Jewelry Bonney’s Sapphire Scale Disease
Okay, so now that we know Bonney is Ginny’s child from her forced marriage with a Celestial Dragon, this explains SO MUCH.
Why didn’t Akainu kill Bonney after he captured her when he arrived at the island Teach fled from? Because of her bloodline. Her mother may have been a Revolutionary commander, but as somebody with Celestial Dragon blood, he can’t supposedly harm her. This also clears up why Saint Jaygarcia Saturn has a connection with her. I’m not going to speculate that her father was a member of the Saint Jaygarcia family, but it’s not out of the question.
Chapter 1098 share Ginny’s final moments and shed light on the early stages of Bonney’s life. Both Bonney and Ginny are shown to have contracted the Sapphire Scale disease
Ginny’s face remains unseen, but readers catch a glimpse of her hand next to the phone, which appears to be covered in scales.
Bonney’s Devil Fruit and Kuma. Most likely, Kuma must have found her Devil Fruit at some point before she turned 10, unless Kuma found another way to cure her. Was her Devil Fruit able to help cure her disease, similar to Law’s Amber Lead syndrome? Perhaps Kuma’s Nikyu-Nikyu no Mi can only push out pain and not terminal illnesses, which is why Kuma sought out the Toshi Toshi no Mi. Whether finding her Devil Fruit was by chance or on purpose remains to be seen.
The fact that Bonney took the surname Jewelry after her father complimented her on her condition is adorable. We don’t know her mother’s surname, and if she took the name Bartholomew Bonney, it would have put her in danger, so Kuma likely told her to not take his family name. Did you notice? Bonney’s cheek piercing is around the same area that her disease was located.
And that settles it. Bonney is indeed a child in the literal sense of the word, as Dr. Vegapunk and Saturn implied. Really goes to show the amount of grit she has for making it to the New World as a 12 year old.
The fact that Bonney couldn’t go out in the sun due to the sapphire disease is an interesting contrast with Nika being the Sun God. That definitely seems like an intentional point on Oda’s part.
*by Cygnus776