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Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 186: Again and Again and Again
They tried again.
And again.
And again.
The sun moved slowly across the sky. The long shadows of late afternoon crept across the field, stretching from the tree line and reaching toward them as though even the light was measuring their endurance.
Their coordination improved. It had to — they couldn't afford to be slow. Their reactions sharpened through repetition, through the particular education of pain that tells the body this is wrong, try something else. Their teamwork became tighter. Not practiced. Not polished. But tight the way rough material becomes tight when pulled from opposite ends — a friction-born stability that held because it had been tested and had not broken.
But it still wasn't enough.
At one point — late in the session, in that window when exhaustion had burned away the overthinking and left only instinct — they executed it nearly perfectly.
Atlas disrupted the terrain at exactly the right moment, pulling the ground beneath Tongen's forward foot and forcing a fractional weight shift.
Mira boxed him on three sides with clone placement that left no clean exit without crossing one of them.
Jelo read the geometry, read the space, moved at the exact right moment — fast, low, direct.
For a split second —
They had him.
The angles didn't lie. The math of it was correct. There was no clean path out.
Then —
Tongen stepped once.
Just once.
Not away. Not back. Sideways, into the seam between Mira's clones that Jelo's approach had unintentionally opened. A single step, placed like a key into a lock, and everything that had felt airtight a moment ago simply —
Collapsed.
BOOM!
All three were sent flying.
They hit the ground and didn't get up immediately this time. Their bodies refused — not dramatically, not with collapse, just a quiet refusal, the kind that comes when the signal from the brain reaches the muscles and returns no answer.
Jelo lay on his back and stared at the sky, which had taken on the pale amber tone of the hour before dusk. He could hear Atlas somewhere nearby, breathing in long controlled exhales. Mira's presence was a stillness off to his left.
Tongen stood over them.
"You're improving," he said.
Not warmly. Not encouragingly. It was a statement of observed fact, delivered with the same flatness as everything else. But it landed differently this time — because it was true, and they all knew it, and there was something strange about having the man who kept dismantling them confirm it.
"But improvement isn't enough."
He looked at Jelo.
"You hesitate."
Not you hesitate sometimes. Not you need to be more confident. Just — you hesitate. A diagnosis, not a suggestion.
Then Atlas.
"You overcommit."
Atlas's jaw tightened. There was nothing to argue with, and that was the worst part.
Then Mira.
"You overthink."
Mira's fingers curled slowly into a fist against the dirt. The accuracy of it was almost insulting — three words that cut past everything she'd done right today and went straight to the place she already knew was the problem.
Tongen turned away.
"Combat isn't about doing better than before."
He paused — not for effect, but like he was choosing the right shape for the thing he meant to say.
"It's about doing what is necessary to win."
Silence.
The field breathed around them. A wind moved through the grass at the edges, cool and indifferent. Somewhere far off, something rustled in the tree line.
After a long moment —
Jelo forced himself to stand again.
His legs shook. Not trembling — shaking, with the honest, uncontrolled vibration of muscles that had been pushed past the line and were now making that known. He stood anyway.
Atlas looked at him from the ground with an expression caught between disbelief and something that was almost admiration.
"…You serious right now?"
Mira exhaled slowly. A long, deliberate breath that seemed to reorganize something inside her. Then she stood too, brushing the dirt from her hands with quiet resolve.
"…We're not done."
Atlas looked at her. Looked at Jelo. Looked at the space where Tongen had turned away as though the conversation was finished.
He sighed — not the frustrated kind, not the defeated kind, but the kind that releases the last of the resistance.
"…Yeah… yeah, I know."
He pushed himself up again, one knee at a time.
The three of them stood.
Barely.
Everything in the way they held themselves told the honest story — the shifted weight, the favored sides, the arms that hung a little lower than normal. But standing is standing. The ground was beneath their feet and they were upright.
Tongen glanced back at them.
He didn't turn fully. Just the slight angle of his head, a fractional shift, like a man who had learned long ago not to show how much he was watching.
A faint, almost invisible smile appeared.
Not warmth. Not pride. Something quieter — the particular expression of a person who had expected to be disappointed and wasn't.
"…Good."
He turned fully.
"Then come again."
Even though they were exhausted —
Even though they'd been taken apart and put back down more times than any of them were counting —
Even though the one real mark they'd landed on him was a torn sleeve that already felt like a long time ago —
Something was changing.
Not in the dramatic way. Not in the way where the music swells and suddenly the impossible feels close. It was slower than that, quieter than that, and far more real for it. The kind of change that happens in the body before the mind understands it — in the speed of a reaction, in the angle of a step, in the half-second earlier that a decision gets made.
Painfully.
But surely.
They weren't winning.
Not even close.
But they were getting harder to break.
And Tongen —
Standing at the edge of the field, arms loose at his sides, watching them find their footing for what felt like the hundredth time —
Was still not satisfied.
He was not going easy in them, and they weren't ready to give up either.







