Aokiji's grin widened. He leaned his tall frame casually against a tree, watching you with the lazy hunger of a man already planning how fast he could lose the upper hand—and liking it.
“I dunno... kinda sounds like fun," he said, voice low, smooth. "Especially if she's the kind of witch who knows a few...bad tricks.”
And thus began the harassment.
Day 1: He brought you a dead fish. "Thought witches liked weird offerings."
You squinted at it, then at him. "That’s mermaid bait, dumbass."
He shrugged and left it on your porch anyway.
Day 3: He challenged you to a "spell duel" and got his ass kicked by a very territorial goat you "accidentally" sicced on him.
Day 5: You caught him napping under your tree, snoring like a dying lawnmower.
You threw a bucket of water on him. He woke up, grinning, ice instantly forming on his clothes.
"You’re gonna have to try harder to cool me off, sweetheart."
You stomped inside before he could see the stupid smile on your face.
Day 7: You found a neatly folded note on your porch:
"Dear scary witch lady, Teach me magic? Also, your hair looks nice. Yours frostily, Aokiji"
You rolled your eyes so hard you nearly fell over. But you smiled too.
He kept coming back. Sometimes he’d just sit nearby, pretending to "guard" your house from wolves. Other times, he’d lazily help you gather herbs (crushing half of them because he was clumsy as hell). You started leaving out a second cup of tea without thinking about it.
He was stupidly tall, annoyingly charming, and somehow managed to look both lazy and sharp at the same time. He made you laugh when you hadn’t laughed in months.
And gods, when he smirked at you… when he leaned a little too close when handing you a flower… It was getting hard to pretend you didn’t notice.
One evening… You sat by the porch, braiding herbs absently. The sky blazed orange, and Aokiji lounged nearby, watching you with open amusement.
"You ever curse anyone for real?" he asked.
You smirked. "Maybe. You wanna find out?"
He whistled low, pretending to wipe sweat from his brow. "Man… you’re dangerous when you talk like that."
You tossed a dried sprig of lavender at him. He caught it, lazy-fast.
There was a pause.
Then he got up—moved toward you—slow, deliberate.
You looked up, heartbeat thudding. He loomed, tall and close enough that you could smell his skin: cold like fresh rain, sharp and clean.
His hand brushed a stray leaf from your hair—fingers lingering just a second too long.
"Y'know," he murmured, voice low and wrecked, "I think you did curse me."
You tried to laugh it off—but it came out breathless.
"Oh yeah? What’s the curse?"
He smiled—a real one this time, a little crooked, a little too soft.
"I can’t stay away from you."
The tension snapped.
You surged up, grabbing his jacket and dragging him down; he met you halfway, crashing his mouth onto yours.
The kiss was everything you expected from him: messy, greedy, starving. His tongue slid against yours immediately, tasting, teasing, claiming you. You gasped into him—he groaned low in his throat—his hands roaming your sides, cool fingertips skating fire trails along your heated skin.
You bit his lip playfully; he retaliated by lifting you effortlessly onto the porch railing, pressing between your thighs.
"You’re lucky," you panted against his mouth.
"Yeah?" he chuckled, kissing down your jaw, voice thick with want.
"Not everyone survives kissing a witch."
He grinned against your throat, cold breath making you shiver.
"Guess I’m built different."
And then he kissed you again—deeper, hungrier—like he was determined to drown in you.
You decided you’d let him.
You barely had time to catch your breath before Aokiji’s mouth was on you again—only this time, lower.
His lips trailed messy, open-mouthed kisses down your jawline, slow and deliberate, sending shivers wracking your entire body. When he reached your neck, he paused, smirking against your pulse like he could feel it racing for him.
"You always this jumpy," he teased in a low growl, "or is it just me?"
You opened your mouth to sass back—but then he bit your neck, just enough to make you gasp, and you forgot how words worked.
His tongue followed immediately after, soothing the sting, cold and warm all at once. You arched into him instinctively, and he groaned deep in his chest, like the feel of you was driving him insane.
"Aokiji—" you tried to say, but it came out a whimper.
"Mm," he murmured against your skin, "I like how you say my name. Say it again."
Instead, you tugged at his messy hair, earning a delighted chuckle from him. He pressed you harder against the porch railing, one hand sliding under your thighs to keep you perched there like you belonged to him.
And then he got even bolder.
His mouth moved lower, ghosting along your collarbone, teeth scraping lightly before he kissed the delicate skin with maddening gentleness.
Your hands clutched at the fabric of his jacket, trying to anchor yourself. You could feel his breath—cool and teasing—against the thin fabric of your dress, making your whole body burn.
"You’re trembling," he whispered, smug. "Cold?" he asked, voice dripping pure sin, "or somethin' else?"
"Y-you're cheating," you managed to choke out, laughing breathlessly.
Aokiji just grinned wickedly against your collarbone.
Suddenly, you felt it—a cold, delicate grip around your wrists.
You looked down to see thin rings of ice curling around them, not painful, but firm—anchoring you gently against the railing behind you.
Your breath hitched. Your heart slammed against your ribs.
"Aokiji…" you whispered, wide-eyed.
He looked up at you, lazy and devastatingly cocky.
"Relax," he purred, mouth brushing your ear. "You can melt 'em anytime… if you ask real nice."
You swallowed hard, feeling the cold of the ice and the burning heat of his mouth on your skin, the impossible contrast driving you absolutely insane.
He kissed your shoulder—slow, reverent—then trailed back up to your neck, biting a little harder this time, earning a shaky, desperate moan from your lips.
"You sound so pretty," he rasped, like he was barely holding himself back.
You tugged at the ice instinctively, but it only made the sensation sharper—being half-pinned, half-teased, at his mercy.
"You want me to stop?" he asked, lips ghosting over yours, voice infuriatingly smug.
You glared at him, cheeks flushed and heart racing. "Don't you fucking dare."
Aokiji laughed—a real, dark, hungry laugh—and then captured your mouth again in a kiss so deep, so filthy, you forgot what planet you were on.
You kissed him back just as desperately, your hips grinding against his without even thinking.
The ice melted instantly under your heat, but you didn’t even notice—you were too busy tugging him closer, swallowing each other whole.
When you finally broke apart, gasping, he rested his forehead against yours, smirking like the cocky bastard he was.
"You’re trouble," he whispered, voice wrecked and affectionate.
You smiled, tugging his collar.
"So ruin me already, Ice Man."
And from the wicked glint in his half-lidded eyes, you knew he fully intended to.