Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 222: Silas wins
The third exchange was where it changed.
Jax came in with a right-handed strike—reinforced fist, full commitment, driving toward Silas’s chest. Silas had been waiting for a full commitment. He deflected the arm the same way he had deflected it before—upward and across—but this time instead of letting the motion close, he followed the arm as it went wide, staying connected to it, his left hand sliding from the forearm toward the wrist where the reinforcement density dropped off.
The wrist joint.
The one location on a reinforced limb where the hardening was always thinner—too much flex required in the joint for full density to be sustainable. Silas had known this before the fight began. He had been waiting for the angle that put the wrist accessible without Jax being able to pull it before contact was made.
He touched it.
Two fingers. Index and middle, pressed to the inside of Jax’s wrist for less than a second.
The disruption fired.
Jax’s right hand went offline. Not dramatically—no collapse, no visible convulsion—just a sudden absence of signal that his hand interpreted as nothing. His fingers opened without him telling them to. His grip dissolved. For four seconds, the right hand was simply not responding.
Jax looked at it.
Then looked at Silas.
He came forward with the left. Still reinforced, still dangerous, still carrying the force that had fractured training equipment. He was not a fighter who lost composure when something unexpected happened. He was a fighter who adapted by doubling down on what still worked.
That had been true since he was thirteen years old, the first time his reinforcement ability had fully activated during a street altercation near his neighborhood and he had realized that the force coming out of his body was not normal. He had broken the wrist of the older boy who had started the fight, not through any technique, simply by blocking with a reinforced forearm, and the older boy’s wrist had been the one that gave. Jax had gone home that night and sat in his room for two hours thinking about what that meant and what it made him responsible for. He had come to the conclusion that it made him responsible for knowing how to use it correctly, and he had sought out formal training the following week. Three years later the academy had found him at a regional intake evaluation and assessed him at a level considerably above his age group. He had entered already knowing how to be dangerous. What the academy had been teaching him was how to be precise about it. The distinction, his master had told him on the first day, was the difference between a weapon and a fighter.
The left hand still worked. He used it.
The strike was powerful.
Silas took the edge of it across the shoulder rather than the center—not a clean deflection, more of a partial redirect that cost him stability on the right side. He felt the reinforced forearm even through the glancing contact. It was like being hit with furniture. His shoulder would be useless for anything precise for the next few minutes.
He reassessed without pausing.
Right hand online again—Jax was flexing it, the disruption wearing off after four seconds as the neural signal reasserted itself. Both hands back. Both potentially reinforced. The window had been used. He needed to open another one.
He changed approach.
Instead of waiting for Jax to commit to strikes, Silas started applying pressure—not aggressive pressure, but presence pressure, closing the distance and staying in it, forcing Jax to manage the threat of contact while simultaneously managing his reinforcement. The mental load of maintaining hardening across multiple surfaces while tracking an opponent who was actively trying to find the gaps was higher than most people understood. Reinforcement wasn’t passive. It required active attention.
Jax managed it well for the first minute of close-range engagement.
The second minute was harder.
He was generating fewer reinforcements per exchange—not because he was running out of capacity, but because the constant attention Silas was demanding was slowing the cycling. A surface would drop to neutral for a half-beat longer than usual before Jax could reinforce it again. The gaps were brief. But they were there.
Silas found one.
Jax threw a left hook—reinforced, committed—and in the moment of commitment the right side of his neck briefly lost its reinforcement as his attention concentrated on the left arm’s output. The neck wasn’t exposed long. Maybe three-quarters of a second.
Silas’s right hand was already moving.
He got two fingers to the side of Jax’s neck—not the throat, the cluster of nerve tissue below the ear and above the collarbone, the location that produced the most significant disruption per contact point.
He held contact for a full second instead of the usual graze.
Jax’s left side went down. 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝙚𝔀𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝒐𝒎
Not fell—went down. His left arm, left shoulder, the left side of his neck and upper back—all of it dropped out of signal for the duration. He staggered. His left knee buckled slightly before he caught himself with the right leg. For six seconds he was fighting one-sided, his right arm and leg functional and his left side simply absent.
Six seconds was a long time.
Silas used all of it.
He didn’t go for a finish immediately. He moved around Jax’s right side—the functional side—putting himself in the position that was hardest to cover with one working arm. He didn’t strike. He made Jax track him. Made Jax’s right arm and eye do the work of two sides, burning the clock on the disruption while Jax’s brain was occupied with compensating.
At five seconds, Jax started turning to follow.
At six, the left side came back online.
Silas was already in position.
The moment Jax’s left arm reasserted function, the neural reconnection produced a brief spike of disorientation—the brain reconciling the sudden return of signal from a limb that had been reporting nothing. That spike lasted less than a second. Silas had timed for it.
He drove a straight strike to the center of Jax’s chest during the spike.
No ability behind it. Just the strike, everything he had, landing at the exact moment Jax’s system was rebooting.
Jax went back. Both feet left the floor for a step. He came down hard, one knee hitting the arena floor with a sound that carried across the whole space.
He stayed there.
Not because he couldn’t rise. His arms were both working now, both still reinforced, still carrying the force that had fractured equipment. He stayed because the calculation had completed and the result was clear. He had lost more than he could recover in the remaining margin.
He put one fist on the floor.
The call came.
Silas stood over the space where the fight had been and let his arms fall to his sides. His shoulder ached deep where the reinforced forearm had connected. He would feel that for days. He breathed through it and didn’t move until the call had finished.
Then he walked back.
Fifth match. Done.
Five names.
Ken. Joan. Tessa. Zarek. Silas.
One fight left in the first round.
Jelo’s name was still waiting.







