The noise from the Virex sections was enormous and imdiate—not built, not crescendoing, just there at full volu the mont Eldrin’s knees hit the stone, the sound of people who had been waiting for this mont since Azula walked out of the tunnel and were now receiving it with everything they had stored.
It spread.
The neutral sections ca with it the way neutral sections always ca with genuine monts—not because of allegiance but because of what the fight had been and what the ending ant within that context. The five-streak fan and the knee hit and Eldrin getting back up and the hip being found twice—the story had been complete enough that its ending carried weight regardless of which side you were on.
Eldrin was on the stone.
Both hands down, both knees down, her body organized into the four-point position of soone whose legs had made a unilateral decision about what was happening next. She wasn’t unconscious. She wasn’t finished in the sense of being done—her head was up, her eyes were open, her hands were pressing against the stone with the particular quality of soone who was having the conversation with her body about whether standing was possible.
The conversation was taking longer than she wanted it to.
Azula stood twelve feet away.
She hadn’t moved to stand over her. Hadn’t advanced toward the downed fighter, hadn’t perford anything in the direction of the Virex sections who were giving her everything they had. She just stood where she had been when the final streak landed—feet shoulder width, hands at her sides, the rhythm finally still. For the first ti since the fight began she wasn’t moving. Wasn’t firing. Just standing in the afternoon light with her chest working steadily and her eyes on Eldrin across the stone floor.
Waiting.
Not impatiently. Not performing patience. Just—waiting. Giving Eldrin the space the mont required without rushing toward whatever ca next.
The referee had moved onto the floor during the descent and was now crouched beside Eldrin—checking, asking, assessing. The sa process that had played out twice already today, the sa careful evaluation that the tournant required before any outco was made official.
Eldrin’s hands pressed harder against the stone.
Her right leg moved—the unaffected one, trying to find the position to push from. It found it. The leg straightened slightly, the knee lifting from the stone, the body beginning to rise—
The right hip failed the instruction.
Not dramatically. Not with pain visible in her expression. Just a refusal—the damaged joint declining to cooperate with the rise, the ssage sent from her mind arriving at the hip and coming back without being carried out. The knee went back to the stone.
She tried again.
Sa result.
The referee asked sothing.
Eldrin looked at the stone in front of her hands for a mont—a single mont, brief, the particular expression of soone accepting information they already knew was coming but needed the mont to land properly before they acknowledged it.
Then she looked up at the referee and nodded once.
The referee stood and raised a hand.
The Virex sections had already been at full volu but the raised hand took them sowhere past it—a second detonation on top of the first, the official confirmation landing on top of the montum that had been building since the final streak and producing sothing that shook the upper tiers physically, the sound moving through the structure of the arena in a way that was felt in seats and railings and the stone beneath everyone’s feet.
The neutral sections gave the fight its due—a standing response that wasn’t about Virex or Solmara but about what had happened on the floor for the last four minutes. The five-streak fan. The reflected hit finding Azula in the opening exchange. Eldrin covering two simultaneous targets, then three, then trying and partially failing on the third angle and the fight turning in that fraction of a second. The knee. The back. The hip struck twice in the sa location.
The Solmara sections gave Eldrin what she had earned.
It was full and it was proud and it was the sound of supporters who had watched their fighter get outpaced and outangled by sothing that moved faster than her ability could fully account for and had refused to stop answering until the body made refusing impossible. That deserved acknowledgnt. They gave it without hesitation, without the deflation that sotis ca with losing—because what Eldrin had done wasn’t deflating. It was the other thing.
Eldrin had gotten to her feet.
Not easily. Not quickly. The dical staff had co onto the floor and she had accepted the arm offered to her and used it to rise—the hip requiring external support that her legs alone couldn’t provide right now. But she was standing. Upright. Looking out at the crowd that was giving her noise from every section of the arena regardless of the color they were wearing.
She raised one hand.
Brief. Small. The sa contained deliberateness she had carried through the entire fight—nothing perford, nothing extra, just the gesture and then the person behind the gesture standing in the afternoon light and letting the crowd do what crowds did.
The crowd did it fully.
"Eldrin of Solmara Institute," the announcer said. His voice had the quality it had found during the second fight and kept finding when the monts earned it—genuine, past performance, the actual person speaking rather than the professional. "She walked onto this floor and reflected streaks that most fighters wouldn’t survive one of. She covered two angles simultaneously when two was supposed to be the limit. She found three. She took the hip and got back up. She took it again—" he paused, "and gave everything she had to getting up a second ti."
He let the crowd respond to that.
Then—
"Your winner—Azula of Virex Academy."
The Virex sections detonated for the third ti in two minutes—the announcent releasing sothing additional even on top of what the raised hand had already released, the official naming of their fighter producing its own specific surge. Azula’s na moving through the stands with the particular energy it had carried before the fight began, except now it carried sothing more—not just anticipation but confirmation. The thing people had expected to see had been seen. The belief had been paid back.
Azula had not moved significantly from where she had been standing when the referee raised the hand.
She looked at the bracket displayed on the screens above the arena floor.
Her na. One fight down. The bracket advancing. The next opponent sowhere in the remaining fights—whoever ca out of the other side of the Class 3 draw, whoever made it through the rounds that stood between now and the later stages.
She turned without raising her arms and walked back toward the Virex tunnel at the sa pace she had walked out of it—the sa lightness in her feet, the sa ease in her movent, the sa sense of soone for whom readiness was a permanent state rather than sothing assembled for occasions.
The crowd watched her go and kept making noise long after she had disappeared into the tunnel.
Backstage—
Jelo had watched all of it.
He stood in front of the corridor monitor and processed what the fight had given him—the specific chanics of Azula’s chain rhythm, the way she had recalibrated against a moving target without losing pace, the five-streak fan that had covered too many surfaces simultaneously for Mirror Skin to fully address. The way she had found the hip the second ti—sa location, different angle, the earlier damage becoming a targeting reference rather than just a scored hit.
She was thodical underneath the speed.
That was what the fight had revealed about her. The chain rhythm looked like aggression from the stands—continuous, relentless, pressure built through volu. But underneath the volu was calculation. She was reading angles and rembering what she had already found and returning to it with new geotry. The speed was real and the pressure was real and none of that was performance. But it was organized speed. Organized pressure.
He filed it.
Not because he was fighting Azula.
Because the tournant was full of people who organized their aggression—who looked relentless from the outside and were actually thodical from the inside—and understanding that distinction mattered. It changed what you prepared for. It changed what you looked for in the opening exchanges. It changed what you did with the information the first minute of a fight gave you.
He looked at the bracket.
His na. Fight five.
One fight away now.
Fight four was next—Brack of Virex against Velis of Solmara—and then his na would be called and he would walk out of the tunnel onto the floor that had already held three fights today and add his own to what the arena had been given.
He turned away from the monitor.
The corridor behind him was quiet in the way it had been quiet between his previous sessions at the monitor—the sounds of the arena coming through the walls as pressure rather than detail, the crowd preparing itself for the next fight in the particular way crowds prepared between monts.
He found his space in the corridor.
Began to move.
Ember Step loaded beneath his footwork—light, present, not firing. The energy sitting under each step the way it always sat now, the way Tongen had described it and the way he had been learning to feel it. Always running. Always there.
Two fights down.
One more before his.
He moved through the corridor and let the rhythm build under him and thought about organized aggression and the difference between what things looked like from the stands and what they were from the inside.
He would find out which kind Sibyl was.
Soon.
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