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"If we're going to do this, then we're doing it properly… all the way!!"

"…Mother? What was that outburst just now?"

"Oh, nothing. Sorry. I just felt like saying it."

Ahem. At the mont, we were paying a visit to the mansion belonging to the gang that had tried to kill Alice—and then, even after settling things with money, had sent assassins after us. We'd just finished wiping them out, and now we were on our way back.

When it cos to this sort of thing, you have to eliminate the source completely. Otherwise, it cos back to bite you later. That's sothing I've learned the hard way.

So people won't give up even after you leave the island. They'll chase you across the sea and send assassins after you.

If it were just , I might let it slide. But once children's safety is involved… that's a line I refuse to tolerate.

So I crushed them. Thoroughly. Nothing left behind.

Only Suzu and I ca along for this job.

Between our physical invulnerability and our ability to turn into paper or mud—perfect for infiltration and swift extermination—we make a frighteningly efficient pair.

…Though, to be honest, once we were inside, I did most of the rampaging.

Suzu sealed every entrance and exit with mud, trapping them inside, while I went through and erased every last one of them. Simple enough.

"Still… it's rare for Mother to go this far," Suzu said quietly. "Usually you'd just knock them around and tell them to scram. But this ti… you wiped them out completely."

"There are tis when sparing people causes no problems—and tis when it absolutely does," I replied. "…Did I disappoint you? Were you scared?"

"It's far too late for that," she said calmly. "We all understand you made this decision after thinking about what was best for us—, Leona, and Alice. Why would we resent you for it? …Besides, the world is full of people far more cruel than Mother."

These kids really are like this, Suzu thought.

Good. That's a relief.

I did what I believed had to be done—ruthlessly, decisively. I don't regret it. Still, I'd worried that Suzu or the others might feel frightened, repulsed, or start putting distance between us.

Now that concern was gone.

"Alright, Suzu. Do a quick sweep and grab all the cash and valuables you can find. Hand everything to —I'll stash it."

"And Mother?"

"She's checking their important docunts. mber lists, evidence of cris, anything that would be devastating if it leaked… then she's going to leave them sowhere obvious."

"…So you're letting whoever cos next find them on purpose?"

"Exactly. I had Alice spread rumors among the rival gangs that this place was wiped out. When they co to confirm it, they'll find a destroyed mansion—and docunts that any gang would kill to get, just lying around."

They'll assu the gang was crushed in a turf war. Using those docunts, they'll mop up the remnants, hunt down survivors, and erase the organization for us.

Even if they suspect soone orchestrated this…

"Make sure there's nothing that links back to us," I added.

"I'm done already. There was cash, and—just like you said—two safes in the next room. One was obvious, the other hidden. Neither had combinations."

"I read the combinations out of that guy's head earlier. Let's open them. The hidden one should have the real good stuff."

We cracked both safes, took the money and docunts we needed, and left before anyone else arrived.

That should be the end of the gang. As planned, the others would finish the cleanup and hunt down any stragglers.

They'd been connected to figures in the island's governing structure, and even to the World Governnt's underbelly and parts of the Marines. Those people might be annoyed that their black-market routes and eting places were disrupted—but it wouldn't last.

Another gang would quickly move in, using the docunts I left behind to take over.

For their clients, the deal itself matters more than who they're dealing with.

Especially in an underworld where morals don't exist.

The country would be in chaos for a while—but we were already leaving. It wouldn't affect us.

And so, we made our quick getaway. Bye-bye.

---

It's already been half a month since we left the island. Ti really does fly.

On my ship now are three daughters—Leona, Suzu, and Alice. The journey has beco far livelier, far noisier, than before.

At first, Alice—the girl we took with us, or rather bought—seed to think she'd be serving aboard as so kind of attendant. She was prepared for it.

We never intended that.

Honestly, I didn't think much at the ti. A friend was about to be killed, so I moved to save her.

I didn't see her as a guest—but I never planned to treat her like a servant either.

If anything, having soone on board you have to be formal with feels more restrictive than helpful. All three of us felt that way.

Leona, friendly by nature, and Suzu, who's more sociable than she looks, imdiately drew Alice in. Before long, they were chatting like old friends.

I didn't treat Alice with any forced politeness either.

In fact, when it cos to audacity and shrewdness, she might even surpass the other two. She's the type you can deal with casually without worry. So I treated her exactly the sa.

…Honestly, adjusting my behavior just for her would've been a pain. It was easier to lump them all together.

At first, Alice looked confused by it. But her talent for socializing is remarkable—arguably better than even Leona's or Suzu's.

A relationship without pretense, where being guarded was pointless, suited her perfectly. Within a few days, she was already…

"Ugh, that's why it's Red Line, Leona! 'Restaurant' has five letters—it doesn't fit!"

"You just filled it in because you were hungry, didn't you? Look—none of the other words match either! You didn't read the clues at all!"

"You two are so annoying! I'm concentrating here! If I solve this crossword, I get an A-rank beef set!"

"At this rate you won't even get the participation prize. Here, let help."

"No! I'm doing it myself!"

Leona was glaring at the crossword puzzle from the magazine they'd bought on the last island. Alice hovered nearby, unable to watch in silence. Suzu observed the chaos with half-amused exasperation.

"Anyway, since we're always at sea, we can't actually enter magazine contests, can we? We're pirates."

"…Oh. Right."

"Besides," Alice added casually, "Mom would probably just buy us beef if we asked. What do you think?"

Sowhere along the way, she'd started calling "Mom."

Just like Suzu, she'd picked it up naturally. At first it felt awkward—but as she grew closer to the others, she stopped resisting the idea of as her mother.

Now she spoke to as casually as they did. Like family.

Even I'd started to relax around her.

"I'm not spoiling you rotten," I said. "But… hearing you talk has made want beef. Shall we get so on the next island?"

"Yes! Grilled at! Barbecue! Beef stew!"

"From despair to joy in seconds. What a creature."

"As long as there's beef, who cares? So, did you finish the crossword?"

"N-no! I'm still working on it!"

And that's how my three daughters are now.

Who could've predicted this? From single, with no romantic experience to speak of, to suddenly becoming the mother of three.

Even with the eyes of Sue the Pirate Literary Master, I never saw this coming.

Truth really is stranger than fiction.

Still… I don't dislike this noise. Not at all.

And hearing them call Mama, Mother, and Mom—it feels surprisingly good.

Maybe it's because I skipped all the hardest parts of parenting. No pregnancy. No childbirth. No sleepless nights. Instead, three well-behaved, understanding children simply fell into my life.

Still, the affection itself is real. At least, that's how it feels to .

…Though they probably aren't thinking this deeply about it.

'It all started when I took Leona—back when she had amnesia—out for a change of pace…'

Before I knew it, we'd slipped into an unofficial parent-child relationship. Then Suzu, then Alice joined.

We arrived here without resistance, without doubt.

But…

"…Is it really okay to just keep drifting like this?"

"…Mother? Did you say sothing?"

"No. It's nothing."

Suzu must have caught my murmur.

I brushed it aside and returned my attention to the sea chart. Right—where to next?

I felt Alice watching with curiosity, but I pretended not to notice.

To be continued...

You are reading One Piece: I Will Become a Great Writer! Chapter 98: Sue, Leona, Suzu, and Alice (1) on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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