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Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Okay, so, ironically enough, I was watching and reblogging all of ya'll post your amazing ideas for this challenge whilst struggling the whole day to think of something XD
Needless to say, I decided to rewrite a short that I had posted four years ago because surely none of you remember it. Reduce, reuse, recycle!
And, yes, it has been a long time since I've written a SHORT story, why do you ask?
_________
âAbsolutely not.â
Ox had been bracing for rejection, but not so soon. And not certainly from Moxy. Or any of the others. âLook, I ainât sayinâ we get him back into traininâ or anything,â he held both hands up to placate the group around him. All seated at the diner he had intentionally invited them to because A) Wage was working today and B) food was usually the best way to introduce a controversial topic.
Like the fact that less dolls were returning from the Big World and they had, up until that point, been twiddling their thumbs for the last few months trying to pretend like nothing was happening. Because not all dolls came back. Whether they chose to stay with their kid instead of returning to ImperfectionâŚor something bad had happened. The former reason obviously was no problem.
But they werenât dealing with the former reason.Â
âBut we canât keep ignorinâ the fact that weâre startinâ to lose more dolls than what the factory is makinâ,â Ox finished. He had more to say, of course, but putting everything out on the table right at the beginning wouldnât be wise. Especially now that he knew his friends were against the idea.
âWell maybe they just like being in the Big World more!â Moxy reasoned, desperate for anything now. Anything other than going to Lou for help. Anything but that. Even it meant kind of implying that Imperfection wasnât on par with the Big World when it came to what dolls preferred.Â
Literally anything would be better than going to Lou. Why would Ox even suggest that?
ââPlus,â Mandy spoke up this time, keeping her voice at an actually reasonable level for a diner, âdolls just donât come back sometimes. Stuff happens. Dogs. Babies. Kids play too rough. ItâsâŚhurts to think about, but thatâs just part of being a doll.â
âYeah, you know all that you just listed?â Ox waggled a finger in her direction. âSounds familiar, donât it?âÂ
Mandy gave him a flat look. âWeâre not fishing the Gauntlet out of the ocean. Lefty already destroyed half of it and the other half has, like, eight layers of paint on it.â
âWe wouldnât need the Gauntlet if we just ask Lou,â Ox pointed out.Â
Wage spoke up this time, finally, which was a shock because Ox had thought, out of all of them, that she would have been the one to protest first. âWerenât you the one that said no one needed Lou or his training, though?â
Ox opened his mouth. Closed it. Faltered. Spluttered faintly. âThatâ IâŚ,â he shook his head roughly, pushing his plate away as well. âThat was somethinâ just heat of the moment, alright? There was a lot goinâ on and I was kinda busy makinâ sure thatââ He stopped, then shook his head again. He didnât have to explain himself for something he had forgotten the reason for. âPoint isâŚ,â he took a breath, âLou actually knew what he was talkinâ about when it came toâŚsurvivinâ in the Big World. Dodginâ dogs and hidinâ from babies. All of it.âÂ
âAll of it?â UglyDog questioned. Because of course he would choose to nitpick that one part, out of everything else Ox had just said.Â
âYou know what I meant, stop pickinâ holes.â
Moxy opened her mouth to object. Anything. Literally anything would be betterâ
âI think we should.â
Ox tried not to choke on his own spit when Wage spoke up to say that. He wasnât complaining, obviously, that someone was agreeing with him, but his arguments and points hadnât been directed toward her, really. He had assumed she wouldnât want anything to do with Lou, save for knocking him upside the head.Â
Instead of voicing his surprise, though, he went with it. âUhâ Yeah, see? Someone agrees with me.â
âYou canât be serious,â Moxy gaped at the orange doll sitting beside her.Â
Wage merely shrugged, looking more interested in her food than the actual conversation, which was probably the only normal thing about the actual situation so far. âI wanna see the look on his face when someone throws the first tomato at him halfway into a lesson.â
Ox deadpanned, ears lowering to either side. Of course, yes, there wasnât a genuine interest in this being beneficial. It was for entertainment.
Which was part of the problem! They were used to just having fun and being happy that rules were never needed for the sake of survival. The only rule back in Uglyville had been to stay away from the flower. And, even then, that rule had really only applied to Moxy.
And she had literally broken the one rule he had enforced.Â
Rules werenât their thing.Â
But againâŚbeggars couldnât be choosers. He supposed if he had support, it didnât exactly matter what the intentions were behind it.Â
Forcing on a smile, Ox rested his elbow on the table. âYou know what? Yeah. Imagine itâ We give Lou this opportunity to teach and do his thing, only for the dolls to throw it right back in his face. Literally. Maybe the dolls could use somethinâ to come back to.â
That caught attention. Moxy pursed her lips. Would more dolls come back from the Big World if they had something entertaining to do that didnât involve random nonsense? After all, the most united she had ever felt with the Uglies and Pretties alike had been when they all banded together against Lou.Â
Mandy, however, suddenly wanted to backtrack. How odd. Ox tried not to grin. âWoah, hey, I donât like the guy, but making him out like a martyr seems a little much, donât you think?â
âIt does sound kinda bad, huh?â Ox hummed, pretending to suddenly think about it.
âOh, come on,â Wage rolled her eyes, forgetting about the original reason Ox had brought this whole thing up and looking over at Mandy now. âAfter all he did to you and Moxy? I think he deserved more than that washer. Public humiliation isnât that bad, anyway.â
âI guess not,â Mandy hesitated, âbut do we really need to trick him into being humiliated?â
âHe tricked us,â Moxy pointed out under her breath.
âHe did do that,â Ox agreed, nodding in Moxyâs direction.
âSo weâre gonna stoop to his level?â Mandy countered. Ox made a hum of agreement for her point as well.Â
âItâs not stooping if he deserves it.â
âThatâŚkind of sounds petty,â Lucky added quietly.Â
âOkay, then what do you suggest?â Moxy looked over at the bat.Â
Lucky looked genuinely confused, because he hadnât realized the discussion had transitioned from âletâs ask Lou for helpâ to âhow should we deal with Lou in general.â Hadnât they already assigned him janitor duty? If they werenât asking him for help on the matter of training then the conversation should have ended already, not completely targeted a problem that didnât even exist.
He opened his mouthâ
âYou know what, new idea!â Moxy brightened, apparently abandoning the fact she had asked Lucky for a suggestion in the first place. âWe let Lou go back to teaching. I bet thatâll be more embarrassing for him. Especially since he canât go to the Big World and we know it.â
Mandy groaned, putting her face into her hands, but Ox smiled brightly and gestured with both hands like Moxy had suggested the best idea he had totally never heard before. âThat is a great idea, Mox! I knew I could count on ya to come up with somethinâ!â
Lucky looked between Ox and everyone else like he had missed something important in the conversation, but the bunny simply sat back and gave the bat a wink.Â
Lou was a great teacher, actually, especially when it came to teaching how to manipulate people into thinking your idea was theirs all along.Â
â
âAbsolutely not.â
There it was! The denial, but now from Lou, which Ox had totally planned for ahead of time, so he smiled through the rejection. âNow, hold your horses. Just think about it, alright? Ya wanna get back into teachinâ, donât ya?â
âFirst off, I taught because I had to,â Lou started, completely deadpan. He was already in a bad mood from, well, everything. His hair was a mess. Clothes shrunken and he had forsaken the blazer back at the shed because it genuinely didnât fit anymore and he looked ridiculous with it on. âSecond off, no, I donât want to teach the same dolls that want nothing to do with me. Why on earth would I help someone like you?â
âNot entirely true,â Ox kept up his smile, tone almost casual. âThey actually want you to teach.â
Lou squinted down at the bunny, skeptical. âWho is âtheyâ, exactly?â
Ox had deliberately told the others he would be the messenger for âMoxyâsâ idea since he and Lou had a history. A noble sacrifice, really, on his part. One could almost call him a saint. âThe dolls.â
âI said âexactlyâ, bunny, not the vaguest answer in the world.â
âMoxy, Lucky, me, Wage, Mandy, Baboââ
âMandy wants me to teach?â Louâs expression changed slightly at that, eyes genuinely widening a bit. And, if Ox didnât know any better, he would have thought the tone of the question had sounded a touch softer. Sincerely shocked.Â
Perfect.
âUh huh!â Ox nodded. His expression sobered a bit, ears lowering. âBut, yeah, I guess I canât blame ya for not wantinâ to teach or anything like that again. So I wonât bother ya about itââ He pivoted on a foot to turn and leaveâ
Lou opened his mouth, then glared. Oh, wait a second. He knew exactly what this bunny was doing and he wasnât falling for it. Lou knew emotional manipulation when he heard it. He had practically invented it!Â
Also, how dare Ox use Mandy to try and trick him. That was low.Â
Two could play at that game.
âWell, hold on,â Lou spoke slowly, watching as Ox stopped like he had been prepared to do so anyhow. Yeah, that rabbit thought he was slick, huh. Lou, in turn, sighed and looked away like he was genuinely conflicted. âIfâŚyou guys really need meââ
âWant you,â Ox clarified, like somehow needing someone took more pride-swallowing than wanting someone.Â
âThen I guess I could,â Lou continued without acknowledging the correction. âBut youâd have to monitor the sessions, obviously,â Lou let out a lengthy sigh, as if just thinking aloud.
Ox blinked, smile tightening. âPardon?â
âWell, you know the dolls wonât listen if itâs just me,â Lou put a hand to his chest, frowning as if any of this actually mattered to him. âAnd I would hate for this idea of yours to go to waste because they didnât take it seriously. Having you there would make it mean something.â
Make it mean something.Â
Lou could have phrased that a million different ways. Ox knew that he could have, because the blond could rephrase one statement over and over and the meaning would somehow change each time. Which meant that Lou phrased everything with intention.
In this case, emotional manipulation.Â
âYouâŚwant meââ
âNeed you,â Lou clarified, tone slightly firmer because wanting someone, to him, was definitely more humiliating than needing someone.Â
Ox hesitated, staring at the blond for a long moment before his expression softened slightly. Still confused, but he didnât have a good reason not to monitor the teaching sessions. âWellâ I mean, I guess I could. If ya really need me to. It would help them pay attention, wouldnât it?â He asked, more to himself than to Lou specifically.
Louâs expression brightened. âYouâre right, it would. I didnât even think of that,â he rolled his eyes, smiling, as if he hadnât been the first to give that reasoning. âSee? This is why Iâd need you there. You can catch onto things that I might not notice. Make sure they pay attention whilst Iâm doing the teaching part.â
That was definitely supposed to be a brush to his ego. Ox could sense it. He could tell this conversation (deal?) had gone from him trying to convince Lou to teach to Lou convincing him to monitor like it had been Oxâs idea all along.Â
Unfortunately for the others, that would mean no tomatoes. Because the dolls, as Lou said, would actually take the teaching a bit more seriously if their mayor was the one enforcing it and watching over the sessions.
Ox had a feeling Lou had known what their intentions had been right from the beginning.Â
He stuttered. âI guess I couldââ
âGreat!â Lou smiled wide, already walking past Ox and turning on his heel to shoot finger guns at the bunny. âI knew I could count on you, buddy!â And then he turned back around, heading for the shed.
Oxâs eye twitched, lips pursing, because those last words were like getting something thrown back in his face.Â
It didnât make it any better that Lou had merely winked and walked on like he had won something.
Under the Microscope (Yandere Sabo x Reader) Part 8
on Ao3 18+ MDNI
All the other chapters
This particular chapter is fluffy. I promise Sabo's coming back to the island soon. And that he's just as focused as he was before :)
Remember I donât know anything about science! If you do, just pretend you donât either!
Your POV
âMake a Logia fruit? Um, thatâs kind of the opposite of what Iâve been working on,â you explained, wiggling your toes in your wet socks. Your butt, feet, and sleeves were wet from the sea water lapping gently at you as you sat on the beach. The temperature was dropping steadily and you felt the chill of the night starting to bother you as you splashed. âIâve been trying to reverse engineer the fruits and find a way to nullify their powers. I was thinking that maybe, um, SaboâŚor someone..could um..Iâm not sure really. But I canât - those fruits shouldnât exist and itâs all my - all my f-faultâŚS-Sabo tried to tell um tell me -â Your heart started racing again, beating faster and faster as your thoughts returned to the collateral damage youâd caused.
You felt Aceâs hand on the back of your neck. He was probably trying to bring you comfort but right now it felt more like the weight of a guillotine. You shook him off, wanting to wallow in the feelings you deserved in spades. You hugged your knees and rested your head on top as you ran your hands along the parts of your pant legs that were still dry. You realized your hands were stinging from salt water that had entered the open wounds left from biting your fingers.
âI caused a lot of pain and suffering, too. I get it,â Ace said, stretching out his legs. You hummed, you couldnât imagine any one person had unintentionally brought so much devastation to the world as you had.
âDid you watch Marineford? The Paramount Wars?â Ace asked while observing the sunset.Â
You took a deep breath, held it in for a moment, then exhaled. âUm, no, Sabo already asked. I was supposed to watch it live but I was too busy and then I never got caught up. I had just started getting assignments from the higher ups at that time and -â
âThat was me. I caused all those Marines to die, my friends to die. Brought my brother into my mess, almost killed him too. Even killed my own father.â Ace said with no emotion in his voice.
âYou - you didnât kill your father. Are you playing with me? Iâm sorry, itâs hard for me to tell sometimes,â you said, wiping your running nose on your sleeve. You hoped he was joking but the stiffness of his shoulders belied his calm tone.
âNo. Iâm Portgas D. Ace, Gol D. Rogerâs son. I was sentenced to execution but Luffy came to save me. Whitebeard and the crew too.â You tried to take in all the information Ace was telling you but it had your head swimming.Â
âIs Luffy your other brother? The one in the picture with you and Sabo?â you asked an obvious question to avoid the awkwardness of his statement. Helping others with their emotions was never your strong suit.
âYeah. Strawhat Luffy. Me nâ him nâ Sabo arenât related by blood. Roger was my biological father but Whitebeard was my dad. Died trying to save me. Buncha my crew siblings died too. Good men.â
âOh.â You wanted to support him like heâd supported you but you were afraid to say the wrong thing in case he started crying or got angry. âThat explains a lot of your lineage factors,â you added quietly. âIf your dad was Gol D. Roger, it makes sense youâd have Conquerorâs Haki.â
âDidnât help me much,â Ace lamented. âLuffy even got me free and all I did was waste the opportunity by taking bait from Akainu. Fucker tried to kill Luffy and punched me through the chest. The only reason I was revived is Law brought me to his sub.â
You blinked rapidly. âLaw? Trafalgar Law? Dr. Trafalgar D. Water Law?â Ace grunted.
âYeah, Trafalgar Law. How come you know him but not meâr Luffy? Iâm more famous than him,â Ace said in a half hearted joke.Â
âOh, Iâm familiar with Dr. Trafalgar from his articles, not his piracy. Heâs brilliant, his articles are always so intriguing. I pay for a subscription out of my own pocket to the journals that publish him, actually. His last article was about heart replacement complications, I wonder if that was from you,â you mused. You cringed as you realized that was not an appropriate statement to make, considering it was likely Aceâs heart he detailed in the article. Â
âProbably. He said it was difficult, but I didnât ask about the details,â Ace said unbothered.
âHow did he save your life?â You were curious about the intricacies of Dr. Trafalgarâs devil fruit power and how he used it in conjunction with his medical knowledge and skills. Youâd hoped to be invited to a Warlord meeting and catch a glimpse of him but it had never happened.
âI dunno, I was dead for that part,â Ace stated, flicking his long hair over his shoulder.
âRight,â you said, wishing you could bury your head in the sand much like your toes were. If Sabo were here heâd know what to say, you thought. Unlike your own awkward nature, Sabo was suave and charming and would know how to soothe his brother.Â
âAre you still healing? Is that why you still have all those bandages?â you asked. Ace raised his eyebrows and looked down at his own chest.
âOh, no. Iâm healed, thereâs just a huge scar I donât like seeing and the yukata doesnât cover it.â he explained.
âWhy donât you wear a shirt then?â Ace frowned like youâd asked him to eat sand off the beach.
âNah, not my style. Besides, all the shirts here are Saboâs and uhâŚtheyâre a little too frilly for me,â Ace said. Shirts werenât his style? What on earth did that even mean? And why didnât Sabo bring him any? Maybe Sabo was keeping Ace on the island too, not letting him leave. You decided to gently press for information while Ace was in a sharing mood.
âSo how long has Sabo kept you on the island?â you asked, hoping Ace would reveal some negative feelings towards Sabo. If Ace wanted off the island, maybe the two of you could work together and figure something out.
âHm? He doesnât keep me here. Actually, heâs been trying to get me to leave for a while. Wants me to âreintegrate back into society.â Ace said, using air quotes and mimicking Saboâs voice, your hopes of escaping dashed. Still, you stifled a laugh at Aceâs impression, trying to keep your composure for the serious conversation. Ace gave you a small smile. âItâs OK, you canât say anything to me I havenât said to myself already.â The sun had set, leaving the two of you in the chill of the dusk. âCâmon, itâs cold and Iâm sure the waterâs making you feel shitty. Letâs go back to the house, get changed. If you get sick, Saboâs gonna yell at me even more than heâs already gonna.âÂ
Ace stood up and offered you a hand, pulling you to your feet as well. The two of you walked in companionable silence for a minute before he spoke again.
âBut just hypothetically speaking, could you make a Logia fruit? From a scientific standpoint?â Ace asked curiously.
Aceâs POV
Ace knew you fell for his bait when you slowed your stroll and began chewing your lip. He could practically see the cogs turning in your head as you thought through the possibilities, your wet socks squelching on the path to the house.
âWellâŚ.the other fruits were made in advanced scientific labs. I donât have the equipment needed to engineer something like thatâŚâ you trailed off.
âNo, no. Not to actually make it here. But could you make an artificial Logia fruit?âÂ
âI could use the- well, it depends which one,â you said, starting to gesticulate. âThe fruit Iâd have the most success in creating would be the Mera Mera that you and Sabo ate. You still have the lineage factor which provides a large part of the genetic material needed to make an artificial fruit. Oh, and a strand or two of Saboâs hair, thatâs definitely here. Oh, and maybe part of my own lineage factor? Even though mine is paramecia it might help with some of the active components⌠And I could probably use any fruit, but for a Logia I would probably want something with a similar quality, maybe some kind of spicy - no that wouldnât really make a difference, I think Vegapunk used apples? But there arenât any here so maybe from a common fr- no, noâŚâ you were off in thought, talking to yourself about how the fruit could be made. Reaching the deck of the house, you stopped before you went up the stairs. You stared off in the distance in silence, giving Ace pause.
âHey, are you alright in there? Didnât mean to start anything, I was -â
âThe flame flower,â you stated.Â
âRight.â Ace nodded knowingly, but had no idea what you were referring to.
âI could use the flame flower as the base and the genetic material provided by your and Saboâs lineage factor. Thatâs how I could make it work,â you said, nodding slowly. Aceâs mouth dropped open as he watched you staring off into the darkness, Sabo hadnât exaggerated. Your genius was on par with Vegapunk and other top scientists of the world. You looked at Ace and tilted your head. âBut again, I canât actually do anything without a lab. And a lot of money. So, hypothetically probably. In reality, no.â You nodded to yourself and entered the house, going up the stairs to change your clothes. Ace trailed behind you, pulling on your sleeve to get your attention.
âBut canât you likeâŚ.â Ace trailed off, using his fingers to pantomime pulling marionette strings.
âWhat? I donât follow,â you replied, looking worn out. He should really leave you alone and let you sleep but Ace couldnât drop the idea, not after you said it was possible.
âIâm not - I don't know how to say it, but like, canât you like change stuff? Like move the molecules around or cells or whatever?â You blinked rapidly while frowning.Â
âSay more,â you commanded, your brow furrowed. You looked like how heâd found you in Saboâs office, completely focused on one thought. The intensity of your stare almost rivaled Luffyâs when he was serious.Â
âLike, um, yâknow, like change stuff when you magnify it. Like move the stuff around to make other things? Arenât molecules the building blocks of life? So move the blocks around?â Ace finished with something Sabo had taught him, trying to get his idea across to you. He wasnât a scientist but he knew devil fruits could be awakened, heâd tried to do it on his own but ran out of time before his death. Maybe this could be the key to your own fruit awakening and to him getting his powers back.
You stopped walking and stared past him, blinking rapidly. Ace waved his hand in front of your face after a moment. You were on the stairs, he didnât want you to fall and get hurt when you finally surfaced again. You moved your head away from his hand but didnât resume walking. Sighing, Ace picked you up, disrupting your thought process.
âH-hey! Put me down! Iâm not a child,â you protested while making no movement to get out of his arms.Â
âGo do your big thinking after you change your clothes. Like you said, none of this is possible here and if you get hypothermia Saboâs gonna kill me for real this time,â Ace joked. Depositing you in Saboâs room, you smiled at Ace.
âThanks Ace. Good night,â you said, holding the door to shut it.
âGood night, kid,â Ace replied, smiling. He turned and walked away to his own room, getting inside before he heard you yell.Â
âIâm not a kid! I think Iâm older than you!â Ace chuckled lightly, reaching to unwind his bandages.Â
Your POV
You were exhausted from the panic attack and the subsequent heart to heart with Ace. But you couldnât stop thinking about what heâd said to you. You were turning the thoughts over and over in your mind, thinking about artificial devil fruits and the implications of changing the molecular structure during magnification. Like youâd told Sabo, you could get to the sub-atomic level but it took a lot of concentration and effort. You closed your eyes to rest but you were fixated on Aceâs idea. You tossed and turned for what felt like hours until your stomach rumbled. Oh yeah, you remembered, you hadnât eaten since earlier that day. It was going to be a long night for you anyway so you might as well eat some food while you thought through the creation of artificial Logia devil fruits.
Heading down to the darkened kitchen, you took out a bowl and some rice. Youâd made jambalaya a few days prior so now youâd give your stir-fried rice a shot. There still wasnât any fish in the house but it would taste ok without it. You were able to make the dish on autopilot, washing the rice and vegetables while thinking about molecular changes. As you thought, you noticed the droplets of water that had landed near the colander.Â
You could probablyâŚÂ try what Ace suggested. Changing h2o to h2o2 wouldnât cause a huge reaction or anything, it would just be hydrogen peroxide. And only one molecule⌠If you changed the wrong elements or made too many molecules unstable, you could cause a huge chain reaction but that would take so many molecules and this was just oneâŚthis was just waterâŚAfter starting the rice and starting the vegetables sauteing, you magnified a water droplet on the table. Getting down to the molecular level took a few moments but shortly there were two h2o molecules in front of your eyes. Careful not to erase the image, you used your thumb and forefinger to try and pluck one of the oxygens from a molecule and put it into the other. Picking it up felt like static electricity and your heart was racing as you tried to move the oxygen from its current molecule. It almost felt sticky, like it didnât want to move, but it didnât take much effort to disrupt its bonds.
You held your breath as you placed it within the bonds of the other molecule. If it didnât work, at least you tried. You let go.
It worked.Â
You were now looking at a molecule of hydrogen peroxide and an hydroperoxyl radical left over. âHoly fuck,â you said softly, looking at the newly formed molecule. You rotated it under your magnification and it looked identical to every other hydrogen peroxide molecule youâd ever seen. The implications wereâŚ.
âBoo,â a voice said from behind you.
You shrieked like a banshee, jumping in fright. Ace laughed loudly and you swatted him with the spatula you were holding while cursing at him.
âAce!! What the fuck?! What the fuck is wrong with you?! Why would you do that?!â
âHey! Ow. Stop hitting me! Ow, that hurts! It was just a joke!â You huffed but you werenât really mad as Ace dodged your well aimed spatula strikes.
âWhy are you awake?â you asked, looking at the clock. It was the middle of the night, surely he had been sleeping like you should have been.
âSmelled good food cooking and Iâm hungry,â he shrugged. You noticed he was wearing his yukata but no bandages underneath. The scarred skin on his chest was a deep red and in a circular pattern, blazing out from where his heart was. It was large and raised and had likely taken months to heal. You knew you were staring but the scar was so large and harrowing, you couldnât stop looking at it.
âStop undressing me with your eyes. Youâre not my type,â Ace teased, sitting at the bar to wait for the food to be done.Â
âOh? And who is?â you asked, genuinely curious. You werenât offended. Besides Sabo, youâd never been anyoneâs type. And even Sabo was just pretending.
âMen,â Ace said offhandedly. Ah. Well, that made things between you a little easier since you didnât have to worry about any sexual tension between the two of you.Â
âNice,â you replied, stirring the dish on the stove.
âWhatcha cookinâ?â Ace asked, standing on the rungs of the bar stool to look over the counter and into the frying pan.
âStir-fried rice. Itâs one of the three dishes I can make, youâve had the other two. Usually I put seafood in there too but we donât have any,â you said, giving Ace a pointed look.Â
âWell, there is a boat on the island,â Ace began, scratching his cheek. Your interest was immediately piqued - maybe you could use it to escape at some point. âBut itâs my old one, Striker. Itâs powered by fire and since I donât have my devil fruit anymore, I canât use it. Thereâs a sail but thatâs not to propel it, just to direct it.â
You sighed, another plan to escape the island foiled. You thought in silence for a few moments, adding in the rice to the dish.
âWhat were ya lookinâ at?â Ace asked, watching you cook. You bit your lip, unsure if you should tell Ace about your experiment. You couldnât think of a reason that the information could be used against you, and it was his idea anyway.
âUm. Well, itâs um. Not that big of a deal and I didnât think it would work but um. I did kind of do what you said and, ah, changed the structure of a molecule - only one! Just one, itâs fine, donât worry. And um it. It did work. I changed it by hand, so to speak. So I - thatâs what I was looking at.â Ace waited patiently while you stumbled over your words.
âThatâs amazing! So what does that mean? Does that mean you can make the devil fruit? The Mera Mera?â He exclaimed, his face breaking into a huge smile and eyes alight.Â
âUm, yes, I suppose hypothetically speaking, I could potentially make a Mera Mera artificial fruit. It would be a huge undertaking but again, hypothetically, I could do it. Um, thereâs enough genetic and lineage factor material here and I probably could if I worked on it enough but I donât think -â
âThis is wonderful! Oh my god I canât wait, Iâm gonna blow up Sabo when he comes back,â Ace exclaimed. He was off the chair and on his feet, pacing in front of the kitchen. âHeâll be fine, it canât hurt him. Ooh, maybe we can finally fight each other! That little fucker has been using my moves, I know it. Gonna teach him whoâs the real boss, ha! And I can finally make my way back to Wano! Maybe see Luff? I know his bounty is way higher -â
âAce -â
âBut before all that I need to find Marco and the crew. And Deuce, oh my god, Deuce. I miss that man so much, gonna kiss him first thing, did you know he was my first mate? I wonder -â
âAce!â
âHe might be doing better off without me, he wasnât really a pirate, more of an intellectual type. Youâd like him a lot. But I also need to go thank Traflagar and hug Bepo, thereâs so much to do -â
âACE!âÂ
Ace finally stopped pacing and chattering and looked at you. âAce, I said I might be able to do it. I just made one molecule , do you know how much work it would take to engineer something like that?â Ace shrugged and waved off your concern, continuing to pace behind the counter.
âSo what? Youâre a genius, youâll figure it out. Besides, itâs not like you have anything else to work on right now,â he said, unbothered by your hesitation.
âNo,â you stated, crossing your arms. Ace turned on his heel to face you immediately.
âWhat do you mean ânoâ?â he asked worriedly, racing to the counter.Â
âNo. Iâve been working on ways to undo the damage my research has caused, not increase the damage. Itâs unethical to bring yet another artificial devil fruit into the world, no matter who it goes to.âÂ
Ace held you in his gaze for a moment, staring into your eyes. Even though he wasnât related by blood to Sabo some of their mannerisms were eerily similar. He plopped back down on the bar stool with a sigh and ran his hand through his tangled black hair. âYou canât undo what youâve done. Trust me, Iâm the first one to wish things were different, that I could change what I did. But itâs not possible. Doflamingo already made the money, Kaido got the soldiers, Vegapunk made the Seralinas or whatever. You canât undo it. What were you going to do? Make a new fruit for them to eat? It wonât work, whatâs done is done.â Ace got up and walked to where you were turning off the heat on the stove and put his hands on your shoulders. You looked up into his freckled face.
âThe only thing to do now is to help the good side win, help people like me ân Sabo. Yâknow, fight fire with fire,â he said seriously.Â
âI donât know, AceâŚ.I donât know if thatâs something I want to do,â you hesitated. Ace hummed.Â
âIt could be a one time thing, make the Mera Mera and be done with it,â Ace pleaded, shaking your shoulders lightly.Â
âAce, even if this works, youâll still be you. Youâll be the same person, with or without the fruit. Itâs not going to solve all your problems. You need to work on your emotional healing, not just your body. You canât even show your chest most of the time,â you said quietly. Ace didnât respond, looking away to avoid your eyes.
Ace took his hands off your shoulders and went over to the cabinet, pulling out two bowls. His face was impassive but his departed enthusiasm spoke volumes. You plated the food and set the bowls side by side on the counter, Ace bringing you a fork. You ate in silence for a few minutes, Ace mostly pushing the food around his plate. You thought about what heâd said about Striker and getting off the island. If Sabo found out you could manipulate matter, you didnât think heâd ever let you go. Your only window of escaping closed once Sabo came back to the island. Steeling yourself against your better judgment, you faced Ace.
âIâll do it. On one condition,â you said, looking at him. Aceâs cheeks were puffed out wide with food.
âHwaf cuhdihun?â Ace asked, not bothering to chew or swallow.
âYou have to take me off the island. Away from here,â you stated. You knew Sabo and Ace were brothers but maybe the desired reward would offset his loyalty to Sabo.
âHmm,â Ace mumbled as he chewed. You watched him closely to see his reaction, this would make or break your escape from Sabo.
âSure, why not?â Ace said, quirking his eyebrow with a small smile.Â
âYouâre sure? You know I mean you need to take me away from Sabo, right?â
âYeah, I got it. I can get you off the island if the fruit works. It wonât help you,â Ace said, scooping the last of his food into his mouth. His careless attitude made you worry that youâd fallen into a trap you set yourself.
âWhat do you mean, it wonât help me?â you asked, frowning.
âSaboâll just chase you. And heâll find you, no matter where I take you,â Ace shrugged, literally licking his bowl clean. Â
You chewed on the skin next to your nail for a moment. âAre you sure? I mean, Iâm not -â
âIâm sure. Heâd follow you to the South Pole if he had to. So Iâll take you out, but you wonât get far. He really likes you.â Ace replied, patting his belly.
âHe doesnât, itâs all an act. Heâs just using me for - well, for this. To have me finish Project Seraphim for the Revolutionary Army. I heard him tell Dragon,â you protested. Ace stared at you, eyes softening with an unknown emotion.
âWhatever you say,â Ace said lightly, getting up and plugging the sink to begin washing the dishes. You tasted blood as you bit too hard on your already chewed thumb.
Saboâs POV
Sabo wasnât sure exactly what set off his internal warning signal. He and Ace had been calling back and forth every few days over the weeks, exchanging information and pleasantries. Ace had been in an elated mood, which he chalked up to becoming better friends with Sunny. Sabo noted Ace hadnât been wearing the bandages around his chest anymore which was an interesting development. According to Ace, you worked in the morning and took a short walk with Ace before lunch. After eating, youâd work again until the evening when you and Ace would eat dinner and go stargazing or hang out in the house. Youâd spoken on the snail a few times, you sounded happy and refreshed. But Ace was up to something and had dragged Sunny into it, Sabo was sure of it. The end of his trip was approaching and Sabo was eager to sail back home and see Sunny. And Ace, of course.
Narrowing his eyes, Sabo wanted to catch Ace in whatever dumbass idea heâd concocted. Sabo was between meetings and ducked into an empty storage room to call. It was nearly lunch, not his normal time to connect with Ace. With luck, Sabo would be able to detect what was going on.
Puru puru puru puru puru puru
âHey Babo, whatâs up?â Ace said, using a childhood nickname Luffy had given him.
âMy âAce is doing something stupidâ alarm is going off. Are you doing something stupid?â Sabo asked with a raised eyebrow.
âAlmost always. But right now Iâm making lunch. Potato salad,â the Ace snail said.
âAnd whereâs Sunny? Whatâs she up to?â Sunny was an incredibly poor liar, even worse than Ace. With only a little pressure, Sabo would get the truth out of her.
âSheâs working in your office, wanna say hi?â Ace asked, the snail throwing a kitchen towel over its shoulder.
âInna minute. How are you guys doing? Howâs she feeling?â Sabo asked, trying to keep from projecting his worries into his voice.
âGood, good. Sheâs working right now, like always. Sleeping enough, I make sure of it. Eats food, drinks coffee and water ,â Ace said proudly.Â
âAlright, put her on.â
âGimme a sec,â Ace said, the sounds of boots on the wood floor coming through the receiver. Ace pounded on the door three times.
âYo, Sunny! Wanna -â
âFuck off Portgas, Iâm busy!â you yelled through the door. Saboâs gut twisted with the ease and familiarity in your voice you used for his brother. Heâd been feeling jealous for a few days now even though the jealousy made him feel guilty. He had brought you to the island partially for just this reason - to befriend his brother. And now that the two of you were friendly he was seeing green. Sabo wished you were just as comfortable with him , telling him to fuck off or spending all your meals together voluntarily. Sabo tried to rein his feelings in but it was difficult when he saw that youâd given Ace a haircut, or you were wearing Aceâs old clothes, or saw how well rested you were looking. During the calls between the three of you, it was difficult to contain himself from making snarky comments. Sabo was homesick for you and Ace, his meetings felt endless and the two of you were up to something. He could feel it in his bones.
âNah, itâs Sabo, câmon.â Ace urged you. Sabo heard a huff and the door open.
âFine, but you know the penalty for disturbing me when Iâm working,â you said cheerfully as the snail changed its visage to your bright smile. Sabo had never made that smile appear before, he thought.
âOw! Owww ! That hurts! Stop pinching!â Ace whined in the background as you laughed.
âNo, you get five pinches for disrupting my flow. I was moving the mol- er -â you looked at Sabo, afraid youâd almost said something.
âMoving what?â Sabo asked brightly.
âUh, nothing! Nothing, um just moving the, um, mol- umâŚmole. The mole,â you finished lamely. Sabo quirked an eyebrow.Â
âThe mole?â he asked incredulously.
âYeah, um the mole. Itâs um, gotten into the office and um Ace and I have been trying to catch it and I um, oh lunch is ready! I have to go!â you stammered. The snail turned back to Ace, who was laughing into his palm.
âI know youâre up to something dumb and Iâm gonna find out what it is. If Sunny gets in trouble because of youâŚâ Sabo trailed off menacingly.
âOk, love you, see you sooooon!â Ace chirped happily and hung up the snail.
The call ending quickly gave greater credence to Saboâs theory that some Ace-derived foolishness was afoot. He sighed and leaned back against the nearest crate. He was leaving for the island in a few short days and it couldnât come quickly enough.Â
Your POV
You and Portgas D. Ace stared at the flower-turned-fruit held in the palm of your hand as you sat side by side on the beach. Youâd experimented and developed it for the past few weeks almost constantly. Youâd worked harder than you ever had in your life, racing to complete the project before Sabo returned in the next few days. True to his word, Ace had locked you out of Saboâs office at 8 every night but that alone didnât turn off your brain. For the first few weeks after your discovery, you stayed up late in the night in the darkness of your room, rearranging molecules and perfecting your craft. Ace had figured out you werenât resting enough and started sleeping on the floor of Saboâs room to get you to go to sleep. Eventually, youâd invited him into the bed because you were tired of seeing him toss and turn on the hard floor. You enjoyed having a warm body next to you but it wasnât the same as Saboâs heat and pleasant aroma.
You werenât sure if you missed Sabo or not. Ace was fun, dynamic, engaging, and easy to talk to. He made you laugh, either intentionally or from his antics, and he had interesting insight to share. Ace was an endless talker, providing you with background noise to listen to while you walked together. He told you stories about Whitebeard, the Spade pirates, his brothers, anything he could think of. Ace enjoyed your company and would watch you work in Saboâs office, sometimes falling asleep and snoring to your amusement. You thought you and Ace were friends and youâd miss him when you left the island.
But a little part of you missed Sabo, too. He treated you like you were worth the world, not just what you could make or produce for him. Ace claimed repeatedly that Sabo was romantically interested in you, which always made you flush. You found Sabo attractive and charming, unlike Ace who felt more like a sibling. He was smart and intelligent and enjoyed the same intellectual pursuits that you did. He had kidnapped you but through his actions youâd realized how drained you were from the Marines, subsisting on coffee and loneliness. You had been miserable, sick, and stuck, even if you didnât see it yourself at the time.
âHey, your handâs shaking,â Ace noted, bringing you out of your thoughts.
âYeah.â
âHavenât seen that in a while,â Ace mused. You didnât answer, too nervous about the outcome of your experiment. There was no way to test anything and make sure youâd gotten everything right. You used parts of your other research, Saboâs hair, Aceâs saliva, and sheer willpower to craft the hideous looking fruit in front of you. It didnât look like the Mera Mera no Mi, it looked like a sad black sea urchin covered in molten red spots. Your lips were bloody and Ace had bandaged all your fingertips after you bit them too much.
âThis is a bad idea,â you said.
âYeah,â Ace replied.
âIt might not work. You might not get any power and you wonât be able to swim.â
âYeah.â
âIt might kill you.â
âMaybe.â
âSabo will be mad.â
âFurious.â
âYou gonna try it?âÂ
âYeah,â Ace said, taking the fruit from your sweaty palm. You had the urge to reach out to take the fruit and fling it into the sea, to let life stay the way it was. But Aceâs brow was furrowed and his jaw set, you knew he wasnât going to hesitate. You held your breath and covered your eyes with your hands as Ace bit into the fruit, scowling as he chewed.
âYou got the taste right. Not something you forget,â he joked, trying to lighten your mood. You took a little peek and he hadnât exploded or projectile vomited. That was a good sign.
âDid it - did it work?â you whispered. Ace ate the fruit in a few bites, one of the advantages to his eating habits, you supposed. He wiped his hands on his yukata and stood up.
âOne way to find out,â he grinned, pointing his index and ring finger like the barrel of a gun.
Fire bullets shot out of his hand rapidly, making you scuttle backwards on the beach. He whooped loudly and beat his chest with his fists, screaming at the top of his lungs. Turning and running full force at you, you squealed as he picked you up under your arms and spun you around in circles. His arms were too warm, almost burning you as he laughed wildly and spun.
âAce! Ace! Too hot!â you yelled into his ear, trying to get him to put you down.
âAh! Sorry, kinda forgot about that,â Ace said, grinning from ear to ear. He set you down only to give you a huge kiss on your cheek. You couldnât help but share in his happiness and laughed along with him. He looked so much younger, his face radiating pure joy as he raised his arm to continue testing his strength.
âHiken!â he yelled, his arm outstretched. A column of flame burst forth from his fist, the raw destructive power it posed sending a shiver down your spine. He turned and winked at you, finger still made of flame.Â
âAnd thatâs why they call me Fire Fist Ace.â