Ace is SO smitten with you after meeting you in Alabasta. He rests his head in his palm while listening to you talk, his big brown puppy dog eyes never leave your face. Nodding along and asking you questions.
When the crew parties on the ship, he just can’t help but come up behind you and rest his head on your shoulder while his arms wrap around you. It’s a good thing he’s behind you so he can’t see the bright blush that spreads across your cheeks, but you’d blame it on the alcohol anyway.
The crew has never seen you like this before. Nami and Vivi exchange glances when you ramble on to Luffy about how great his brother is. “I know, right? He’s awesome!” he grins innocently, too oblivious to your eyes flickering over to where he sits.
Little do you know, he's saying the same things about you to Sanji across the ship.
Summary: When Ace visits Luffy, his eyes latch on to one of the crewmates. . . .
Song: Slow Down - Chase Atlantic
Author’s note: Please like, reblog and share this! 🫶
The deck groaned under Ace’s weight as he stepped aboard the Thousand Sunny, but his grin faltered when he saw you—not Luffy—leaning against the mast, your fingers idly twisting the breeze into spirals that danced like invisible ribbons around your wrists. The air itself seemed to pulse in time with your breath, thick and electric, and for a heartbeat, Ace forgot why he’d come.
Luffy tackled him from behind, laughing, but Ace barely registered the impact. His gaze snagged on the way your lips parted—just slightly—as you exhaled, sending a gust skimming across his collarbones, warm and teasing.
"Who’s that?" he muttered, low enough that only his brother could hear.
Luffy’s grin widened, shark-like. "Ohhh, you noticed?" He wiggled his eyebrows, sticky with rice from whatever he’d been devouring. "Y/N can make the wind do anything." The way he said it—like a challenge—sent heat crawling up Ace’s neck.
Ace swallowed, tasting salt and something sharper. "Yeah?" He kept his voice casual, but his pulse wasn’t fooling anyone, least of all you. Your fingers twitched, and suddenly the air between you thickened, carrying the scent of his sweat, the faintest tang of gunpowder clinging to his skin.
Luffy moved on with the conversation, oblivious—or maybe not—babbling about some island with meat trees, but Ace wasn’t listening.
Your bare feet padded silently across the deck, the wood smooth under your toes, and you slipped into the shadow of the mast—just out of reach, just far enough to make Ace’s jaw tighten.
The air around you hummed with restrained energy, and the space where your body had been a moment ago still carried the ghost of your warmth, the scent of something wild and untamed.
Ace’s fingers curled into his palms, the roughness of his calluses catching against his skin. He exhaled sharply, watching as the wind you’d left behind curled around his wrist like a question, teasing the fine hairs there before dissipating. His pulse thrummed thickly in his throat, a drumbeat out of sync with the waves lapping at the hull.
Luffy tugged him toward the aquarium bar, oblivious, chattering about Franky’s latest upgrades—something about cola-powered cannonballs—but Ace’s attention snagged on every flicker of movement in his periphery, searching for the dip of your waist or the curve of your shoulder in the shifting sunlight.
The air tasted different where you’d stood—charged, like the moment before lightning cracks the sky open.
The galley door swung shut with a whisper of wind, deliberate, teasing. Ace caught the barest glimpse of your fingers curled around the frame before you vanished inside, leaving behind the faintest impression of your presence—warmth lingering in the spaces between molecules, your scent woven into the salt-stiff fabric of his shirt. His teeth clicked together.
Luffy tugged him toward the crow’s nest, oblivious to the way Ace’s pulse kicked against his ribs like a trapped bird. “And up there’s where Usopp watches for—”
Ace wasn’t listening. His gaze scraped over every shadow in the rigging, every shift of sailcloth, hunting for the barest ripple of disturbance in the air—your signature, your silent laugh. The wind carried nothing but salt and the chatter of the crew below, and the absence of you burned sharper than any presence.
Luffy’s elbow jabbed his ribs. "Ace! You’re not even looking!" He pouted, waving at the gleaming figurehead, but Ace barely registered the sunlight glinting off the lion’s mane.
His pulse thrummed in his fingertips, restless, and he flexed his hands against the ghost of your touch still clinging to his skin.
The galley door creaked again—just a fraction—and Ace’s breath caught. But it was only Sanji, balancing a tray of drinks with practiced ease, his cigarette smoke curling lazily upward.
The disappointment settled heavy in Ace’s gut, sour and unfamiliar. He exhaled through his nose, tasting the lingering trace of you—something floral and wild, like the wind after a storm.
His fingers twitched toward the empty space beside him, where the air still thrummed with the memory of your presence. The ship rolled gently beneath them, and Ace imagined he could feel the shift of your weight against the boards, the whisper of your breath threading through the rigging. His skin prickled, hyperaware of every stray current brushing his bare arms.
Luffy jabbed a finger at the mast, grinning. "See? It’s way taller than the Merry’s!" Ace nodded absently, his gaze darting past his brother’s shoulder to the darkened doorway of the women’s quarters—had that curtain just swayed?
The air there hung unnaturally still, thick as honey, and his tongue stuck to the roof of his mouth.
Behind him, Nami’s citrus perfume cut through the salt, sharp and bright, but it was the phantom brush of your breath against his nape that made his shoulders tense. He turned—too fast—and found only empty space, the deckboards warm where sunlight pooled.
The wind carried a snatch of your laughter from somewhere above, but when he craned his neck, the crow’s nest gaped empty, its ropes swaying like they’d just been touched.
Luffy dragged him belowdecks, crowing about the new cannon storage, but Ace’s knuckles grazed the wall as they passed, and the wood hummed under his touch—residual vibration, the echo of footsteps that weren’t his.
He inhaled deep, catching the barest hint of ozone tangled in the ship’s damp, and his pulse stuttered. Your scent. Close.
The laundry line snapped taut under your fingers, damp fabric swaying like sails in the sluggish afternoon air. You didn’t turn when the heat bloomed behind you—knew the exact cadence of his footsteps, the way the boards sighed under his weight.
Ace’s shadow stretched long across the deck, his breath a slow, deliberate thing against your shoulder blades. The sun had baked the cotton warm, but his nearness scorched hotter, the air between you wavering like mirage.
Your fingers twitched; the wind coiled lazy around the hanging shirts, wicking moisture from the fibers with a whisper. Ace’s shirt fluttered against his chest, sleeves brushing his forearms—close enough to tease the fine hairs there, not close enough to touch.
You exhaled, slow, and the breeze carried the scent of him back to you—woodsmoke and sea salt, the stubborn tang of gunpowder clinging to his skin. His fingers flexed at his sides, knuckles brushing the hem of his own damn shirt where it hung, still damp, between you.
Behind you, Ace swallowed audibly, his throat clicking. The laundry line creaked as you stepped away, your bare feet silent on the sun-warmed deck.
The wind curled playful around his wrists, tugging at his sleeves like it wanted to pull him closer—or maybe that was just you. You didn’t look back. Didn’t need to. The air itself trembled with the weight of his gaze, hot as a brand between your shoulder blades.
Luffy’s voice shattered the moment like a cannonball through glass. "Ace! Sanji made meat-flavored cotton candy!" He barreled across the deck, arms waving, and Ace barely had time to brace before his brother collided with him, sending them both stumbling into the rigging.
The ropes groaned under their weight, and Ace’s elbow knocked against the mast—pain flared bright up his arm, but his eyes stayed locked on you, on the way your lips curved as you turned, finally, to watch.
The wind shifted, carrying the scent of sugar and meat, the sharp tang of Luffy’s excitement. But beneath it all—beneath the salt and the sun and the ship’s creaking bones—Ace could still smell you. Wild. Close. Gone.
Dinner was quickly served, and Ace sat opposite you. The table between you was laden with Sanji’s latest feast—glazed ribs dripping honey, towers of buttered rolls, skewers of seared meat glistening under the galley’s warm light—but Ace barely registered the spread.
His fingers tightened around his fork, the metal groaning under his grip, as you leaned back in your chair, deliberately slow, your bare foot brushing his calf under the table. The contact was fleeting, barely there, but it sent a current up his spine, sharp as a lightning strike.
You didn’t look at him. Didn’t need to. The air between you was thick with unspoken tension, the breeze from the open porthole carrying the scent of your skin—something floral and dangerous, like night-blooming jasmine tangled with gunpowder.
Your fingers traced idle patterns on your glass, condensation beading and rolling down your knuckles as Ace’s jaw worked, his throat bobbing with each swallow.
The crew’s laughter blurred into white noise, the clatter of cutlery distant, muted, as if the world had narrowed to the space where your knee now pressed against his, deliberate and unyielding.
Ace’s breath hitched. The fork in his hand bent, the tines curling inward like claws. You finally met his gaze, your lips quirking as you took a slow sip of wine, the red staining your mouth—a challenge, a provocation.
The air around you shimmered, charged with the weight of his attention, the way his pupils dilated, swallowing the firelight whole. You exhaled, and the candle between you guttered, the flame bending toward him like it couldn’t resist the pull of his heat.
Across the table, Nami’s voice cut through the haze, sharp with amusement. “Ace, you’re not eating.” His gaze snapped to her, but his fingers twitched toward you, drawn like a compass needle to true north.
You leaned back, breaking contact, and the air rushed back between you, cool and taunting. The candle flared back to life, casting shadows that danced across his collarbones, the hollow of his throat.
You smiled, small and private, as Ace’s knuckles whitened around his ruined fork. The game wasn’t over. It had barely begun.
The crew dispersed like scattered embers—Chopper yawning into Usopp’s shoulder, Sanji humming as he stacked plates—but Ace lingered, his pulse a slow, heavy thing beneath his skin.
You slipped away without a word, the sway of your hips deliberate, the hem of your skirt brushing the back of your thighs. The doorway swallowed you whole, but the air in your wake clung to him, thick with the memory of your knee pressing into his, the phantom heat of your breath against his jaw. His shirt stuck to his shoulders, damp with something other than sweat.
Your door clicked shut behind him, the sound final, a punctuation mark. Ace exhaled, rough, and the hinges groaned under his palm—not a push, not yet, just the weight of his hesitation.
The scent of you here was richer, deeper: salt and the bitter tang of ink from the maps strewn across your bed, the oil you used to sharpen your knives lingering on your fingertips.
You turned, slow, your back to the porthole, moonlight carving silver along the curve of your neck. “Lost, Fire Fist?” The words curled, smoke-light, around the space between you.
Ace’s throat worked. The air in the room shifted, pressurized, as he stepped forward—one pace, two—until the heat of him pressed against you, close enough to feel the shudder of your breath against his chest. Your fingers found his wrist, tracing the pulse there, erratic as a storm-tossed ship.
His skin burned under your touch, the embers in his veins flaring with each brush of your thumb. "Not lost," he murmured, the words rough, smoke-roughened. "Just following the wind."
Your laugh was low, deliberate, as you pressed your palm flat against his sternum. The fabric of his shirt scorched under your fingers, threads curling from the heat radiating off him.
"Careful," you whispered, watching his pupils swallow the moonlight whole. "Winds change direction without warning." The air between you thickened, tasting of salt and the ozone-sharp promise of lightning, and Ace’s fingers dug into the wood of the doorframe, splinters catching in his skin.
You stepped back, letting the breeze coil around him like a living thing—tightening just enough to make his ribs expand against the pressure before dissolving into nothing.
His breath hissed between his teeth, but you were already turning away, the hem of your skirt whispering against the floorboards. The porthole rattled as you passed it, a gust of wind slamming it shut with finality.
Ace’s reflection warped in the glass, his jaw clenched tight around words that wouldn’t come.
The bunk creaked as you sat, rolling a knife between your fingers—the blade catching moonlight in jagged shards. You didn’t look up as Ace’s shadow stretched across the floor, didn’t acknowledge the way his knuckles whitened around the doorframe.
"You’re persistent," you mused, testing the edge of the blade against your thumb. A bead of blood welled, stark against your skin, and the air in the room shuddered as Ace’s control snapped.
He moved like wildfire—sudden, consuming—one hand closing around your wrist, the other pinning the knife to the wall with a thud that vibrated up your arm. His breath scorched your cheek, uneven, his chest heaving against yours like a caged thing.
"Persistent?" His voice was gravel, smoke, the embers of a dying fire. "You’ve been playing with me since I stepped on this damn ship."
You exhaled, slow, and the candle by the bedside guttered out, plunging the room into darkness save for the faint glow of Ace’s tattoos—embers in the night. His grip tightened, calluses rough against your pulse, but you didn’t pull away.
Instead, you leaned in, close enough to taste the salt on his lips, close enough to feel the hitch in his breath when your knee brushed his thigh. "Playing?" You let the word curl, languid, around the space between you. "Or waiting for you to catch up?"
The knife clattered to the floor as Ace’s mouth crashed into yours, all heat and hunger, his teeth catching your lip hard enough to draw blood. The taste of iron bloomed between you, sharp and metallic, and you laughed into the kiss—a challenge, a surrender—as the wind outside howled, rattling the porthole like it wanted in.
His hands burned paths down your sides, igniting every inch of skin they touched, and you arched into him, your fingers tangling in his hair to pull him closer, deeper, until the line between his fire and your storm blurred into something neither of you could control.
Ace groaned when you bit down on his tongue, the sound rough and raw, and his grip tightened on your hips, fingers digging in hard enough to leave bruises.
The air between you crackled, charged with the weight of everything unsaid, and you broke the kiss just long enough to whisper, "Still think I’m playing?" against his mouth.
His answering growl vibrated through you, low and possessive, and you grinned as he shoved you back onto the bed, his body following yours like a collapsing star.
The mattress dipped under his weight, the sheets tangling around your legs as Ace’s mouth found the pulse point beneath your jaw, his teeth scraping the sensitive skin there.
You gasped, your fingers tightening in his hair as the wind outside surged, sending papers fluttering off the desk in a whirl of motion. His hands were everywhere—kneading, gripping, claiming—and you arched into him, your back bowing off the bed as his lips traced a burning path down your throat.
Ace’s breath hitched when your nails raked down his back, leaving red trails in their wake, and he pulled back just enough to meet your gaze, his pupils blown wide with want.
The air between you thrummed with tension, thick and heady, and you smirked, dragging a thumb over his swollen lower lip.
"Fire Fist," you murmured, your voice rough with amusement, "looks like you finally caught up."
His answering grin was feral, all teeth and hunger, and then his mouth was on yours again, his hands mapping your body like he was memorizing every curve, every scar, every shuddering breath. . . .
Have some acesan cause i recently gotten into one piece and they are the ship that has stuck with me instantly, I would love to post about one of my interest for a bit but i keep having artblock for half of the time i have my obessions
This is based off a prompt i found here on tumblr that basically described almost half the Acesan content made, ill have to look for it and credit them(I can't find them)