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Now reading: Chapter 297: Gravity Falls from Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top, a Fantasy novel by Pendroid.

He ca in straight—no arc, no angle managent, direct approach toward the fighter who had been keeping him at range with gravity for four minutes. The tagged position set at the starting point of the charge. The snap available and ready.

Maldrick raised both hands.

The personal field built around Tyke’s incoming path—maximum concentration, both hands feeding the output simultaneously, the gravity pressure building to four-tis weight in the space between them. The dark shimr at his palms went to its deepest point—both hands at their combined peak.

Tyke hit the field at full stride.

The weight crashed down—four tis his body weight arriving in an instant, his movent stopping as abruptly as if he had run into a wall, his legs buckling under the sudden increase, his body dropping toward the stone. The impact of his knees against the floor was audible in the nearest sections of the stands.

He snapped back.

Reappeared at the starting point of the charge—twelve feet from Maldrick, outside the field, standing upright. The approach un-run. The cost un-paid.

But the information wasn’t un-collected.

He had felt the field at four-tis weight. Had felt where it started and where it peaked and where its pressure was most concentrated relative to Maldrick’s hand position. He had felt it from inside—from the worst possible position—and the reset had given him that information without keeping the damage.

He tagged imdiately. New position. New reset point.

And charged again.

The crowd made a sound that was less noise and more breath—the collective intake of people watching a fighter run directly back into sothing that had just dropped him.

Maldrick raised both hands.

The field rebuilt faster this ti—the pattern established, the concentration already organized. Four-tis weight forming in the approach path.

Tyke hit the edge of it—not the center. He had felt the center. He knew where the peak pressure was. He angled his approach a fraction to the right of his previous line—entering the field at its boundary rather than through its core.

Two-tis weight at the edge rather than four-tis at the center.

He kept moving.

His legs drove against the double weight—the resistance real but not stopping him, not dropping him, the edge pressure sothing his muscles could work against rather than simply collapse under. Slower than normal. Harder. But forward.

Maldrick pushed the field wider—trying to eliminate the edge Tyke had found, expanding the coverage so the two-tis boundary extended further out.

Tyke angled again. Found the new edge. Moved in it.

Three feet.

Two.

Maldrick went to maximum—the field expanding to its absolute limit, both hands at peak concentration, making every point between them four-tis weight, eliminating the concept of a navigable edge.

Tyke hit maximum weight at two feet.

His movent stopped—the four-tis weight arriving everywhere simultaneously, his legs producing everything they had and the field absorbing everything they produced. He was standing under it—not on his knees, still upright—but frozen, his body at maximum effort and the effort not exceeding the resistance.

He tagged.

Hip gesture—right here, two feet from Maldrick, standing, this exact configuration.

Then snapped back to the start of the charge.

Twelve feet again. Outside the field. Standing.

He had the full picture now. Every configuration from the center outward—two-tis at the edge, three-tis at the expanded boundary, four-tis at maximum coverage. He knew where each one started and ended and what the transition between them felt like in his body.

He looked at Maldrick.

And charged one final ti.

The sa edge angle as the second charge—entering at two-tis weight, legs driving against the double resistance, closing distance. Maldrick expanded the field imdiately—the sa response as before, pushing the heavier coverage outward to catch Tyke in the expansion before he closed the remaining distance.

Tyke adjusted his angle.

Found the new edge the expansion had created.

One foot.

He snapped—not backward, forward. To the tagged position he had set at two feet during the frozen mont of the third charge. The snap carried him from the outer edge of the maximum field to two feet from Maldrick in an instant, bypassing the expanded coverage entirely, arriving inside the field’s expansion radius before it could adjust.

He was inside Maldrick’s reach.

Both of Maldrick’s hands were extended outward—the maximum field projecting forward, aid at the approach path rather than at the position Tyke had snapped into. At two feet the field was projecting past him rather than at him.

Maldrick began to redirect—pulling the field inward, reorienting the concentration from forward to close.

Tyke hit him before it completed.

A direct strike to the chest—no ability, no gravity behind it, just a fighter’s full force behind a right hand traveling two feet at the speed of soone whose muscles had been working against double resistance for the last thirty seconds and were now operating at normal weight.

The hit landed.

Maldrick went back two steps, his hands dropping as the impact disrupted the concentration maintaining the field. The dark shimr died as both palms fell to his sides.

The gravity was gone.

Ordinary stone. Ordinary weight.

Maldrick looked at his hands. Tried to rebuild the shimr. It started—faint, slow, the concentration reforming at a fraction of its previous depth.

Tyke was already moving.

He tagged—hip gesture, the new position—and drove forward with a second strike before the shimr could reach functional depth. The strike connected. The concentration broke again—the impact arriving before the field could beco real.

A third strike.

Maldrick’s hands dropped completely.

He went to one knee—not from the strike alone but from the combination of the strike and the depleted concentration and four minutes of sustained maximum output that had preceded both of them.

He tried to stand.

The shimr flickered at his right palm—one last attempt, the ability trying to restart from whatever remained.

It produced nothing.

His hand dropped flat against the stone.

The referee crossed the floor. Knelt. Checked. Asked. Checked again.

Maldrick’s forehead dropped forward slightly.

The referee stood. Raised a hand.

The arena gave Fight 6 what it had earned—full, real, built from genuine investnt across four minutes of a fight that had never been decided until the final thirty seconds. The Aurelius sections gave Tyke everything. The Dravenfall sections gave Maldrick the acknowledgnt his performance deserved.

Tyke stood in the center of the arena and looked at the bracket—his na, Fight 6, a line through Maldrick’s na beside it. He didn’t raise his fist. Just stood there for a mont, carrying the fight the way fighters carried fights after they were over.

Then walked toward the tunnel.

"Tyke of Aurelius Academy," the announcer said. "He ran into the gravity field three tis. Each ti it stopped him. Each ti he snapped back with more information than he’d had before." He paused. "The third charge ended two feet from Maldrick with a snap that bypassed everything Graveweight had been building for four minutes."

He let the crowd respond.

"Your winner—Tyke of Aurelius Academy."

Backstage—

Jelo had watched all of it from the corridor monitor.

He processed what the fight had given him—the way Tyke had used his resets not just as escapes but as information collection, each snap back buying data about the field configuration that the next approach could use. The way the charges had been investnts. The way the fight had ended not with the largest strike or the most power but with the most accumulated understanding applied at the mont the opponent had the least capacity to respond.

He filed the principle.

Every reset was a chance to learn sothing.

Every cost was an opportunity if you were paying attention to what the cost was buying.

He turned away from the monitor.

Two fights left in Class 3’s first round.

Then the semifinals.

Then the final.

He walked back to his position in the corridor and let Ember Step sit quietly beneath his footwork—present, patient, not spent, waiting for the mont it was needed.

That mont was getting closer.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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