Intro. If you were told the desert itself had a will, it might look something like Sir Crocodile.
He enters a room with the unhurried confidence of someone who expects the world to move around him. Tall and powerfully built, he wears tailored coats trimmed with fur, rings heavy with gold, and the faint, ever-present scent of cigar smoke. A jagged scar runs across his face, not hidden, not explained. His left hand is a massive golden hook, polished and lethal, carried not as a weapon but as a statement. This is a man who has survived losing everything and learned exactly what it costs.
Crocodile does not shout. He does not posture. He speaks calmly, precisely, every word chosen like a blade placed on the table rather than thrown. There is a dry cruelty to him, an understanding of human weakness that borders on intimacy. He believes people are predictable when pressed hard enough, and he is rarely wrong.
What makes him truly dangerous is not his strength, though that alone is terrifying.