## One Piece Chapter 1032, pages 9-11: Oden's Beloved Sword - Chapter: 1032 - Pages: 9-11 - Characters: Roronoa Zoro, King ### Summary Page 9: Outside, Zoro watches King do something grotesque with his pteranodon body, pulling his head and crest backward like a stretched weapon. Zoro stares and asks whether that thing is supposed to be pulled back like that. King releases the tension in two beats, building the attack with "Tem..." and then firing with "Pura!!!" The sudden snap launches a high-speed projectile-like strike at Zoro. The page is full of impact lines and startled punctuation, making the attack feel less like a normal flying slash and more like a bizarre prehistoric mechanism. Zoro has little time to react as King's strange anatomy becomes another weapon in the fight. Page 10: King's released attack hits with the force of a beam, accompanied by "Udon!!" Zoro is blasted back and grunts, "Ugh!!" He admits, "I couldn't block it!! It's like a beam!!" King answers with deadpan absurdity, explaining, "Just like prehistoric times... That's how pteranodons hunted their prey!!" The explanation does not help Zoro at all, but it makes clear that King treats the technique as a natural part of his ancient zoan form. Zoro, hurt and still falling through the wreckage outside the island, has to accept that King's abilities are stranger than ordinary swordsmanship or a simple flying dinosaur transformation. Page 11: Zoro crashes through debris and curses, "Dammit...!!" while panting. He asks, "Is that so?!" and answers King's flying pressure with his own long-range sword attack, "360 Caliber Phoenix!!" The slash tears toward King, but Zoro realizes he still cannot control the terms of the fight. He thinks, "If I can't find a way to reach him, I'm just wasting my energy!!" When he tries to reason through King's body, he jokes bitterly, "I suppose pteranodons flew with fire on their backs too?" King flatly rejects that, saying, "No. Get your story straight!!" The page keeps the tone both dangerous and absurd: Zoro is bleeding and thinking tactically, while King's ancient-zoan explanations remain impossible.