Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 194: Mira vs lucan

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Chapter 194: Mira vs lucan

Mira and Lucan came forward,

Start Sherlock said,

A space opened up naturally between the two groups as Mira stepped forward, rolling her left shoulder once and shaking out her hands at her sides. She’d heard the name — Lucan — but that was all she had. A name and a face now, as he stepped out from Sherlock’s side to match her.

He was lean. Medium height, relaxed in the way he carried himself, arms loose, no visible tension anywhere in his posture. He didn’t look like someone who was nervous, but he also didn’t look like someone performing confidence. He just looked easy. Comfortable. Like he’d done this before and already knew how it was going to feel.

Mira filed that away and said nothing.

They faced each other across the open floor, a measured distance between them, and for a moment neither moved. The room had gone quiet in the way rooms do when something is genuinely about to happen — not the performed silence of ceremony, but the held-breath stillness of people who didn’t want to miss anything.

Then Mira moved first.

She came in at a measured pace, not rushing, testing the ground between them. She threw a straight jab toward his shoulder — not her hardest, not her fastest. Probing. She wanted to see how he responded before she committed to anything real.

What she didn’t expect was for his arm to give.

Not buckle. Not block. Give — stretching backward at the point of contact like the resistance she’d anticipated simply wasn’t there, the limb bending in a way that made her brain stutter for half a second because it didn’t match anything she’d prepared for. Her fist pushed through where solid resistance should have been, and the momentum of her own strike pulled her half a step forward before she caught herself and jumped back.

She stared at his arm as it returned to its normal shape, the movement smooth and unhurried, like elastic snapping back into place.

Lucan watched her process it. He didn’t explain himself. He just shifted his weight slightly and waited.

Mira came in again, this time with a combination — jab, cross, low kick aimed at his lead leg. The jab glanced off his forearm, which bent away from it at an angle that shouldn’t have been anatomically possible. The cross he let through, absorbing it into his torso, his midsection depressing inward on contact before pushing back out.

The kick connected cleanly with his shin and he didn’t stretch that — he took it, wincing slightly, foot shifting back an inch. So he couldn’t elastic everything. There were limits, or at least preferences. She filed that away too.

She reset. Okay. Elasticity, or something close to it. His body could stretch, absorb, redirect. That meant conventional striking was going to be inefficient — you couldn’t rely on impact the way you normally would. She needed to think differently. She needed numbers.

She exhaled once, and split.

Two figures stepped out from her sides — same face, same stance, same quiet focus in their eyes — and Lucan’s expression shifted for the first time. Not panic. More like recalibration. His gaze moved between the three of them, tracking, assessing, trying to find the tell that separated the real from the copy.

The three Miras spread apart, circling him slowly from different angles, each one moving with the same unhurried deliberateness. That was the thing about her clones — they didn’t telegraph. They moved exactly as she did, held themselves exactly as she did, because they were drawn from her. There was no stiffness, no lag, no flaw in how they carried themselves to give them away.

Lucan turned slowly on the spot, keeping all three in his peripheral vision. He didn’t rush. He was thinking.

The left clone came in first, driving a hard elbow toward his ribs. He pivoted and let his torso stretch away from the strike, the blow sailing through a body that simply wasn’t where it had been a fraction of a second ago, and countered by whipping his elongated arm around in a wide sweeping arc. It caught the clone across the side and the figure dissolved — not dramatically, just gone, like smoke clearing.

Two left.

He’d found something. One clean hit was enough to dispel them. That changed his approach immediately — instead of defending and waiting, he needed to be the one pressing forward, hunting contact rather than avoiding it.

The remaining two Miras pulled further apart in response, widening the angle between them until he couldn’t keep both clearly in front of him at the same time. The real Mira drifted right, letting the clone push pressure from the left — drawing his eye, drawing his body, trying to open a gap on the side he wasn’t watching.

The clone threw a flurry — three fast strikes aimed at his head and chest, relentless enough to demand his attention. He dealt with them the hard way, letting some land and absorbing the impact through stretched muscle and compressed torso, wincing at the ones that connected at angles his ability didn’t cover cleanly. While he was occupied, Mira came in hard from the right — a driving knee aimed at his ribs, her fastest movement of the fight so far.

He caught it.

His hand shot out and his fingers wrapped around her knee, grip firm despite the awkward angle, and he used his own momentum to redirect her forward, sending her stumbling past him. She caught herself before she hit the ground, spinning back around, but the clone had stopped its pressure to compensate for her stumble and Lucan used the half second of stillness to lunge at it — a sudden explosive extension of his whole body, covering the distance faster than a normal stride had any right to — and swatted it out of the air before it could reposition. 𝓯𝙧𝓮𝓮𝒘𝓮𝙗𝙣𝒐𝒗𝒆𝓵.𝓬𝓸𝒎

Gone. Just Mira now.

She was breathing harder. Not gassed, but working. She summoned both clones again immediately, pulling them into place on either side of her, and this time she didn’t let them spread. She kept them close, the three of them moving together in a tight formation, layering strikes in rapid sequence so that he was never dealing with one hit at a time — always two, always from angles that overlapped, trying to overwhelm the tracking that had been picking her apart.

It worked, for a while.

Lucan backed up under the pressure, arms stretching and bending to cover as many angles as he could manage, but the volume was getting through. A clone’s elbow cracked against his jaw. Mira’s heel came down hard on his instep. The other clone drove a palm strike into his sternum and he absorbed it but stumbled half a step backward, the first time he’d visibly lost ground in the entire fight.