Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 200: Begin

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Chapter 200: Begin

"Begin!" Sherlock shouted.

The moment his voice cut through the air, Elon moved.

No windup. No tell. No wasted motion. Just a sharp, controlled exhale through his nose and a wide horizontal sweep of his right arm, smooth and practiced, like brushing something off a table he had cleared a thousand times before. The air answered immediately, peeling away from him in a concentrated band that crossed the distance between them faster than Atlas’s eyes could properly track.

Atlas was already moving.

He had been watching Elon from the moment they stepped forward — not his face, not his hands, but his posture. The way he held himself said everything. Too still. Too composed. Not the stillness of someone calm but the stillness of something coiled, waiting for the exact right moment to release. So when the motion finally came, Atlas was already committing to the lean, already shifting his weight sideways into the step, already in motion before the gust arrived. 𝕗𝚛𝚎𝚎𝐰𝗲𝗯𝗻𝚘𝚟𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝕞

It caught his shoulder instead of his chest. The force spun him half a step but didn’t take him off his feet. He let the rotation carry him, used the momentum to drop into a low stance, and the moment his palm made contact with the floor, the earth beneath him answered. He felt it the way he always felt it — not through his hand exactly, but through something deeper, like a frequency his body had been tuned to recognize. Dense. Solid. Patient in the way only stone could be.

Good.

A slab tore upward in front of him — rough-edged, thick, angled forward like a shield braced against the wind. Elon had already reset. His hands drew inward, palms compressing toward each other with slow deliberateness, and then thrust forward. The air between his palms had been gathering that entire time, invisible and silent, pressure building in the space between his hands like something being wound tight. When it released, the sound it made hitting Atlas’s stone wall was enormous — a thunderclap trapped inside a confined space, the kind of impact that rattled teeth and filled the chest. Three cracks split across the surface of the slab simultaneously. The stone held, barely, but the force behind the strike skidded Atlas backward across the floor regardless, boots scraping, arms trembling, every muscle in his shoulders working to maintain the technique under the load.

He let the wall fall.

No point defending what was already compromised. He dropped the slab, heard it crumble behind him, and immediately launched into a sprint, closing the gap as fast as his legs would carry him, trying to get inside Elon’s range before he could reset, before the distance could be reestablished on Elon’s terms.

But Elon didn’t need to reset. That was the first real lesson the fight was teaching him.

Elon had no position. No stance that needed recovering, no setup that needed repeating. The air was everywhere — omnidirectional, invisible, already in motion — and his control over it was fluid enough that he could draw from any angle without telegraphing, without turning to face the direction, without any of the physical tells that normally preceded a technique. He backpedaled smoothly, a low current lifting him just slightly, carrying him rearward with almost no physical effort, feet barely grazing the surface. Every step Atlas pushed forward, Elon matched backward. Not hurried. Not reactive. Measured and calm, like a man maintaining a specific distance because he had chosen it, not because he was forced to.

That patience made Atlas angrier than any aggressive move could have.

He stopped chasing.

He drove both fists into the ground instead.

The earth responded in a wide radius around the point of impact, erupting outward in jagged ridges and uneven spurs that broke the flat surface into something treacherous and irregular. Terrain that rewarded being anchored to the ground — which Atlas was — and punished anything that relied on smooth, consistent footing. The air could carry Elon backward across flat ground all day. Broken ground changed the geometry of it, made the angles unpredictable, took away the clean lines his technique relied on to maintain spacing.

Elon’s left foot caught the edge of a rising ridge mid-step. His composure fractured for just a half-second — a small stumble, a break in the otherwise seamless backward flow — and he corrected with a sharp upward burst of air beneath his feet that lifted him just enough to clear the obstacle. He landed three meters to the left, clean, already settling back into his neutral stance.

But the half-second had happened. Atlas had seen it.

He pulled a chunk of rock from the floor, torso-sized and rough, no refinement in it, and launched it directly at Elon’s midsection. Not a technique. A blunt statement, the kind that said he was done trying to be elegant about this. Elon’s crosswind deflected it cleanly, shearing it off to the side, but the debris spread wide on impact and he had to raise his forearm to shield his face. In that half-second of interrupted sightline, Atlas closed the remaining distance and drove his shoulder hard into Elon’s chest.

They hit the floor together.

It was ugly and close and nothing like the structured, distanced exchange they had been having. Atlas landed first and immediately got his palm flat against the ground, channeling his focus downward, pushing a thick ridge of stone upward against Elon’s back to pin him, to take the movement away, to make this a problem that required something other than air to solve. For one second it almost worked. Elon was flat against the floor, stone pressing in from behind, Atlas’s weight above him, nowhere to drift.

Then Elon exhaled.

Short. Controlled. Angled with the kind of precision that could only come from someone who had spent years learning exactly how much pressure a specific distance required. The compressed air hit Atlas in the side of the jaw at close range — not enough to do real damage, but enough. His concentration shattered. The ridge crumbled without his focus holding it.

Elon rolled free before the dust finished settling.

They separated, both breathing harder than before. Atlas pressed the back of his hand against the corner of his mouth and tasted copper. Across from him, Elon straightened his collar with two fingers — a composure so deliberate it bordered on provocation — and regarded him with the same flat, analytical expression he had worn since the very beginning of this.

A long beat of silence passed between them.

Then Elon changed.

It was subtle at first. His weight dropped slightly. His arms widened. Something behind his eyes shifted from patient to something colder and more deliberate, the way a person looks when they stop observing and start committing. When he exhaled next, it was not a burst or a directed gust. It was sustained — a slow rotating column of pressurized air that began to build outward from where he stood, gaining speed with each revolution, until the sound of it became constant and the debris on the floor around him began to lift. Fragments of Atlas’s shattered stone rose and began to orbit the perimeter of the current, caught and carried, the wreckage of the fight recycled into something dangerous.

The air pressure in the immediate area changed in a way Atlas felt physically — in his ears, in his chest, in the resistance that suddenly lived in