Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 221: Silas vs Jax
The fifth call came and the room felt it differently than any of the previous four.
Not because the names were significant. Not because the remaining students had been waiting for this pairing specifically. But because there were only two fights left after this one, and everyone in the observation space understood that the bracket was almost done narrowing for the first round. The tournament had a shape now—real, visible, the kind of shape that made each remaining match feel more consequential than the last. Five fights in and the floor had already taken six names. Two more first-round fights and the field would be cut to six. From six, the bracket would find its final four.
The math had weight.
"Silas. Jax."
Jax stood first. He was big—not in the exaggerated way that sometimes indicated more size than function, but the kind of big that had been built deliberately over years, the kind of frame that moved with purpose and carried density in every step. He cracked his neck left, then right, and walked without looking at Silas.
Silas followed.
He was quieter in his physicality than Jax—leaner, more compact, the kind of build that didn’t announce itself. He had been sitting with his hands folded in his lap since the first match began, watching each fight with an attention that hadn’t broken once. He hadn’t reacted visibly to any of them. Hadn’t leaned forward when Tessa dismantled Nyra’s ability, hadn’t shifted when Zarek’s attunement read Kaizo through the floor. He had simply watched, and processed, and stayed still.
That stillness was not a personality trait. It was a practice.
Silas had come from a background that most people at the academy hadn’t. He had grown up the youngest of four brothers in a household where being loud got you talked over and being slow got you left behind. He had learned early that the most efficient way to operate in a room full of people who were all trying to be heard was to stop trying to be heard entirely. He had taken that same principle into combat. While other students in his early training years had been developing aggression, developing presence, learning to fill space with force and noise, Silas had been developing something quieter and considerably more dangerous—the ability to read a situation completely before acting on it and to act on it only once, with everything he had, at the precise moment it would do the most damage.
His ability was nerve disruption.
He could channel a focused current of bioelectric force through direct contact—fingers, palm, any part of his hand that touched skin or thin material. The disruption didn’t break bones or tear muscle. What it did was interrupt the neural signaling between the brain and the affected limb, producing a paralysis that lasted between three and eight seconds depending on the intensity of the contact and the physical resilience of the target. A full-palm contact to an unguarded nerve cluster could take a limb completely offline. A fingertip graze to the right point could produce enough disruption to break a fighter’s concentration at a critical moment.
The limitation was contact. He had to touch. Which meant he had to get close, and getting close to Jax was not a simple problem.
Jax’s ability was kinetic reinforcement—he could harden any part of his body to a density several times greater than normal tissue, making those areas effectively impact-resistant. He could reinforce his fists, his forearms, his shins, any surface he chose, and when a reinforced part of his body struck something it struck with the combined force of his natural strength and the added mass of the hardened tissue. A reinforced punch from Jax at full output had fractured training equipment rated for forces well above what standard students produced.
He was not subtle about it.
He didn’t need to be.
His approach to combat had always been direct—close the distance, reinforce, hit hard enough that the fight stopped being a fight. He had won eleven of twelve sparring sessions during group training by this method, and the one he had lost had been against an instructor who had specifically been evaluating whether he could be baited out of his direct approach. He had been baited. He had lost. He had thought about why he lost for approximately two days and then gone back to the direct approach because the direct approach, against anyone who wasn’t specifically trained to counter it, remained devastating.
Silas was specifically trained to counter it.
Not because he had known he would face Jax—though the bracket had made that confrontation obvious once it was posted—but because his entire ability set was built around finding the small openings in large force. Nerve disruption had no effect on reinforced tissue. He had already established that in his mind before the match was called. If Jax reinforced his forearm and Silas touched the reinforced forearm, nothing would happen. The disruption required nerve access. Which meant he needed skin. Which meant he needed to find the moments when Jax was between reinforcement states—the small gaps when one surface was releasing hardness and another was acquiring it, or when Jax had committed a reinforcement to a strike and left something else temporarily un-reinforced.
Those gaps existed. Every ability had them.
Silas had spent the last three matches watching Jax watch the fights, cataloguing how his body moved when he wasn’t thinking about it—where his tension defaulted, how he breathed when he was at rest, the micro-expressions that crossed his face when something on the arena floor surprised him. Information. All of it information.
The observation space had gone quiet in the way it did when people had stopped forming opinions and started simply watching. Four fights had given the room enough context to recognize when something was about to be complicated. Jax’s size told one story. Silas’s stillness told another.
They entered the arena.
Jax reinforced immediately—both fists going dense the moment the signal tone finished. He wasn’t going to wait. He covered the distance in five long strides and threw the first strike before Silas had taken two steps.
It was fast for a fighter his size.
Silas had already moved.
Not back. Sideways, tight to the line of the incoming arm, close enough that the reinforced fist passed within a handspan of his shoulder. He didn’t try to touch Jax on the pass—too much reinforcement on the forearm, no access. He let it go and reset his position. 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖
Jax turned and came again.
The second strike was lower—a body shot, reinforced forearm driving horizontal toward Silas’s ribs. Silas deflected the arm upward with both hands, redirecting the trajectory without absorbing the force, and the arm went high and wide. The motion opened Jax’s side for a half-second.
Silas let it close.
Not yet. The side was exposed but Jax’s hip and oblique were dense from residual reinforcement spillover. Touching there would do nothing. He needed a cleaner access point and he needed Jax to have committed hard enough to a strike that a meaningful surface was temporarily offline.
He stepped back and let Jax fully reset.
Then he let Jax come again.







