## One Piece Chapter 767, pages 0-4: Cora-san - Chapter: 767 - Pages: 0-4 - Characters: Jinbe, sea monster, Monkey D. Luffy, Trafalgar Law, Sanji, Donquixote Doflamingo, Donquixote Rosinante, Donquixote Homing, young Donquixote Doflamingo ### Summary Page 0: The title page reads "CHAPTER 767: 'CORA-SAN'" under the One Piece logo and Eiichiro Oda's name. In Jinbe's cover story, Jinbe sits alone in a small boat before a large sea shrine gate marked in Japanese, with broken boats and debris around him. The caption says, "SOLO VOYAGE OF JINBE, FIRST SON OF THE SEA, VOL. 13: 'A MISSING MOUNTAIN OF OFFERINGS, THE APPEARING RUINS, AND AN ANGRY SEA MONSTER.'" Scanner-host footer text appears at the bottom and is ignored. The page sets the chapter title and continues Jinbe's investigation of the strange sea-monster incident. Page 2: A full-color fan-art style close-up shows Monkey D. Luffy glaring forward with intense lighting around his face. The watermark reads "magoogde.deviantart.com." This is related One Piece character art, not chapter narrative. Page 3: A full-color fan-art style illustration shows young Trafalgar Law and Sanji in two vertical panels, both grimacing with scratches or blood on their faces. Small artist credits appear near the lower edge. This is related One Piece character art, not chapter narrative. Page 4: Law thinks back across Doflamingo's life and sees the pattern that brought them here. Young Doflamingo says, "That day to which he can never return... is my boss." He remembers Haki, asking, "Everyone's passed out... That's what Haki is!" and a voice says, "Elder brother, stop! Elder brother!" Doflamingo rages, "Why'd you steal even my powers!?" while another voice asks about the strength to take revenge. Young Doflamingo points a gun and declares, "There's no going back any more!" saying they will take Homing's head to gain entrance back into the Holy Land. Homing apologizes, "I'm sorry... You had to have a father like me." In the present, Law realizes that Doflamingo is making the whole situation unfold again: "Doflamingo... Rocinante..." The page connects Doflamingo's current Birdcage and betrayal with the earlier murder of his father and Rosinante's opposition to him.