## One Piece Chapter 736, pages 2-4: Elite Officer Diamante - Chapter: 736 - Pages: 2-4 - Characters: Rebecca, Sabo, Diamante, Gatz, Bartolomeo, Jesus Burgess ### Summary Page 2: The result of D-block still poisons the start of the final. Spectators shout that the match must not begin and demand that Rebecca be removed from the ring, insisting D-block needs a redo and refusing to recognize the insane result of the previous battle. One angry group charges into the arena, yelling that there is no way they could have lost to a little girl like Rebecca and ordering her to face them now. Others urge them to take her down. Rebecca stays silent, watching the fury approach while Sabo stands nearby in the Lucy disguise. The colosseum is supposed to begin its final, but the crowd's hatred turns into a direct attack on her. Page 3: Before the mob can ruin the show, Diamante steps in. He says that not knowing when to give up is shameful and that results are results, then commands everyone to stop ruining his show. The charging men complain that they are not bulls and ask what he is doing, while Diamante tells them to aim well. His black cloak spreads out around him like a theatrical curtain. The attackers rush him anyway, and he answers all at once, striking them with sharp, sudden force while standing at the center of the ring. The message is simple: Diamante controls this stage, and even the crowd's anger must move according to his performance. Page 4: Diamante explains the trick behind his cloak. He is a "Flag Man" who ate the Hira Hira no Mi; anything he touches becomes floppy and fluttery. Although his mantle flaps with a light "hira hira" sound, he reveals that it is actually made of steel. The fighters hear the lock of his attack, and then Diamante unleashes "Corrida Glaive," sending his hardened, fluttering mantle crashing through the intruders. Bodies fly as the impossible cloth behaves like a weaponized sheet of metal. The power is both strange and cruelly practical: Diamante can make solid material wave like a flag, then turn that same softness into a sweeping blow.