A wave of murmurs and gasps went through the crowd.
"A ten million Berri deposit just to get on board?"
"And you don't get it back if you don't buy enough?"
"Isn't that just robbery?"
"Heh. With a business model like that, who's going to buy from them?"
"So arrogant!"
But then, their eyes fell on the items displayed along the ship's rail, and their jaws dropped.
"That vase... it's exquisite! That pattern... could it be the unique porcelain of the Kano Country in the West Blue?"
"I've only ever seen sothing like that in the royal treasury! A single piece is said to be worth over a hundred million Berries!"
"And that... is that top-grade beef from the South Blue?"
"Hey... what's that incredible sll? Is that perfu? From Nanohana?"
The array of high-quality goods captivated the town's rchants. When the potential for profit was this great, what was ten million Berries?
The world economy was in a slump. The poor were getting poorer.
But the rich were getting richer.
The rchants with the capital to spare quickly ford a line and were led onto the ship's specially designed exhibition deck.
All the goods were clearly priced. No haggling. Take it or leave it.
Dammit!
The rchants cursed inwardly. They'd never seen such an arrogant seller. But the goods... they were just too good to pass up.
Top-grade. Everything was top-grade. Even better than the official shipnts from the Marines.
If you didn't buy, soone else would.
But Jin's business model was a clear provocation to the established interests of the town, and a source of intense envy.
So of the rchants, seething, turned and left.
Soon, a mob of over a hundred thugs began to erge from the side streets, gradually converging on the main avenue, all of them falling in behind a young man with a rooster-comb haircut.
"Big Bro Bartoloo! Those guys from the Grand Line... they're completely disrespecting us!"
"YEAH!"
"Everyone knows the score—you wanna do business in Loguetown, you pay the Barto Club a 'managent fee'!"
"Their goods are seriously ssing with the market prices! If they're selling the good stuff, how are our shops supposed to compete?"
"Exactly! They've got better stuff, but they're selling it at the sa price as us! If we have to lower our prices, we'll lose money!"
"They have to sell their goods to us! Let us handle the distribution! That's how it's done!"
The mob was a cacophony of angry voices. Among them were so of the town's shopkeepers, the ones who couldn't afford the ten million Berri deposit and had to find another way.
They had gone to Bartoloo. He was the leader of a gang that controlled over 150 streets in Loguetown.
The rchants paid him a "managent fee" every month. When it mattered, he was supposed to step up.
"Hey! What's with all the damn chatter? One more word out of you lot and I'll toss you in the sea to feed the fishes."
Bartoloo, picking his ear, swaggered forward, whistling, a look of utter contempt on his face.
He had a green, rooster-comb mohawk, a tattoo under his right eye, and a ring in his nose that made him look like a demon. A black, winged, half-ring tattoo was emblazoned on his chest. He wore a purple coat with a skull on the back, plaid trousers, and a short sword at his waist.
He hadn't been listening to a word they'd said.
He strode forward with a swagger that dared the world to look him in the eye.
The mob of a hundred grew as it moved through the streets, a black tide that sent pedestrians scrambling out of the way. It was like a scene from a movie—one signal, and a thousand soldiers appear.
They arrived at the docks.
The crowd, having already heard that the scoundrel Bartoloo was coming, had parted, watching from a safe distance. Deuce grabbed Ace and pulled him out of the way.
Law looked up slightly.
Doruyanaika stared.
Bartoloo cupped his hands around his mouth.
"OI!" he roared. "YOU LOT ON THE SHIP! HAND OVER EVERYTHING YOU'VE GOT! OR ELSE... I'LL SINK YOUR DAMN SHIP, YEAH!"
His speech was laced with a thick local dialect, and he added a "yeah" to the end of every sentence.
Doruyanaika frowned. A local gang?
"I suggest you leave," Law said, his voice calm, a good-natured warning. "Don't make things difficult for yourself, local boss."
Jin wasn't on the ship. He had taken a gift box and gone to the Marine base to see Smoker.
If he were here, a lot of people would be ending up in the boiler.
That king... he seed gentle, but when it ca to killing pirates, he was utterly ruthless. He had already sent more than twenty pirate crews to their graves.
"WHAT?!" Bartoloo cocked his head, cupping a hand to his ear. "I couldn't hear you! What did you just say? Make things difficult for ?"
"HEHAHAHA...!" he roared with laughter.
He turned his back to Law and faced his n.
"Smash their goods and sink their ship!" he bellowed. "Show these bastards what happens when you disrespect !"
"YEAH!"
His n were already itching for a fight. The goods on that ship were worth a fortune. If they could take them, they would.
"KILL THEM!"
"CHARGE!"
The mob was no longer just the Barto Club. The pirates and bounty hunters who had been hiding in the town, all hoping to get a piece of the action, had joined in.
A force of four or five hundred n charged the ship, ready to smash, grab, and get everything for free.
"Hey, Law! What now?" Doruyanaika felt her scalp tingle at the sound of hundreds of running feet. She swallowed hard.
Law was calm, his hand still resting on his sword.
"My, my," Ai's voice chirped from the ship's speakers. "It seems we're being underestimated."
And then, the music began...
Beethoven's Wellington's Victory—the fourth movent, the Symphony of Triumph.
"What's that sound?" Deuce said, looking at the ship. "Is that... music?"
"There's a monster over there," Ace said, his gaze fixed on the ship.
"A monster?" Deuce was confused. "What monster?"
He didn't feel anything.
On the side of the ship facing the port, a series of holes, large and small, like a honeycomb, appeared without a sound.
Law, sensing the change, grabbed Doruyanaika by the back of her collar and leaped back onto the main deck.
The mont they landed...
DAKKA-DAKKA-DAKKA-DAKKA-DAKKA!
Muzzles flashed. A wall of lead tore through the air, a swarm of angry hornets descending on the crowd.
Then ca the larger cannons.
BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!
The sound was like thunder, echoing through Loguetown. The cannons were firing grapeshot.
Iron balls, packed with gunpowder and shrapnel, designed to explode in a fan-shaped pattern a second or two after leaving the barrel, causing massive area-of-effect damage.
Ten thousand guns, a hundred cannons, all firing at once from within the "fortress." The sheer density of the fire was terrifying.
And they were so close.
Even with flintlocks, accuracy was irrelevant.
The mont the guns roared, the people at the front of the mob were torn to shreds by the wall of lead.
Not a single recognizable piece of them remained.
Blood erupted from the bodies like burst waterlons, atomizing into a fine, crimson mist that mingled with the gunsmoke and fell upon the street like a bloody rain.
A warm splash hit Deuce's cheek. He didn't even register it. He was completely, utterly frozen in shock.
How could a scene be this horrific?
After the first volley, the four or five hundred people were like stalks of wheat cut down by a scythe. The ones at the front had been torn to shreds. Those behind them, shielded by the bodies of their comrades, were in slightly better shape.
But almost all of them had been hit.
So of them weren't dead yet, and their screams and wails filled the air.
Of course, so of the stronger, more cunning ones had used others as shields and had survived.
But the scene... it was a massacre.
Even the survivors didn't dare to move. So of them had pissed themselves in terror.
The entire dock was silent.
Only the triumphant strains of the symphony, mingling with the blood mist and the gunsmoke, drifted through the air.
Doruyanaika's throat was dry. The hair on her arms was standing on end. The ship had this kind of firepower?!
She was suddenly very grateful that she still had so value. Otherwise... her little gang's four city blocks wouldn't have been enough to satisfy its appetite.
Law looked calm, but a single drop of sweat trickled down his forehead.
Maya, her kind heart unable to bear the suffering, raised her sniper rifle and put the screaming n out of their misery.
She had been with Jin for a long ti. She had seen good and evil. She knew that so people were just born bad, that they couldn't be saved. She also knew that so villains could change, but that most would just keep doing evil.
And when you couldn't tell the difference...
The king had said that the greatest kindness you can show to a villain, a brute, is to send them on to their next life. Maybe they'd be a better person then.
"Alright, you idiots! Get to work!" Ai's voice blared from the speakers. The Germa 66 clone soldiers began to clean the battlefield.
"YOU BASTARDS!" a furious roar ca from a pile of bodies. "WHAT DID YOU DO TO MY N?!"
The bodies were thrown aside.
Bartoloo stood there, a barrier shimring in front of him.
A few dozen of his n were huddled behind him, protected by his power.
The Paracia Barrier-Barrier Fruit.
It was the reason Bartoloo was able to rule over 150 city blocks.
Seeing the carnage, the bodies of his n, hearing their dying screams, an uncontrollable rage burned in his eyes.
It had all happened so fast. In his arrogance, he hadn't raised his barrier until after the guns had started firing.
But it had all been over in less than two seconds. He had only had ti to protect the n behind him.
Seeing the Germa 66 clone soldiers taking away the bodies of his n, Bartoloo's eyes turned blood-red.
"STOP!" he roared. "Barrier Crash!"
The attack sent seven or eight of the clone soldiers flying.
Then, he charged toward the ship, his mind consud with a single thought: to destroy it completely.
"BIG BRO BARTOLOO!" his n scread from behind him.
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