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Blood Online: Evolving Endlessly-Chapter 186: Silence
The white light that had taken Akhil barely faded before Jeren moved again.
No pause for questions. No moment to process what had just happened, what they’d just witnessed, what the system had just declared. The tournament master’s hand rose with the same mechanical precision he’d used to transport the Monarch’s vessel, and this time the light took everyone.
Nyla felt the pull an instant before it activated—her enhanced cold-sense registering the buildup of energy—but there was no time to resist. The arena dissolved around her and reformed in the span of a heartbeat, and when her vision cleared she was back in her designated combat box, barriers solidified, the platform beneath her feet humming with renewed containment energy.
Around her, the other fighters were experiencing the same disorienting return. Ryan stumbling slightly as he materialized. Nibo’s massive frame appearing with a sound like distant thunder. Every fighter who’d been frozen in that terrible moment of hesitation now forcibly repositioned, the decision of what to do about Akhil taken from them by simple removal of the option.
But that wasn’t the only change.
New figures were materializing on previously empty platforms—fighters who’d been waiting their turn, who’d been watching the tournament from screens throughout the settlement, experiencing it as spectators rather than participants.
Aria appeared on a platform three rows from Nyla’s, her long blade already in hand, her expression carrying the particular tension of someone who’d just transitioned from observer to participant without warning. Her eyes were wide, scanning the arena, processing the change from watching this on a broadcast to standing in it physically.
Others appeared in similar states—the reserve fighters, the ones scheduled for later rounds, all suddenly present and combat-ready whether they felt ready or not.
The divine realm’s presence above them had changed too.
Nyla could feel it even without her cold-sense active—the quality of attention that had been excited and hungry throughout the earlier rounds had gone quiet. Not absent. The gods were still watching. But the character of their watching had shifted from entertainment to something else.
Something that felt like held breath.
Like fear pretending to be patience.
The divine chat, which had been a constant stream of commentary and wagers and enthusiastic reactions, had gone eerily silent. No burst transmissions. No overlapping declarations. Just the weight of divine attention without the usual noise that came with it.
It annoyed Jeren.
Nyla could see it in the set of his shoulders on his elevated platform, in the particular stillness that had replaced his usual fluid theatrical motion. His fan was closed in his hand, held like a weapon rather than a prop, and the pleasant mask he wore so carefully had slipped enough to show the irritation beneath.
The silence from his divine audience—the beings who were supposed to be entertained, who were supposed to be engaged, who were the entire ostensible point of these tournaments—was a judgment of sorts.
And Jeren didn’t appreciate being judged.
His voice, when it cut through the arena, carried none of his usual performance. No theatrical enthusiasm. No carefully constructed excitement. Just cold instruction delivered with the tone of someone who had stopped caring about appearances.
"Your opponents."
The shadows at the edge of each platform responded immediately.
But not the way they had in previous rounds. Not with the gradual emergence or the careful calibration of difficulty to match observed abilities. This time the shadows simply parted and the opponents were there, fully formed, already in combat stance. 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝔀𝓮𝒃𝙣𝓸𝒗𝒆𝒍.𝙘𝒐𝒎
Four per platform.
Nyla counted them instinctively—four figures in dark armor that matched what Najim had worn, segmented and edge-sharp and radiating the same aura of something-other-than-human. Not shadow commanders, probably. Najim had been special, a centurion of Jeren’s personal forces. But these carried enough similarity that the message was clear.
The difficulty had escalated.
Dramatically.
Around her, on every platform in the arena, the same scene was playing out. Fighters who’d faced two opponents in the first round, three in the second, now confronted with four. And not random summoned constructs calibrated for data collection—these looked purpose-built. Professional. The kind of opponents designed to kill rather than test.
Aria’s platform had four figures in identical dark armor surrounding her in a loose diamond formation, already moving before she’d fully processed their presence. On Nibo’s platform, his four opponents were sized to match him—massive armored warriors whose weapons looked capable of actually stopping his axe rather than shattering on contact.
Ryan’s opponents carried bows—he could see them nocking arrows with mechanical precision, their stance suggesting they’d been chosen specifically to counter his close-combat style.
Everyone was facing something designed to exploit their weaknesses.
And they were all still processing what had happened to Akhil.
Nyla’s mind was split between the immediate threat and the brother who’d just been transported to unknown location marked as the world’s enemy. Her blades were in her hands—she didn’t remember drawing them—but her attention kept trying to divide itself, kept trying to calculate where he might be, what Jeren had intended, whether the system’s declaration meant—
"I’d advise you all," Jeren’s voice cut through the arena again, darker than before, carrying an edge that made the instruction sound almost personal, "to focus on what’s in front of you and worry about the future later."
The words landed like a slap.
Around the arena, Nyla could see the impact ripple through fighters who’d been similarly distracted. The reminder that regardless of what had just happened, regardless of what Akhil’s disappearance meant, they were still here. Still in combat boxes. Still facing opponents who wouldn’t pause for confusion or grief or the complicated emotions that came from being told your ally was now your enemy.
It was practical advice.
It was also cruel in its timing, in its dismissal of everything they’d just witnessed.
But Jeren had achieved his purpose—the worry visible on every face hardened into something else. Not acceptance exactly, but focus. The survival instinct that had kept them all alive this long overriding the paralysis of complicated emotions.
Nyla’s opponents moved.
All four simultaneously, coordinated with the kind of precision that suggested hive-mind communication rather than individual decision-making. Two came from angles designed to split her attention, forcing her to defend in opposite directions at once. The other two held back, weapons ready, waiting for the opening the first two would create.
Her body moved before her mind finished catching up—muscle memory and combat instinct taking over where conscious thought would have been too slow. Her twin blades came up in crossing arcs that caught the first two attackers mid-strike, ice already forming at the point of contact, frost spreading down their weapons toward their hands.
But these weren’t like the summoned fighters from earlier rounds.
The ice slowed them but didn’t stop them. Their armor resisted the cold in ways normal metal wouldn’t, and they pushed through the frost without the hesitation ordinary fighters would have shown.
The other two moved while Nyla was engaged, coming from her blind spots with attacks timed to arrive exactly when she’d be committed to defending against the first two.
She activated Winter’s Breath—a smaller application of her cold manipulation, not the overwhelming power of Winter of Death but faster, more precise. The temperature around her dropped in a tight radius, the air itself becoming weapon. The two flanking attackers hit the edge of it and their movements slowed, not stopped but hindered, buying her the fraction of a second she needed to disengage from the first two and reposition.
It was going to be a hard fight.
Around her, on every platform, similar battles were beginning.
---
Aria’s blade was already in motion before her conscious mind had fully processed the transition from spectator to participant.
Four opponents.
The thoughts catalogued themselves in the background while her body executed the opening she’d practiced ten thousand times—a burst of wind-manipulation that compressed and released in a directed blast, creating space, pushing two of the four opponents backward while she closed with the other two.
Her long blade was made for this—the reach letting her engage from distances where most fighters would still be approaching. She covered the ground between her starting position and the nearest opponent in a blur of wind-assisted speed, the blade already descending in an arc designed to test defenses.
The opponent caught it on a bracer that shouldn’t have been strong enough to stop the strike but was, the impact sending shock up Aria’s arm and forcing her to disengage before the other three could capitalize.
’These aren’t normal summoned fighters,’ she thought, the analysis running parallel to the combat. ’These are something else. Something that can actually match us.’
The four reformed their diamond formation, moving with that same unsettling coordination.
Aria adjusted her grip on her blade and channeled wind into her legs, preparing for the kind of extended engagement she’d hoped to avoid.
’Akhil,’ she thought, the name surfacing despite Jeren’s advice to focus on the present. ’Wait a bit. Let us deal with this mess. We’ll be coming to get you.’
She didn’t know if that was true.
Didn’t know if it was possible, if the system’s designation of him as enemy meant rescue was even an option, if the gods would allow them to try.
But it was the promise she made to herself as she launched back into combat, wind screaming around her blade, four opponents moving to intercept with mechanical precision.
Because the alternative—accepting that Akhil was gone, that he was the enemy now, that the person who’d kept them alive through every impossible scenario was now the thing they were supposed to kill—wasn’t something she could process while also trying not to die.
So she fought.
And told herself they’d figure out the rest later.







