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Now reading: Chapter 264: Ember step iv from Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top, a Fantasy novel by Pendroid.

Tongen waited the way he always waited—completely still, no performance of patience, just the genuine article. The morning light fell flat across the training ground. Nothing moved.

Jelo had been turning the explanation over since the walk here, trying different ways to fra it, testing whether any of them ca out clearly. None of them had. So he decided to do what he usually did when language wasn’t cooperating.

He’d show it first. Then explain.

"Sothing happened during the last session," he said. "A new ability." He paused, choosing the words carefully. "It started in my feet. But it wasn’t just speed—it wasn’t moving faster. It was like each step I took was carrying sothing extra. Like pressure building underneath . Like fire sitting in the ground right where my feet landed." He stopped. "I don’t know what to call it yet."

Tongen’s gaze had sharpened almost imperceptibly—not dramatically, not with surprise, just the specific shift that happened in his eyes when sothing he was hearing had weight to it.

"Show ," he said.

Jelo stood from the bench and moved to the open center of the ground. Behind him he could feel the others adjusting—Atlas straightening from his cross-legged position, Ken rising slightly from the stone block, Mira turning to face the space with her arms loose at her sides. The shift of attention in a room, or in a training ground, was sothing you learned to feel without needing to look for it.

He stood still for a mont and found the feeling.

It was easier now than it had been the first ti. The first ti it had arrived without invitation—sudden, unfamiliar, sothing breaking the surface of his movent and announcing itself in a way he hadn’t been prepared for. Now it was more like a room he knew existed. He still had to go looking for it, still had to move toward it carefully, but the door was where he rembered it being.

He took three steps forward.

The first two were ordinary.

On the third he let it through.

The step landed wrong for a person his size—that was the only way to describe it. Not a stomp, not an impact perford for effect, but a landing that carried genuine density, a low thud that moved through the ground and the air in the sa motion, the kind of sound and feeling that ca from sothing much heavier than Jelo arriving at the stone surface. For just a fraction of a second, barely visible, barely there—a thin shimr curled around his foot and the ground beneath it. Not fla. Not quite light. The suggestion of heat, the visual edge of combustion without the combustion itself.

Then it was gone.

Jelo straightened and looked at Tongen.

Tongen had leaned forward on the bench, elbows on his knees, fingers laced together, eyes on the exact spot where Jelo had stepped. He stayed that way for a mont after the shimr had faded—not looking at Jelo, looking at the stone, like the afterimage of sothing was still visible to him that wasn’t visible to anyone else.

"Again," he said. "Slower this ti. Hold the load an extra half second before you release it."

Jelo went again. Three steps, sa sequence—but this ti he didn’t let the energy fire and release in one motion. He held it at the peak of the step, right at the point of contact between his foot and the ground, feeling the pressure stack and compress against itself rather than imdiately dispersing. The shimr was more visible—broader, less brief, sothing that held its shape long enough to actually look at. The impact was the sa dense landing, the sa wrong-weight thud, but now with a residual heat that hung in the air above the stone for two full seconds before dissolving.

He turned back.

"Ember Step," Tongen said. Quietly. Like naming sothing he had been waiting to see.

"Is that what it—"

"That’s what it is." Tongen rose from the bench and walked toward the center of the ground, closing half the distance between them with unhurried steps. He looked down at the scorch-edge Jelo had left on the stone—faint, barely there, just the ghost of heat—then looked back up. "It’s a dragon ability. A specific one. It appears in users whose system has moved past raw output—past simply generating force on demand—and started integrating that energy into base movent. Into the architecture of how they move rather than what they choose to fire." He paused. "Your steps carry compressed dragon energy. All of them. Not only when you consciously activate it—it’s running beneath your movent constantly now. The activation amplifies what’s already there."

Jelo absorbed that.

"How much amplification?"

"At your current level? Enough to matter in a real fight. Not enough to be your answer alone." Tongen tilted his head slightly, eyes moving over the way Jelo was standing—reading posture the way he always did, cataloguing without obviously cataloguing. "What you’re producing right now is incomplete combustion. The energy is present but it’s cycling through each step and releasing rather than building across a sequence." He paused. "You’re treating each step as its own event. It’s not. It’s a chain. Three steps feed the fourth. Five steps feed the sixth. A full sprint at proper loading—by the ti whatever you throw at the end lands, it carries every step that ca before it."

The silence that followed wasn’t empty. It was Jelo rearranging sothing.

He had understood the ability as individual impacts—each step producing its own force, distinct and separate. The idea that the steps were additive, that montum compounded across movent rather than resetting with each stride, changed what the ability was. Changed what it could beco.

"That’s why it felt like more than just speed," he said.

"Because it is more than speed," Tongen said. "Speed is distance over ti. What you have is pressure accumulating over distance. The difference matters." He looked at Jelo with sothing settled and serious in his expression. "Speed makes you difficult to track. Pressure makes you difficult to survive."

From sowhere behind them, Ken said quietly: "That’s terrifying."

"It should be," Tongen replied. He held Jelo’s eyes. "The question is whether you can operate it under the conditions where it needs to function. An ability you can only access when you have ti to think about it is a training tool. What you need is an ability you can access when you have no ti at all." He took two asured steps back, creating deliberate space between them. His posture didn’t change—arms at his sides, weight evenly distributed, nothing that signaled preparation.

But the air between them shifted.

"So," Tongen said. "Show what you can do with it."

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