Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 187: one more chance

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Chapter 187: one more chance

The next day came too quickly.

Their bodies still ached from the previous training, but none of them complained this time.

By the time they arrived, Tongen was already waiting.

Arms folded.

Watching.

"You’re late," he said.

They weren’t.

But none of them argued.

The three of them stood in a loose line, still rolling out the stiffness in their shoulders, still carrying yesterday’s bruises like quiet reminders. Jelo’s ribs ached with every breath he drew in too deep. Atlas had tape wrapped around two fingers on his left hand—a small, personal admission that he’d landed wrong on something yesterday and hadn’t mentioned it. Mira stood the straightest of them, posture clean, expression composed, though anyone paying attention could see the way she’d shifted her weight slightly off her left ankle.

None of that mattered here.

They’d learned that much already.

"Today," Tongen continued, "we remove your biggest weakness."

Atlas frowned.

"...Which one?"

"All of them."

Before they could react—

Tongen stepped forward.

But this time...

He didn’t attack immediately.

Instead, he raised one hand.

"From now on, you fight under pressure."

The ground beneath them shifted.

Atlas’s eyes widened.

"...Wait."

It started subtle—a low rumble that moved through the soles of their feet before they understood what it was. Then the earth cracked. Fissures spread outward in jagged lines, splitting the flat training surface into something unrecognizable. Loose stone rose and tilted. Slabs shifted at awkward angles. Sections of ground dropped slightly, uneven lips of rock jutting up where smooth earth used to be.

The terrain changed.

Uneven ground.

Loose stone.

Cracked surfaces.

No stable footing.

Within seconds, standing still felt uncertain. Every instinct told them to widen their stance, to root themselves—but there was nowhere clean to root into. Wherever they placed their feet, the ground offered something different underneath.

"Balance," Tongen said. "Let’s see how long you last."

Mira moved first.

She’d always been the fastest at reading the room, at shifting from stillness into motion before the others had finished processing. But speed was the wrong currency here.

"Spread out—!"

But the moment she stepped—

She slipped slightly.

Just enough.

Just a fraction of a degree off her intended angle, her foot catching a loose stone that skittered sideways—and that was all it took. Her center shifted. Her next step compensated in the wrong direction.

Tongen appeared instantly.

BAM!

She was knocked back before she could recover. The hit wasn’t vicious—it didn’t need to be. It was perfectly placed, catching her mid-correction, using her own recovery against her. She hit the ground rolling, came up onto one knee, one hand braced against the uneven stone.

⸻ 𝓯𝓻𝒆𝙚𝒘𝓮𝙗𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝒍.𝙘𝓸𝙢

Atlas tried stabilizing the ground.

Instinct—the same instinct that had carried him through every fight he’d trained for up until now. The ground is wrong? Fix the ground.

"Earth Grip—"

CRACK!

The earth broke under his own control.

He’d pushed against terrain that was already fractured, and the force he applied split it further rather than settling it. He lurched sideways.

Tongen was already in front of him.

"Adapt."

WHAM!

Atlas hit the ground again—harder this time, like the word was punctuation. He lay there for a half-second longer than he wanted to, blinking dust out of his eyes, jaw tight.

Jelo narrowed his eyes.

So that’s it...

He’s removing our control over the battlefield.

He stood back and watched for a moment longer than the other two—not hesitating, just reading. Taking in what had just happened to Mira, what had just happened to Atlas. Looking at the way the broken terrain sat beneath Tongen’s feet like it didn’t bother him at all. Like he’d trained on worse. Like uncertainty was just another surface he’d already learned.

He used Wing Burst—

A short, controlled push of air. Not aggressive. Careful.

But when he landed—

His footing was off.

Just slightly.

The slab he’d aimed for had shifted in the half-second he was airborne. His weight distributed wrong on landing, and the tiny correction his body made—automatic, unconscious—left him open for exactly half a breath.

That was enough.

Tongen struck.

BAM!

Jelo crashed to the ground.

"Again."

They stood up.

Slower this time.

There was a different quality to the silence after that first round. Not defeat—they’d been hit harder, dropped faster, in previous sessions. But something more frustrating than that. They’d been taken apart not by Tongen’s raw power, not by being outpaced, but by their own footing. By the ground. By something that had nothing to do with skill and everything to do with the fact that the world they were fighting in had been quietly rearranged beneath them without warning.

Round after round—

They struggled just to stay on their feet.

Attacking became secondary.

Surviving the terrain alone was difficult.

Every exchange lasted seconds. Every exchange ended the same way—not because Tongen was too fast, but because they kept arriving at each moment already compromised. A split-second of imbalance. A foot landing an inch off. A stance that would’ve been perfect on flat ground and was useless here.

Mira adjusted first.

It happened quietly, without announcement. Jelo noticed it before Atlas did—the way her pace changed, her energy shifted from forward-pressing to something more deliberate. She stopped rushing.

Instead of rushing, she slowed down.

Her clones moved carefully now—testing the ground before committing. Each duplicate placed weight experimentally, like it was checking ice before crossing. Her real self moved only when the clone confirmed the surface. It cost her speed. It cost her the burst pressure she usually applied. But she stopped falling.

Tongen noticed.

"Better."

Then he broke it again.

He shifted the terrain mid-exchange—just enough. The section her clone had tested became unreliable half a second later. She stumbled, recalibrated, and he was through her guard before she finished the adjustment.

But she’d lasted longer.

Atlas stopped trying to dominate the terrain.

That was the real change, the one that cost him more than the physical adjustment—letting go of the reflex. Earth was his. Ground was his. Trying to fight on unstable earth while not being allowed to fix it felt like being told to write with his off hand. Wrong. Uncomfortable. Humiliating in a way he couldn’t quite name.

Instead, he made small, controlled adjustments.

Just enough to stabilize himself.

But not enough to rely on.

He stopped trying to own the battlefield and started trying to read it. A small raise here. A half-second of support there. Micro-corrections that didn’t overcommit. It was fragile. It required far more focus than brute-forcing the terrain into compliance.

Still—

Tongen broke through.

But the hits landed slightly different now. There was less of an open window. Less of that ugly, full-exposure moment where Atlas was completely mid-correction with nothing left to offer. Progress, measured in millimeters.