Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 216: Joan wins

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Chapter 216: Joan wins

Joan had counted on that. ๐™ง๐™š๐™š๐”€๐’†๐“ซ๐“ท๐™ค๐“ฟ๐’†๐™ก.๐’„๐™ค๐“ถ

She began deliberately building the pattern.

She had done this in trainingโ€”against different partners, different abilities, different stylesโ€”but the core of it was always the same. Establish a rhythm. Make the opponent trust the rhythm. Then break it at the moment that cost them the most. Her old instructor from before the academy, a retired fighter who had worked out of a cramped gym near the transit district, had called it threading. You ran the same stitch over and over until the cloth knew the needle, and then you went somewhere the cloth wasnโ€™t expecting.

She threw combinations.

Consistent ones. Predictable by designโ€”jab, cross, jab, cross, small variations on the same structure. Riven redirected them. Every time. The efficiency of her deflections actually improved as the sequence continued, her hands settling into the pattern of Joanโ€™s rhythm, the timing becoming more automatic.

That was exactly what Joan wanted.

Between exchanges she watched Rivenโ€™s feet. The tells were subtleโ€”the slight forward lean before she committed to a redirection, the way her left heel rose slightly when she was anticipating a right-hand strike. Micro-adjustments. The kind of thing that didnโ€™t exist in isolation but became visible against a consistent pattern if you were paying attention to the right things.

Joan had been paying attention.

The fifth exchange was different.

She opened with the jabโ€”same as before, same timing, same angleโ€”and Rivenโ€™s hands moved to meet it exactly as they had four times previously. But Joan pulled it. Not fully. Just enough to shift the angle of arrival by a few degrees, enough that Rivenโ€™s redirection caught air instead of contact, and the cross that followed came from a line Riven hadnโ€™t set her hands for.

It landed to the left side of Rivenโ€™s ribs.

Not devastating. But real. And more importantlyโ€”unexpected.

Riven reset quickly and created distance. She was calm about it, which Joan noted. A less composed fighter would have responded to the first clean hit with urgency, with acceleration, with the kind of emotional response that opened new gaps to exploit. Riven processed it like information and kept moving.

She changed her own approach.

Instead of waiting for Joan to come to her, she started moving in erratic patternsโ€”not random, but non-linear, making her position harder to commit to. She feinted twice, drawing Joanโ€™s forward movement, then stepped around it and caught Joan with a redirected returnโ€”using the force of Joanโ€™s own advance and pushing it sideways, spinning Joan off-balance for a step.

Joan caught herself.

They separated.

The exchange had been even and both of them knew it.

What followed was the longest stretch of the fightโ€”three minutes of controlled, grinding engagement where neither of them was able to land cleanly because neither of them was giving the other anything to work with. Riven kept denying Joanโ€™s combinations. Joan kept adapting the combinations so they cost Riven more effort to deny. The arena was quiet except for footwork and the occasional impact of a partial strike, and the students watching from the observation space had stopped shifting in their seats.

This was the kind of fight that didnโ€™t look like much until it did.

Some of the students watching had seen both of them train extensively. They knew what Joanโ€™s combinations looked like when she was setting something up versus when she was just maintaining pressure. They knew what Rivenโ€™s footwork looked like when she was confident versus when she was working harder than she wanted to admit. Reading those signals from the observation space was a different exercise than reading them from across a training floor, but the signals were still there if you knew where to look.

A few of the students were looking.

Most were just watching.

There was a difference.

The ones who were only watching saw two fighters exchanging without either of them breaking through. The ones looking saw Joan establishing a reference pointโ€”a consistent destination for her strikes that Rivenโ€™s hands were learning to anticipateโ€”and saw Riven spending slightly more energy on each successive redirection than the one before it. But the accumulation was real. Effort had a ceiling and Riven was closer to hers than she knew.

The change happened in the fourth minute.

Joan had been landing a consistent light strike to Rivenโ€™s left shoulderโ€”not because it did significant damage, but because it was the most reliably reachable target given how Riven positioned her hands during redirection. The strike had landed six times over the course of the fight. Small, accumulative, not the point.

The point was what Rivenโ€™s shoulder did on the seventh attempt.

It rose slightly in anticipation. An unconscious protective adjustmentโ€”the body responding to repeated contact at the same location before the mind had sanctioned the response. The shoulder came up. Which meant the left side of Rivenโ€™s midsection opened, just briefly, just by a fraction, at the exact moment Joan had been waiting to stop going for the shoulder.

Joan dropped the strike angle.

The blow landed below the ribs, direct and full, everything behind it.

Rivenโ€™s breath left her in a single hard exhale and she folded at the midsectionโ€”not to the ground, but enough that her hands came down, enough that her posture broke. Joan followed immediately. A second strike to the same point. A third that caught Riven across the jaw as she tried to straighten.

Riven went down to one knee.

She stayed there for a momentโ€”hands on the floor, head down, processing. Then she looked up. Her hands werenโ€™t shaking. Her expression hadnโ€™t broken. She simply looked at Joan the way someone looks at a calculation theyโ€™ve just finished, understanding the result even if it wasnโ€™t the one they had been working toward.

Then she stayed down.

The call came.

Joan exhaled once through her nose and stepped back. Her ribs were tight on the right sideโ€”Riven had caught her there twice in the third minute and the impact had settled into a dull ache that would get louder before it got quieter. She hadnโ€™t shown it. Hadnโ€™t adjusted her movement around it in any way that Riven could have read and used. That was the discipline her master had drilled into her since the first monthโ€”not the absence of pain, but the refusal to let it rewrite your behavior before you had decided to let it.

She turned and walked back toward the observation space.

She didnโ€™t look at the students watching as she passed back through the door. Didnโ€™t check for reactions. Whatever they had seen, whatever conclusions they had drawn about her or about Riven or about the way the fight had gone, none of it was information she needed right now. What she needed was to sit down, let the ache in her ribs settle into something manageable, and watch the matches that came after. There were four more first-round fights still to go. Each one was information. Joan never wasted available information.

Second match. Done.

Two names.

Ken. Joan.

The bracket had started narrowing. Five more names still waiting.