They ca back the next morning.
The ground was the sa. The posts were still scorched at the tops. Tongen was already there, standing this ti, arms folded, watching the sky like he was waiting for sothing.
He turned when he heard them approach.
"Good," he said. Just that.
He pointed at Jelo first. "You’re starting."
Jelo stepped forward. "Starting what?"
Tongen uncrossed his arms. "I’m going to co at you. Your job is to survive thirty seconds."
A pause.
"That’s it?" Jelo asked.
"You’ll understand in about four seconds."
He wasn’t wrong.
Tongen moved without preamble—no stance shift, no telegraphed wind-up. One mont he was standing still, the next he was inside Jelo’s guard with a pressure strike aid at his center mass. Jelo got his arms up in ti to deflect but not absorb it, and the force threw him sideways two full steps.
He recovered. Tongen didn’t wait.
The next ten seconds were a masterclass in controlled pressure—not overwhelming force, but relentless repositioning, each move forcing Jelo to react from a worse position than the last. Jelo managed to hold his ground twice, found angles twice more, even landed one clean counter that Tongen let pass without comnt.
At thirty seconds, Tongen stepped back.
"What did you notice?" he asked.
Jelo was breathing harder than he expected. "You kept cutting my angles before I could use them."
"Yes. Why?"
A beat. "You weren’t reacting to what I did. You were deciding where I’d be before I got there."
Tongen nodded once. "You have good instincts. But your instincts run ahead of your commitnt. You set up a move and then reconsider mid-execution. That half-second of doubt is enough for soone who knows how to read bodies." He tapped two fingers against his own sternum. "Commit or don’t. Partial commitnt is just a gift with a bow on it."
He waved Jelo back and pointed at Atlas.
Atlas lasted twenty-two seconds before Tongen got him into a position he couldn’t recover from without a full retreat—which, instinctively, Atlas refused to take.
That was the lesson.
Tongen made him stand there for a mont, not pressing further, just holding the position like a mirror. "You know you’ve lost the angle," he said. "But you won’t step back to reset. Why?"
Atlas’s jaw was tight. "Stepping back feels like losing ground."
"It is losing ground. The question is whether losing a step is better than losing the exchange." Tongen released the hold and stepped away. "A retreat that preserves your options is worth more than holding a position that has none. Pride isn’t a strategy."
Atlas took that without argunt, though the line of his mouth stayed tense.
Mira went next. Her thirty seconds looked different from the other two—more asured, more careful. She lasted the full duration without being put in a terminal position, but Tongen looked less satisfied at the end of it, not more.
"You survived," he said.
"That was the goal," she replied.
"I told Jelo his goal was to survive. Your goal was the sa. But you’re not the sa fighter." He studied her for a mont. "You protected yourself very well. What did you give up to do it?"
Mira went quiet. Then, slowly: "I didn’t press anything."
"Not once. Every ti there was an opening you were aware of it—I could see it—and every ti you made the decision to cover instead of move through." He didn’t make it sound like a condemnation. Just a fact. "You’re managing risk so tightly that you’ve made yourself predictable. Against soone patient enough, that’s just a slow defeat."
He moved to Ken last.
Ken’s approach was the most unusual of the four. He didn’t try to survive in the traditional sense—he tried to negotiate space, testing angles with short probes, keeping enough distance that clean pressure was hard to build. It was smart in theory. In practice, Tongen dismantled it thodically by simply closing that distance in ways Ken kept underestimating.
At the end, Tongen said: "You think distance is safety. It’s a variable. Against so fighters it’s an advantage. Against others it’s exactly what they want." He tilted his head. "You need to know the difference before you commit to it."
Ken nodded, processing.
Tongen stepped back to the center and looked at all four of them.
"Here’s what I know now," he said. "Jelo commits halfway. Atlas won’t yield ground. Mira manages instead of presses. Ken leans on distance as a default." He paused. "These aren’t character flaws. They’re patterns. And patterns are fine until soone who knows how to read them is standing in front of you. At that point, a pattern isn’t a style. It’s a map to beating you."
Silence across the ground.
"The work from here is simple to describe and difficult to do. Each of you needs to add the thing you’ve been avoiding. Jelo—full commitnt, even when you’re wrong. Atlas—tactical retreat, even when it stings. Mira—press through openings even when the risk isn’t zero. Ken—learn to close distance, not just manage it."
He let them sit with it.
Then he did sothing unexpected. He walked to the far edge of the ground and picked up four flat stones from the base of the wall—the sa kind he’d been turning over the day before—and set one in front of each of them.
"Hold those," he said.
They picked them up. Smooth, palm-sized.
"Every ti I catch you falling back into the old pattern, you lose the stone. End of session, whoever still has it gets sothing useful out of . Whoever doesn’t—" he shrugged mildly—"does it again tomorrow."
Ken looked down at the stone in his hand with a kind of thoughtful wariness.
Mira turned hers over once.
Atlas closed his fist around it.
Jelo said nothing. He just looked at Tongen with sothing settled in his expression—not quite readiness, not quite challenge. Sowhere in between.
Tongen read it and said nothing back. Just returned to the center of the ground.
"Sa drill as yesterday," he said. "Except now I’m involved."
He looked at each of them one last ti.
"Don’t hold back to protect the stone. If you hold back, you’ve already lost it."
Then he pointed at Jelo.
"You’re first. Again."
The session began.
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