The arena reset.
Fight 7.
Drake of Virex against Ordin of Solmara.
The Virex sections gave Drake their aggressive territorial response—the sound they had been producing for their fighters all tournant. The Solmara sections gave Ordin their focused disciplined acknowledgnt. The neutral sections organized themselves around the attention this matchup deserved—the seventh fight of Class 2, the bracket nearing its first-round conclusion, the crowd’s investnt in the stage itself climbing as the number of remaining fights shrank.
Drake walked out of the Virex tunnel.
He moved with a restless energy—not still for a mont, his weight shifting constantly, the specific quality of soone whose ability rewarded motion and who had built a fighting identity around never being stationary. As he crossed the floor small wisps of fla curled up from where his feet touched the stone—faint, controlled, the fire trail beginning before the fight had officially started.
The Virex sections gave him everything.
Ordin walked out of the Solmara tunnel.
The crowd’s attention went to his hands imdiately—not unusually large at rest, but carrying a quality of looseness, the skin and tissue visibly more elastic than ordinary, the specific stretched appearance of palms that had been used for sothing far beyond their apparent size many tis. He moved with calm deliberateness, his hands relaxed at his sides, nothing about his posture suggesting urgency.
The Solmara sections gave him their focused response.
"Drake," the announcer said. "Class 2, Virex Academy. His ability—Wildfire Step."
A murmur from the crowd.
"Drake leaves a trail of controlled fire wherever his feet make contact with a surface. Every step ignites the ground behind him—the flas spreading outward and persisting for several seconds before burning out. He can use the fire defensively, building walls of fla, or offensively, leading an opponent into ground he’s already lit. He can also kick concentrated fireballs from the trails." He paused. "The longer he moves—the more of the arena floor becos a lattice of active fla."
He paused once more.
"His weakness—the trail requires continuous movent to maintain density. If he stops, the existing flas burn out without replenishnt, thinning from the oldest sections first."
Then—
"Ordin," the announcer said. "Class 2, Solmara Institute. His ability—Airbreaker Palms."
The crowd’s reaction was imdiate—the visible quality of his hands suddenly making sense, the announcent landing with the weight of explanation arriving for sothing already visible.
"Ordin’s palms are abnormally large and elastic. Slamming them together compresses the air between them into devastating projectiles. A standard clap launches a needle-like blast of compressed air that travels faster than sound—the farther apart his palms are pulled before clapping, the stronger the shot." He paused. "Rapid consecutive claps produce a barrage. Holding the compression before release produces a massive drilling projectile. And his ultimate—a full-power clap at maximum stretch tears a trench through the battlefield."
Another pause.
"His weakness—excessive use damages his palms and arms. Stronger shots require longer recovery. And turbulent air disrupts his accuracy."
The crowd absorbed it.
Looked at the wisps of fla still curling from where Drake had stepped.
At Ordin’s hands—relaxed, ready, the elastic tissue visible even at rest.
The matchup carried an obvious tension—fire heating and disturbing the air, air shots blowing out fire. Both abilities working against the dium the other depended on.
The referee raised a hand.
Drake moved imdiately—not toward Ordin, lateral, a wide arc along the periter of the arena floor, his feet leaving fire with every step. The flas ignited behind him in a continuous line—small at first, the wisps from his entrance growing into genuine fla as his movent built montum, the fire trail extending across the floor in the shape of his arc.
Ordin watched him move.
He didn’t pursue.
He pulled his palms apart—slowly, the elastic tissue stretching, the distance between his hands increasing well beyond what looked anatomically reasonable. The compression building in the space between them, invisible but present, the air itself being gathered and concentrated.
Drake completed a third of his arc.
The fire trail behind him was a continuous line of fla—low, persistent, the heat radiating off it visible as shimr in the air above.
Ordin clapped.
The compressed air released as a needle-thin blast—faster than sound, the projectile traveling toward the section of fire trail closest to Ordin’s position rather than toward Drake himself.
The blast hit the fla.
The fire in that section extinguished—the concentrated air pressure snuffing the fla across a six-foot stretch of the trail, the gap appearing in Drake’s continuous line.
The crowd reacted—the specific noise of watching one ability directly counter another’s output for the first ti in the fight.
"He’s not targeting Drake," the announcer said. "He’s targeting the trail. Blowing out sections as they form."
Drake felt the gap.
He didn’t stop moving—stopping ant the whole trail started burning out from its oldest sections, and a deliberate gap from an air blast was different from natural burnout but the principle was the sa. He needed continuous fire. A gap was a gap regardless of cause.
He adjusted his arc—curving back toward the gap, his feet relighting the section Ordin had blown out, the trail reconnecting.
Ordin clapped again.
A new gap—further along the trail, a different section, the air blast extinguishing six more feet of fla.
Drake relit it.
Ordin clapped a third ti.
Three gaps now—Drake’s continuous line developing holes faster than a single fighter’s feet could relight them, the trail becoming patchy rather than continuous.
Drake changed approach.
He stopped trying to maintain a continuous periter line and instead began building density in a smaller area—concentrating his footwork into a tighter region of the floor, the fire trail thickening in that zone rather than extending across the full arena.
Concentrated density was harder to gap aningfully—Ordin’s air blasts extinguishing sections, but the sections regenerating faster because Drake’s feet were covering less total ground per pass.
Ordin read the change.
He stopped targeting the trail directly.
He pulled both palms apart to maximum stretch—the elastic tissue extending further than it had for the standard claps, the compression building for several seconds rather than releasing imdiately.
Vacuum Spear.
Drake felt the air around him change—not the heat from his own fire, sothing else, a directional pull, the air in the arena being drawn toward the space between Ordin’s stretching palms. The compression building toward sothing larger than the standard claps had been.
He recognized the buildup.
He had two choices—stay in the dense fire zone he had been building, accepting whatever the Vacuum Spear was going to deliver, or move, sacrificing the density he had accumulated to avoid the projectile.
He stayed.
The fire density was his resource. Abandoning it reset the fight to the opening exchange.
Ordin clapped.
The Vacuum Spear released—a massive lance-shaped projectile of compressed air, far larger than the standard needle-blasts, traveling toward Drake’s dense fire zone with the capability to drill through multiple targets in its path.
It hit the fire zone directly.
The compressed air didn’t just extinguish flas—it punched through the dense lattice Drake had built, the spear’s drilling capability tearing a channel through the accumulated fire, extinguishing a swath of fla in a straight line from Ordin’s position to Drake’s.
And it kept going.
Drake was in its path.
He turned sideways at the last mont—the lateral profile reducing the impact area, the spear catching his left side rather than his center mass. The force was significant—pushing him three steps sideways, the air pressure carrying weight that the standard claps hadn’t carried.
His fire density—gone.
The channel the spear had drilled through his lattice had removed the majority of what he had built.
Drake stood at the edge of his diminished fire zone.
The Vacuum Spear had cost him—the dense lattice reduced to scattered remnants, the channel through the center of what he had built leaving only the edges intact. He looked at Ordin across the arena floor.
Ordin’s arms were extended—the recovery from the Vacuum Spear visible in how he held them, the elastic tissue having stretched to its capacity for that shot, the muscles requiring a mont before the next clap could be produced at any aningful strength.
Drake read the recovery.
He moved—not toward the remnants of his fire zone, toward Ordin directly, the fastest approach his Wildfire Step could produce. Each step ignited fresh fla—small trails forming behind him as he covered the distance, the fire density building along his approach path rather than in a stationary zone.
Ordin’s recovery was running.
He couldn’t clap at full strength—the elastic tissue needed ti, the Vacuum Spear’s stretch having pushed past what imdiate recovery allowed.
He clapped anyway—a reduced-strength shot, the needle-blast weaker than the opening exchanges had produced, the recovery cost visible in the diminished output.
It hit Drake’s chest.
Reduced force—real, but less than a full-strength clap would have delivered. Drake absorbed it and kept coming, the approach interrupted by half a step and resud.
Eight feet.
Ordin clapped again—still in recovery, still reduced, the second weak shot arriving with even less force than the first as the recovery debt compounded.
Drake took it.
Six feet.
Drake’s approach had built fire along the path—a trail directly between his current position and where he had started the approach, the fla dense and continuous along that specific line.
Ordin’s recovery was nearly complete.
He clapped at three-quarters strength—the needle-blast faster and harder than the previous two reduced shots, aid at Drake’s approaching legs.
Drake felt the air turbulence as the shot approached—the heat from his own fire trail rising off the floor between them, the rising hot air interacting with the compressed projectile’s path.
The shot wobbled.
Not dramatically—a slight deviation, the projectile’s trajectory bending fractionally as it passed through the heat-disturbed air above Drake’s own trail.
It hit his thigh instead of his shin.
Real impact—the three-quarter strength shot carrying genuine force—but the deviation from the intended target ant the hit landed sowhere Drake’s approach could absorb rather than sowhere it would have stopped him.
He kept coming.
Four feet.
Ordin’s recovery completed.
Full strength available again—but Drake was four feet away, inside the range where the needle-blasts and even the standard claps required less travel distance to arrive, where the heat turbulence from Drake’s trail was thickest because the trail had been building continuously during the approach.
Ordin clapped at full strength.
The needle-blast traveled the four feet through the densest heat turbulence of the fight—the air above Drake’s continuous trail rising and shifting and disrupting the projectile’s path more severely than the longer-range shots had experienced.
The shot deviated significantly.
It missed Drake entirely—passing wide, the full-strength projectile spending itself against the arena wall behind him.
"The turbulence is getting worse," the announcer said. "Drake’s trail has been building continuously during this approach—the heat rising off it is disrupting Ordin’s accuracy at exactly the range where accuracy matters most."
Drake reached him.
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