Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 239: Jelo vs Joan

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Chapter 239: Jelo vs Joan

The second fight didn’t last as long as the first.

Nylen versus Zarek had been sharp and decisive — over in under two minutes, Zarek forcing an early concession through a pressure ability that left Nylen with nowhere to move and no good answer for it. Clean win. No drama.

The crowd had absorbed it quietly.

Filed it away.

And now the field was being reset again, students shifting their positions around the boundary, the officials moving back to their ends, Olmo standing exactly where he always stood — at the edge, watching everything, showing nothing.

Jelo had watched both fights carefully.

Zarek’s pressure ability was worth noting — a radial force emission that expanded outward from his body in controlled pulses, each one building on the last. Not destructive on its own. But it compressed space. Removed options. Made every position feel slightly more wrong than the one before it until there was nowhere left to stand that felt safe.

Smart ability for a tournament setting.

Nylen had figured it out too late.

Jelo filed it and moved on.

"Silas. Joan."

Olmo’s voice.

Jelo’s attention sharpened.

Not because of Silas.

Because of Joan.

He had watched her during the bracket announcement. Watched her during both previous fights. She hadn’t moved much. Hadn’t talked to anyone. She stood slightly apart from the main clusters of students — not isolated, not unfriendly, just self-contained. The kind of person who kept their energy close.

Her essence signature was unusual.

Jelo had noticed it when Olmo had first read the names. He’d run his enhanced vision across the room automatically — mapping signatures, reading distributions — and Joan’s had stopped him for a moment.

It wasn’t dense. It wasn’t fluid like Tessa’s had been. It was layered in a way that felt almost architectural. Precise. Structured. Like something that had been carefully built rather than naturally developed.

He hadn’t been able to read it fully from a distance.

He wanted a closer look.

Silas and Joan moved to the center.

Jelo repositioned without drawing attention to it — stepped slightly forward, slightly left, finding the angle that gave him the clearest sight line on Joan specifically.

Atlas noticed.

"You’re watching her."

"She’s interesting."

Mira, quietly: "Her essence is strange."

"You felt it too," Jelo said.

"From here it looks almost segmented," Mira said. "Like it’s divided into separate parts."

That matched what Jelo had read.

Segmented.

That was the right word for it.

The fight started.

Silas opened aggressively — a direct, confident approach that suggested he’d done his homework and decided Joan wasn’t someone who could handle forward pressure. He came in fast, leading with a sharp ability discharge that crackled outward from his hand in a tight, concentrated beam.

Joan stepped aside.

Not urgently. Almost casually.

The beam passed her and she was already moving — not retreating, not countering immediately. Just repositioning. Fluid. Unhurried.

Silas adjusted and came again.

This time Joan raised one hand.

Something appeared between them — a flat, translucent barrier, roughly the size of a door, that materialized out of what looked like compressed light and held for exactly long enough to catch Silas’s second discharge cleanly. The energy hit the barrier and stopped. Dispersed.

Then the barrier vanished.

Just as quickly as it had appeared.

Silas blinked.

The crowd murmured.

Jelo’s eyes narrowed.

He read her more carefully.

The segmented quality of her essence made sense now. She wasn’t pooling power in one place for one purpose — she was maintaining multiple separate constructs simultaneously, each one drawing from a different layer of her essence. The barrier had been one layer. But he could see the others still active beneath the surface, waiting.

Construction ability.

She built things.

Temporary, solid, functional things — pulled from condensed essence and held in place by sustained focus. The barrier was the most obvious application. But the layering suggested she had more than one construct available at any given time.

The question was how many. And how long she could hold them.

Silas found out the hard way.

He tried to flank her — fast repositioning, coming around the side to avoid a second barrier. Joan turned with him, raised her other hand, and a second construct appeared behind him — not a barrier this time but a solid platform of compressed essence that caught his foot mid-step and disrupted his momentum completely.

He stumbled.

Joan moved in.

Her strikes weren’t remarkable on their own — clean, practiced, nothing unusual. But she threw them while simultaneously maintaining two constructs, which meant her attention was divided in a way Silas couldn’t fully account for. He kept expecting the constructs to drop when she committed to the offense.

They didn’t.

That was the real ability.

Not the constructs individually.

The ability to sustain multiple things at once without any of them degrading.

Silas lasted another ninety seconds before the official called it.

Joan had constructed a third object near the end — a wedge-shaped block of hardened essence that she’d placed precisely in Silas’s path during a retreat and used to corner him against the field boundary. No dramatic finish. Just methodical reduction of his options until he had none left.

The official raised a hand.

"Joan."

Atlas let out a low breath.

"She builds things."

"Multiple things," Mira said. "Simultaneously."

"While fighting," Atlas added. "That’s not easy."

Jelo said nothing.

He was still reading Joan as she walked off the field — the segmented essence settling slightly now that the fight was over, the constructs dissolved, the layers returning to their resting state. She looked composed. Not drained. Whatever the cost of maintaining multiple constructs was, she hadn’t hit it yet.

That mattered.

That told him something important about what she’d be like when it was his turn.

He looked at his hand briefly.

Opened it.

The draconic warmth was there. Patient. Settled.

He closed it again.

Two more fights ran before his name was called.

Kaizo versus Jax — a brutal, physical exchange that Kaizo ended decisively with an ability that temporarily multiplied his striking force through a short burst of kinetic amplification. Different from Riven’s amplification. Faster activation. Lower duration. Like a spike rather than a sustained pressure.

Jax hadn’t found an answer for the timing of it.

Jelo noted the distinction between Kaizo and Riven. Filed it.

The semi-finals were taking shape.

Tessa. Zarek. Joan. And one more spot still being decided.

Then Olmo’s voice again.

Flat. Unhurried.

"Jelo."

A pause.

"Joan."

The field settled into a different kind of quiet.

Jelo felt it as he stepped forward — the shift in the atmosphere around the boundary. Not louder. Not more electric. Just more focused. More attentive. He was one of the known quantities in this bracket. People had been watching him for weeks. They had expectations built from Dragon Claw, from Wing Burst, from the controlled precision of how he moved.

They thought they knew what they were going to see.

He moved to the center.

Joan was already there.

Up close her essence was even more clearly structured than it had looked from a distance. Distinct layers, each one separate, each one maintained independently. He counted four. Four separate constructs available, or close to available, resting in their divided compartments like tools arranged on a workbench.

She was looking at him with the same kind of focused attention he was giving her.

Reading him back.

Good.

That meant she was taking this seriously.

He preferred that.

Olmo raised his hand.

Dropped it.