Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 224: jelo wins

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Chapter 224: jelo wins

The third exchange was Jelo’s.

He let Nylen set the shell first—watched the fingers move through the sequence, counted the three-point configuration as it landed in the space between them. Nylen was fast with it now, faster than the first exchange, the placement tightening as he found his rhythm. The shell covered the direct approach angles. Coming straight at him through it was not an option.

Jelo didn’t come straight. 𝘧𝘳𝘦ℯ𝓌𝘦𝒷𝘯𝑜𝑣𝘦𝓁.𝒸𝘰𝓂

He fired a Dragon Claw at a steep angle—not aimed at Nylen, aimed at the floor two meters to Nylen’s right, forcing Nylen to track the projection and adjust his shell orientation to cover the new angle. The claw struck the floor and the impact sent a concussive wave outward. Not significant damage. But enough noise and force to demand attention.

Nylen’s hands moved to reorient.

Jelo was already in motion.

Wing Burst—not toward the reorientation, toward the gap it left behind. The shell’s left side was momentarily thin as Nylen’s attention went right. Jelo came through the thin side, fast enough that the spatial disruption he passed through was minimal—a brief sensation of wrongness in his left shoulder as he transited the edge of a fragmentation point, not enough to stop him, just enough to register.

He was inside the shell.

Three meters from Nylen. Close range.

He threw the Dragon Claw at close range—a quick thrust rather than a full extension, the claw projection tight and fast, aimed at Nylen’s midsection.

Nylen took it.

He hadn’t had time to collapse the shell and rebuild a defensive configuration. The close-range claw hit him across the abdomen and drove him back two steps. He went with the momentum—smart, not fighting the force—and used the backward motion to create distance, reorienting his hands as he moved, setting new fragmentation points in the space between them before Jelo could close again.

The shell reformed.

They separated.

Jelo stood outside the new shell and looked at Nylen through it. He could see the effort in Nylen’s posture now—a slight tightness across the shoulders that hadn’t been there in the first exchange. The close-range Dragon Claw had landed real damage. Not finishing damage. But real. And maintaining a fragmentation shell while absorbing impact had cost Nylen something in terms of concentration.

Good.

The pattern was becoming clear. Nylen’s shell was strongest when he had space and time to configure it. Under pressure—when Jelo was forcing decisions faster than Nylen could think through them—the configuration quality dropped. The points were placed reactively rather than strategically and the coverage had gaps. The closer Jelo pushed the tempo, the more reactive Nylen’s placement became.

He pushed the tempo.

The next four exchanges were faster than anything that had come before. Jelo didn’t give Nylen time to settle into a configuration—he was moving before the previous exchange had fully resolved, firing Dragon Claws at varying angles to force shell adjustments, using Wing Burst to change his own position between claws so that Nylen was tracking two problems at once. The claw’s angle demanded one adjustment. Jelo’s position demanded another. Nylen could manage one. Managing both simultaneously was degrading the shell.

By the fourth rapid exchange a fragmentation point was visibly mis-set—Jelo’s enhanced vision caught the slight spatial shimmer that indicated a point placed without full concentration, weaker than a properly configured one.

He aimed the next Dragon Claw directly at it.

The claw hit the weak point and instead of fragmenting on contact, pushed through—the point collapsed under the force rather than holding. The projection continued and caught Nylen across the right shoulder with partial impact, not the full force a clean shot would have carried but enough.

Nylen’s right arm lost its precision temporarily.

His hand movements slowed.

Without precise hand movement, the shell couldn’t be configured. Without the shell, Nylen was a physically capable student without an active ability. And Jelo, standing across the floor reading him with enhanced vision, operating with abilities that still had significant reserve, was not a physically capable student.

He was something else.

He used Skilled Guard—a brief hardening across his forearms—and walked through the edge of the degraded shell. The disruption from the remaining fragmentation points hit the hardened surface and transferred as dull pressure rather than spatial disorientation. He felt it. It didn’t stop him.

He reached Nylen.

No Dragon Claw. No Wing Burst. He grabbed Nylen’s right shoulder with his left hand and drove a controlled palm strike into his sternum with the right—hard, direct, not enhanced, just a strike from someone who had been training to fight since before the academy and knew how to end a close-range exchange when the geometry finally allowed it.

Nylen went down.

He hit the floor on his back and lay there for a moment, looking up at the ceiling. His hands were still moving slightly—reflexive, trying to set points—but the configuration wasn’t completing. The focus was gone. Whatever he had left was being spent on breathing.

He stayed down.

The call came.

Jelo stood over the space where the fight had been and felt the dragon system settle back into stillness inside him. None of it had been difficult. That was the part he would not say out loud to anyone. He had used a fraction of what he carried and the fight had gone exactly where he had calculated it would go from the second exchange onward. He had not shown the fire. Had not shown the Duragon Ignis Claw. Had not shown the upper range of what the system could produce.

He had shown enough to win.

That was all today required.

But he was aware of them. Was always aware of rooms. His enhanced vision didn’t switch off because the fight was over—it ran underneath everything, a constant low-level read of the environment and the people in it. He could see the faces of the students as he crossed back toward the door. Some of them had expressions he recognized. The kind of expression that formed when someone had expected to see more and wasn’t sure whether the fight had been simpler than anticipated or whether the simplicity itself was the thing that should concern them.

They wouldn’t find his ceiling.

What they had seen was one layer. The surface. Dragon Claw at controlled output, Wing Burst used economically, Skilled Guard deployed once and briefly. His enhanced vision had done most of the real work, reading Nylen’s hand sequences before they completed and feeding that information into movement decisions that had looked like reaction but were closer to anticipation.

Tongen was not in this room.

Jelo found his seat, sat down, and went still.

Six names standing.

Ken. Joan. Tessa. Zarek. Silas. Jelo.

The first round was done.

What came next would be something else entirely.