## One Piece Chapter 392, pages 7-10: Dereshi - Chapter: 392 - Pages: 7-10 - Characters: Nico Robin, Jaguar D. Saul ### Summary 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. Page 8: The giant coughs, twitches, and finally lurches awake. He makes strange noises -- "Geh-bo-bo!!" and "Gu-gaa-aah!!!" -- as Robin stands before him without running. His enormous face comes close enough to fill the space around her, but she stays still. The giant is frightening in size, yet the page frames him as injured and disoriented, not as an attacker. Robin's silence is important: unlike the children who called her a monster, she does not immediately label him as one. She waits and watches the truth of him emerge. Page 9: The giant wakes properly, sees Robin, and panics. He tries to crawl away through the water, making a huge commotion, while Robin quietly asks, "Mimizu?" A note explains that mizu means water and mimizu means earthworm, catching her confusion at his movements. He crashes through the landscape and screams "Bhaaaa!!" as he drags himself inland. The fear is reversed from the town's cruelty: here the giant is more afraid of being found than Robin is of him. The scene turns strange and comic, but beneath it is the same theme of hiding from danger. Page 10: The giant eventually collapses inland and catches his breath. The page identifies him as "Drifter (giant) Saul." He mutters, "... Ya saved muh life..." and wonders whether that person is all right, too. Robin asks if this is a big land with a town, and he answers, "Yup," while admitting, "I see... I don't care where dis is... but I wish I'd drifted to sumplace uninhabited..." Saul is not interested in making trouble; he is wounded, stranded, and trying not to be discovered. Robin, still small and solemn, has stumbled into someone whose isolation mirrors her own in a completely different form.