## One Piece Chapter 705, pages 4-6: Maynard the Pursuer - Chapter: 705 - Pages: 4-6 - Characters: Maynard, Ganbia, Bartolomeo, Issho ### Summary Page 4: The undercover man deals with the interruption violently. In the "Toilets/Garbage Dump," water splashes as he washes his hands, and Ganbia lies beaten. The page identifies the man as "Fighter 0429: Capman (Marine HQ Vice Admiral: Maynard the Pursuer)." Maynard says, "Ah, Ganbia the Missionary, who I mentioned before... Bartolomeo's man... Go ahead and forget about him... I must have been seeing things." Then he reports, "My apologies. I've taken care of the problem." The cover name Capman hides a Marine vice admiral in the Colosseum, and his target is not simply the tournament but the criminals gathered inside it. The chapter title now becomes literal: Maynard is pursuing information from within the arena under a fighter's disguise. Page 5: The tournament moves forward. The announcer calls, "Moving on, it's time for B-block!! Enter, combatants!!!" The stands roar as the next set of fighters begins. Elsewhere, Fujitora listens calmly and says, "That was quite a few notable names... Shall we be going now?" He wants the situation handled with force and order: "For the time being, they should head to... I'd like to bring over three battleships..." When asked where to send them, he searches his memory: "Ehh... where was it... Ah... 'Green Bit'. Yes, there." A subordinate offers his coat, and Fujitora turns from the Colosseum toward the next point of conflict. The scale of Dressrosa's crisis widens: while Luffy pursues Ace's fruit inside the tournament, the Marines are already preparing action around Green Bit. Page 6: Fujitora, now identified as "Marine HQ Admiral Fujitora (Issho)," orders the next steps with quiet authority. "Request a large number of medical officers. We're going to have injuries..." he says, then adds, "And also... what was it... right... I'd like you to find out how many people are in the audience, as well as the population of this city... and of the whole country..." A subordinate hesitates: "Ah... do we really need to know that?" Fujitora answers from the back of a coat marked with justice: "Rather than the number of enemies... shouldn't one instead count the number of those who need protecting...?" The line shows his priority clearly. He is not measuring Dressrosa only as a battlefield; he is measuring the civilians who could be harmed.