Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top

Chapter 281: Rhythm and Fracture

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Chapter 281: Rhythm and Fracture

Eldrin changed her approach.

She had been stationary or minimally mobile through the first phase of the fight, letting Azula do the moving and responding from a fixed position. The knee hit had made staying still a liability—a fighter with a compromised knee who didn’t move was a fighter whose positioning could be read and exploited. She started moving properly now, covering ground in controlled lateral steps, keeping her profile shifting and her position unpredictable.

The fight changed when Eldrin started moving.

Azula had been reading a stationary target—building her rhythm against a reference point that didn’t change. A moving target meant the angles she had calculated were no longer reliable, meant the three-streak combination that had found the knee required recalibration, meant the entire rhythm she had established in the first two minutes needed to rebuild itself against something that wasn’t standing still anymore.

She didn’t hesitate.

She recalibrated in motion—adjusting her arc to track Eldrin’s lateral movement, firing single streaks first to reestablish the read, learning the new rhythm of a target that was covering ground rather than holding position.

Eldrin reflected the single streaks cleanly.

The reflection accuracy was the same moving as stationary—she hadn’t lost the transition speed by adding footwork, the two things apparently independent in how she managed them. Moving and hardening simultaneously without either suffering for the other.

The crowd made noise at the quality of it—at the continued precision of Eldrin’s Mirror Skin even as she was covering ground, the Solmara sections giving her the acknowledgment she had earned.

Azula fired two.

Moving target, two angles—right hand and left foot, upper body and lower simultaneously.

Eldrin hardened both.

Two reflections, both clean.

Azula fired three.

Eldrin covered two. The third—a right hand streak aimed at the center of Eldrin’s back as she was mid-step in a lateral movement, the angle created by the movement itself rather than by Azula’s positioning—hit between the shoulder blades before the Mirror Skin reached it.

Eldrin arched forward.

The concussive burst hitting the unprotected back pushed her two steps ahead of her intended movement, her balance breaking forward, arms coming out to stabilize. She caught herself cleanly but the two steps had taken her out of the circling pattern she had been maintaining and put her in a position she hadn’t chosen.

Azula was already reading the new position.

She fired immediately—not a three-streak combination, a five-streak fan from both hands and her right foot, covering Eldrin’s entire front profile across five separated points simultaneously. Too many surfaces to cover. Too many angles arriving at once. Eldrin hardened three of them—chest, right forearm, left shoulder—the three she had time to reach—and the remaining two streaks hit her right hip and left forearm clean.

Both detonations landed.

Eldrin went down to one knee.

The arena erupted.

The Virex sections produced the loudest sound they had made all tournament—a full standing detonation, people grabbing each other, the noise carrying the particular quality of watching something they had believed in deliver on the belief at the exact moment they needed it to. The neutral sections came with it, pulled in by the visual impact of the five-streak fan and the two clean hits and Eldrin down on one knee in the center of the floor.

"FIVE SIMULTANEOUS!" the announcer called, his voice cutting through the noise. "Azula fans five streaks across Eldrin’s full profile—Eldrin covers three—and two land clean! The hip and the forearm—Eldrin is down on one knee—"

Eldrin pushed back up.

Not slowly. Not dramatically. Just—up. One knee pushing against the stone, leg straightening, body rising back to standing with the particular refusal of someone who had not decided this was over. Her right hip moved carefully. Her left forearm was held slightly away from her body, the concussive hit having done something to the surface below the elbow.

She looked at Azula across the floor.

Her expression hadn’t changed.

The Solmara sections gave her the standing response she deserved—sharp and full, their fighter back on her feet, their belief returning to full volume. The noise from the two support sections pressed against each other across the arena floor and the crowd between them felt it like weather.

Azula was already moving again.

The fight had shifted.

Not in outcome—Azula was ahead on landed hits, clearly, the damage accumulated across the hip and the back and the knee telling a story that didn’t need interpreting. But Eldrin had landed the reflected glancing hit on Azula’s forearm in the opening exchange and the fight had been close enough through the middle that the crowd hadn’t given up on anything.

What had shifted was speed.

Azula was moving faster now—not forcing it, not overcooking the rhythm, but the pace of the arc and the chain had climbed from what it had been in the opening exchanges. She was pushing the tempo in the way fighters push tempo when they have landed something significant and want to build on the momentum before the opponent recovers fully.

Eldrin was moving more carefully.

The hip was affecting her lateral step on the right side—not dramatically, not a limp, but a fractional reduction in the speed of the rightward movement that wasn’t there on the left. The asymmetry was small. Against a fighter who fired straight lines, small asymmetries created predictable positioning patterns. Against a fighter who read positioning and calculated angles before firing—

It was a fracture line.

Azula found it.

She moved to Eldrin’s right—tracking into the slower side, positioning herself to force Eldrin to move right to maintain profile distance. Eldrin moved right. Slower on the right than the left. The arc Azula needed to maintain her angle was shorter than it should have been because Eldrin’s rightward movement wasn’t covering the same ground it had been covering before the hip hit.

Azula fired.

Not the five-streak fan. Something more deliberate—three streaks, right hand and both feet, timed with Eldrin’s rightward step, the angles calculated against a target moving at the specific reduced speed the hip was producing.

Eldrin hardened two.

Right forearm. Center chest.

The third—right foot streak, aimed at Eldrin’s right hip, the same location as the earlier hit, coming in from a slightly different angle that Eldrin’s reduced rightward mobility had created—hit before the Mirror Skin arrived.

Same location as before.

The detonation hit the already-damaged hip and the effect was multiplicative—not just the force of the new hit but the accumulated damage of the same point being struck twice, the hip responding to the second concussive burst with significantly more disruption than the first had produced.

Eldrin went down.

Both knees this time—the leg on the affected side giving completely, taking the other with it, her body dropping to the stone floor in a controlled descent that still looked like a fall no matter how controlled it was.

The Virex sections didn’t wait for the announce

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