## One Piece Chapter 734: The Kamaitachi of Rommel - Chapter: 734 - Pages: 0-17 - Characters: Usopp, Rebecca, Gatz, Cavendish, Orlumbus, Suleiman, Hakuba, Damask, Mummy, Sabo, Donquixote Doflamingo, King Riku, Violet, Trafalgar Law, Monkey D. Luffy, Franky, Roronoa Zoro, Kin'emon, Nico Robin ### Summary Page 0: The chapter opens with the title page for Chapter 734, "The Kamaitachi of Rommel." The cover request shows Usopp riding a giraffe and painting patterns across its long neck while other giraffes stand nearby with their own designs. The caption reads: "Usopp is riding a giraffe and painting patterns on those without any" - sent in by Croquette of Aichi Prefecture. It is not part of the Dressrosa action, but it is a useful extra because it identifies the chapter title and provides the reader-request illustration before the story returns to the Corrida Colosseum. Page 1: The Corrida Colosseum announcer struggles to understand the impossible ending of D-block. The twenty-odd stalwart fighters who remained were all mysteriously knocked out in a flash, and the announcer calls it a bizarre finish after such a chaotic block. The crowd asks how it turned out this way and wonders whether the one responsible for everything is still in the ring. In the center of the arena, someone is attempting to stand. The audience watches the dust and fallen bodies, asking whether this person will be the winner. A blade plants against the stone with a clear clunk, and every eye turns toward the lone figure rising from the wreckage. Page 2: The survivor is Rebecca. She stands in the ruined ring breathing hard, both hands on her sword, her cloak falling around her while the rest of D-block lies scattered across the stone. The announcer and spectators stare in disbelief before the cry spreads: "It was Rebecca who stood up!!" The colosseum erupts into her name, the crowd shouting "Rebecca!" and "Re..." as they realize that the hated granddaughter of King Riku is the one still upright. Rebecca herself looks exhausted and shaken rather than triumphant. She has not emerged as a conquering warrior; she is simply the last person standing after an attack no one fully saw. Page 3: The announcer reviews the field and emphasizes how absurd Rebecca's victory looks from the outside. The promising D-block candidates, all treated as potential winners, have failed to stand. The infamous warriors lie beaten, and none of them can rise. Among the fallen are named threats such as Cavendish, Orlumbus, Suleiman, and other dangerous fighters, yet the final contestant moving on in Dressrosa's fighting tournament is, of all people, the prisoner gladiator carrying the sullied blood of the Riku royal family. The page contrasts Rebecca's quiet survival with the unconscious bodies of the famous warriors around her, making her victory feel less like celebration and more like a mystery. Page 4: The crowd refuses to accept the result. People shout "Rebecca!!!" while others curse her, asking what she did and demanding an investigation. The reaction spreads beyond the ring to the prisoner gladiator lodgings, where supporters cry that Rebecca did it and admit they do not know what happened, only that she won. Others call it a terrible outcome and ask what happened to Cavendish-sama, while Orlumbus' supporters insist there is no way Commodore Orlumbus could lose to that little girl. Rebecca stands silently amid the wreckage, surrounded by anger, disbelief, and scattered bodies, her victory immediately treated as suspicious rather than earned. Page 5: Outside the colosseum, the mystery is given a name: "The Kamaitachi of Rommel." A note explains that kamaitachi are Japanese folklore monsters, weasels with scythes that move too quickly to be seen and deliver cuts as if from a whirlwind. The story recalls the Rommel Kingdom long ago, where during the night a wind would blow through and cut people to shreds. These mysterious incidents continued until even a Marine battleship dispatched to investigate was attacked. The Marines also fell victim to that cutting wind, but in the end the true identity of the wind was one man, known as Hakuba. To this day he has not been caught, and he always appears in towns visited by a certain pirate. Page 6: The chapter reveals what happened inside the ring. A pale, wild-eyed version of Cavendish, Hakuba, moves like a nightmare through D-block, chasing Rebecca as she stumbles and tries to run. One fighter yells that she cannot run forever, little girl, but the real threat is the blur of Hakuba's swordwork cutting through the battlefield faster than the eye can follow. Rebecca is terrified, barely keeping her feet while bodies are carved down around her. She sees the attacker coming and can only react by instinct, her expression shifting from fear to shock as the attack closes in. Page 7: Hakuba's strange condition becomes clearer. Someone notices that the man has an odd stance, and another realizes that he is asleep. Rebecca sees him...