## One Piece Chapter 392, pages 5-7: Dereshi - Chapter: 392 - Pages: 5-7 - Characters: Nico Robin, Professor Clover, Archaeologists of Ohara, Nico Olvia, Jaguar D. Saul ### Summary Page 5: The room falls silent around Robin's confession. Clover tells her, "It's true... you've gained the knowledge to claim that you're an archaeologist... but... Robin, you're still a child!!!" The scholars explain the danger: they are determined to continue even if it means risking their lives, because when the research became illegal 800 years ago, countless scholars around the world lost their lives. They say, "We, of Ohara, are the only ones who can decipher the ancient writings," and "We're already involved. We cannot turn back." But Clover draws a hard line for Robin: "I swear on the Tree of Omniscience...!! If you go near that basement again, we'll prohibit you from entering the research center and the library!!! Understood!!?" Page 6: Robin runs from the library at night, crying beside the immense Tree of Omniscience. The scene shifts to the scholars inside, who understand the tragedy of her position better than she knows. One says, "She's completely... following her mother's path." Another explains, "She still doesn't know... the incident from the other day... Robin's mother Olvia has been captured." Their conclusion is chilling: "Her fate is obvious...!!!" On the final panel, Nico Olvia is named and shown, linking Robin's forbidden desire for knowledge directly to the mother who has been absent from her life. Robin thinks she is only chasing scholarship and belonging, but the adults see history closing around her. Page 7: At the shore, Robin finds a giant washed up on the sand. He lies face down, huge and wounded, with the surf sliding around him. Robin approaches cautiously, her small footsteps marked by "tap tap," and asks, "Wha...?" The stranger twitches, coughs, and drags himself through the water with exhausted force. Robin watches silently as he struggles to breathe. The page is almost wordless because the scale does the work: an eight-year-old child stands before a giant, not as a monster this time, but as the first person to notice someone else abandoned and hurt.