The sun blazed high in the sky.
Its light poured over the massive arena, reflecting off polished stone and steel, illuminating the sea of spectators packed into every section. The air buzzed with energy—alive, electric, impossible to ignore. Vendors moved through the rows carrying trays above their heads. Children leaned over railings to get a better view. Older spectators sat with programs folded in their laps, not reading them, too absorbed in the atmosphere to look down.
The crowd roared.
Cheers rolled like thunder across the stadium, rising and falling in waves, each one louder than the last. The sound didn’t stay in one place—it moved, building from one section and catching in another, spreading the way fire spreads when the conditions are already perfect for it. Banners cut through the air. Colors clashed across the stands—the marks of different academies, different loyalties, different reasons for being here today.
Anticipation hung thick in the atmosphere.
Almost tangible.
Today—
Was the day.
A man stepped onto the stage.
He wore a loose black suit that swayed slightly with each step, the fabric catching the light as he moved. There was nothing rushed about the way he crossed the stage—he walked like soone who understood that the space between an entrance and the microphone was part of the performance. His thick mustache curved proudly across his face. His sharp eyes swept the crowd the way you sweep a room when you already know you own it—not checking whether the attention was there, just acknowledging it.
He reached the center.
Picked up the microphone.
Tapped it once.
The tap echoed through speakers positioned across every corner of the arena, and the crowd that had been buzzing dropped a fraction—not silent, but suddenly aware that sothing was about to be said. A thousand conversations trimd themselves down without instruction. The space sharpened.
"Good day, ladies and gentlen!"
The response was instant.
A deafening roar answered him—full-throated, imdiate, the kind of sound a crowd makes when they’ve been holding sothing for a long ti and soone has finally given them permission to release it. It rolled through the arena in a wave and ca back off the far wall as echo, layering over itself until the whole structure seed to be vibrating with it.
He smiled.
Not perford. Genuine—the smile of soone who had spent years in front of crowds and still found sothing in it that hadn’t worn out.
"Yes," he said. He let the word breathe. "I can feel it. The excitent. The anticipation."
He began to pace—slowly, unhurried, moving across the stage with the microphone loose in one hand. His voice carried effortlessly, shaped by the speakers but projecting on its own underneath the amplification. The kind of voice that filled space without effort.
"Today is not just any day." He stopped moving and let the statent land. "Today is a day we have all been waiting for. A day we have all been looking forward to. A day that has lived in the conversations, in the training yards, in the dormitories—in every corner of every academy that sent its fighters here."
He paused.
Raised one hand.
The crowd pulled in a breath.
"And now—"
A brief silence.
Then—
"It is finally here."
The crowd exploded.
People rose to their feet in sections—first one block of the stands, then another, then the whole thing cascading until it seed like no one was sitting anywhere. So shouted nas. Others waved banners overhead with both arms, colors blazing in the sun. The energy didn’t just climb—it broke through whatever ceiling it had been pressing against, spilling into sothing bigger than anticipation. This was release. This was arrival. This was the mont a crowd transforms from spectators waiting into sothing genuinely alive.
"The tournant has begun!"
Another wave of cheers crashed through the arena, heavier than the first, rolling from floor to upper tier and back down again like sothing physical.
"For weeks—for months—you have waited." His voice rose and fell with the rhythm of it, giving the words room to move through the crowd before the next ones arrived. "You have wondered. You have speculated. You have argued with your friends about who would stand and who would fall." He smiled again. "And now, we stop arguing—and we find out."
He turned slightly toward the massive screens positioned around the arena—screens that currently showed nothing but the logo of the tournant, a design rendered in gold and black, sharp and deliberate against the light.
"One by one, they have arrived. One by one, they have prepared. And today—they face each other. No more waiting. No more wondering." He paused. "Today, we find out what they’re made of."
His voice deepened.
Deliberate now. Ceremonial.
"Our host—Aurelius Academy!"
A section of the crowd erupted—loud, proud, ho support with a particular quality to it, the cheer of people who felt ownership over what was about to happen.
"Virex Dominion Academy!"
Another surge—louder, more aggressive, with an edge underneath it that was different from the first. Not just celebration. A statent.
"Solmara Institute!"
Cheers again—sharp, focused, disciplined in their own way, matching the reputation that preceded the na.
"And finally..."
He let the pause stretch.
The crowd, sohow, got quieter. Not silent—but waiting. The kind of quiet that has weight behind it.
"Dravenfall Academy."
The reaction shifted.
Heavier.
Darker in tone, the cheers carrying sothing complicated—not hostility exactly, but the particular energy a crowd generates when a na carries reputation ahead of it. A na people had heard things about. A na that made so lean forward and others pull back slightly without knowing why.
But just as powerful as any other.
"These academies bring with them their finest." His voice steadied back into the driving rhythm. "Students forged through training, through battle, through the kind of preparation that doesn’t show on the outside until the mont it has to. Each class represented. Each fighter chosen with purpose. Each one standing here because they earned the right to be here."
He leaned slightly toward the mic.
"And only the strongest... will stand at the end."
The crowd roared again.
"So if you haven’t gotten your snacks—your drinks—your comfort—"
He pointed out toward the stands with the particular ease of soone who had done this enough tis to know exactly when the crowd needed to breathe.
"Now would be the ti."
A ripple of laughter moved through the audience—genuine, scattered, cutting the tension just enough without dissolving it entirely.
"Because once this begins..."
His voice dropped.
Quieter than it had been. More direct.
"...you won’t want to miss a second."
He straightened.
Then smiled—the sa smile from before, the one that hadn’t worn out.
"But before we dive into the main event—"
He gestured toward the arena floor, one hand sweeping out toward the open space below.
"Let’s start with a little entertainnt."
The lights shifted.
Not fully dimd—adjusted, the tone of the arena changing in a way that was felt more than seen, the bright midday quality of the light giving way to sothing more deliberate. Focused. Theatrical.
The noise didn’t drop—
It grew.
Anticipation restructuring itself into sothing new. The crowd understanding that whatever ca next was the first note of sothing longer, sothing that would build across hours into sothing none of them would forget.
Because everyone knew—
This was just the beginning.
And sowhere in the crowd—
Among the fighters preparing behind the scenes, in the corridors and staging areas beneath the stands, in the waiting spaces where people paced and stretched and gathered themselves—
Jelo stood.
Watching the screens. Listening to the noise move through the walls like a living thing, pressing against every surface, filling every gap.
Waiting.
His mont was coming.
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