Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 192: we must win this
Here’s Part Two expanded to 1,200 words:
Part Two
The next morning came in clear and a little cool, the kind of weather that made the training courtyards feel sharp and awake — the air carrying that particular edge that didn’t ask if you were ready, just arrived and expected you to be. The sky was pale at the edges and brighter overhead, and the stone of the east block cast long shadows that hadn’t shrunk yet from the low angle of the early sun. It was the kind of morning that felt like a beginning, which was either a good sign or the universe setting something up.
Tongen was already outside when they arrived. He stood near the open stretch of ground beyond the east block’s far wall, hands in his pockets, looking out at nothing specific with the expression of a man who had been thinking something through for longer than he wanted to admit. He turned when he heard them coming.
Jelo, Mira, and Atlas — standing in a loose row before him, varying degrees of alertness between them depending on how the night had gone. Mira looked like she had been awake for an hour already, sharp-eyed and upright, the kind of person whose body treated sleep as a task to be completed efficiently rather than something to linger in. Atlas was quieter in his presence, settled, his gaze steady and patient. Jelo looked like he had slept fine but was already somewhere else mentally, which for him was a normal state of being and not a cause for concern.
Tongen looked at them for a moment. He was still working out how to frame this.
"So," he started, "I have great news."
All three of them stared at him with the particular stillness of students who had been in this situation before — the situation where their instructor’s definition of great news arrived wearing a different costume than theirs. They waited.
"My friend Sherlock — you’ve heard me mention him — challenged me. We made a bet." He paused, watching their faces. "The bet is about you three."
"A bet about us," Mira said. She was already leaning forward slightly, her weight shifting onto the front of her feet the way it did when her attention caught on something. Of the three, she was the one most likely to ask the question before it fully formed, which also meant she was the one most likely to ask it a second time when the first answer didn’t satisfy her. "What kind of bet?"
"My students against his," Tongen said. "A real match. Head to head. Whoever wins—" He stopped. He had arrived at the part of the explanation that required describing the punishment, and something about articulating it out loud, in the open air, in front of his own students, made his chest do something uncomfortable. He cleared his throat. "You know what, I’ll get into the rest of it later. What matters right now is that you have to win. There is no room for failure. None."
He said the last part with more weight than usual, which was notable because Tongen was not, as a rule, the type of person who dramatized things. He was measured in how he delivered instructions, economical with emphasis, the kind of instructor who made you understand that when he did add weight to something, it meant something. They all felt the difference.
Jelo was smiling.
Not the kind of smile that shows up because a situation calls for it — polite, surface-level, there to fill space. This was a real one, the kind that came from somewhere internal and didn’t ask for permission before it arrived. It had been a while since something had felt genuinely interesting, since there was a direction ahead worth pointing himself toward. Training was training. He took it seriously and he always had, but there was a specific quality to the thing in front of him now that was different — a real fight, against opponents he didn’t know yet, with actual stakes and a real outcome. No controlled sparring, no pre-agreed parameters. Just a match, and a result.
That was more than enough.
Atlas caught the look from his peripheral vision and turned slightly to read it properly. He didn’t say anything — there was nothing to say. He and Jelo had been around each other long enough that certain things communicated themselves without language. The expression on Jelo’s face right now was one he’d seen before, and he understood exactly what it meant. Most people would have looked at Jelo in that moment and seen calm. Stillness. Someone not particularly moved by what they’d just heard. Atlas knew better. That stillness was not calm in the way a quiet room is calm. It was the stillness of something at full compression, the moment just before a coil finishes tightening and lets go. Jelo wasn’t unmoved. He was ready, and ready for him had a specific texture that looked like nothing from the outside.
Atlas felt something similar in himself, though it arrived differently — quieter, cooler, less like electricity and more like a gear settling into place. He wasn’t someone who chased the feeling of a fight for the feeling’s sake. He fought when there was a reason, and he trained because the discipline of it meant something to him beyond the outcomes it produced — the geometry of it, the way bodies in motion created problems and solutions simultaneously, the craft underneath the chaos. He respected that craft. And now there was a reason, a concrete one with shape and consequence, and he wasn’t going to let it pass through his hands without giving it everything. 𝒻𝘳ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝒷𝘯ℴ𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝑐ℴ𝑚
Mira had already moved on to logistics. "Who are we fighting? What do we know about them?"
"Nothing yet," Tongen said.
She blinked. "Nothing?"
The word landed like a minor inconvenience that had chosen to arrive at a bad time. She looked at him the way she looked at incomplete information — not angry, exactly, but the kind of focused dissatisfaction that came from a mind that preferred to work with complete data and had just been handed a partial set.
"I know Sherlock," Tongen said. "I know how he thinks, how he trains. That’s something."
"That’s not the same as knowing who we’re actually fighting."
"It’s what you have right now," Tongen said, and his tone closed the door on that particular line of inquiry without slamming it.
Mira held the look for a moment. Then she straightened, rolled her shoulders back, and let it go. She was practical above most other things, and practicality meant not burning energy on the things she couldn’t control. Information gaps were annoying. They were also, sometimes, just the condition. It changed her preparation — broader coverage, less specific countering, more emphasis on reading and adapting in the moment rather than arriving with a plan built around a known target. She could work with that. She had before.
The three of them stood in the cool morning air for a moment that stretched just slightly longer than necessary — the kind of pause that isn’t uncomfortable, just full. Each of them was building something quietly, layering it in without announcement. Focus, in Mira’s case. Readiness in Atlas’s. In Jelo, something that didn’t have a clean name but sat behind his eyes and made him look, to anyone paying attention, like a person who had already decided how this ended.
Tongen studied them. The thing he’d been quietly carrying since he left Sherlock’s company last night — the low-grade concern about whether they would understand the weight of it, whether they’d receive this the way it needed to be received — came loose and drifted off. They understood. Not the part about the gown, which he was still absolutely not explaining yet, but the part underneath it. The fight. The expectation. The fact that this was real.
"Good," he said, mostly to himself. "Training starts in ten minutes."
He turned back toward the block. "Don’t be late."







