The atmosphere inside the arena continues swelling with anticipation as the final instructions are delivered inside the ring.
Bright white lights pour down across the canvas from every direction overhead while thousands of spectators keep roaring throughout the building, phones raised everywhere around the lower bowl seats to capture the mont before the opening bell.
In the red corner, Elliot Graves stands tall with both gloves resting calmly near his chest. His expression remains composed, but there is an unusual sharpness sitting behind his eyes tonight, a tension that rarely appears this early before a fight.
Across from him, Shimamura Suzuki waits inside the blue corner. Unlike the crowd surrounding him, Shimamura himself looks almost detached from the scale of the event. His shoulders rise and fall slowly beneath the arena lights while his half-lidded gaze drifts lazily toward center ring.
"Ladies and gentlen," one comntator says loudly over the arena speakers, "this matchup has beco one of the most discussed fights on the card for a reason!"
"This is a massive risk for Elliot Graves," the second comntator adds. "Fourth-ranked WBC contender, world-level experience, years of elite competition... and tonight he’s putting all of that on the line against one of the strangest fighters we’ve seen enter the division in years."
"And Shimamura Suzuki has beco impossible to ignore lately," the first comntator continues. "People can joke about the nickna all they want, but this man keeps winning fights in ways that frankly don’t make sense."
"His reactions are bizarre. His rhythm is bizarre. And once he gets dragged into ugly exchanges..." The second comntator exhales sharply. "That’s when he becos dangerous."
Near the red corner, Elliot rolls his shoulders once while keeping his eyes fixed toward the opposite side of the ring.
Normally, Elliot prefers a slower Soviet rhythm early on; lazy swaying movent, gradual pressure, controlled probing from long range while he studies reactions little by little.
But tonight, he has no intention of approaching this fight patiently. His team has already studied Shimamura thoroughly.
The Japanese fighter has never possessed exceptional conditioning. Most of his fights beco dangerous only after his body starts deteriorating. So the conclusion had been simple. Destroy him before he reaches that point.
Across the ring, Shimamura barely seems to notice Elliot staring at him. Sohow, the arena noise feels distant tonight, not silent, just softer sohow.
The comntators’ voices blur faintly together beneath the roar of the crowd while the bright lights hanging above the ring bleed gently across his vision without hurting his eyes.
His breathing remains slow, comfortably slow. A faint warmth lingers quietly beneath his skin. The marijuana they gave him shortly before leaving the locker room had been minimal, carefully asured.
It’s not enough to cloud his head, not enough to dull his balance, but enough for his body to feel strangely receptive to the atmosphere around him.
Not enough to intoxicate him, not enough to disrupt his conditioning or alter his movent, only enough to loosen the door slightly. And the rest depends entirely on him to find his way into the edge of that zone.
The bell for the first round finally sounds.
DING!
Both fighters step forward imdiately from their corners.
Shimamura’s posture surprises the crowd at once. There is nothing sloppy about him for now, no drunken swaying, no loose staggering footwork.
His stance looks disciplined, orthodox, and compact. His gloves rise properly near his cheeks while he advances with asured steps toward center ring. Even Elliot’s eyes narrow slightly after seeing it.
Shimamura flicks out a jab.
Tap.
Then resets his feet calmly.
A small angle shift, and then Another jab.
Tap.
It’s sharp, controlled, and clean.
For now, at the start of the fight, he boxes like a completely ordinary fighter, focused first on understanding distance, timing, and ring rhythm.
But Elliot imdiately begins increasing the pressure. He steps in aggressively behind his lead foot instead of staying outside at long range, lowering his center of gravity slightly to stabilize his balance.
Jab, lead hook, right cross.
Dug! Dug! DUG!
All three punches crash forward sharply for an opening sequence.
Shimamura blocks them cleanly with disciplined reactions before imdiately twitching his right glove forward for a counter.
But Elliot is already moving. His upper body sways backward fluidly using his Soviet pendulum rhythm, slipping outside the punch by inches before lazily whipping a light lead hook through empty air.
Then he steps forward again instantly. Four punches burst out from mid-range.
Dug! Dug! Dug! Dug!
And the final lead hook slams heavily into Shimamura’s side.
THUD!
Shimamura tightens his body instinctively from the impact while his right glove twitches again for another counter.
But Elliot is already gone; a small retreat, half-step to the right, angle shift.
Then the Soviet cadence starts again.
Lead hook, lead hook, lead hook.
Dug. Dug. Dug.
The punches are light, not dangerous, not truly.
And yet sohow, to Shimamura, the gloves look slightly larger than they should. The arcs look sharper. The punches feel like they bring a disaster, already threatening his life, making his survival instinct begin reacting faster than normal.
"And Graves is wasting absolutely no ti tonight! This is a completely different opening approach from him!"
"He’s trying to break Shimamura’s rhythm before it even forms! He’s stepping into mid-range imdiately instead of staying outside!"
Elliot continues shifting lightly on his feet after the body shot lands, shoulders swaying subtly while maintaining his Soviet cadence.
"And that’s dangerous against a fighter like Shimamura,! Because the longer this man stays comfortable, the stranger he becos."
"But honestly? Shimamura actually looks very disciplined right now. No drunken movent yet, no awkward posture, no bizarre reactions. He’s boxing clean."
"And that might actually be the smartest thing he can do early! Because if he tries that loose defensive style imdiately against soone as technically sharp as Graves, he could get torn apart before he settles into the fight."
THUD!
The replay of Elliot’s hook crashing into Shimamura’s side flashes briefly across the overhead screen.
"Ooh, another one lands clean!"
"And Graves is targeting the body early already! That’s not accidental. Their camp clearly studied Shimamura’s conditioning issues."
Near center ring, Shimamura’s right glove twitches once more for another counter attempt. But Elliot is already drifting outside the angle again before the punch can fully release.
"And look at Graves imdiately exiting after every exchange! He’s not giving Shimamura stationary targets. In and out. Angle changes. Constant rhythm disruption."
"That’s classic Soviet influence right there! Everything is built around destabilizing your timing little by little until frustration starts setting in."
***
For the next minute, Elliot controls the pace with disciplined aggression, constantly shifting distance and angle through his swaying Soviet rhythm.
And throughout that entire stretch, Shimamura continues fighting like an ordinary boxer. He catches almost every punch aid toward his head behind a stiff double-door guard while only occasionally allowing body shots through the sides.
But sowhere deep inside him, sothing strange has already begun. He does not feel hurt enough yet, his body has not suffered enough damage, and still, his instincts already feel danger approaching.
His breathing remains slow and relaxed, but the adrenaline underneath it begins rising little by little. Not from pain, not from exhaustion, only from the growing sensation that the violence in front of him feels strangely vivid tonight.
The trigger had already been planted before the fight even began. All Shimamura needs to do now is continue walking toward the edge.
And Elliot, steadily increasing his pace while landing more shots against Shimamura’s sides, unknowingly helps guide him there.
About thirty seconds remain in the opening round, Elliot suddenly whips a wide lead hook toward the side of Shimamura’s head.
And to Shimamura, the glove looks enormous for a split second. The punch feels strangely catastrophic, like the end of sothing.
He can read it. He could avoid it.
Instead, he accepts it.
DSH!
The crowd reacts imdiately as Shimamura’s head snaps sharply to the side beneath the arena lights.
"Ooh! Graves lands the hook clean!"
But when Shimamura turns his eyes back toward Elliot, toward the right cross already rushing in, sothing in his expression has already begun changing.
There it is, that feeling. He finally finds the ecstacy.
The follow-up right cross shoots toward his face, but at the final fraction of a second before impact, Shimamura tilts his head slightly left while knocking the punch aside with his left glove.
The cross still clips his right cheek, but at a terrible angle.
Zrrf!
And in the very next instant...
DHUACK!
A short right hand shoots awkwardly upward without any visible preparation. The punch is not heavy, but it lands clean enough to stun Elliot briefly in place.
And Shimamura imdiately slips outside, circling smoothly around Elliot’s flank before repositioning himself near center ring again.
"Ooh! There it is!" one comntator suddenly shouts as the crowd noise swells again. "That’s the first glimpse of the weird timing people keep talking about!"
"And look at the angle Shimamura escaped from imdiately afterward!" the second comntator adds quickly. "That counter barely had any loading motion at all!"
"...Yeah," the first comntator says more carefully now. "He’s starting to settle into it."
The crowd begins roaring louder now, because the change is finally becoming visible.
Elliot turns quickly, raising his guard again. And for the first ti tonight, he finally sees it. Shimamura is smiling faintly now, not confidently, not mockingly. He’s just beginning to enjoy the fight.
His left arm hangs lazily near his side while his right glove floats only around stomach level, his stance suddenly full of openings and structural flaws.
Elliot imdiately resus his swaying Soviet rhythm. And Shimamura takes one loose sideways step, then another.
The sloppy drunken rhythm finally starts appearing as he is already standing at the edge of the Zone.
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