Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 237: Riven vs Tessa

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Chapter 237: Riven vs Tessa

Morning came differently.

Not louder.

Not brighter.

Just heavier.

The kind of morning that sat on your chest before you even opened your eyes — the kind where your body already knew something was coming before your mind caught up.

Jelo was awake before the others.

He lay still for a moment, staring at the ceiling, listening to the quiet. Atlas was still asleep across the room, one arm hanging off the edge of the bed. Mira’s side was still. The academy itself felt suspended — like everything was holding its breath.

He sat up slowly.

Rolled his fingers once.

The draconic essence responded immediately. Steady. Present. Waiting.

Good.

He stood.

He dressed without rushing.

No urgency. No nerves. Just the quiet deliberateness of someone who had already made peace with what the day was going to ask of them.

He looked at his hand briefly.

Opened it. Closed it.

The warmth was there — deep and layered, sitting beneath the surface like something patient. Not restless. Not eager. Just present in the way it had been since yesterday’s training. Since the two controlled releases. Since he’d confirmed that the ability wasn’t just raw destructive output he had to contain — it was something he could direct.

That distinction mattered today.

More than it had yesterday.

He exhaled once and moved toward the door.

Atlas was awake by the time Jelo reached the common area — barely. He was sitting on the edge of his bed with his eyes half open, rubbing the back of his neck with the slow movements of someone whose body hadn’t fully agreed to be conscious yet.

"You’ve been up a while," Atlas said. Not a question.

"A bit."

Atlas looked at him for a moment. Something passed behind his eyes — not concern exactly. More like calibration. Taking stock.

Then he stood.

"Alright," he said simply.

Mira was already dressed when they reached her. Standing near the window, arms crossed loosely, looking out at the training grounds below. She turned when they entered, studied Jelo’s face briefly, and nodded once.

No words.

None needed.

The three of them left together.

By the time they reached the main hall, most of the others were already there.

The room was full but quiet in the way that crowds get quiet when no one wants to be the first to speak too loudly. Students stood in loose clusters, some talking in low voices, most just waiting. The air was thick with the kind of focused tension that had no outlet yet — energy with nowhere to go.

Jelo scanned the room without thinking about it.

His enhanced vision moved naturally now, reading signatures, reading posture. He recognized faces. Matched names to abilities in his memory without effort. Some of these students he had watched train for weeks. Some he knew only by reputation. Some he had never spoken to directly.

Today he would learn more about all of them than weeks of observation had told him.

Twelve students.

Four spots.

The math wasn’t complicated.

Olmo arrived without fanfare.

He walked in from the side corridor, a single sheet in his hand, and moved to the front of the room with the unhurried certainty of someone who had done this many times before. No announcement. No signal. He simply stopped, turned, and waited until the room had settled completely.

It didn’t take long.

"You know why you’re here," Olmo said. 𝙧𝙚𝙚𝔀𝒆𝓫𝓷𝙤𝓿𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝙤𝓶

His voice carried easily through the silence. Not loud. Not dramatic. Just clear. The kind of voice that didn’t need volume because it had weight.

"Twelve of you. Four positions. Today that number gets cut." He let that sit for exactly one second. "The bracket determines the order. Fights are one on one. Standard rules apply — no permanent damage, no equipment outside your registered ability set, no interference from outside the match. The rest of you watch. You learn. You remember."

He looked down at the sheet briefly.

Then back up.

"Losers aren’t eliminated from the class. But they will not represent it. That distinction matters. Remember it."

The room stayed quiet.

No one shifted. No one murmured. Whatever nerves were present in that space — and there were plenty — they stayed contained. Controlled. Everyone in this room had earned the right to be here, and that meant everyone in this room understood that composure was already part of the test.

Olmo gave them another second.

Then read the bracket.

Jelo listened to each pairing without moving.

First match — Riven versus Tessa.

Second — Nylen versus Zarek.

Third — Silas versus Joan.

Fourth — Kaizo versus Jax.

Semi-finals would follow. Then the final matches to determine the remaining spots.

Jelo’s name was toward the end.

He noted it. Filed it away. Let it settle in the back of his mind without dwelling on it. There was nothing to be gained from thinking about his own fight while others were still ahead of him. Every match before his was information. Every match before his was preparation.

He focused back on the room.

Atlas leaned slightly toward him.

"Riven and Tessa first," he murmured. "That’s going to be interesting."

Mira said nothing. But her eyes had already moved to Riven — standing near the left wall, arms crossed, expression flat. He was compact and still in the way that suggested the stillness was a choice rather than a default. Like something coiled.

Then to Tessa — three people away, shoulders back, jaw set. She wasn’t looking at Riven. She was looking at nothing in particular, her focus already somewhere internal. Already in the fight.

Neither of them looked at each other.

That said enough.

The fights would take place on the main training field.

Olmo led them out without ceremony. The twelve competitors moved through the corridor and out into the open air, the rest of the observers falling in around the edges of the marked space. The field had been cleared. Boundaries set at clean intervals across the ground. Two officials Jelo didn’t recognize stood at opposite ends — there to call stops if needed, expressions professional and neutral.

The sky was overcast.

Flat grey light that fell evenly across everything. No shadows to read. No sun to angle away from or use.

No wind.

Perfect conditions for nothing to be hidden.

Jelo moved to a clear vantage point near the front of the observers. He wanted sight lines on both fighters from the opening moment. He wanted to see how they settled into the space. How they read each other before the first move.

He wanted to see everything.

The remaining students arranged themselves around the boundary.

Some quietly. Some with more restless energy, shifting weight, cracking knuckles, doing the small physical things people did when they were trying to manage tension without showing it. Jelo recognized the behaviors. He’d felt them himself before.

He wasn’t feeling them now.

He was watching.

Reading.

Storing.

Whatever happened in the next few minutes would tell him something — about Tessa, about Riven, about what this bracket was actually going to demand from everyone in it.

He wanted every piece of it.

Olmo moved to the edge of the field.

Looked at both fighters.

Then gestured once.

"Riven. Tessa. Center."

They stepped forward.

The crowd stilled completely.

And the morning — the real morning, the one that had been waiting since before any of them opened their eyes — finally began.