Y/n lands on the forsaken island of Kuraigana, crossing paths with the world’s greatest swordsman, Dracule Mihawk.
PART 1 OF READER WHO CAN USE THE INFINITY STONES
dracule mihawk x reader ౨ৎ💗 ONE SHOT
main characters: mihawk
tags: fluff, sfw, soft, lots of v!ol3nce
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only so expect this ff cringe and oc
words count: 968
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
Kuraigana Island was a corpse of a land.
Fog hung like a wet cloth. Gnarled trees clawed at a grey sky. Castles lay in ruin. Crows perched on broken battlements, staring like tiny, judgmental gods. The humandrills lurked in the shadows, half-watching, half-measuring you with the unsettling intelligence of creatures that knew too much and bowed to nothing.
You arrived with no fanfare — a split in space, a ripple in air, and there you stood.
The swordsman was already waiting.
Golden eyes sharp as his blade, Dracule Mihawk took you in without surprise. Just a flick of his gaze, the briefest narrowing of lids.
“You’re not from here.”
“...”
A beat. Then a faint smirk.
“State your business.”
You glanced around. The entire island radiated don’t bother, but you liked the silence.
“Needed a place to land.”
Mihawk regarded you a moment longer, then turned away.
“Don’t get in my way.”
You didn’t answer. You never did.
There he stood, placing the wine aside. Up close, he was taller than you expected, broad-shouldered and impossibly composed, moving like liquid death. The sort of man who didn’t need to raise his voice to command a room.
“I don’t know where you came from,” he said, approaching with unhurried grace, “but I can tell you this island is no place for a traveler. It devours the weak.”
“I’m not weak.”
Something in his eyes sharpened. “Prove it.”
A sword materialized in his hand—a black-bladed cross almost as tall as you were.
You didn’t blink.
He smirked, and in a blur of movement, brought the blade down.
You raised a hand.
The world stuttered. Time hiccupped.
His strike slowed to a crawl, the blade inches from your face.
“Cute,” you murmured, tilting your head. You could feel the hum of cosmic power rising within you.
With a flick of your wrist, you stepped out of sync with the moment. Time resumed, his blade cleaving harmlessly through empty air.
You were leaning against a column now.
“Done?” you asked, voice flat.
Mihawk turned, eye narrowing. A slow, dangerous smile curved his mouth.
“Well, Aren’t you interesting.”
Days bled together.
Mihawk didn’t ask you to leave, and you didn’t offer. He trained in the ruins. You wandered. A routine of unspoken tolerance.
Occasionally, the hum of his blade slicing the mist would pause as you flexed space to pluck fruit from high branches, reversed time to catch a falling stone before it shattered, or made entire sections of the crumbling wall rebuild themselves just for fun.
Once, a particularly bold baboon lunged at you. Mihawk turned just in time to see it dissolve into stardust.
You held its still-beating heart in your palm for a moment, then let it fall.
The humandrills kept their distance after that.
He said nothing, but his eyes followed you longer after that.
He asked about your powers one evening, rare curiosity threading his tone.
You sat by a fire you didn’t need, lazily manipulating the flame into twisting shapes.
“Are you a god?”
You considered it. “Complicated.”
He hummed. “Good. I hate gods.”
The corner of your mouth twitched. “Noted.”
Tension hung between you like fine wire. Neither speaking it. Neither breaking it.
When pirates landed, drunk on courage and legends of Mihawk’s title, you watched from a stone wall.
Twenty men.
They charged.
Mihawk moved like death made flesh, blade a dark glimmer. He cut through them like wind through leaves.
One survivor crawled toward you, gasping, reaching.
You tilted your head.
The man froze. His body peeled apart into strings of light, unraveling like an old tapestry.
Mihawk watched, bloodied and silent.
You met his gaze. “Messy work.”
He smirked. “Efficient.”
Weeks later, a storm hit.
Lightning split the sky. Waves devoured the shore.
A galleon, unfamiliar flag, shattered against the cliffs.
Mihawk and you stood at the shore. Bodies in the water. Survivors clinging to wreckage.
“Yours?” you asked.
He shook his head.
A captain, foolish and loud, cursed and called Mihawk out by name.
Mihawk’s blade lifted — but you stepped past him.
A simple gesture. A ripple in reality.
The ocean bent, swallowing the survivors. The ship’s remains vanished, leaving only empty, perfect water.
Silence.
“You stole my kill,” Mihawk said.
You shrugged. “They bored me.”
He stared at you a long moment, then laughed. Low, rare.
“Stay,” he said.
You did.
Because for once, you weren’t bored.
One dusky evening, Mihawk invited you on a hunt.
“A nuisance on a nearby island,” he said. “A former Warlord pretending to hold dominion.”
You quirked a brow. “And you need me?”
“I don’t need anyone,” he replied smoothly. “But you might amuse me.”
You smirked and stepped through a portal, Mihawk following.
The island was a lush jungle, overrun with hostile fauna and even more hostile men.
They expected Mihawk. They didn’t expect you.
One tried to cleave your head from behind.
You stopped time.
Walked around the frozen scene, plucking the man’s weapon away, rewinding his attempted strike into a trip and face-first fall into mud.
When time resumed, Mihawk didn’t flinch, but you caught the slight twitch of his lip.
“You enjoy showing off.”
“I enjoy being alive.”
You flicked a finger. Space warped around a group of enemies, their bodies crushed into a single, compacted orb of air before disappearing.
Mihawk cut down the rest, his precise strikes a sharp contrast to your cosmic chaos.
Afterward, the island was silent save for the wind and the cawing of carrion birds.
Mihawk sheathed his sword.
“You might be dangerous company.”
“You might be boring,” you countered.
Another smirk. “Then we’ll keep testing that.”
You stepped back into Kuraigana’s misty air together.
The humandrills stared harder than usual.
And you, for the first time in centuries, considered the notion of staying.
Hello, hello, hello, beautiful, gorgeous, divine
I love your story Marco nooo I love all your stories you are fantastic
I love you, please beg for something. Can you create a Marco the Phoenix story for y/n? Where y/n saves Thatch's life by stopping Teach's attack? Thatch was injured, but not seriously, losing the yami yami nomi. However, y/n was seriously injured protecting her nakama. Marco and Ace, his brother, are very worried. More so Marco 😏 Since the young woman wasn't waking up, When she regained consciousness, she played a joke on Marco for being so worried, Pretending not to recognize them 🤣 Later, Y/n spoke to Whitebeard, discussing the traitor and how dangerous he would become in the future. When she returned to Marco, she lay down next to him, thanking him for taking care of her all that time, and that even though she couldn't answer him, she always heard him calling her. Please, I implore you.
lmaoao this is funny i like it! dahaha u can support me through ko-fi, but please know that tips are never expected but always deeply appreciated! also I hope this is to ur liking!
Teach Tried It, I Survived It
After stopping Teach’s betrayal and nearly dying, you wake up in Marco’s arms—and decide that pranking him with fake amnesia is exactly what he deserves before finally falling into the comfort of home and love.
Marco the phoenix x reader tags: slight angst, sfw, ooc, bl00d/v!olence, happy ending, betrayal, 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: 2k
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The sun blazed high over the open sea, casting golden light across the deck of the Moby Dick. The battle was well underway — a scrappy band of pirates had made the monumental mistake of challenging the Whitebeard Pirates. Bad for them. Good for everyone else who needed a bit of exercise.
You ducked under a wild swing from some random enemy pirate, spun on your heel, and delivered a solid punch to his gut. He crumpled with a satisfying oof.
"Oi! Y/N!" Thatch shouted from a few feet away, grinning like a maniac, a strange fruit in his hand. "Check this out!"
You sliced another pirate across the side with your blade (nothing fatal, you were feeling merciful today) and jogged over.
"What did you find this time?" you asked, breathing hard, a spark of excitement lighting your eyes.
Ace clambered over a fallen mast to join you. "Yo, Thatch, whatcha got?"
Thatch held the thing out like it was a newborn kitten. The fruit was round and black with swirling violet patterns, almost like the night sky had been trapped inside it.
"I found something interesting," he said proudly.
Ace squinted. "Ohhh... is that a Devil Fruit?"
You leaned closer. "Looks like one. Wonder what it does."
Behind you, a presence stiffened. You glanced over your shoulder.
Teach — good ol' big, laughing Teach — was standing there, his usual grin stretched way too tight. His forehead was shiny with sweat despite the easy fight. When he noticed you looking, he barked out a laugh that didn’t reach his eyes.
"Heh! Devil Fruit, huh? Zehahaha! Who knows? Maybe it's a lame one, like making your farts turn into explosions!"
Ace snorted. "Wouldn't put it past the sea."
You shook your head, laughing, not noticing the way Teach’s hands clenched at his sides.
That night, the Moby Dick was peaceful. The waves lapped lazily against the hull. Most of the crew was sprawled across the deck or below, snoring, laughing, or drinking.
You had just curled up in your hammock when a strange noise cut through the stillness.
Scuffle.
You bolted upright, instincts screaming. Without a second thought, you grabbed your weapon and padded silently toward the sound.
Your heart dropped into your stomach.
There, in the dim lantern light, was Teach — stabbing Thatch through the side.
"Teach?!" you gasped.
Thatch grunted, struggling, but Teach was too strong. His eyes were wild, desperate, like a man possessed.
Without hesitation, you leapt into action.
"THAT'S ENOUGH! TEACH! HOW DARE YOU!?" you roared, slamming into Teach with everything you had.
The two of you crashed into the deck. Your blade flashed; Teach snarled and swung a fist, and you met it with a grimace, blocking the worst of the blow. It was chaos — wood splintered under your feet as you battled, the sounds waking a few of the closer crewmates.
But Teach was slippery. He was fighting like a man who had nothing left to lose, and with one last shove, he pushed you back, making you stumble.
Your foot caught the edge of a broken beam, and before you could react, Teach's fist landed squarely on the side of your head. The world spun instantly, your vision going blurry as the impact sent you crashing to the ground.
“Y/N!” Thatch cried weakly from where he was still slumped, blood dripping from his side.
You blinked hard, trying to regain your senses. A searing pain throbbed in your head, and the edges of your vision blurred even further. You could barely hear anything over the ringing in your ears as your body felt like it was on fire.
Just as you tried to push yourself up, Teach took his chance, grabbing the mysterious fruit from Thatch’s weakening grip. His sinister laugh filled the night air as he turned and bolted into the shadows, vanishing before anyone could stop him.
You couldn’t chase him.
Your body was failing you.
With a grunt, you collapsed to the floor, dizziness consuming you. Your world tilted, everything spinning as blood pooled beneath you. The last thing you heard was the frantic sound of footsteps.
.
.
When you cracked your eyes open, it was to the blinding white of the infirmary ceiling. Everything hurts, your head hurts.
The room was filled with silence, save for the steady beeping of the heart monitor beside the bed. Marco sat slumped forward, elbows on his knees, head bowed in exhausted vigilance. He hadn’t left your side in days — barely eating, barely sleeping. Even Ace, who was normally a ball of chaotic energy, was quieter than a graveyard at midnight, sitting against the wall and anxiously tossing a small ball between his hands.
Then, finally, the miracle happened.
You groaned.
Marco was upright so fast he nearly knocked over the chair. "Y/N?!"
Your eyes fluttered open, squinting against the light. Slowly, you turned your head, taking in the sight of Marco — disheveled, wide-eyed, hopeful — and Ace, who had shot to his feet, mouth hanging open in disbelief.
You blinked a few times. A mischievous thought bubbled up. You couldn't resist. Then you tilted your head in confusion.
"...Who are you?" you rasped, your voice hoarse from disuse.
The world froze.
Marco actually stumbled back a step, his mouth parting in horror. "W-What?"
Ace dropped the ball he'd been tossing — it hit the floor with a pathetic little bounce. "No way," he muttered, eyes wide as saucers.
You frowned, genuine confusion painted across your features. "Where am I? What happened? Are you... my doctors?"
Marco choked on air. "Doctors?! w-well, I am! but..." His voice cracked, his wings briefly puffing out in shock. "Y/N—it's me! It's Marco-yoi!"
You gave him a pitying, bewildered look, like he was some delusional lunatic. "I'm sorry, I... I don't know any 'Marco.'"
Ace ran a hand down his face, whispering to himself, "Oh my god, oh my god, Pops is gonna kill us."
Marco dropped to his knees by the bed, panic etched into every sharp line of his face. "Y/N, please, listen! It's me! You—you always called me 'birdbrain'! Remember? And Ace—he's the loud one! You always yell at him!-yoi"
You gave a tiny, skeptical squint at Ace. "He does look like he yells a lot," you mumbled thoughtfully.
Ace put a hand over his heart, wounded. "Hey!"
"Y/N..." Marco reached for your hand, his own trembling. "Please tell me you're joking."
You pulled your hand away, shrinking back against the pillows dramatically. "S-sir!, I don't even know you! Why are you touching me?!"
Ace looked between you and Marco, starting to sweat buckets. "She really doesn't remember us?! Oh my god—I'm not ready to raise someone! I can barely keep my plants alive!"
Marco paled. "Ace, this isn't about raising—"
"We'll have to teach her everything again!" Ace wailed. "How to walk! How to talk! Oh no—do you even remember how to eat?"
You blinked at him, deadpan. "I don't know... can you show me?"
Ace immediately picked up a banana from a nearby fruit basket and started dramatically demonstrating how to eat it, like some crazed tutorial video.
"First you PEEL it," he said loudly, yanking the peel down and waving it in your face. "Then you put the FOOD PART in your MOUTH—"
"Enough!" Marco barked, his voice cracking with desperation.
He turned back to you, gripping the edge of the mattress. His eyes were so blue and so full of heartbreak that you nearly cracked right there.
"Y/N..." he whispered, voice raw. "Even if you don't remember me... I'll stay with you. I'll protect you until you remember. I swear it."
Your throat tightened.
You stared at him for a long, tense moment.
Then you cracked a wicked smile.
"...Dumbass," you wheezed, voice croaky but full of teasing mischief. "Of course I remember you, pineapple head!"
The silence was so thick you could hear a pin drop.
Ace's banana hit the floor.
Marco stared at you, eyes wide, processing... and then, "WHAT?!"
You burst into a fit of raspy laughter, clutching your sides painfully. "Oh my god, the LOOK on your face—!" you cackled, tears forming at the corners of your eyes.
"You little—!" Marco sputtered, half lunging at you and half hugging you at the same time.
"You should've seen yourselves!" you wheezed. "Ace was about to teach me how to chew!"
Ace pointed an accusing finger at you. "You gave me a heart attack, Y/N! I was ready to start teaching you object permanence!"
Marco collapsed onto the side of the bed, groaning into your blanket. "I can't believe you did that-yoi. I was ready to—!" His voice broke again.
You smiled softer now, reaching out and brushing his messy blond hair back from his face. "I'm sorry, Marco... couldn't resist. You were just too easy."
He lifted his head, cheeks flushed slightly, a trembling smile forming. "You're the worst," he said hoarsely, voice thick with relief.
"And you love me for it," you teased.
"...Yeah," he whispered back, no hesitation at all.
You blinked.
Your heart fluttered.
Ace, oblivious as usual, was still dramatically re-enacting how he was going to "re-educate" you with flashcards and alphabet songs in the background. You and Marco stared at each other, soft and quiet amidst the chaos, and for a moment, the world was right again.
You were safe. You were alive. You were home.
.
.
Later, once the fuss had died down (and Ace had finally been dragged off to sleep), you found yourself summoned to Whitebeard’s quarters.
The old man sat on his throne-like chair, the steady pulse of his IV a soft, constant background noise.
"You fought well, little one," Whitebeard said, his voice rumbling like distant thunder. His gaze was heavy, serious. "But you were lucky."
You nodded, bowing your head respectfully.
"Teach..." you began.
Whitebeard’s eyes narrowed.
"He was after that fruit," you said grimly. "It wasn’t random. He knew what it was. And if he went so far as to attack Thatch, his own crewmate..." You shook your head. "He's dangerous. More dangerous than we realized."
Whitebeard grunted, the sound low and displeased.
"A traitor among my sons," he murmured, anger flashing in his gaze. "We will hunt him down."
You hesitated. "He has the Yami Yami no Mi now. I don't know much about it, but I saw enough. That fruit... it's not normal. His power—"
"—Will be immense," Whitebeard finished.
You nodded grimly.
There was a long silence.
"You did well protecting your brother," Whitebeard said at last, his expression softening. "Rest now. Heal. We have a long road ahead."
You bowed again and left, heart heavy but determined.
When you returned to the infirmary, Marco was there, perched like a golden phoenix on the edge of the bed.
He looked up, immediately easing when he saw you.
"Hey, yoi," he said softly.
You didn’t say anything. Instead, you limped over and, without asking, slid onto the bed beside him.
Marco froze, startled — and then melted, wrapping an arm carefully around your shoulders so you didn’t jostle your injuries.
For a while, you just lay there, breathing together.
Finally, you spoke, voice quiet against his chest.
"Thank you."
He tilted his head down, puzzled. "For what-yoi?"
"For staying," you murmured. "For talking to me even when I couldn’t answer. For calling me back."
Marco’s throat bobbed as he swallowed hard.
"You heard me?" he whispered.
"Every word," you said, smiling faintly. "Even when I was somewhere dark... you were there."
Marco closed his eyes, pressing his forehead to yours.
"You scared me so bad," he whispered, voice raw. "I thought I'd lost you-yoi"
"You didn’t," you promised.
He kissed your forehead, the gentlest brush of lips, barely a touch.
"I’m not going anywhere," you said.
Marco smiled — a real one, full of love and hope and lingering fear.
"Good," he said, pulling you closer. "Because I’m not letting you out of my sight-yoi."
You chuckled softly, your heart full despite the pain.
"Guess you're stuck with me," you teased.
"Wouldn’t have it any other way," Marco said against your hair.
And for the first time since everything had gone to hell, you felt truly safe.
You and Luffy accidentally get married by a hyper-intelligent vending machine on Egghead Island. The crew takes it way too seriously, but Luffy is surprisingly into it.
LUFFY X GN!READER | ONE SHOT tags: fluff, sfw, acc!dental marriage, ooc 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: 706
masterlist | ko-fi
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
Egghead Island sparkled like something out of a futuristic dream. Or a nightmare. Depending on who you asked.
Laser drones zipped overhead, holographic sharks swam through the air, and the vending machines charged a 40% service fee to flirt with you.
You were already over it.
“What the hell is this?” you asked, staring at the sleek, metal screen of a suspicious-looking marriage kiosk that had popped out of a wall.
"CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR NUPTIAL INTEREST!" it blared.
You winced. “Nope. Not interested.”
Behind you, Luffy was already poking the glowing buttons like a toddler with a remote. “Oooh! What’s this do?”
“Don’t press that.”
He pressed it.
A beam of golden light scanned the both of you. "MATCH ACCEPTED," it beeped. “YOU ARE NOW LEGALLY MARRIED UNDER VEGAPUNK CODE 6.66 SUB-SECTION WE BALL.”
You blinked. “…What.”
Luffy blinked. “Cool.”
He grabbed your hand with that signature, easy grin. “We’re married now! Sweet!”
“LUFFY—”
Twenty seconds later, the rest of the crew found out.
Chopper: “You guys WHAT!?”
Sanji: (sobbing) “WHY WOULD YOU DO THIS TO ME, Y/N-CWAAAAN!?”
Robin: (smiling behind a book) “How lovely. I hope it was a beautiful ceremony.”
Zoro: “Of course you two would get hitched by a vending machine.”
Franky: “THIS IS SUPER!! WE GOTTA THROW A RECEPTION!!”
Jinbei: (serene) “I’ll call this divine destiny.”
Usopp: “Waitwaitwait—do we all have to get married now?? Is it contagious?!”
Nami, arms crossed, was the only one who looked vaguely sensible. “We’re not on a honeymoon, you idiots. We’re on a mission. Can’t believe you got fake-married on an island run by six genius maniacs.”
“It’s not fake,” Luffy said proudly, wrapping his arm around your shoulders.
“It’s legally binding,” the vending machine added.
“LUFFY,” you groaned, facepalming. “We are not actually married—”
“But you held my hand,” he said with a pout.
“I was trying to stop you from pressing the stupid buttons!”
“But you didn’t let go shishishi” he added.
You were going to kill him. Or maybe yourself. Or maybe the vending machine.
Over the next few days, the crew refused to let it go.
Nami “accidentally” started assigning you and Luffy shared quarters.
Franky built a honeymoon hover-chair for two that followed you around and played romantic music at inopportune moments.
Brook wrote a song called “Wedded Bliss on a Warped Island” and played it constantly.
Zoro made gagging noises every time you entered a room.
Even Vegapunk Stella got involved.
“Fascinating bond signature,” he mused, looking at the machine’s readings. “Unusual compatibility levels. Perhaps a cosmic entanglement. Or just dumb luck.”
You were ready to drown in holographic seagull juice.
Luffy didn’t help.
He insisted on calling you "my spouse."
He’d hold your hand while walking down the lab halls like it was the most casual thing ever.
He used you as a pillow during naps—okay, not new behavior—but now he’d nuzzle your shoulder and murmur, “This is what married people do.”
You tried to zap him with a soft stun from your energy-based power.
He laughed and asked for more.
He started sharing his food.
You shared back.
He offered you half his meat skewer.
You offered him half your fruit cube.
You even started sitting next to him at dinner on purpose.
...You were doomed.
One night, while stuck in a laser barrier room together (thanks to Luffy pressing another suspicious button), things got quiet.
“Hey, Y/N,” Luffy said, lying next to you on the cold sci-fi floor.
“Yeah?”
“Do you wanna be married for real someday?”
You paused.
“With… you?”
“Yeah.”
You turned to face him. “You don’t even know what marriage is.”
He smiled, soft and crooked. “I know it means I get to be with you all the time.”
You blinked. Your powers, which usually sparked when you were annoyed or overwhelmed, glimmered gently around your fingertips like starlight instead.
You didn’t respond. Just nudged his leg with yours.
He took that as a yes.
The next day, the machine short-circuited itself trying to process “divorce.”
You pretended to be annoyed.
But when Luffy yelled, “Don’t worry, I didn’t want a divorce anyway!!” and tackled you into a hug, your powers sparked again—glowing soft blues and pinks this time.
And you let him hold you.
When Luffy mistakes a giant duck for dinner and ends up getting a kiss instead
LUFFY X GN!READER ౨ৎ💗 ONE SHOT
tags: fluff, sfw
a/n: this js me trying to write ffs, this is experimental and for fun only so expect this ffs a bit cringe
masterlist | ko-fi
words count: 1.1k
: 𓏲🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
The sun was high, the sea was calm, and there were absolutely no signs of trouble.
Which, on the Thousand Sunny, meant one thing:
Trouble was coming.
“LUFFY, NO—!!”
Too late. You watched in horror as Monkey D. Luffy, your idiot-slash-sweetheart captain, launched himself full-speed off the ship.
“THAT’S A HUGE DRUMSTICK!!”
He landed with a wet splat on what you now saw was not, in fact, a drumstick, but a massive, living, very not amused yellow blob.
A duck.
A giant duck. Towering, glistening, waddling angrily in the shallows.
It honked—a sound that felt more like a roar—and thrashed its wings wildly, trying to throw the rubbery parasite off its back.
Luffy clung to its neck like a child to a carnival ride, cackling madly. “SHISHISHSHI IT’S THE SIZE OF A WHOLE BANQUET!!”
You pinched the bridge of your nose. “This man has the survival instincts of a particularly reckless bread roll.”
You glanced at the rest of the crew.
Zoro was asleep.
Sanji was busy sculpting carrot roses for Robin.
Robin was reading, obviously not surprised.
Nami looked up from her map just long enough to yell, “Not it!”
Usopp and Chopper screamed something about curses and jumped into a barrel together.
Which left you.
Of course it did.
—
The duck, still honking its fury to the high heavens, stomped in circles while Luffy attempted to bite its side. You sprinted down the ramp and into the shallow surf.
“LUFFY, GET OFF THE DUCK!”
“I’M TRYING TO TASTE IT!”
“IT’S A SENTIENT CREATURE!”
“BUT IT LOOKS SO CRISPY—”
The duck, insulted on a deeply personal level, launched itself upward in one majestic leap and sent Luffy flying through the air like a flailing meat meteor. He landed beside you, face in the sand, limbs splayed in defeat.
“…Ow,” he mumbled.
You sighed and knelt beside him. “You good?”
He gave you a thumbs-up, still face-down. “YUP! SHISHISHI”
You helped brush sand off his hat as he sat up.
“Luffy,” you said, trying to be calm, “you can’t eat random animals just because they’re big and vaguely drumstick-shaped.”
“But look at it!” he whined, pointing. “It’s got those golden thighs! The rotisserie energy! The juicy potential!”
“It has a name, probably. A family. A job.”
He squinted. “Maybe it’s an orphan with a deep desire to fulfill its destiny as dinner.”
You blinked then laugh at this. “… pftt! did you just create a duck backstory to justify your cravings?”
“Yes!” he said proudly. “That’s called empathy I think! SHISHISHI”
You stared at him, completely deadpan. “You’re lucky you’re cute.”
He blinked. Then beamed. “You think I’m cute?”
“…That was supposed to stay in my head.”
“TOO LATE!” he yelled, springing to his feet and throwing his arms in the air like a victorious meat wrestler. “Y/N THINKS I’M CUUUUTE!!”
“Luffy!”
“I’M CUTE! I’M CUTE! EVEN CUTER THAN THE DUCK!”
The duck, now perched like a war god on a rock, glared at him with pure malice.
You sighed. “We’re gonna be hunted by poultry assassins. I can feel it.”
—
Back on the Sunny, after Luffy was physically restrained from offering the duck “one little nibble,” peace was finally restored. The sun dipped low, painting the sky in soft golds and purples.
You sat on the deck’s edge, feet dangling over the sea. Luffy flopped beside you, hat tilted back, grin wide.
“Hey, Y/N,” he said suddenly.
You braced yourself. “If you ask me to cook duck—”
“No, no,” he chuckled. “I was gonna say... I like when you laugh.”
You turned to him, surprised.
He was watching you. Not in the usual Luffy way — not like when he spotted meat across the room, or stared down an enemy. This was the kind of look that made your chest feel warm and your brain do a little somersault.
“Earlier,” he said, “you laughed when I said something about empathy”
“Thats not... I was mocking you!,” you replied. “I thought I was about to watch you get pecked into a new time zone.”
“But you still laughed,” he said, all sunny and smug. “You always do.”
“That’s because you’re ridiculous.”
“You like it,” he teased, nudging your shoulder.
You bit back a smile. “I tolerate it. Barely.”
He tilted his head, expression soft. “Zoro said it’s obvious.”
“…You talked to Zoro about me?”
“I asked if I could kiss you,” Luffy said bluntly. “He said ask you, not him.”
Your brain fizzled. “Wait. What—”
“So,” Luffy continued, turning fully to face you with that open, earnest joy you’d come to adore, “can I?”
“Can you what?”
“Kiss you,” he said like it was the most natural thing in the world.
Your breath caught. This was the same boy who just tried to eat a duck like it was a buffet item. Who once got stuck inside a vending machine trying to retrieve a stuck candy bar. Who sometimes forgot his shoes and didn’t notice for an hour.
And yet.
Your heart fluttered like it hadn’t gotten the memo about logic.
“…Yes,” you said, quiet.
His face lit up like a festival. “Yeah?!”
You nodded.
He scooted close—awkwardly but gently—and cupped your cheek, his hand warm and calloused. The kiss was clumsy, sweet, quick. His nose bumped yours, and when he pulled away, he had that stupidly big grin that made your stomach flip.
“WHOA,” he whispered.
“Yeah,” you whispered back.
He leaned back on his hands, practically glowing. “Gonna tell Zoro it worked!”
“LUFFY—NO—!”
Too late.
“ZORO!! I KISSED Y/N!! AND THEY SAID YES!! YOU WERE RIGHT!!”
You groaned and dropped your head into your hands as Zoro’s muffled “I don’t care!” echoed from the crow’s nest.
Sanji’s head whipped up from the kitchen door, his cigarette dangling dangerously.
“WHAT?!”
Luffy turned mid-skip. “I kissed Y/N!”
Sanji's eye twitched. “I leave you alone for ONE romantic sunset and you SNEAK AHEAD?!”
You, now partially hiding behind the mast, groaned. “Oh no.”
“Luffy, you absolute—! That was supposed to be MY kiss! I was going to bring you a fruit parfait! HOW DARE YOU KISS MY Y/N~CHWANNNNN!”
Luffy skipped back to you, unbothered and beaming. “Wanna kiss again?”
You peeked through your fingers. “If you promise not to announce it like a seagull with a megaphone.”
He nodded. “Fineee!. But I will write it in my logbook shishishi.”
“…You have a logbook?!”
“It’s mostly meat sketches and battle doodles. But now it has you.”
And your heart, traitor that it was, somersaulted again.
You sighed. “Fine. Just… no more trying to eat ducks.”
He tilted his head. “What if it asks nicely?”
You groaned, flopping back dramatically.
And somewhere in the distance, a vengeful honk echoed over the sea.
Hi! I'm the anon who requested oblivious ace x reader and i must say I REALLY LOVE IT IVE BEEN SCREAMING FOR FIFTEEN MINUTES. God i love him so much, i love you so much, thanks a lot! Sorry in advance for me might be request more in the future <3 have a nice day!!
hi! thank youu sm! im glad u like itt~ 💞
ill make sure to be ready w ur requests then🥰🤭😳
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
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.
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.
Smoke Break
A collection of fiery, smoky encounters where passion burns as hot as the cigars and blunts exchanged between you and some of the world’s most dangerous daddies i mean men — every kiss laced with smoke, heat, and unspoken desire.
Benn beckman x reader x sanji x smoker x crocodile | ONE SHOT
Tags: fluff, flirty, smok!ng, w3ed mentions, blvnt smok!ng, cigarette smok!n, mouth-to-mouth sm0ke sharing, minor spit description, light nsfw tension
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🐋 ๋࣭ ࣪ ˖✩࿐࿔ 🌊
Is it hot in here or is it just me?
I'm so high in here, been smokin' on this weed
Only drug a bitch is on is the tree
But I lasted ten rounds like a freak
Like a G
Benn Beckman
The deck still stank of gunpowder and sea salt by the time you slumped onto the steps leading up to the helm, boots heavy with exhaustion. Your knuckles throbbed from the earlier brawl with some no-name pirate crew dumb enough to pick a fight with the Red Hair Pirates. You won, obviously—but victory didn’t erase the tight coil of stress still buzzing under your skin.
You dragged your hood up over your head, shielding your face from the low sun. Hands steady, you pulled out a battered little tin from your pocket, the familiar ritual already soothing your frayed nerves. You broke down the nug slowly, fingers working with careful, practiced motions. You barely even registered the distant sound of boots approaching.
Benn Beckman stopped a few feet away, cigarette halfway to his lips, brows lifting slightly at the sight of you hunched over the tray.
He leaned against the rail, arms crossed.
"Rough day?" he drawled.
You didn’t look up right away, just finished rolling your blunt with a lazy flick of your thumb. When you finally glanced his way, your gaze was cool, detached—like you were sizing him up and decided he wasn’t worth worrying about.
"Nothing a smoke can't fix," you muttered, voice low and even.
Benn whistled low under his breath, impressed.
"Didn't think you were the type to roll your own medicine."
You snorted, lighting the blunt with a snap of your lighter.
"Cigs are for rookies," you said, plucking the cigarette from his fingers without asking. You tucked the blunt between his lips instead, your touch casual, intimate.
Benn played along, inhaling deep. His eyes hooded slightly as the taste hit him—stronger, sweeter than he expected.
"Holy shit," he coughed out, laughing.
You took the blunt back from him with two fingers, tapping it lightly against the railing.
"Too much for you, old man?" you teased, the faintest smirk curling at the edges of your mouth.
He chuckled, a low, rich sound that vibrated in his chest.
"Old enough to know better. Dumb enough not to care."
You offered the blunt again—not by hand this time, but by leaning in, smoke trailing from your lips in a lazy, tantalizing swirl. Benn caught on quick, closing the small distance between you. His mouth brushed yours just enough to catch the exhale directly, smoke passing from your tongue to his.
The heat flared instantly.
Before you could pull back, he tilted his head slightly, deepening it into a kiss—slow, languid, tasting of smoke and adrenaline. His hand found your jaw, rough thumb grazing your cheekbone with a kind of reverence that didn’t match how fucking cocky he was about it.
When you finally parted, a thin, silver thread of spit clung stubbornly between your tongues until it snapped, leaving a hot smear of want in its wake.
You sat back, lazily dragging the blunt between your lips again. Your expression barely shifted—still that same unreadable cool—but your hooded eyes glittered with something dangerous, something alive.
Benn wiped the back of his hand across his mouth, grinning like he just won the biggest prize in the world.
"You always this generous after a fight?" he asked, voice low and rough.
You exhaled slow, letting the smoke roll between you both like a secret.
"Depends who's asking."
Benn’s grin widened, cigarette long forgotten at his side.
"Good," he said, leaning in close enough that you could smell the faint whiskey on his breath.
"'Cause I’m not planning on being just a one-time habit."
Sanji
The galley was quiet at night, all the chaos of the day gone still. It was your favorite time—when the ship seemed to breathe slow and easy, and nobody was around to bother you.
You sat perched on the counter, blunt half-rolled between your fingers, working fast but precise. You glanced around — no way in hell you could borrow a lighter from anyone without exposing your little habit.
Of course you didn’t bring yours. Of course.
You sighed through your nose and hopped down from the counter, moving toward the stovetop. You twisted the burner’s dial, letting a tall flame lick up from the gas, the soft click click whoosh breaking the silence.
You leaned into the flame, lighting the tip of your blunt directly against it, shielding it with one hand like an old habit.
That’s when you heard a low whistle behind you.
"You know," Sanji’s voice drawled from the doorway, lazy and amused, "most people come to the kitchen for food. Not... that."
You turned slightly, the blunt between your lips, glowing softly as you took your first pull. You held his gaze through the smoke, your expression unreadable, unbothered.
"Guess I’m not most people," you said coolly, exhaling a slow, thick ribbon of smoke into the low light.
Sanji didn’t flinch. Didn't fawn.
Instead, he grinned, a slow, dangerous curve of his mouth as he stepped into the kitchen, cigarette tucked behind his ear, hands sliding easily into his pockets.
"You could've just asked for a light," he teased, voice like silk and heat. "I would've given it to you. Anything you want."
You shrugged one shoulder, casual.
"Not exactly advertising my hobbies."
Sanji stopped a few feet away, head tilting just slightly, studying you. You could feel the weight of his gaze — not heavy, not invasive — just... there, like a hand trailing just over your skin without touching.
"You're full of surprises," he murmured, voice dipping lower.
You took another hit, slow and deliberate, letting the thick taste settle on your tongue. As you exhaled, Sanji moved closer, crossing into your space so naturally it felt like gravity.
"Mind if I...?" he asked, eyes dropping to the blunt between your fingers.
You raised an eyebrow but didn’t answer with words. Instead, you leaned forward slightly, parting your lips just enough to offer the smoke right to him.
Sanji caught the game instantly.
He plucked the cigarette from behind his ear and set it on the counter. Then he leaned in, mouth brushing dangerously close to yours—not kissing, not yet—and drew the smoke straight from your mouth with a slow, deep inhale.
His hand came up to cradle the back of your neck, thumb brushing the warm skin behind your ear.
When he exhaled, it was right against your lips, warm and intoxicating.
The space between you crackled.
You barely had time to process before he closed the gap completely, his mouth pressing to yours in a kiss that was all slow burn, all slow claiming. His grip tightened just a little, guiding you against the counter behind you without force—just the kind of confident pressure that made your stomach flip.
You kissed him back, matching his heat with your own, the taste of smoke and fire mixing between your tongues. When you finally parted, a thin, sticky thread of spit clung between you, snapping when you tilted your head back, breathless but still wearing that same cool smirk.
Sanji stayed close, his forehead brushing against yours, his fingers still tangled loosely in your hair.
"You," he said, voice low and warm, "are way too dangerous to be left alone in my kitchen."
You chuckled, flicking ash into the sink.
"Then don’t leave," you said, voice lazy, teasing.
Sanji smiled against your cheek, teeth just grazing your skin as he whispered,
"Wasn't planning to."
And from the way his hand slid down to your hip, you knew he meant it.
Smoker
The port was busy, noisy, and reeking of salt and sweat.
Perfect place to disappear for a while.
You slipped between two battered brick buildings, finding a patch of shade away from the main street. No patrols, no Marines. Just the low hum of the sea and the sharp scratch of your lighter as you tried, once, twice — and cursed under your breath.
Dead. Perfect.
You rolled the unlit blunt between your fingers, considering your options. Borrowing a lighter wasn’t on the table — too many judging eyes. Especially for someone like you, already treading too close to the Navy's leash.
"Problem?"
The deep, rough voice made you freeze. A shadow stretched into the alley. You didn’t even have to look up to know who it was.
Vice-Admiral Smoker stepped into view, coat draped over his broad shoulders, two cigars clamped between his teeth, smoke curling around his head like a storm cloud.
You gave him a flat look, the blunt dangling lazily from your lips.
"No lighter," you said simply.
Smoker snorted, amused in that dry, almost imperceptible way of his. He pulled one cigar free and tucked it into his coat, flicking his silver lighter open with a smooth motion.
He lit his remaining cigar, took a deep drag — and then, without saying a word, held the lighter out to you.
You raised an eyebrow but leaned forward, cupping a hand around the flame as you lit the blunt, your face close enough to his chest that you could smell the faint scent of smoke, leather, and something warmer underneath.
You inhaled slow, savoring the first pull, then leaned back against the rough brick wall with a sigh.
"Didn't peg you for the sharing type," you said, smoke curling from your mouth.
Smoker grunted, replacing the cigar between his lips.
"Don't make me regret it," he said, but there was no real bite in his voice.
For a moment, you just stood there, passing slow, lazy pulls between you. The world outside the alley blurred into meaningless noise.
Then, bold from the buzz creeping in your veins, you leaned forward again—holding the blunt between your fingers—and offered the smoke directly to him, a silent challenge.
Smoker’s gaze sharpened slightly, amused. He plucked the cigar from his mouth and stepped into your space, his broad chest almost brushing yours.
Without hesitation, he caught the smoke straight from your lips, leaning in so close you could feel the heat of him — and then, instead of pulling back, he kissed you.
It was rough at first, full of the same heat and tension that always seemed to spark between you. His hand came up to cradle your jaw, fingers pressing firmly as he tilted your head back just slightly.
You opened for him without thinking, the kiss deepening into something slower, hotter — tongues brushing, breath hitching between you. His mouth tasted of smoke and salt and something that was just him.
The world outside the alley dissolved entirely.
When he finally pulled back, it wasn’t messy — just breathless, lingering. His forehead rested against yours, both of you catching your breath in the haze of smoke curling between you.
"You," he muttered, voice low and thick, "are nothing but bad news."
You smirked against his lips, your hands still fisted loosely in the fabric of his coat.
"Good thing you’re terrible at saying no," you murmured.
Smoker let out a rough, half-laugh, half-growl, and kissed you again—deeper, slower, like he had no plans to stop this time.
And honestly, neither did you.
You barely had time to settle into the heat of Smoker’s mouth again, the slow grind of his body pressing yours back against the brick wall, when—
"S-smoker-san?!"
The sharp voice cracked through the alley like a gunshot.
Both of you froze.
Smoker broke the kiss with a low, almost feral growl under his breath, his hand still curled possessively around your waist.
You cracked one eye open lazily, barely lifting your head from Smoker’s shoulder to glance toward the entrance of the alley.
Tashigi stood there, sword awkwardly bumping against her hip, her entire face rapidly turning the color of a boiled lobster.
"I— I— I was looking for you to discuss patrol routes— but I can—! I can come back later!" she sputtered, already halfway turning on her heel, practically tripping over herself to get away.
Smoker let out a long, slow exhale through his nose, the kind of breath that usually meant someone was about to get absolutely wrecked—but he didn’t move away from you. His hand stayed right where it was, fingers still flexing slightly against your hip.
"You’d better," he said, loud enough for Tashigi to hear as she fled back into the chaos of the port.
You couldn't help it—you laughed. A low, smoky sound that vibrated against his chest.
"Think we traumatized her," you said, voice rough with amusement.
Smoker shot you a sideways glare, but there was no real fire behind it. If anything, he looked... pleased. Dangerous. Like a man who didn’t give a damn who saw what he wanted.
"Serves her right for barging in without knocking," he muttered, gruff.
You arched a brow, grinning lazily up at him.
"Maybe you should install a door in your alleys."
Smoker huffed a laugh — a real one, low and brief — and bent to kiss you again, less careful this time. Hotter, a little messier. His free hand finally dropped the half-burned cigar, grinding it under his boot as he pressed you back into the wall, fully claiming your mouth again like he had all the time in the world.
And honestly, for once, you hoped he did.
Crocodile
The lounge was dim, soaked in the kind of golden light that made everything seem a little more expensive than it probably was.
Low jazz music played from hidden speakers, and the soft clink of chips and whiskey glasses filled the background.
You slouched lazily in a velvet armchair near the back, rolling the blunt between your fingers, cool and unbothered. No one really noticed you here — not with the heavyweights and high-rollers stealing the spotlight.
But, of course, he noticed.
You felt it before you saw him — a shift in the room’s atmosphere, a change in the way conversations dropped to murmurs.
Crocodile’s presence was like a thundercloud creeping over sunny skies.
You kept your expression blank, indifferent, even as you realized your lighter was nowhere to be found.
Perfect.
Exactly what you needed.
You sighed, the blunt sitting unlit between your lips, considering your next move.
A shadow fell across your table. You didn’t bother looking up.
"Need something?" Crocodile’s voice rumbled, amused.
You tilted your head slightly, fixing him with a bored stare, the blunt still balanced at the corner of your mouth.
"Seems I’m short a flame," you said, voice dry.
Crocodile’s lips curled around his cigar, eyes gleaming with something sharp and entertained.
He didn’t say a word.
Instead, he bent slightly at the waist — slow, deliberate — bringing the burning tip of his cigar close to the end of your blunt.
Too close.
He stopped just shy, forcing you to lean in to meet him.
You exhaled through your nose, slow and steady, and leaned forward, lips brushing barely near his cigar, lighting your own off the glowing ember. The flame caught with a faint crackle, a tiny hiss.
The whole time, Crocodile didn’t move an inch.
The smell of smoke, expensive leather, and something faintly spiced wrapped around you like a second skin.
You leaned back into your chair, taking a long, slow pull from the newly lit blunt. The first hit bloomed warm in your lungs. You exhaled lazily toward the ceiling, your eyes half-lidded.
"You're welcome," Crocodile said, voice dripping with dry amusement, straightening to his full height.
You tapped ash into a crystal ashtray nearby without even glancing at him.
"Didn’t say thank you," you replied coolly.
He chuckled — a low, dangerous sound that vibrated in the base of his chest.
"Didn't expect you to."
For a moment, neither of you said anything. The tension crackled softly between you, thick and slow, like molasses dripping from a knife.
Crocodile shifted, the gold of his rings catching the low light as he pulled a chair up to yours — close enough that his knee brushed yours under the table.
Deliberate.
Territorial.
"You planning to cause trouble tonight?" he asked, cigar smoke curling lazily around his words.
You blew out another cloud of smoke, just as lazy, just as unbothered.
"Depends," you murmured, voice low. "You planning to stop me?"
Crocodile smirked around his cigar, eyes gleaming with something dark and hungry.
"Not tonight."
He sat back, perfectly relaxed, the image of a king amused by the antics of his favorite piece.
You could feel his eyes on you as you smoked, weighing every slow drag, every lazy exhale.
Watching.
Waiting.
The house always won in places like this.
And tonight, it was clear you weren’t going anywhere.
The minutes slipped by in a slow, heavy haze.
The blunt burned low between your fingers, each drag slower than the last. Across the small table, Crocodile watched you like a predator sizing up easy prey — not rushing, not moving, just waiting for the exact right moment.
You met his gaze through the rising smoke, your face blank, but your heart starting to thrum a little harder behind your ribs.
He shifted finally, leaning forward slightly, elbows braced on his knees. The gold of his rings caught the light again, flashing like a warning.
"Come here," he said lowly, almost conversational, like you were a thing he fully expected to obey.
You didn't move immediately. You took another lazy pull from your blunt instead, blowing the smoke off to the side with a small smirk. Testing him. Pushing.
Crocodile huffed a small laugh under his breath, all amusement gone razor sharp.
Without warning, he reached across the table, hand catching you by the wrist — not rough, but firm, dragging you forward until you were pulled out of your chair and into his space.
The blunt dangled forgotten from your fingers as he leaned in — close enough that you could see the faint scar cutting across his face, the glint of amusement and warning in his heavy-lidded eyes.
He reached up with two fingers, plucking the blunt casually from your grip and setting it in the ashtray with a careless flick.
"You’re slow," he murmured, voice like warm gravel. "Let me show you how it's done."
You barely had time to process it before Crocodile’s lips crashed into yours.
It was rough — like he was making a point. His mouth devoured yours with an intensity that was unexpected, yet exactly what you needed. His cigar still burned between his fingers, and before you even had the chance to think about it, he tilted the cigar toward your lips, offering the smoke as you kissed.
The warm, glowing tip of the cigar hovered near your mouth, and you instinctively opened up, taking in the deep, spicy taste as you inhaled. The heat of it filled your lungs, mixing with the taste of Crocodile’s kiss — rich, dangerous, intoxicating.
You pulled back just a bit, lips brushing against his, then exhaled slowly, the smoke curling out from your mouth and into his.
Without breaking eye contact, Crocodile inhaled the smoke you gave him, his gaze darkening as he held it in for a beat, then exhaled it slowly, sending it back toward you.
The air was thick now, saturated with smoke and the lingering taste of him. Every breath felt like it stretched the moment, making it last forever, and yet, you knew it was only a brief exchange.
When he pulled away, his lips were curved into that same smug, dangerous smirk.
"Better," he muttered, voice rough with satisfaction. "Now you’re getting it."
You smirked back, though your chest felt a little tighter than it had before.
"You’re insufferable," you said, the words coming out softer than you intended, but your heart was still racing in your chest.
Crocodile chuckled low, the sound like a dangerous promise.
"Only when it suits me," he said, leaning back in his chair and taking another slow drag from his cigar. He didn’t look at you directly but you could feel the weight of his gaze on your lips. "You’ll learn, eventually. That’s how the game is played."
You stayed there, breathless and still, as the tension simmered between you.
The house always won.
And tonight, you were playing Crocodile's game
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.”
Please do a part two of Queen Of Chaos!! 😭😭 Like with a plot twist of the reader having a secret relationship with a lazy laid back man (Kuzan) 😉 and they're all shock!! Please 🙏🏻🥺
hii! its a good idea but unfortunately, queen of chaos is one shot only >< hope u understand!!