Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 229: Jelo vs drex
Jelo slowed his pace as he moved deeper into the academy grounds.
The atmosphere here was different.
Quieter.
Not empty—but focused.
Students here weren’t showing off. They weren’t gathering crowds. They trained alone or in silence, refining their abilities with intention. No one glanced up when he passed. No one stopped what they were doing to watch. There was a rhythm to this part of the grounds—measured, deliberate, private. The kind of discipline that didn’t need an audience to exist.
Jelo preferred it.
Less noise.
More substance.
He rolled his shoulder slightly as he walked, feeling the aftereffects of his previous fights. Not pain exactly. More like a low hum settled into the muscle—residual tension that hadn’t fully released yet. His fire reserves were holding at a comfortable level. His guard had taken hits but hadn’t buckled. His footwork was still clean, still responsive.
His body wasn’t fresh—but it wasn’t worn out either.
Still good enough.
Up ahead, a reinforced training zone came into view. The ground there was darker, more compact—clearly built to handle stronger impacts. The kind of surface that didn’t crack under ordinary force. The kind that told you whoever used it regularly wasn’t concerned with restraint. Most training zones showed their history in craters, in burn marks, in fractured stone. This one looked different. Intact. Almost untouched.
One person stood inside it.
Alone.
He wasn’t moving much.
Just standing still... with one hand slightly raised.
At first, it didn’t seem like anything. Just a student holding position. Maybe mid-thought. Maybe resting between efforts. Jelo’s gaze passed over him once—then came back.
Something was off.
But then Jelo noticed it.
The ground around the boy wasn’t broken.
It was pressed down.
Flattened more than it should be.
Like something heavy had been sitting on it. Not a strike. Not an explosion. Something slower than that—constant, persistent weight pushing into the surface without letting up. Subtle enough to miss if you weren’t paying attention. Obvious once you were.
Jelo stopped just outside the training zone.
He watched for a few seconds. Kept his expression neutral. Kept his posture relaxed. He wasn’t trying to draw attention—just trying to understand what he was looking at. 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶
The boy lifted his hand slightly—
Then lowered it.
A faint, almost invisible shift passed through the air. Not sound. Not light. Something else—a thickness that pressed against Jelo’s skin briefly and then eased back, like a held breath finally releasing.
Pressure.
Jelo stepped forward.
Not aggressively.
Just enough to be noticed.
The boy glanced up.
Their eyes met.
No reaction at first. No tension pulling across his face. No wariness sharpening his posture. Just the flat, quiet acknowledgment of someone who had spent enough time here to know the difference between someone walking past and someone stopping with intent.
Jelo spoke.
"You’re not just standing there."
The boy raised an eyebrow slightly. "What does that mean?"
"The ground," Jelo said, nodding toward it. "It’s compressed."
A short pause.
The boy looked down briefly—not like he needed to check. More like he was deciding how much to give away. How to respond to someone who had already noticed more than most.
Then—
"...You noticed."
Jelo stepped into the edge of the training area.
"Hard not to."
The boy studied him more carefully now. His gaze moved across Jelo without hurry—taking stock. Not threatened. Not guarded. Just assessing with the patience of someone who didn’t feel the need to fill silence.
"You’re observant," he said. "Most people just walk past."
Jelo shrugged slightly. "Most people aren’t looking."
That got a faint reaction.
Not quite a smile—but close. The corner of his mouth shifted just enough to register.
The boy lowered his hand fully this time.
The pressure in the air eased slightly. Not completely—Jelo could still feel the faint weight of it at the edges, like something present but pulled back. But the active push dropped off. Like someone turning down a dial that had been running quietly the whole time.
"You need something?" he asked.
Jelo didn’t answer immediately.
He looked around the training area. Took in the reinforced ground—undamaged despite the clear density of force being applied. No craters. No scorch marks. No fractures. Just compression. Quiet, total, sustained control.
Then back at him.
"I want to fight you."
The words were direct.
But not aggressive.
The boy blinked once. Not startled—but recalibrating. He hadn’t expected that framing. Or maybe he had, and just hadn’t expected it delivered so cleanly.
"...That’s straightforward."
"I don’t like wasting time," Jelo replied.
A brief silence followed. The kind that wasn’t uncomfortable. Just two people sitting in the space between a question and an answer.
The boy crossed his arms slightly.
"And why me?"
Jelo answered honestly.
"Because you’re strong."
Another pause.
The boy looked at the ground for a moment. Something moved across his expression—not pride, not dismissal. Something more internal than either of those. Like he was measuring the weight of the answer against something only he could see.
Then back at Jelo.
"You don’t even know what I can do."
"I don’t need to," Jelo said. "I just need to know you’re worth it."
That... landed.
The boy exhaled slowly. Not a sigh. More like something settling. Like he’d been waiting to hear something real and had finally gotten it.
"...You’re either confident or stupid."
Jelo met his gaze.
"Find out."
A few seconds passed. The air between them held still.
Then—
"...Fine."
The boy uncrossed his arms and stepped forward.
"Drex."
"Jelo."
Drex glanced around briefly—checking the perimeter. Making sure they had room. Making sure no one was standing close enough to catch stray force when this started.
Then back at him.
"No interruptions. No complaints."
"Agreed."
Drex nodded once.
Then stepped back into the center of the training zone.
Jelo followed.
The air shifted slightly again. Heavier. Not overwhelming—but present. Like stepping through a doorway into a room where the temperature had dropped a few degrees without explanation. You could breathe fine. Move fine. But you could feel it sitting there, waiting.
Drex flexed his fingers once. A small, unhurried motion.
"Don’t expect me to go easy just because you asked."
Jelo rolled his shoulders.
"I wouldn’t have asked if I wanted that."







