Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 218: Tessa wins
Nyra felt it immediately.
The absence of incoming energy was its own kind of pressure. She was carrying the converted charge from the earlier absorptions—it sat in her arms like heat, ready, needing somewhere to go. The longer she held it without discharging, the more awareness it demanded. Her body wanted to move, wanted to release the stored force into something. Standing still in the middle of the arena while Tessa simply watched her from across the floor was exactly the wrong condition for an ability that operated on input and output.
She came forward.
Tessa didn’t move. Didn’t raise a construct. Just watched.
Nyra closed half the distance and stopped. She was waiting for the next bolt—waiting to absorb again, to add to the charge, to build toward the threshold where she could discharge everything at once and end it. But nothing came. Tessa just stood there, hands at her sides, eyes steady.
The charge in Nyra’s arms was starting to feel different now.
Not stronger. Just present. Heavy in a way that hadn’t been there two minutes ago. She had absorbed two and a half constructs worth of force and held it without fully discharging. The conversion had been clean, but conversion without release was just stored pressure looking for an exit. She needed to hit something. She needed to close the distance and end this.
She came forward again. Faster.
Tessa raised her right hand and a construct materialized—not a bolt this time, but a wall. A wide flat barrier that extended across the space between them, floor to chest height, blocking the direct line forward. Nyra hit it with both forearms and absorbed the impact. The barrier shattered on contact. The energy moved through her arms cleanly—a fresh surge on top of what she was already carrying.
Too much. 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶
She felt it the moment it arrived. The absorbed charge from the wall absorption pushed her closer to the saturation point than she had intended to be. Her arms felt tight. Her chest felt tight. The stored force was approaching the threshold and she hadn’t discharged yet—hadn’t landed a clean hit on Tessa, hadn’t released any of it into a real target.
Tessa saw her hesitate.
That half-second of stillness—the slight tension across Nyra’s shoulders, the way her hands came up and then didn’t commit to anything—told Tessa everything she needed to know. The saturation point was close. Maybe closer than Nyra wanted it to be. Which meant the next absorption would push Nyra past what she could comfortably hold, and a fighter past their threshold stopped being a fighter and started being a problem for themselves.
Tessa changed her approach.
She had been using force constructs—bolts and walls, direct energy that Nyra could absorb cleanly. She stopped. Instead she began constructing differently—a sustained field rather than a discrete projectile. A slow-moving pressure construct that didn’t arrive like a punch but like a tide, expanding outward from Tessa’s position in a wide arc and pressing against everything it touched.
Nyra had never absorbed a sustained field before.
She tried.
The pressure construct reached her and she pulled at it the way she pulled at everything—instinct, the same motion her body had made a hundred times in training. But a sustained field didn’t have a moment of impact to absorb. It was continuous. It pressed without arriving, pushed without stopping, and her ability kept trying to process an input that didn’t end. The absorption started and couldn’t complete. The stored charge in her arms spiked.
She discharged involuntarily.
The force left her body in an uncontrolled burst—not directed, not aimed, just released outward in all directions as her body ejected the excess before the saturation point became damage. It kicked up dust from the arena floor and pushed back against the pressure construct and dissipated into nothing useful.
Nyra was breathing hard now.
Empty. The discharge had cleared everything she had built up over the fight. She had absorbed two and a half bolts, a full wall construct, part of a sustained field—and she had nothing to show for any of it. No damage landed. No hit that had connected. And now her arms felt hollow where they had felt charged, and Tessa was still standing across the floor looking precisely as composed as she had at the start.
Nyra understood then.
The bolts at the beginning hadn’t been attacks. The wall hadn’t been a barrier. Every construct Tessa had sent at her had been a controlled feed—calibrated amounts of energy, just enough to load Nyra toward the saturation point without pushing her past it, buying time while Nyra’s own body became the problem. And then the sustained field had been the key that unlocked the involuntary discharge. The whole sequence had been architecture. Tessa had built a trap out of Nyra’s own ability and walked her into it at a pace slow enough that Nyra hadn’t seen the walls going up.
She came forward anyway.
Because there was nothing else to do.
This was the part of Nyra that people underestimated. They built their read of her entirely around the ability—as though she were nothing outside of what her power could do. Nyra had been fighting since she was twelve, long before the ability manifested. She had learned to compete with what she had before she had anything exceptional. The ability arrived later. The foundation was already there. She was not the kind of fighter who fell apart when her advantage was removed.
Empty of charge, tired from the saturation spike, she came in on pure physical fighting—no ability, just speed and weight and the muscle she had built over three years of conditioning. She was not slow. She was not weak. She landed two strikes that Tessa absorbed with raised barrier constructs, and a third that clipped Tessa across the forearm when the barrier came up a half-beat late.
Tessa felt that one.
She acknowledged it, reset, and projected the final construct.
Not a bolt. Not a wall. A compressed sphere of force, dense and contained, released at close range with everything she had loaded into it. It hit Nyra center mass—sternum, direct—and the impact moved through her entirely. Nyra’s feet left the floor for a moment. She came down hard, one knee, then both hands, then she stayed.
The call came.
Tessa released the last of her active constructs and let her hands fall to her sides. Her forearm ached where the strike had landed—she would feel that through the rest of the day. She took one slow breath and then one more, and when her heart rate had started to come down she looked across the arena at Nyra.
Nyra was already rising. Slowly. With dignity.
She met Tessa’s eyes and held them for a moment. Then she nodded once—small, direct—and walked toward the exit without looking at anyone else.
Tessa watched her go.
Then she turned and walked back herself.
Third match. Done.
Three names.
Ken. Joan. Tessa.
The floor had already claimed half of what it was going to claim. Three more first-round fights remained. Jelo’s name was still waiting.







