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Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 215: Joan vs Riven
The second call came before the room had fully settled from the first.
Ken had barely cleared the doorway when Olmo’s voice cut through the residual noise.
"Joan. Riven."
The room shifted again. A different kind of attention this time—not the charged uncertainty that had preceded Ken and Plistus, but something more focused. More informed. They had just watched a fight. They had just seen what it looked like when two people stepped onto that floor and stopped holding anything back. The abstract idea of the tournament had become something with texture and weight, and now the second match was live before anyone had fully processed the first.
Joan was already standing.
She didn’t wait to be called twice. Didn’t adjust her clothes or check her hands or take a breath to center herself. She stood, and she moved, and the directness of it told everyone in the room something about how she approached things before she had thrown a single strike. Joan had been like that since the first week of training—the kind of student who treated preparation and execution as the same thing, who never needed a moment between deciding and doing. Her group master had noticed it early and pushed her for it—instinct without discipline was just recklessness wearing a different name. Joan had taken that and made it into something sharper—not slower, but deliberate. The instinct remained. The recklessness had been stripped out of it.
Riven rose a beat after her.
She took her time. Not hesitation—but the deliberate pace of someone who understood that the time between the call and the first step was still time, and time was never wasted if you used it correctly. She had told someone once, during a cooldown after a particularly brutal conditioning session, that she had trained herself to think in intervals. It had started before the academy—back when she trained under a woman named Sera who ran a private combat program out of a converted warehouse on the east side of the district. Sera didn’t believe in warm-ups. Didn’t believe in easing into anything. She had told Riven on the first day that the body learned what it was taught, and if it was taught that violence came slowly, it would always be slow when violence arrived. Riven had trained there for two years before the academy accepted her, and she had arrived with reflexes that impressed the intake evaluators and a read-speed that Sherlock had commented on during her first week. What she was still developing was the patience to deploy those reflexes selectively—to wait for the right moment rather than use them the moment they became available. Every moment before a fight was a moment to observe. What was the floor like. What was the light doing. Where did her opponent carry tension in their body before the first exchange. Information was everywhere if you looked for it, and looking cost nothing.
She looked at Joan steadily while she walked.
Joan didn’t look back once.
That alone was already information.
They entered the arena from opposite sides.
The floor was the same—flat, open, no cover, just ground and the distance between them. Riven measured that distance the moment she stepped through the door. Roughly fifteen meters. More than enough for her to work with. Her ability required space—not because it couldn’t function in close quarters, but because it was most effective when she had room to breathe, room to set the geometry of a situation before her opponent could collapse it. 𝚏𝕣𝕖𝚎𝚠𝚎𝚋𝚗𝐨𝐯𝕖𝕝.𝕔𝐨𝕞
Riven’s ability was vector redirection.
She could intercept incoming force—a strike, a push, any physical momentum directed at her—and redirect it at an angle of her choosing. Not absorb it. Not block it in the traditional sense. Redirect it. The force remained; she simply changed its destination. A punch thrown at her chest could be redirected sideways, or downward, or back toward the person who threw it. The limitation was contact—she had to be touching the incoming force at the moment of redirection, which meant she needed to be in position before the strike arrived. Too slow and she absorbed the hit. Too early and her opponent could adjust.
Timing was everything.
She had spent six weeks drilling the timing until it lived in her hands instead of her head.
Joan knew about the ability. Everyone in the group did—you trained together long enough and you stopped having secrets about what you could do. What you didn’t know was how well someone had refined it, how fast the execution had gotten, where the gaps were. Joan had watched Riven during training. Had catalogued what she saw. Riven’s redirections were clean on linear strikes. Combinations were harder for her—the second strike in a sequence sometimes got through because her hands needed a half-beat to reset between redirections.
Joan had thought about that half-beat for a long time.
She hadn’t only thought about it in the abstract. Two weeks before the group evaluations, during a late session when their group master had paired them for sparring, Joan had deliberately targeted that gap—throwing rapid three-strike sequences designed to arrive at the half-beat window and land through it. It had worked twice. Riven had closed the gap slightly after the second time, adjusting mid-session in real time the way good fighters did. But she hadn’t closed it completely. You couldn’t fully eliminate a limitation through awareness alone. Awareness told you where the hole was. Closing it required time and repetition that two weeks couldn’t provide.
The signal came without warning.
Riven moved first.
Not to close distance—to establish it. She stepped to her left, creating an angle, making herself a harder target to approach directly while she read how Joan responded to the movement. A probe. Not aggression but information gathering in motion.
Joan walked straight at her.
Not fast. Not slow. Just a direct line across the floor, no feinting, no angle adjustment, like someone who had decided the most efficient path between two points was still a straight one and wasn’t interested in being argued out of it. Riven tracked her and adjusted her own position, keeping the space between them at a range she preferred, stepping right when Joan pushed left, maintaining the geometry she wanted.
Joan let her maintain it for exactly four steps.
Then she burst.
The acceleration was sharp—not telegraphed, not built into the approach, just suddenly there. Riven’s hands came up immediately, timing the reach, and she caught Joan’s first strike at the wrist—redirecting it sideways, the force of the punch glancing off at an angle and carrying Joan’s arm with it.
Joan was already throwing the second.
Riven’s reset was fast. Almost fast enough. The second strike landed partial—not clean, not where Joan had aimed, but the outer edge of it caught Riven across the shoulder and there was weight behind it. Riven stepped back from it and reassessed.
Joan stopped advancing.
She had gotten what she came for in that exchange. The reset time was real. It was faster than she’d remembered from training—Riven had improved—but the gap was still there. A fraction of a second between redirections. Enough to work with if she was precise about it.







