## One Piece Chapter 764, pages 9-10: White Monster - Chapter: 764 - Pages: 9-10 - Characters: Trafalgar Law, Corazon, young Donquixote Doflamingo, Donquixote Homing, Donquixote Rosinante, angry townspeople ### Summary Page 9: Law accuses Corazon directly: "LIAR!! Your damn shoulder's on fire!" Corazon, sitting with smoke rising from him, says, "It's all been an act." Law asks why he hid it from all of his friends and comrades, but Corazon snaps, "Shut up about that already!! The most unbelievable parts are all true though!!" He admits, "Well... I've never been able to get over being clumsy since forever... I've always been a klutz..." Law says he does not think of the Donquixote Family as comrades. Corazon's expression turns hard as he explains his reason: "My duty... as his younger brother... is to keep my older brother Doffy's 'madness' at bay. From such kind-hearted mother and father... how they could have given birth to such a monster, I'll never know." The page reframes Corazon not as a traitor to Doflamingo's family but as someone trying to restrain Doflamingo from inside it. Page 10: Corazon recounts the childhood catastrophe: "Aim your arrows at me! Come on!! These children have committed no sins!! Help meee--Uwaaaaah!!" In the memory of the mob, Doflamingo screams, "The pain... Father... I just want to die already!!" Homing answers through his own suffering, "No matter what you do to me, I will not die!!!" A brother figure calls out while the crowd threatens, and Doflamingo swears, "You'll all pay for this!! Until not a single one of you is left alive!! And I will kill you all... one by one..." Corazon says those are the only ones who know Doffy's true nature and his madness. He tells Law, "Are we four of his inner circle... and the former Corazon, Vergo." Law asks if Vergo is close to him, and Corazon says Vergo is extremely skilled and has absolutely nothing to do with Law. Corazon ends by warning, "Don't become a monster like my brother!! Get away from here, Law...!! You are a member of the fated family of 'D'."