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Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 198: Jelo wins
A longer, sharper projection burst out, the energy more concentrated than the first, the shape tighter and the trajectory flatter—cutting straight through the air with increased force and a sound like fabric tearing.
Ken raised his arm—
but this time—
Slash.
The shadow shield split.
It didn’t shatter dramatically. It divided cleanly along the line of the projection’s path, parting like something that had simply been cut too quickly for the darkness to redistribute itself in time. And through the gap—
Ken’s shoulder was grazed, a thin line of blood appearing against his skin.
For the first time—
he stepped back.
Not from pain, exactly. More like recalibration. The expression on his face shifted almost imperceptibly—a quiet internal adjustment, the look of someone revising their model of what they were dealing with.
Jello didn’t stop.
Wing Burst again—
—but this time there was a slight delay. A fraction of a second between his step and the displacement, a micro-hesitation that he tried to mask in the flow of motion.
Ken noticed.
He can’t spam it freely.
There was a cost to the technique. Whether it was physical, or tied to something that needed to recover between uses, Ken didn’t know—but the delay was real. And if there was a cooldown, then Wing Burst could be baited. Could be anticipated if you learned the rhythm of its recharge.
The moment Jello reappeared—
Ken’s shadow exploded outward in a wide radius.
Not a tendril. Not a wall. A dome—a full hemispheric expansion that erupted from the ground around him in every direction simultaneously, dark and dense and structured, filling the space between them before Jello’s attack could find its angle.
Jello’s attack slammed into it—
but instead of breaking through, the shadow wrapped around the energy itself, absorbing it—pulling the projection inward, folding around it the way water wraps around a stone, redirecting the force along internal channels that dissipated it harmlessly into the construct’s mass.
Then—
the dome collapsed inward.
Not outward. Inward—a controlled implosion, the darkness folding back toward its center with purpose.
Jello was caught.
Darkness closed in from all sides, compressing, crushing—not violently at first, but with a steady, inexorable pressure that built with every passing moment, like being caught at depth with no direction to swim. The shadow had no temperature. No texture he could identify. It was just presence—absolute, total, and growing heavier.
His Skilled Guard flickered under the pressure.
The hardened surface of his skin held—but it held the way something holds when it’s being asked to do more than it was designed for. He could feel the strain beneath it, could feel the Guard fraying at the edges where the compression was most concentrated.
Cracks formed.
Jello gritted his teeth.
Too strong...
The shadow tightened further—
Then—
his eyes sharpened.
A faint glow.
Heat.
Something shifted in his focus—away from the walls closing in, down to his own hand, to the energy still present there, still available. Not spent. Not gone. He’d been thinking about breaking outward. About matching force with force. But that wasn’t what he had.
What he had was precision.
"Dragon Claw...!"
But this time—
he didn’t release it outward.
He condensed it.
It took everything he had to resist the instinct to push the energy away from himself. The projection wanted to extend—that was its nature, its shape, the direction it was trained to go. Fighting that was like trying to hold fire in a closed fist. But he held it, forced it inward, compressed the shape tighter and tighter until the glow at his hand became blinding and the heat was visible even through the shadow.
Right at his hand.
Then drove it downward.
BOOM.
The compressed energy exploded at point-blank range, the detonation hitting the base of the dome where shadow met arena floor—the weakest structural point, the seam where the construct had originated. The force was catastrophic at that scale. The shadow didn’t redirect it this time. There was nothing to redirect. It simply came apart.
Both fighters were sent flying in opposite directions.
They landed hard. The sound of two bodies hitting the ground was followed by a long moment of absolute stillness—dust and scattered shadow-fragments drifting in the arena light, the air shimmering faintly with residual heat.
Silence.
Heavy breathing.
The fight had dragged on longer now—both of them showing signs of strain. Not the theatrical exhaustion of someone performing effort. The real kind—where movement becomes slightly slower than you want it to be, where the next action requires a beat more calculation than the one before.
Ken’s shadow flickered slightly. Not gone—but visibly diminished, the armor around him thinner than it had been at the start, less fluid in the way it moved.
Jello’s stance wasn’t as steady. His weight was distributed unevenly, his left leg—the one that had been seized—bearing slightly less of his body than it should.
Still—
they stood again.
Ken wiped the blood from his shoulder with the back of his hand, a casual gesture that was somehow more unsettling than if he’d reacted to the pain directly. He looked across the arena at Jello with something in his expression that wasn’t quite respect, wasn’t quite surprise—but existed in the space between them.
"You’re adapting."
It wasn’t a complaint. It was an observation delivered with the detached precision of someone who kept careful account of things.
Jello didn’t reply.
He just raised his hand.
The energy that formed around it this time was different. Not brighter—sharper. Tighter at the edges, the shape more defined, as though the previous exchanges had refined something in his understanding of how to hold it. Like he’d found a better grip.
Ken’s shadow rose again—but slower now. Less stable. The dome had cost him something, and whatever the source of his ability demanded in exchange for that scale of construct, the interest was showing.
Jello took a step forward.
Then—
Wing Burst.
He appeared directly in front of Ken—close, uncomfortably close—but didn’t attack immediately. A half-beat. Just long enough for Ken’s shadow to react, to surge toward the perceived threat—
Ken reacted— 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖
his shadow surged to block—
—but Jello vanished again.
A second Wing Burst.
Behind him.
It was the fastest he’d chained them—and the delay between the two was shorter than the last time. Whether he’d found a way to shorten the recovery or was simply paying a higher price for it, only he knew. But it worked.
Ken turned—
too late.
"Dragon Claw."
At point-blank range.
SLASH.
The attack tore through Ken’s shadow defense before it could fully form—catching it mid-reconstruction, the darkness still in motion, unable to achieve the density it needed—and striking across his torso with the full, focused force of everything Jello had left to give. The impact didn’t just connect. It carried. Ken left the ground.
He crashed across the arena, skidding hard against the floor before coming to rest near the far edge of the ring.
The shadow dispersed entirely. Not retreating—simply gone, unraveled all at once, like a structure that had been held together past the point where holding was possible.
Silence fell.
Ken tried to rise—
His arms pushed against the floor, muscles engaging, the motion starting—and then, quietly, his body gave out. Not dramatically. Just a settling, a ceasing, the kind of stillness that arrives when the last available resource has been spent.
The arena settled.
Jello stood there, breathing heavily, his arm still faintly glowing before the energy faded—a slow dimming, like embers cooling. He didn’t move toward the center of the ring. Didn’t raise his arm or look toward the stands. He just stood where he was and let his breathing slow.
Tongen crossed his arms. "That was closer than it should’ve been."
"No," Sherlock said, and there was something almost gentle in the correction. He was still smiling the way he smiled when something had gone exactly as it needed to. "That’s exactly how close it needed to be."
Atlas exhaled slowly, some of the tension leaving his frame. "Ken almost had him..."
Mira watched quietly. She hadn’t said anything since the fight began, and she didn’t say anything now. But her eyes stayed on Jello—reading something in the way he stood, the way he held himself even while catching his breath.
Jello turned slightly, glancing at Ken on the ground.
No pride.
No celebration.
Just acknowledgment.
Because he knew—
if that fight had gone on even a little longer...
the result might have been different.







