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Now reading: Chapter 354: The Lock from Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top, a Fantasy novel by Pendroid.

Two iron patches now—shoulder and hip, both small, both hardened, both present on Mark’s body without yet restricting movent significantly.

Mark created distance—the silver eyes reassessing, the pattern becoming clearer. Ragnor was using strikes as misdirection, the trailing hand exploiting whatever evasion path Mark’s reflexes chose. The full-stance reading hadn’t been enough to prevent the second contact because the combination’s complexity had required processing more variables than the single-strike exchanges.

He needed to stop evading into Ragnor’s trailing hand.

Which ant he needed to evade in directions Ragnor couldn’t predict—not the directions his reflexes naturally chose based on the incoming strike’s trajectory, but directions chosen specifically to avoid wherever Ragnor’s other hand might be.

This required a different kind of processing—not reading the strike and reacting, but reading the strike, reading the trailing hand’s likely position, and choosing an evasion that avoided both simultaneously.

The Dead Eyes could do it.

But it required more from the reflexes—the processing speed climbing, the silver eyes working harder to generate the dual-avoidance solutions in real ti.

Ragnor advanced again.

He threw a single strike this ti—a straight punch, no combination, the simplicity itself a different kind of misdirection. With only one strike to process, Mark’s reflexes might default back to single-evasion thinking.

Mark read the punch.

And read Ragnor’s other hand—positioned at his side, ready, the trailing-contact technique anticipated even from a single strike now.

He evaded the punch in a direction that avoided both the strike’s path and the most likely trailing-hand position.

Clean evasion.

No contact.

Ragnor adjusted—his trailing hand moving to a different position than Mark had anticipated, a third option Mark’s dual-avoidance hadn’t accounted for.

The hand reached Mark’s other shoulder.

Third contact point.

Iron transferred.

"Three patches now," the announcer said. "Shoulder, hip, other shoulder. Ragnor keeps finding additional positions for the trailing hand—Mark’s reading the two most likely options and Ragnor’s using a third."

Mark created distance again.

Three iron patches—both shoulders and the hip, the tal present on three points of his body. Individually small. Collectively beginning to restrict the natural range of motion across his upper body and one hip.

He felt it when he moved—the patches not locking his joints, but adding weight and slight resistance to the movents that involved those locations. His reflexes were still fast. But the body executing the reflexes was carrying more than it had been carrying at the fight’s start.

Ragnor pressed the advantage.

He advanced with another combination—faster this ti, the rhythm building toward sothing that required even more processing from Mark’s reflexes.

Mark’s silver eyes worked at their fastest pace yet—reading each strike, reading the trailing hand’s shifting positions, generating evasion solutions that accounted for the iron-patch weight now present on his body.

He evaded the first three strikes cleanly.

The fourth strike—a knee, low, unexpected in the combination’s rhythm—Mark’s reflexes processed correctly, but the evasion required a movent that the iron patch on his hip made fractionally slower than it would have been without the patch.

The knee grazed his thigh.

Not a clean hit—a graze, minimal contact, but contact nonetheless.

Ragnor’s trailing hand found Mark’s forearm during the graze’s aftermath—the mont Mark’s balance was readjusting from the partial hit, the trailing hand exploiting the readjustnt window.

Fourth contact.

Iron transferred to Mark’s forearm.

Four patches.

The crowd was fully invested—the specific noise of watching a fighter’s defensive system being worn down increntally, each exchange adding weight without producing a decisive mont, the accumulation itself becoming the story.

Mark created distance.

He looked at his own body—at the four iron patches, the weight they were adding, the way his reflexes were still processing at full speed but the body they were directing was carrying more than it had carried at the start.

The silver eyes read the trend.

Every exchange adds weight, he understood. The reflexes aren’t slowing. The body is. If this continues the iron accumulates faster than I can prevent new contact—eventually the weight itself becos the problem regardless of how fast I read.

He needed to end the exchanges.

Not evade indefinitely—finish it before the accumulation beca decisive.

He activated the simulation.

The silver eyes deepened—not just the reflexes now, the full Dead Eyes capability, the lock beginning to build toward the unending constructed reality that the ability could produce given sufficient focus.

Ragnor felt sothing shift in how Mark was looking at him.

The eyes weren’t just reading anymore—they were building sothing, the silver carrying a different quality, deeper, more focused.

Ragnor advanced—he had no reason to stop, the accumulation strategy working, four patches already present and the fifth contact just an exchange away.

He threw a strike.

Mark didn’t evade.

He took it.

The strike landed—a clean hit, real force, Mark absorbing it without the reflexive evasion that had characterized every previous exchange.

Ragnor’s trailing hand reached for the contact point the hit had created—the fifth patch, the position straightforward now that Mark wasn’t moving.

Iron transferred.

Fifth patch.

But Mark’s eyes hadn’t moved from Ragnor’s face throughout the entire exchange—the silver eyes locked on Ragnor’s gaze even as the strike landed and the iron transferred, the simulation building from direct eye contact rather than from evasion-based reading.

The lock completed.

Ragnor’s perception shifted.

The constructed reality folded into his experience—not gradually, the simulation’s construction having been building silently while Ragnor focused on the accumulation strategy, the completion arriving all at once now that the lock had found its target.

He stood in the arena.

Except the arena was different now.

The crowd was the sa. The floor was the sa. Mark was standing across from him—but Mark’s posture was different, defeated, both hands raised in surrender, the simulation constructing a version of the fight where Ragnor had already won.

The referee was raising Ragnor’s hand.

The crowd was cheering for him.

Mark—the simulated Mark—was nodding in acknowledgnt of defeat.

It felt completely real.

Ragnor’s actual body—the body experiencing the actual fight rather than the simulation—relaxed. The victory celebration in his perception triggered the physical relaxation that ca with a fight ending, his muscles releasing the tension they had been holding throughout the exchange.

In actual reality, Ragnor stood with his guard dropped, his body relaxed, completely unprepared for anything because his perception was telling him the fight was over and he had won.

Mark moved.

The five iron patches added weight—real, present, the accumulation genuine. But Ragnor’s actual body was relaxed, undefended, the relaxation of victory-perception leaving him completely open.

Mark’s hand found Ragnor’s throat—not a strike, a hold, the silver eyes maintaining the simulation while the actual body executed the actual finish.

The Nikegami activated alongside the simulation—the body lock, the specific effect that froze movent while the eyes held the target. Ragnor’s actual body—relaxed, undefended, locked by the Nikegami on top of the relaxation—couldn’t respond to the hold at his throat even if his perception had allowed him to recognize a threat.

It didn’t.

In Ragnor’s perception, Mark’s hand at his throat was a congratulatory gesture—the kind of contact that happened after a fight ended, a handshake or an embrace, the simulation reinterpreting the actual physical event to match the constructed reality’s narrative.

The referee in actual reality moved.

He crossed the floor and arrived at the position—Mark’s hand at Ragnor’s throat, Ragnor’s body relaxed and unmoving, the Nikegami lock visible in the specific stillness of Ragnor’s posture despite his face carrying an expression of soone experiencing a positive mont.

The referee assessed.

Mark held the position for three seconds—the simulation complete, the Nikegami lock complete, the actual fight decided in every way that mattered while Ragnor’s perception remained inside a victory that had never happened.

The referee raised a hand.

Mark released the lock.

The simulation dissolved—Ragnor’s perception snapping back to actual reality, the constructed victory disappearing, the actual configuration arriving all at once. Mark’s hand at his throat. The referee’s raised hand. The five iron patches still present on Mark’s body.

The fight had ended.

Ragnor blinked.

Looked at the arena floor—at the actual configuration, at Mark’s hand withdrawing from his throat, at the referee’s raised hand indicating a result that had nothing to do with the victory he had just experienced.

He understood in the space of a second.

The simulation. The relaxation. The opening it had created.

He exhaled.

The Aurelius sections gave Mark the full ho response—the second mber of the Deadly Trio advancing to the next stage, the mythology continuing to build.

The Virex sections gave Ragnor their acknowledgnt—the sound of people watching their fighter execute an accumulation strategy that had been working until the eyes that had been reading every exchange built sothing underneath the reading that nobody could see coming.

"Mark of Aurelius Academy," the announcer said. "Five iron patches. The accumulation was real. The weight was real." He paused. "But the eyes were building sothing else the whole ti—and when the lock completed, Ragnor experienced a victory that existed only in his own perception while the actual fight ended in the three seconds his guard was down because he believed it was already over."

Another pause.

"Your winner—Mark of Aurelius Academy."

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