The arena had been reset for the semifinals.
Not just cleared—reset with a deliberate formality that hadn’t been present between the first-round fights. The floor crew worked differently now, their movents more careful, the attention they gave each section of stone more thorough. The bracket on the screens above had been updated to reflect the new stage—the first-round results logged, the semifinal pairings displayed, the path to the final visible for the first ti in concrete rather than theoretical terms.
The crowd that had filled the arena for the first round had co back for the semifinals with sothing additional in them—not just the investnt that built across a day of watching but the specific awareness that from here forward every fight was an elimination fight. Every loss permanent. Every win a step toward sothing that had been waiting since the bracket was revealed.
The announcer raised the microphone.
"Class 3 semifinals begin now," he said.
The crowd gave him everything imdiately—no warmup, no build, just the full response of people who had been ready since they sat down.
"Semifinal one. Azula of Virex Academy against Silith of Dravenfall Academy."
Both tunnels opened simultaneously.
Azula walked out first—the sa lightness in her movent that had defined her first-round fight against Eldrin, the sa ease that suggested her feet were always slightly ahead of the rest of her. The Virex sections gave her their aggressive territorial response. The neutral sections gave her the recognition noise—the particular sound that followed fighters whose nas had acquired aning across the tournant.
Silith walked out second.
The Dravenfall sections gave her their heavy deliberate response. The neutral sections received her differently from Azula—not with recognition noise but with the specific wary attention that Silith had produced since her first-round fight. She had dismantled Sorel from inside Sorel’s own ability, contact point by contact point, and the crowd had not forgotten it.
In the stands Jelo watched both fighters cross the floor.
He had watched Azula against Eldrin—had filed the chain rhythm, the organized aggression underneath the speed. He had watched Silith against Sorel—had filed the contact point accumulation, the patience of dismantling rather than defeating. He had not seen them fight each other. Nobody had. The matchup was new and the crowd understood it was new and the specific anticipation of sothing genuinely unknown sat in the stands as a physical thing.
Silith needs contact, Jelo thought. Every ability she shuts down requires touch. And Azula’s streaks travel in straight lines—Silith has to let them reach her or she has to get close enough to make contact before the streaks accumulate.
Atlas leaned over. "Azula doesn’t need to touch her," he said. "She just needs to keep firing."
"Silith will find a way in," Mira said.
"Maybe," Atlas said.
The referee raised a hand.
Azula settled—weight forward, hands slightly raised, the posture of soone about to move rather than soone about to stand. The faint shimr of Streak energy already present at her fingertips, building before the fight officially began.
Silith stood upright. Still. Her hands open at her sides.
The referee’s hand dropped.
Azula fired imdiately—not a chain, a single streak from her right hand aid at Silith’s lead shoulder. Testing. asuring. The streak traveled the distance between them in a fraction of a second and hit Silith’s shoulder with the concussive burst that was Streak’s chanism—force at the exact point of contact, no spread, no explosion, just the battering ram impact of concentrated kinetic energy.
Silith moved with it.
One step sideways—absorbing the hit, redistributing the force through the movent rather than into the body. She hadn’t tried to avoid it. She had taken it and moved with it and the movent had carried her two feet to her right and two feet closer to Azula’s position.
Azula read the movent.
She’s walking through them, Jelo thought from the stands. She’s not trying to dodge. She’s using the hits to close distance.
Azula fired three—a spread, fanning from her right hand across Silith’s front profile, the three streaks aid at shoulder, chest, and hip simultaneously. Too many surfaces to absorb and use simultaneously.
Silith hardened.
Not Mirror Skin—she didn’t have Mirror Skin. Sothing different—her body absorbing the three hits and redistributing the combined force through a lateral movent that was larger than the single hit had produced, carrying her another four feet closer to Azula while absorbing what the three streaks had delivered.
She was using the streaks as propulsion.
The crowd made the noise they made when sothing unexpected happened—not loud, not imdiately, the sound arriving a beat after the understanding.
"She’s walking into them," Atlas said. He sounded genuinely surprised.
"She’s converting the streak force into forward movent," Mira said. "Every hit closes distance."
Jelo said nothing. He was watching Silith’s hands—at her sides, open, waiting. Waiting for the distance to close enough that contact beca possible. Every streak Azula fired was bringing Silith closer.
Azula understood it too.
She changed—stopped firing at Silith’s body and started firing at the floor in front of her, the streaks hitting the stone and creating debris, trying to disrupt the surface Silith was using to absorb and redirect the force. The floor cracked under the concentrated impacts, small fragnts scattering across Silith’s path.
Silith kept coming.
The debris didn’t stop her—she read the surface the way fighters who had been watching the tournant read surfaces, adjusting her footing to the new terrain without breaking the approach.
Fifteen feet.
Ten.
Azula fired a full fan—five streaks simultaneously from both hands and her right foot, covering Silith’s entire front profile at five separated points. Everything she had in one mont aid at stopping the approach.
Silith took all five.
She went down to one knee under the combined force—not stopped, not finished, but down. Her left hand found the floor and the right hand ca up toward Azula’s position, the gesture of soone who had found what they were looking for and was reaching for it.
Azula was already moving—Wing Burst repositioning, carrying herself backward before Silith’s hand could close the remaining distance. But the repositioning cost what Wing Burst always cost—the slight drain in the legs, the physical toll of the ability accumulating.
Silith rose.
Eight feet now. The closest she had been.
The crowd was fully standing
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