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My boy blushed before the war against Camelot. I can sleep peacefully 💕💕
Hiei&Botan Halloween day4! The Addams Family
Hiei&botan halloween day3.
Botan is always happy to spend time with her favorite grumpy guy .. Bats too 😂
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Botan&Hiei Halloween 🎃🎃👻
Sometimes, the greatest adventure is simply coming back. One shot. Set 10 years after the manga. Luffy x Boa
The night swallowed the sea like docile ink, and the stars—too many to count—trembled upon the waves. The Thousand Sunny, moored in a hidden cove, creaked softly in its wooden slumber. A warm breeze drifted through the palms, and in the distance, carved against the cliffs, the island’s silhouette held its pose, still and sovereign: Amazon Lily.
Luffy had grown. You could read it less in his build—though his shoulders had broadened, carrying the quiet weight of a promise kept—than in the way his steps pressed against the deck: measured, steady, almost silent. Pirate King for years now, he had discovered something better than a crown: the patience it demanded, the gaze that held instead of devoured. Yet, when the sweet tide of the island reached his nose, when his Haki stretched its unseen hand toward the city of warriors, a boyish smile lit up his face. The same smile that once leapt from banquet to banquet, the same smile that had never stopped loving without calculation.
“I’m home,” he murmured to himself, as if to bring sea and heart into agreement.
He had chosen to dock at night, without drums or clamor, because surprise seemed to him the most honest way of showing what he felt to the one who was waiting. On deck, half the crew slept, scattered across their hammocks, content after an uneventful voyage. Jinbe had taken the previous watch and now snored deeply, his rumbling breath vibrating through the hull.
He leapt onto the pier as if walking on air, fastened the rope to a stone ring, then lifted his face toward the cliffs. In the dark, Amazon Lily looked like a gentle beast breathing, and each breath made the palace windows glow with a yellow shimmer. Luffy tipped his hat back onto his head, lowering the brim only slightly over his eyes, for the gesture’s sake. A month… A month is short for someone who sails through seasons… and long for someone who waits. A sharp pang gripped him. He promised himself he’d say it—not with polished words, but with the weight of his presence.
The sentinels stationed along the white stone path did not flinch. Some straightened with movements almost choreographed, bows in hand more out of respect than caution, then, at the curve of his hat and the simplicity of his stride, they bowed with faint smiles. The Kuja had accepted him since his very first visit; he was that welcomed outsider, the living paradox the queen had loved and the island had learned to respect. No one searched him, no one questioned him; they offered him passage as one offers water to a traveler back from the desert. Like greeting an old friend.
“Good evening, King Luffy,” one guard whispered, her eyes playful despite the late hour.
“Yo,” he answered without stopping, and the word seemed to make the stone vibrate, heavier than a simple greeting.
He crossed the inner garden where flowers slept, dew clinging to their lashes. Water ran through carefully carved channels. At the palace entrance, two doors of dark wood opened with a sigh, releasing a clear fragrance: wax, jasmine, and a trace of storm held in stone. Luffy, who had never cared for palaces and their frozen grandeur, felt something loosen inside him; this home didn’t crush—it resonated with his very core.
A young maid stepped forward, nervous as a flickering flame. Her gaze caught on the hat, then the scar, then the awkward gentleness that placed a half-laugh at the corner of the man’s lips. She drew in a breath, and it gave her courage.
“Her Majesty, Queen Boa Hancock, is asleep,” she announced with a hurried bow. “Shall I wake her?”
Luffy shook his head side to side, meaning: no, absolutely not. He smiled, a dimple deepening in his cheek, and scratched the back of his neck with a familiar gesture that made him look younger.
“Thanks. I’ll… I’ll take a shower first.”
The maid blinked, surprised by the kindness. She stepped aside, her heart swelling with a simple kind of admiration—the kind one reserves for legends who walk like ordinary men. As he walked away, she thought to herself that later, she would tell her sisters how the Pirate King had said “thank you” and chosen not to wake the queen. That’s why she loves him, she thought, without jealousy, simply as one states an obvious truth.
The corridor leading to the private baths was lined with frescoes he had seen before, yet rediscovered each time with a trace of embarrassment: painted heroines of old, tamed beasts, arrows drawn from slender hands. In that sovereign order of a setting, Luffy walked straight yet mindful, as though each tile could reproach him. She likes the scent of that soap—the clear one, not the harsh one… He caught himself remembering the tiniest things. And the carpet, it’s so clean you can see your own step in it. Makes you walk softer.
He pushed open the bathhouse door. Steam welcomed him, brushed against his skin still salted by the sea. He knew this place; it reminded him of their first meeting. The water, resting in the stone basin, lay calm as an unblinking eye. He undressed, laying his clothes down with unusual care. Boa’s discipline had seeped into his movements—he even found himself amused by it. I’ve grown, he thought, not with pride, but with a tenderness almost lucid. I’ve learned that some people want things to stay in their place. And sometimes, I can want that too. It’s not a prison. It’s attention.
Under the shower, the water streamed down and carried the day away: the brine of the swell, the dust of ports where he had dropped off friends with Jinbe, the fleeting smells of a thousand cities. He closed his eyes. Droplets crackled against his lashes, and each crackle brought back an image: an old woman’s hand offering him a bag of fruit and a blessing for his journey; the flash of Franky’s laughter as he stepped down from a shipyard vessel; Robin’s sudden seriousness when she handed him a book to deliver to someone, someday. I’ve been gone too long, he admitted to himself for the first time, without excuses. The words didn’t hurt. He had the right to be far. But she had the right to feel the distance.
When he cut the water, silence spread like fresh canvas. He dried off carefully, slipped on a clean shirt, left his sandals at the door—she likes the floor bare—and took up his hat. A faint scent of clear soap clung to his skin. She’ll say I smell good. She always says it, hiding behind her pride. He smiled without realizing it.
Boa’s chamber was vast and serene, wrapped in the night. The curtains, left open, allowed a silver thread of moonlight to draw a pale path across the bed. Luffy paused on the threshold, just long enough to admire her. Hancock slept on her side, one hand tucked under her cheek, stripped of her ornaments and thus more queenly than ever. Her pajamas, shifted by restless sleep, revealed the line of her hip, a curve fragile and sovereign all at once. How could I have been so stupid? he thought, not with anger, but the way one laughs at the child one used to be. She was there—whole, brave, undeniable—and it had taken him years to see it.
He stepped forward. Each footfall made the floorboards tremble with a faint vibration. He placed his hat on a vanity, then sat gently at the edge of the bed, as if taming a dream. His hand hovered for a moment—not over her face, unwilling to brush the night away too soon—but above the edge of the sheet. He leaned down, as though pulled by a soft gravity, and pressed a kiss to the pale skin of her hip, where the light touched. It was stronger than him. This gesture belonged to no ritual; it spoke of absence, of admiration, of return.
Hancock drew a slightly longer breath, her lashes trembling. Her body, trained to vigilance, rose first in reflex; her hand reached for a danger that wasn’t there. Luffy froze, caught in the act, his hand already raised in apology, scratching his head with that old nervous tic that outlived all his victories.
“Sorry… I woke you up.”
At first, the queen didn’t understand. The voice came through the fog, familiar yet impossible. She blinked, sat up, and then saw him: the hat on the vanity, the sheepish smile, the eyes laughing at themselves. Understanding struck her like clear lightning. She threw herself at him—literally—tipping the balance of the bed, pinning the Pirate King against the covers with a strength that asked no permission. The contrast was almost comic and deeply moving: he, whose very presence could bend storms, flattened beneath her. And he wanted it no other way.
“Welcome home,” she said, her voice lower than a whisper, as though confiding a secret to someone who already knew it.
For a heartbeat, he didn’t answer—more stunned by the phrase than by the assault. Home. The word spun in his head and found its place, simple and sure. He ran a hand through his still-damp hair and replied, without laughter, without mask:
“I’m home.”
Hancock buried her face in his neck, inhaled, and let a smile unlock her lips.
“You always smell good.”
⸻
He didn’t say that he’d showered on purpose. He hadn’t needed it. He hadn’t wanted to reduce the moment to a trick. He closed his eyes for a second, wrapped his arms around her, and breathed in the scent of her skin: faint warmth, a trace of sandalwood, a trace of sleep, a trace of her. This is home, he thought. It’s not a place. It’s the weight lifting from your shoulders.
She stayed there for long seconds before worry, patient as ever, claimed its due. She slowly drew back, her eyes seeking his with that disarming honesty.
“A month, Luffy. A month without a word. I’ve read of your… exploits in the papers. You may be the strongest man in the world, but I am… I am still worried sick. You could have called me on the Den Den Mushi.”
She hadn’t raised her voice. That was worse. The restraint gave her words the density of water. Luffy lowered his head for a moment—not in shame, but in respect for what she said. Then he raised his eyes again, because he had learned that looking someone in the eye is its own kind of promise.
“I had to make stops everywhere, with Jinbe. We dropped each one… at a place that mattered. It was important. Some needed to go home. Others needed a new start. I thought a week would be enough. I’m bad at counting.”
“The girls are here too?” she asked, her heart suspended in the question, as though half expecting Nami and Robin to walk into her room.
“No. They’re at Whole Cake. They wanted to see Sanji.”
An incongruous sound broke the tension: Luffy’s stomach growled, theatrically, like a beast sleeping inside him, angry at having nothing to eat. He burst into a quiet laugh, surprised himself to be laughing under such reproach. Hancock rolled her eyes, half exasperated, half tender, then straightened with the authority of someone who once commanded an army.
“You’re hungry? Of course you’re hungry. Wait. I’ll have something prepared for you.”
“Hancock, it’s the middle of the night. Don’t wake the whole palace for me.”
She ignored him. Slipping out of bed, she adjusted her pajamas, closed the window against the nosy breeze with a simple gesture. On the landing, she exchanged a few quick words. Two Amazons darted off like well-mannered lightning.
Luffy stayed sprawled for a moment, gazing at the ceiling. He smiled to himself, lazily happy. I’m here. She’s here. And nothing’s exploded yet. He laid his hand on the sheet, letting the fabric play between his fingers, as if to test the reality of it all.
Hancock returned a few minutes later, followed by two warriors carrying trays. They laid out, on the great balcony table, a discreet feast: grilled fish gleaming with crisped skin, fruit cut with a dancer’s precision, fragrant rice, sauces that hinted at spice, and above all, meat. Luffy watched them set it all down, torn between embarrassment and a childlike appetite. She’s overdoing it, he thought without reproach. But I’m hungry.
The Amazons withdrew, their steps fading in a whisper. With a confident gesture, Hancock invited Luffy to sit. He obeyed, and the night air—warm and clear—brushed the back of his neck.
It was she who began serving. The gesture startled Luffy more than he cared to admit. Hancock, long accustomed to being served, had taken the ladle and filled his plate with generous portions, then drew some back again, as if not to treat him like a child. He almost wanted to tell her she could—because to him, it wasn’t a hierarchy but a game, a sign. Instead, he chose to eat first, knowing she was watching his appetite as closely as his figure.
“So,” Hancock said, her eyes resting on him like a cool hand, “what are the girls doing in Whole Cake?”
“They’re teasing Sanji. And helping, I think. He wants Pudding’s birthday to be… huge. Cakes with tiers that have tiers that have tiers. You know the kind.”
A smile touched the queen’s lips. She could easily picture the blond on his knees before an oven, soul ablaze, sculpting roses out of sugar as though writing poems.
“And why isn’t the number-one party lover staying with them?” she asked, head tilted, like scolding a child caught with his hand in the jar.
Luffy scratched his head, a bit awkward, then let fall the only words he had—straight, sincere, unadorned:
“I missed you, Hancock.”
The honesty split the air. She hadn’t expected it—or rather, she had, but not here, not now, not on a balcony where even the stars seemed to be listening. She blushed, literally, a delicate shade rising from her neck to her cheek. She muttered something far too dignified to be understood, then fled into the ritual of serving: more fish, keep your hands steady, Boa, you’ve defeated fleets. But she knew that when it came to him, she lost all her composure. She was more measured than ten years ago, less pushy, less suffocating.
“You… you really know how to pick your moments,” she finally breathed, scarlet.
Seeing her blush over something so trivial always warmed his heart.
They ate while talking about everything and nothing. The bananas from the day before had been strangely straight, which to Luffy was a culinary mystery. Hancock laughed, her laughter soft. He mentioned a port where children tried to mimic Gear Fifth with elastic ropes. She arched a brow—she didn’t understand all the names of his techniques, but she grasped their nature: everything about him tied back to elasticity, even his patience.
Gradually, though, the conversation drifted where it was meant to go. Not into pain, but into clarity. Luffy wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, then corrected himself—he grabbed a napkin. She smiled inwardly at the Pirate King, the most undisciplined man she knew, trying to make a good impression for her.
“I didn’t call you,” he said, “because… because I don’t know how to call just to say nothing. I kept thinking: I’ll tell her my adventures in person.”
Hancock stayed silent for a moment. She let her fingers rest on the table, tracing the grain of the wood as if she were reading a palm line. You’re a man of action, she thought, with a mix of tenderness and exasperation.
“I’m asking for a sign,” she finally replied. “A simple ‘I’m fine.’”
“I’ll obey,” Luffy said plainly. “I’ll obey what matters to you.”
She looked at him, startled by the word. Obey. It wasn’t often offered to the queen, except by those who were bound to it. But here, it was an offering. She felt a strange, light peace settle in her chest. He’s never feared chains, because he knows how to shatter them. But he holds a promise the way one holds a helm.
“Very well,” she said, with soft irony. “Rule number one: one Den Den Mushi call a day. Rule number two: you tell me when you’re afraid—even if it’s after.”
“I’m rarely afraid,” Luffy smiled, almost apologetic.
“I know. That’s why I said after. You’re allowed the after.”
He nodded. The wind tugged gently at a curtain, like a flag lowered after battle. They fell into silence—not from lack, but from fullness. Luffy ate some more, joy slightly reined in, marveling, as he always did, at a fruit he’d eaten countless times before. He’s faithful in everything, Hancock thought, even in wonder.
“You know,” he began after a while, “when you said ‘Welcome home,’ it struck me. Because… home has always been movement for me. A tavern, a deck, a ship, a hat. I wondered if I had the right to add a palace. It didn’t sound like me. But then I thought: home is where I can set my hat down without worrying the wind will steal it.”
“The wind obeys me,” Hancock replied with a small, arrogant smile.
He found her even more stunning in that instant.
His equal.
“Then I can come more often.”
“I prefer when you stay longer,” she said.
They cleared the dishes together, a gesture so incongruous it would have sparked gossip in the halls if anyone had seen. Luffy stood, took his hat, brushed it with his thumb. Hancock watched him, caught between amusement and tenderness. He set the hat gently on Hancock’s head. It surprised her. That hat meant everything to him. Her heart skipped a beat.
“You look even more beautiful with my hat,” he said with a boyish grin. Yet in his eyes lingered the shadow of a growing desire.
Hancock blushed again, harder. She didn’t know what to say. She simply held the hat tighter against her head, tenderly.
A silence followed—one they didn’t need to fill. The moon was retreating, yielding to the timid pallor gathering at the horizon. Already, the scent of the sea was changing: less salt, more green freshness.
“You’re staying tonight,” she said, lifting her chin. It wasn’t a question. It needed no answer.
“I came for that. And for tomorrow. And maybe the day after. Jinbe will understand.”
“Keep your promise, Pirate King!” she teased.
They returned to the bed. Hancock placed the hat where it belonged, on her vanity, where it always should rest. She pulled the sheet up. She sought no grand gesture. She sat first, raised her eyes to him, and offered what she knew was her truest territory: honesty.
“I love you,” she said—without theater, without trembling—almost the way one says, it will rain tomorrow.
He smiled, a smile that began in his eyes and ended nowhere. He added no words. He leaned in, pressed his forehead against hers, and let his hand slide until it found hers. I love her, he thought, not to convince himself, but to feel the exact weight of the word.
I love her so much, it hurts.
They lay down. She came against him with a trust that still, sometimes, startled him. He felt the rhythm of her breathing against his ribs, and he found himself matching it. He had never been good at imitation, except for the movement of the sea. Now he learned the movement of a woman. He grew used to her body pressed to his.
“You know,” she murmured, her voice already heavy with returning sleep, “if you forget to call, I’ll scold you. That’s my right.”
“You’re right,” he answered, with a seriousness that was almost funny.
The Pirate King, scolded. Zoro would laugh at him. But he didn’t care. She had absolute rights over him.
He closed his eyes. His Haki stretched out, like a cat basking in the sun, wrapping around the palace, the chamber, the woman, the ship in the cove, the familiar breaths of his friends. He wasn’t watching. He was keeping watch. Everything’s fine, he told himself. Tonight, everything’s fine.
Outside, the sea kissed the cliffs with the gentle insistence of someone trying to say something without knowing how. The breeze had stopped playing with the curtains. The stars, satiated, blinked more slowly. The palace breathed.
He could have fallen asleep like that, content. But Hancock, faithful to her promise of “speak afterward,” lifted herself a little, set her chin on his chest, and fixed him with eyes that tolerated no evasions.
“Luffy.”
“Hmm?”
“What are we?”
The question wasn’t a blade. He didn’t feel that panic that once would have made him leap up, crack jokes, run off to find meat at some impossible hour. He stayed, breathed, sought the answer. What are we? Words, for him, weren’t walls to lean against; they were nets, sometimes too tight. He chose one, simple.
“We’re… exclusive,” he said, a little proud to have found the exact word they had once let float between them without catching. “We’re… two. I don’t know much about being two. But I’m learning. With you. And… I don’t know if home means what people think it does. For me, it means, ‘I can leave, and come back, and find the same breath waiting.’ If you want that, then it’s to you I return, Hancock.”
She stayed silent, her face serious, then softened into a smile.
“I accept that definition. It’s imperfect. You are. I am. That will do just fine.”
“That’ll do just fine,” he echoed, like sealing a pact.
She nestled against him again, satisfied. The night moved on, patient. Luffy amused himself by counting heartbeats—his, then hers, then both together, answering one another. He remembered counting waves as a child. He had often fallen asleep to the rhythm of the sea. Tonight, he fell asleep to another tide.
At dawn, a soft pallor laid its fingers along the edges of things. The birds hesitated, then began their business. Amazon Lily stretched and yawned. Luffy opened one eye, then the other, conscious of that precise moment when night was no longer night, and day had not yet declared its demands. He didn’t dare move. He watched Hancock sleep—no diadem, no posture now—and remembered the first kiss he had placed, hours earlier, on her hip. He wanted to keep moving along that path; she awakened in him feelings, emotions, desires he had never thought possible. He had sailed the world, stood among the most beautiful women, yet none of them had that power over him… except her. Sometimes when he thought of her, his knees went weak. In the beginning, he’d blush at such thoughts, such desire… but not anymore.
“You’re thinking too loud,” Hancock grumbled, without opening her eyes.
“I’m thinking… I should call you tomorrow morning,” he replied, amused.
“You’re here tomorrow morning,” she corrected, voice rumpled.
“After-after, then.”
“After-after,” she echoed, like a domestic spell.
They stayed a while in that golden suspension where decisions seemed easy. Then a quiet, respectful sound reminded them the world existed beyond the bed. A maid set tea on a low table, silent as a shadow. Luffy rose reluctantly, took his cup with the care of a man who knew spilling a drop here would be a poetic offense. Hancock stretched, sat, brushed her hair back behind her ear.
“You’ll have to leave,” she said—not bitterly. It was a phrase born of clarity, not reproach. You’ll leave because you’re you, she added inwardly, without lessening what she felt.
“Yes. But I’ll know when I’m coming back. Not ‘soon.’ A date. A day. I’ll tell you. And if I can’t, I’ll send… a sign.”
He pressed a kiss to her temple to seal the promise.
Day would soon impose its demands: audiences, reports, news from elsewhere, maps to study, decisions to make. But there still remained, between night and day, a narrow step where they could be simply two human beings.
They met later in the banquet hall for lunch.
“Welcome home,” Hancock whispered—not because it needed repeating, but because it built the home.
“I’m home,” Luffy answered, with the same light gravity. He would repeat it as many times as needed, until the word ceased to be a surprise and became furniture.
Later, when he left the palace to greet the sisters, when the Amazons pretended not to watch his every gesture, when he left behind the imprint of clean sandals, when he climbed back aboard and Jinbe gave him a look that said You did well, he would keep in the pocket of his heart three things: the scent of clear soap, the weight of a kiss on a hip, and a simple phrase, laid down like a stone on which to place his foot again.
He had never believed in homes that did not move. He was learning to love the kind that smelled of jasmine.
And Amazon Lily, behind him, smelled like that.
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