Chapter 158 Hancock: Trembling with anger...
"Good morning, lamp. Good morning, potted plant. Good morning, toy snake. Good morning, carpet. Good morning, wardrobe. Good morning, sink. Good morning, toilet... Good morning, everyone."
"Every day when he wakes up, Luffy greets every item in the small room like this. At this time, his mother Hancock also brings toiletries and sits aside with a blank expression. Luffy reminds her: "Today is my birthday, I am five years old..." Hancock responds to him, "Okay, I know."..."
When Hancock read this paragraph, he was obviously a little dazed.
What happened?
Who is this Luffy?
What did the words "Mother Hancock" mean... How come the protagonist in this book, who looked almost exactly like herself, suddenly became someone's "mother"? Did she miss something?
In the previous paragraph, was it about the legendary "man" seeking help from "the kind-hearted and beautiful man Cook" to treat his pet snake?
Robin carefully watched the changes in Hancock's expression, and at the same time glanced at Lynch, the instigator over there. This guy was so absorbed in playing with his ghost that he didn't care at all about what was about to happen here.
Hancock continued to read the story with doubts.
This new character named Luffy seems to be the protagonist Hancock's...daughter? No, since there is a man, maybe the protagonist's child can also be a male? But what should the male child be called? Hancock was confused. After searching for a long time, she couldn't find any mention of this five-year-old child Luffy in the book. Is she a daughter or something else? It's really annoying!
The story continues. From the perspective of five-year-old Luffy, the protagonist Hancock is introduced to the environment at the moment. It is a very small room with no windows on the four walls. There is only a hard skylight on the ceiling several meters high that lets in a faint sunlight, and a heavy iron door that is more than ten centimeters thick. It is the only entrance and exit to the room.
What's going on? Is this a prison? Hancock felt a little uncomfortable, but it didn't matter, just keep reading.
If she remembered correctly, the protagonist of this book, Hancock, was very similar to her, that is, not only was she as beautiful as her, but she also had the same strength as her.
Even if it was a prison, she believed that the protagonist could easily escape, and might just be lurking now.
As for this five-year-old Luffy, who she wasn't sure if she was a daughter or something... Hancock didn't understand matters between men and women after all, so she didn't think anything of it. She just thought of it as having an extra pet similar to Salome.
But the next paragraph came as a shock to Hancock.
"...In the small room, Hancock stretched her body as hard as she could, recalling the exercises and martial arts she had done in her hometown. However, due to years of lack of nutrition, her physical strength had been weakening. Now, after just doing a simple set of training, she felt exhausted, sweating and panting. Especially when she stopped and found that Luffy, a five-year-old child, had been following her movements until now, she suddenly felt a shivering chill that made her fingertips cold."
"She is no longer able to complete the training she once did, even the simplest ones."
"The so-called training just now was nothing but self-deception. She was force-fed a devil fruit and was wearing a seastone collar that restrained devil fruits. She was imprisoned in this dark room for seven years. The beautiful and powerful self in her memory has become blurred. She even doubted whether the past was an illusion, and the nightmare hell at this moment is the reality..."
As Hancock read, he could not help but feel his hands and feet turning cold and he was shaking with anger.
What do you mean? What do you mean?!
Is the protagonist Hancock really imprisoned in a small room? She is also fed some kind of devil fruit and wears a collar that restrains the devil fruit, so she has no ability to resist? This collar can even explode?
Is this being kept as a pet?! Also, due to years of malnutrition, the protagonist Hancock's physical strength has declined, and her athletic ability is not much better than that of a five-year-old child?!
Hancock now began to feel that the origin of this so-called child Luffy, "her" one, was very suspicious!
What happened seven years before the imprisonment and after the incident with the man who asked the protagonist to help treat his pet snake? What made the protagonist Hancock become like this? Hancock was angry about the plot, but she was also confused and puzzled. She really wanted to know what happened.
Holding back her strong emotions, Hancock frowned and continued reading.
Robin moved aside and held her forehead in her hands, hoping that Hancock wouldn't get too involved...
…
Apparently...
The first half of this book created by "BIB" using the Castle Fruit is based on Hancock's own Mary Sue story, so I won't mention it. The core of the book - the second half of the story, is based on the movie "Room" starring Captain Marvel.
The movie "Room" unfolds from the perspective of Jack, the son of the heroine Joey, and has a kind of innocent beauty. In addition, the mother-son relationship in the movie is also very touching, the mother accompanies the son, and the son saves the mother...
There is no mistake in the poem, post, content, and read the book on 6, 9, and bar!
Lynch changed all of these.
Anyway, he is not going to win the Best Adaptation Award or something like that. His core purpose is to stimulate Hancock! If the mother-son relationship is written too warmly and touchingly, how can it work? It must be cruel!
It must be dark, deep and cruel! If you want to change it, you have to change it hard.
In his modified story, the protagonist Hancock is extremely disgusted with her son Luffy.
This child is a symbol of her nightmarish life, reminding her all the time what kind of hell she lives in.
Hancock's attitude towards the child was extremely contradictory. On the one hand, she was unwilling to hurt him, but on the other hand, she deliberately ignored him and turned a blind eye to him. Even when necessary communication was necessary, she would say as little as possible.
On his fifth birthday, Luffy asked for cake. The protagonist Hancock suddenly remembered how lively the scene was when she celebrated her birthday in her hometown. Her mood suddenly became bad. She cried and yelled, and smashed the few things in the room amid Luffy's screams...
When Hancock read this paragraph, her heart trembled. It was not because the writing of this book was so good, but for her, this story was too immersive... Between the lines, it was almost named that the hometown that Hancock missed in the book was the Nine Snake Island, and the family members she missed madly at that moment were her two sisters...
"Hurry to the closet, he's coming." Hancock pushed Luffy into the closet and ordered him to sleep there tonight. Luffy blinked. He knew who his mother was talking about. Every time the Celestial Dragons came, he had to sleep in this closet..."
(End of this chapter)