hey guys- i’m very sad to share the news that i am no longer a part of drawfee going forward. you’ll keep seeing me around as i move on to new things! but please understand the privacy and difficulty around the matter.
thank you everyone for many fun years, and for your continued support going forward 🫶
I have been struck by a genius idea that I know I won’t ever get the time nor motivation to write but :
Expédition 33 x Batman fusion in which Jason died when the League made an attempt on Bruce’s life by exploiting Damian’s trust in them and maybe lying about.
I love the idea of Bruce falling into despair and bargaining over the memories of Jason but also I enjoy the idea of Bruce and Jason confronting each other like pRenoir and pVerso do so his role is undetermined. Maybe both ? Like Bruce and the Batman fractured and separated from each other because Bruce couldn’t accept that he failed to protect his family.
Starring : Dick as Gustave, a genuinely nice guy who’s a better parental figure for Damian anyway.
Tim as Clea, overworked responsible sibling who had to step up in the real world and deal with the conflict while everyone else is stuck in the canvas dealing with their emotions
As Clair Obscur who then is grief, how it affects the members of the family and the world around them, it’s a perfect setting for exploring the impact of Jason death on the Batfam.
king of hell leaves a very specific impression on the enemy
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34
Sanji calling Zoro his wife because that's what he always imagined calling his partner growing up and it just became an inside joke term of endearment between them and Zoro going along with it because he thinks it's hilarious to watch people's faces when they hear Sanji talk about his "wife" only for a grown ass man to show up with 3 swords 250lbs of raw muscle and the evilest grin you can imagine
damn @questionable-method pls save some correct takes for the rest of us. shoutout to @the-music-maniac for the v best tags 🫡
x
Morning cuts across the deck and the crew’s half-scattered, Chopper lecturing Luffy, Brook tuning, Usopp fussing, Nami tallying charts with one hand and coffee with the other. It’s routine and ordinary until it’s not.
Sanji comes out in between the crew’s usual brand of chaos, balancing a tray of crumpets and tea and the calm satisfaction of a task well done. When he leans forward to set the mugs down, there’s a flash of gold at his ear, as warm as the dawn that’s just kissed them and the morning… pauses.
Robin sees it first and her smile turns private, as if she’s just discovered a sentence no-one else can read. “That’s new.”
Nami’s pen pauses mid-scratch. “What is?” She looks. The pen clatters. “Excuse me – what?”
“Wow!” Luffy shrieks, already airborne. Sanji dodges the incoming grab but the sunlight hits dead-on and the earring sparks.
“Wait, wait, wait. Isn’t that –” Usopp wheels on Zoro, who’s lounging against the rail with the deep serenity of a man who absolutely planned this. “That’s yours! That’s from your ear!”
Zoro smirks. “Looks better there.”
The deck detonates.
“You can’t just give someone your earring!” Usopp sputters. “That’s like, that’s like –”
“Marriage,” Nami supplies, eyes bright, already calculating how this will get them free drinks at port.
Sanji tries to swallow the laugh bubbling up his throat and fails. “You’re all idiots,” he says, too quick, too pink. “It doesn’t mean –”
“It means what I say it means,” Zoro cuts in, calm as the tide around them. He pushes off the rail, strolls through the chaos and, because he’s him, tucks Sanji’s hair behind his ear so that the gold flashes again, deliberate as a vow.
“Happy wife, happy life,” Franky declares, misty-eyed, like this is something he would know about. “New ship law.”
“Seconded,” Robin says, sipping her tea, like this is something she would also know about.
Nami points a warning finger at the pantry. “If wife equals extra rations, I’m inventing spousal maintenance.”
Zoro snorts. “Noted.”
The word wife becomes furniture, part of the ship’s bones, as reliable as the sun. Brook readies his violin and asks whether the lady of the house prefers waltz or quickstep, to which Zoro solemnly replies, “Both. My ankles are delicate.”
Usopp tries, once. “Why not husband though?”
Sanji salts him with a look. “Because wife means dinner’s on the table and the bed’s ready and there’s someone waiting at the end of the night. I want,” he adds, soft and vicious, “To have that. So I’m taking it.”
Usopp raises both hands. “I mean, honestly, same.”
Zoro, meanwhile, stands behind Sanji to tie his hair back for him, with the care of a man threading a needle in a storm, big hands gentle at the temple. He kisses Sanji’s shoulder, quick, thoughtless, turning the pan handle because the oil’s about to spit.
Through a mouthful of bread, Luffy asks, “Wait, do wives get extra meat?”
“Yes,” Zoro snorts, shameless. “Obviously.”
Luffy beams. “Hey, maybe I could be a wife too.”
Nami does the math on extra Luffy-sized rations in real time and winces. “Definitely not.”
The first time Sanji says it in public is at the fish market, right where the harbour smell sharpens from stale sea air to fins and scales and where mackerel flash like in tanks, waiting for their untimely demise.
“I’ll take the belly cut,” Sanji tells the vendor in his lazy drawl, sleeves rolled, flour still ghosting the hair at his wrists. “My wife needs the fat.”
The vendor blinks, eyes doing a quick reconnaissance through the waiting crowd for lace, parasol, ribbons: someone delicate enough to be protected, probably. Sanji’s smile stays nothing but knives and courtesy as he motions towards the fish. “Skin on.”
Behind him the crowd parts by instinct around three swords, letting Zoro steps out of it with a sack of rice balanced on one shoulder, hair wetted in spikes from the damp. He drops the sack to the dock with a neat thump and Sanji’s grin sharpens and warms in tandem. “Ah, my wife’s always had impeccable timing.”
(It’s fundamentally untrue, but he’s learned to roll with it.)
The vendor stares, eyes darting between them like he’s missed the punchline of a joke. “Your… wife?”
Zoro blinks, mild. “What?” He cocks his head, mouth twitching like he’s fighting back a smirk. “Are you saying I’m not womanly enough to be his wife?”
The vendor chokes so hard it borders on obscene. A neighbouring fishmonger coughs into her sleeve and, somewhere, Usopp makes a noise like he’s been whacked in the throat. Sanji delights at the ripple, confusion curdling into horror, horror melting into the politest retreat. He leans his weight into Zoro’s side like other man’s a wall built just for him. “He’s very graceful,” he says, all innocence.
“And domestic,” Zoro adds, eye bright with the kind of serenity that’s started bar fights and ended wars. “You forgot very domestic.”
Sanji’s laugh is a low spill. “Exquisite housekeeping,” he agrees, taking the parcel of fish like the vendor hadn’t paid for the sheer privilege of witnessing this exchange.
They’re three stalls away before the vendor remembers how to count change and before Luffy barrels into them, already eating takoyaki he absolutely did not pay for but swears he was given out of joy. Sanji lets him have, pressing his shoulder into Zoro’s, Zoro’s skin passing heat back into it like a debt repaid.
They keep it up in ports and at sea and in battles because it’s not a joke, not really. It’s a shape they choose every day, a word they bend until it fits. Sanji says my wife with wicked pleasure and Zoro proves it with his hands, his grin, the way he sweeps him into a kiss regardless of who is or isn’t there to see.
At sea, the word is a litany of cues and feints and jokes and sheer, unbridled affection. Storms arrive on a whim, as they do, and Sanji helps adjust the rigging, yelling, “Do not let my wife drown!” as Zoro braces the mast with one arm and Wado in the other. Lightning hits the water, thunder agrees and absolutely no-one doubts who he means.
After a morning dip Zoro emerges shirtless, towel over his head and Sanji tells Robin, “My wife’s going to drip all over the damn deck,” in a voice that’s scandalised and fond in equal measure. Robin’s eyes gleam like she’s just been granted a private puzzle made specially for her. Zoro pauses long enough to wring seawater directly and purposefully onto Sanji’s boot and then kiss his cheek with the same mouth that’ll argue footwork for hours just to pick a fight.
It spreads by both rumour and meal, by word of mouth and then some. “My wife bought the rice,” Sanji tells a vendor with the sort of smile that used to be a weapon and now, inconveniently, is also kind of sincere. “We’re good on staples.”
“Your…” Her gaze does a hopeful little orbit only to find Zoro at the far end, haggling and pretending he isn’t. He looks up like he can feel the assumption pointed at him and saunters over with two sacks and the easy arrogance of a man who can carry three.
“Need me to curtsy?”
The vendor, to her credit, dies with dignity. “Oh, uh, congratulations?”
Every now and then someone tries to weaponise it, every now and then some idiot heckles them, tries to push a button that doesn’t exist. It usually happens in bars, the kind of places where sailors come to remember they’ve got fists.
“Pretty boy in the suit,” someone sneers, begging for their face to be rearranged. “Bet your wife wears the pants.”
Sanji exhales smoke through a smile sharp as a blade. “Every night,” he purrs because wife is like blood in the water, sometimes. He places his hand on the back of Zoro’s neck, a claim and a statement all in one that has the group of men crowing, breaking off into jeers and the typical basket of insults.
“Big bastard like that? That ain’t no wife,” someone sneers and Zoro grins, lets it be murderous.
“You saying I’m not pretty enough?”
Their answer doesn’t matter; Sanji beams like he’s been handed a gift. “Careful,” He warns the idiots, flicking his cigarette to the floor to grind it out with his boot. “Insult my wife, you insult me. And I don’t let people walk away after that.”
(Zoro doesn’t lift a finger. He just watches the destruction, arms crossed over his chest with feral appreciation, tracking every kick and every whipcord motion, pure surgical violence, and knows it’s a private show meant just for him.)
In battle, the word becomes choreography and direction. Sanji kicks a man off the deck, smoke in his teeth. “Wife! Duck!”
Zoro drops, Kitetsu singing, and the three Marines behind him develop a sudden and terminal interest in the floor. He straightens, grinning like a wolf, and pulls Sanji into a kiss that’s more bruise than affection.
Quiet makes wife truest, when it’s late at night in the crow’s nest, blanket over their knees and the ship’s small sounds moving through the dark, tangerine drifting up the mast from Nami’s orchard to breathe into the night sky.
“Bandanas go in the drawer, not the floor,” Sanji says and then: “Can’t believe I married a menace.” He means I never thought I’d get here. He means I can’t imagine it any other way.
Zoro laughs, quiet, mostly breath and tucks the same curl behind the same ear he always does, thumb grazing the gold until it warms under his touch. He presses their foreheads together and kisses the soft arch of an eyebrow for luck, then tips down to kiss the earring before finding Sanji’s mouth, slow, warm, exactly as long as it takes for the ship’s hum to thread through the kiss and settle there.
“Say it,” Sanji whispers, because he’s never been above begging for the line he likes.
Zoro laughs, mostly breath and kisses the corner of his mouth. “Happy wife.” Another kiss, the other corner. “Happy life.”
Sanji grins, presses their foreheads together. Once, he’d pictured a wife with delicate shoulders and soft, tidy hands, someone small enough to fit in his hands, in the frame he’d been given. Instead he has this: a swordsman who smells of sweat and oil more often than not, who scares half the locals, who faces storms and fights with the exact same care he uses on Sanji’s hair, whose hands are scarred and steady and rough and impossibly, impossibly gentle. The opposite of the picture, and somehow exactly it.
“Ship law,” he murmurs.
“Ship law,” Zoro agrees, thumb resting where gold meets skin.
x
as soon as he gets that earring i just know sanji just.... shoves it in his ear right then & there. chopper has an aneurysm when he finds out