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Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 223: Jelo vs Nylen
The sixth call came and the room changed in a way that was harder to explain than the previous five.
It wasn’t louder. If anything it was quieter—a specific kind of quiet that had less to do with absence of sound and more to do with the suspension of breath. Five fights had passed. Five names had advanced. The bracket’s first round was almost complete and everyone remaining in the observation space had been watching, absorbing, cataloguing, building their read of what the floor asked of a person once you stepped onto it.
Now the last first-round name was being called.
"Jelo. Nylen."
The reaction to Jelo’s name was the same as it had been when Olmo first announced the selections—that fractional pause, that small collective adjustment that moved through the room before anyone had consciously decided to make it. Students who had been still became slightly more still. A few eyes moved to him before moving away, as though looking too directly felt like a commitment to something.
Jelo stood.
He hadn’t shifted in his seat since Silas walked back from the fifth match. Had sat the same way through all five fights—forward enough to watch, still enough that he didn’t draw attention, processing everything the floor had shown him with the quiet efficiency of someone who had learned long ago that observation was its own kind of preparation. He had watched Ken adapt his shadow constructs under pressure. Had watched Joan thread a pattern through six exchanges and break it at exactly the right moment. Had watched Tessa build a trap out of someone else’s ability and walk them into it at a controlled pace.
He had taken all of it carefully in.
None of it showed on his face as he walked toward the arena.
What the room didn’t know—what almost no one knew—was the depth of what Jelo carried with him onto that floor. They had seen him in drills. Had seen the output without understanding the architecture behind it. Some of them had formed reads on him that were accurate as far as they went, which was not very far at all. They knew the surface. They had seen enough of his training to understand that his output didn’t match his apparent effort, that there was something controlled and deliberate in the way he operated that sat at odds with how most students his level functioned. What they hadn’t seen was the system underneath it. The dragon system—the layered structure of ability that Chloro Raimo had first helped him understand and that he had spent the subsequent months learning to manage with increasing precision. Most students had one ability, maybe two with enough training. Jelo had a framework. And within that framework were things he had not yet shown to anyone in this academy.
He intended to keep it that way.
The goal today was to win without showing anything he didn’t have to show. Dragon Claw if the range demanded it. Skilled Guard if the pressure required it. Wing Burst if the positioning called for it. His enhanced vision running underneath all of it, reading his opponent’s movements at a resolution most fighters couldn’t access. That was enough to win this fight. He was certain of it before he had even seen Nylen step onto the floor.
Nylen’s ability was spatial fragmentation.
He could identify fixed points in three-dimensional space and shatter them—not physically, but structurally, creating invisible rupture zones that behaved like walls of broken geometry. Anything passing through a fragmentation point experienced violent spatial disruption—a projectile lost cohesion, a limb passing through one experienced disorientation and temporary loss of directional control, a body moving through a high-density fragmentation field stumbled as the geometry of the space itself disagreed with the expected physics. The effect was deeply disorienting rather than directly damaging, but disorientation in a fight had the same practical result as damage—it broke momentum, interrupted attacks, created openings.
Nylen had spent three years learning to place fragmentation points precisely and rapidly. He could set them in mid-air, on surfaces, around his own body as a defensive shell. Against physical fighters he was nearly untouchable at close range—the fragmentation shell around him meant that any incoming strike passed through spatial disruption on its way to contact, arriving scrambled and weakened by the time it reached him.
Against projected abilities he was equally problematic.
Any ranged attack passing through a fragmentation point broke apart before landing.
He had been thinking about Jelo’s Dragon Claw since the bracket was announced.
The energy projection was the core of Jelo’s visible offense—a claw-shaped force extended at range, fast and significant on impact. On paper, a fragmentation point placed in the projection’s path would shatter the construct before it arrived. Nylen had run the calculation multiple times. He was confident in it. What he was less confident about was the mobility—the Wing Burst was harder to plan around. Instant repositioning at close to medium range meant Jelo could invalidate a fragmentation shell’s geometry simply by appearing inside it before Nylen had time to adjust the shell’s positioning.
He needed to place his points before Jelo moved.
Jelo needed to move before Nylen placed his points.
It came down to that.
They faced each other across the arena floor. Jelo looked at Nylen the way he had been looking at the previous fights from the observation space—with the same quality of attention, the same contained focus. His enhanced vision was already running. He could see the micro-tension in Nylen’s hands, the slight way his fingers moved when he was setting a fragmentation point—a barely visible curl at the tips, a kind of reaching motion that most people would miss entirely.
Jelo was not most people.
The signal came without ceremony.
Nylen moved his hands immediately, fingers curling in three rapid sequences—three fragmentation points placed in a wide arc in front of him before Jelo had taken a step. Invisible. A barrier of broken geometry extending across the middle distance between them.
Jelo saw the hand movements.
He didn’t move through the arc.
He used Wing Burst sideways—not forward, hard left, crossing the space to Nylen’s flank before the fragmentation points had been fully oriented to cover that angle. The burst was fast, the slight delay absorbed into the motion, and he was on Nylen’s left side before Nylen had processed the lateral exit.
Nylen spun. Fingers already moving to reset the shell.
Jelo read the hand movement before it completed and Wing Burst again—this time backward, creating distance rather than closing it, getting out of the reset shell’s range before the new points landed.
They separated.
Two exchanges. No contact yet made. But Jelo had learned something important.
The hand movement was visible. And it had a sequence length—three curls per point, three points per shell configuration. He had counted both in the first exchange. He now knew how long a fragmentation shell took to set, and he knew that the hands communicated the intention before the geometry arrived.
He could read it clearly.
He was already planning the third exchange.
Nylen was genuinely good. But he had just shown Jelo the one thing Jelo needed to see.







