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Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 236: Another spar
They didn’t go back inside.
Atlas had mentioned food.
Mira had nodded along.
But neither of them moved toward the corridor.
And Jelo hadn’t either.
They stood at the edge of the training grounds, the three of them, watching the field as it thinned out — students drifting toward meals, toward rest, toward wherever people went when the day stopped demanding something from them.
"You want to go again," Mira said.
Not a question.
Jelo nodded once.
Atlas stretched his arms behind his head.
"Thought so."
⸻
They spread their attention across the field slowly.
No urgency.
Just looking.
Jelo’s enhanced vision was already active — the world sharpened at the edges, details pulling into focus the way they always did when he stopped passively seeing and started actually reading. Essence signatures. Weight distribution. The subtle way power settled differently in different bodies.
He wasn’t searching for the strongest person left on the field.
He was searching for the right one.
"What about him?" Atlas nodded toward a tall student running footwork drills near the center. Fast. Light on his feet.
Jelo studied him briefly.
"Too mobile."
"That’s a bad thing?"
"Today it is." Jelo’s eyes moved on. "I need someone who’ll take the hit and stay standing. Not someone who’ll dodge and make me chase."
Atlas considered that.
"...Fair."
⸻
Mira’s gaze had already shifted elsewhere.
"Far end," she said quietly.
Jelo looked.
Stocky build. Calm, deliberate movements. A student working through impact drills against a reinforced post — short explosive bursts, each strike landing with more weight than his frame suggested.
Jelo’s vision sharpened on him.
Dense essence. Pooled toward the chest and legs. Physical enhancement type. The kind of fighter who absorbed pressure rather than avoiding it.
He’d feel Dragon Claw.
He wouldn’t collapse from it.
"That one," Jelo said.
Atlas squinted across the field.
"He looks solid."
"That’s the point."
Mira nodded slightly.
"He’ll push back if you give him room to breathe. Don’t let this run long."
Jelo was already moving.
⸻
The student noticed him halfway across the field.
Stopped his drill.
Waited.
Up close, he was broader than the distance had suggested. Shoulders set wide. Expression unreadable but not hostile. His gaze dropped briefly to Jelo’s arm — same arm, same side — and something shifted in his eyes. Not fear. Calculation.
Word traveled fast.
"One round?" Jelo asked.
A short pause.
"Yeah. Alright."
⸻
They moved to open space.
Atlas and Mira stayed back — close enough to watch clearly, far enough to stay out of it.
Jelo centered himself.
Breathed once.
His enhanced vision was already reading — posture, weight, the way the student’s essence gathered toward his lower half. Grounded fighter. Would close distance fast and make Jelo work for space.
Good.
That was exactly what he needed.
⸻
The student moved first.
Faster than expected.
Jelo shifted — Wing Burst, short range, just enough to clear the initial rush. He felt the pull in his legs, the brief cost of the displacement, and filed it away. Two Wing Bursts used today already. He’d need to be careful with them.
The student adjusted instantly. No hesitation. He turned and drove forward again, and this time Jelo didn’t retreat.
He blocked.
Skilled Guard hardened across his forearm. The student’s strike landed with real weight. Jelo felt it even through the absorption.
Dense.
Confirmed.
⸻
He stepped inside the follow-up and launched Dragon Claw at close range.
Sharp. Direct. The student caught it partially on his guard, stumbled back, shook his arm once.
Felt it.
Didn’t stop.
Good.
Jelo reset. Gave distance. Let the student come again.
Three exchanges.
Each one teaching him something. The student was methodical — building pressure, layering, waiting for Jelo to overextend or exhaust himself.
Smart opponent.
That was what made this worth doing.
⸻
Behind him, Atlas kept quiet.
That alone said something.
⸻
Jelo waited.
Timed the rhythm.
The student closed in again —
Wing Burst. Forward this time. The sudden shift in distance broke the student’s timing completely. His eyes widened — just a fraction — and in that gap, Jelo raised his arm.
He didn’t rush it.
Let the essence rise on its own terms.
The draconic energy moved through him — heavier than Dragon Claw, warmer, carrying that alive quality that still felt slightly foreign. A language he was learning to pronounce correctly.
He held focus.
Not too tight.
He’d learned that. Gripping it hard made it push back. He held it the way you’d hold something fragile and burning at the same time.
Even.
Steady.
The student had recovered his footing and raised his guard —
Jelo released.
Partial.
Controlled.
But shaped this time. Not just pushed outward — directed. He’d been thinking about this since the first fight. Full release was destructive. Partial release was usable. But partial release with intent behind it —
That was something else entirely.
The surge hit the student’s guard like a wave breaking against stone.
BOOM.
The impact rolled through the ground beneath them. The student slid back — three, four steps — arms locked, essence flaring instinctively as he tried to absorb it.
He absorbed most of it.
Not all.
He went to one knee.
Stayed there for a moment.
Then looked up slowly.
"...That’s not Dragon Claw."
Jelo lowered his arm.
"No."
The student studied him. Not frustrated. Not rattled. Assessing.
"You held back."
"Yes."
A short silence.
He nodded once. Pushed himself upright. Rolled his shoulder — testing it — and turned back toward his drills without ceremony.
No further questions.
That was enough.
⸻
Jelo stood still for a moment.
He looked at his arm.
The warmth sat lower now. The cost of two controlled releases was real — essence thinner beneath the surface, like a fire burning at a reduced level.
But it hadn’t spiked.
Hadn’t surged past his intention.
Hadn’t required him to fight himself to contain it.
Twice.
Two opponents.
Two controlled partial releases.
And the second one had been shaped — directed with intent — in a way the first hadn’t.
That was real progress.
⸻
He turned back toward Atlas and Mira.
Atlas let out a slow breath.
"That second one hit different."
"It was more controlled than the first," Mira said. Her eyes were still on Jelo’s arm. "You directed it."
"Tried to," Jelo said.
"It worked."
Atlas crossed his arms.
"So you went from barely holding it together to actually aiming the thing. In one afternoon."
Jelo didn’t answer that.
He didn’t need to.
Atlas shook his head slowly — not dismissive. Something closer to quiet respect.
"...Yeah. Okay."
⸻
They walked back together.
The academy had quieted around them. Long shadows stretched across the grounds. The noise from inside drifted out in pieces — voices, footsteps, the distant sounds of a meal hall filling up.
Jelo moved through it without stopping.
His mind wasn’t racing.
Organizing.
What was confirmed. What still needed work. What tomorrow would demand from him.
Two controlled releases.
Directed output on the second.
Cost manageable.
Control consistent under real pressure.
That was what he’d come back for.
That was what he had.
⸻
Mira spoke as they reached the door.
"Sleep early tonight."
"I will."
Atlas pulled the door open.
"For what it’s worth—" he said, holding it, "—I’d hate to be whoever’s across from you tomorrow."
Jelo stepped inside.
The warmth in his arm settled.
Patient.
Ready.







