The Team One preparation room had a low ceiling and a table and three chairs and the particular quality of a space that had been used for exactly this purpose for many tournant cycles and had absorbed sothing of all of them.
Míng Xīn sat. Kael Sòng sat across from him. Wèi Chén sat between them and looked at the table with the focused expression of soone who was not going to speak until he understood what kind of conversation this was.
"Team Two," Míng Xīn said.
"Six mbers," Kael Sòng said. "Hún Yuán'er ranked first among them. Two Shattered Clans mbers including Rèn Wú. Three Remnants mbers from the middle bracket."
"Rèn Wú's lineage has not finished declaring."
"No." Kael Sòng looked at him steadily. "You noticed that in her second match."
"Her shoulder changed in the thirty first second."
A pause.
"I saw it in the twenty ninth second," Kael Sòng said.
Neither of them made anything of this. It was simply information, placed on the table between them the way you placed sothing you intended to work with rather than argue about. Wèi Chén looked between them and then looked back at the table and said nothing, which Míng Xīn noted as the correct response.
"Hún Yuán'er's cultivation is concealed," Míng Xīn said.
"As is yours," Kael Sòng said.
Míng Xīn looked at him.
Kael Sòng looked back with the particular steadiness of soone who had identified sothing accurate and was neither apologizing for it nor weaponizing it. Simply stating it. The way accurate things were stated by people who had no investnt in anything except clarity.
"As is mine," Kael Sòng said.
Wèi Chén appeared to be reconsidering certain assumptions about his morning.
"Secondary objective," Míng Xīn said.
"Do not reveal true level before the designated round," Kael Sòng said. "Yes. The system assigns secondary objectives to participants worth assigning them to." A pause. "Hún Yuán'er said the sa thing to you in the western corridor last night."
"You were in the western corridor."
"I was in the corridor adjacent to it. Sound carries in old stone." He did not appear concerned about this. "She identified your strategy from your Round 1 match. I identified it from your Round 1 match. The difference is she told you."
Míng Xīn considered this.
"She told because she wanted to know she had identified it," he said.
"Yes," Kael Sòng said. "Which tells you sothing about her secondary objective."
They looked at each other across the low table in the preparation room with the low ceiling and the absorbed quality of many tournant cycles and understood each other with the specific efficiency of two people who had both spent significant portions of their lives thinking faster than they were permitted to show.
Wèi Chén cleared his throat. "Should I be taking notes."
"Yes," Liàng said from the doorway.
All three of them looked at her.
She entered with her scrolls and her outer robe properly fastened now and her large calm eyes moving across the room with the rapid assessnt of soone cataloguing everything simultaneously and finding it mostly acceptable. She placed the scrolls on the table, looked at Kael Sòng with the direct evaluation of soone who had already ford a preliminary opinion and was confirming it against the original, and then looked at Wèi Chén.
"You should be taking notes," she confird.
Wèi Chén produced a scroll from sowhere.
The match was called two hours later.
The Grand Hollow Arena had filled again by then, the upper observation platforms returning to their compressed weight of watching eyes and opinion and the particular energy of people who had spent the overnight interval deciding what they thought about Round 1 and were now prepared to be confird or surprised. The divided arena format for Round 2 ant two matches running in parallel sections, temporary barriers of compressed hollow energy creating distinct combat zones on either side of the floor.
Team One entered the eastern section.
Team Two entered across the barrier from them.
Míng Xīn looked at the six mbers opposite. Filed each one in the order of threat. Rèn Wú third, which was deliberately conservative. Hún Yuán'er first, which was accurate regardless of what she chose to reveal today.
She was looking at him the way she had looked at him across the arena floor in Round 1. The way she had looked at him in the corridor. Cataloguing. Filing. The gold undertone in her eyes steady and warm and completely unbothered by the distance between them.
He looked back.
The match official called the start.
What happened in the first four minutes was not deception exactly. It was the more precise thing, the careful managent of what was shown and in what order, each action selected not only for its imdiate tactical value but for the impression it created in the minds of the people watching. Wèi Chén fought well and honestly and with the full asure of what he had, which was the right thing for Wèi Chén to do. Kael Sòng moved with the economy of soone who had assessed the field and identified the minimum output required to manage it and was deploying exactly that amount, which looked like competence rather than restraint.
Míng Xīn did the sa.
He coordinated the three of them with the kind of spatial intelligence that did not announce itself, positioning that appeared to be individual choice rather than directed structure, pressure applied to Team Two's formation at exactly the angles that created maximum inconvenience with minimum visible effort. The Remnants mbers on Team Two began adjusting to him in the third minute, which told him they were good. They adjusted correctly in the fourth minute, which told him they were very good.
Rèn Wú had not moved toward him yet.
Hún Yuán'er had not moved toward him yet.
Both of them were managing the sa thing he was managing. He could see it in the quality of their output. The particular shape of held back things.
In the fifth minute she moved.
Not fully. Not the way she would move in Round 3. But more than Round 1. The Divine Dragon bloodline still concealed, but the movent carrying the ghost of sothing larger underneath it, the way a covered fire still changed the temperature of the air above it. She ca toward him with complete economy and the warm steady eyes and he t her with the thing he was permitted to show today, which was more than Round 1 and less than everything.
They exchanged seven tis.
Each exchange was clean. Each one filed. Each one carrying the specific quality of two people who were both performing below themselves and both knew the other person knew it and had made a mutual unspoken agreent to treat this as interesting rather than frustrating.
On the seventh exchange she pressed harder than the previous six.
Testing.
He held.
She saw him hold and sothing in her expression shifted the sa small amount it had shifted in the corridor when she recalibrated. Filing the revision. Updating the column.
They separated.
The match continued.
In the stands above, Liàng was writing with both hands, which she had developed as a technique for docunting matches where multiple significant things happened simultaneously. Wèi Chén, in the monts he was not actively engaged with a Team Two mber, kept glancing between Míng Xīn and Hún Yuán'er with the expression of soone who had started this tournant with certain assumptions about how young cultivators fought and was finding those assumptions gently and continuously revised.
Team One won in nineteen minutes.
Not dominantly. Convincingly. The specific margin of a team that had enough to win and chose not to show what enough actually ant.
The crowd responded with a sound that was different from Round 1. Louder. But the loudness had a question inside it. The particular noise of thousands of people who had watched sothing and could not fully account for what they had seen.
Kael Sòng ca to stand beside him as the match officials confird the result.
"They know sothing is different," Kael Sòng said quietly. "They cannot identify what."
"No," Míng Xīn said.
"Hún Yuán'er knows what."
"Yes."
A pause.
"She is going to be very difficult in Round 3," Kael Sòng said.
"Yes," Míng Xīn said. "She is."
From sowhere above them, so clearly that it reached the arena floor without apparent effort, his father's voice arrived like weather.
"NINETEEN MINUTES. CONTROLLED. COORDINATED. DECISIVE." A brief pause that suggested notes were being consulted. "I HAVE BEEN KEEPING TRACK. THAT IS MY SON IN THE MIDDLE. THE ONE COORDINATING EVERYTHING. IN CASE ANYONE NEEDED CLARIFICATION ON WHICH ONE."
Wèi Chén looked at Míng Xīn.
"That is your father," Wèi Chén said.
"Yes," Míng Xīn said.
"He has been doing that since yesterday."
"Yes."
"Does he do that at ho as well."
Míng Xīn thought about seventeen years of assemblies and training sessions and formal council gatherings and his father's voice filling every room it entered with the specific warmth of a man who had decided that loving his son loudly was not a weakness and never would be.
"Yes," he said.
Kael Sòng made a sound that was the closest thing to a laugh that a person produced when they had been trained out of laughing freely and the training had not fully taken.
They walked off the arena floor together.
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