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Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 201: Atlas wins
Elon was making the arena into an extension of himself.
Atlas pressed forward into it and immediately understood the problem in his body before his mind had finished naming it. Walking into the column was not like hitting a wall — it was like pushing through a river running sideways across him, constant and grinding, each step forward costing more than the last and returning less. He tried raising stone columns from the ground to use as cover, but the wind gradient sheared them sideways before they could fully form, catching them mid-rise and toppling them harmlessly. He tried flat slabs dragged low along the surface — harder to catch, lower profile — but the current near the floor was worse, faster, more concentrated, and they flipped and scattered before reaching their target. 𝕗𝕣𝐞𝐞𝘄𝐞𝚋𝚗𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗹.𝚌𝕠𝚖
He was being locked out of the fight from the inside.
Atlas stopped. He planted both feet and stood still, and instead of pushing harder against what wasn’t working, he went somewhere he had never gone in a real fight before.
He went deep.
Not the surface layer he had been working with. Not the loose, responsive stone sitting just beneath the floor. He pushed his awareness further down, past the shallow material, past the easy reach, into something older and far heavier. Bedrock. The dense, dark, immovable foundation beneath everything built on top of it. He had touched it before — slow, careful sessions under Tongen’s guidance, quiet mornings learning what lived below the obvious. He had never tried to pull from it quickly. He had never tried to pull from it while something was actively grinding against him from every direction.
The cost arrived before anything surfaced. A deep fatigue moving through his arms and into his chest — not muscular exhaustion but something deeper, structural, like forcing a tool past the load it was designed to handle. His jaw locked. His knees threatened to soften. He held the reach and kept pushing.
The floor cracked.
Not broke — cracked. Deep, concentric fractures spreading outward from where he stood, slow and deliberate, like the earth acknowledging something far below it was being disturbed for the first time in a long while. Then it came. A column rising from depth — wider at its base than anything he had raised today, denser in a way that was almost tactile, moving slower than anything he had produced in this fight but carrying a weight behind it that felt geological, like a piston being driven upward by something that did not understand resistance.
It hit the wind column from beneath.
The rotating current fractured around it. Not scattered — fractured, like glass struck at its structural center. Elon’s composure broke visibly for the first time: both arms thrown wide, scrambling to redistribute the pressure before the entire column destabilized, and in doing so the tight shell around him came apart. The orbiting debris fell. The grinding resistance dropped almost entirely.
Atlas moved.
He crossed the distance with one hand dragging along the ground, pulling a low rolling wave of stone with him, kept tight to the surface where the wind had the least leverage. Elon recovered fast — three rapid bursts aimed low, trying to sweep Atlas’s legs out from under him. The first two hit the stone barrier Atlas raised at knee height. The third came in at an angle he hadn’t covered and caught him clean across the ribs — sharp, precise, the kind of hit that stole breath without asking permission. He gasped. His next step stuttered. For a moment the whole thing nearly came apart.
He didn’t stop.
The wave reached Elon and caught him across the shins, driving sharply upward. It launched him cleanly off his feet. Elon twisted midair — reflexive, trained — and the air caught him before impact, suspending him two meters above the floor, wind cycling beneath him to hold the position.
They looked at each other across that distance. Elon hovering. Atlas below him, standing in the wreckage of everything the fight had produced, ribs burning with every breath, arms trembling from the depth he had pulled from, the bedrock fatigue sitting in his chest like a stone swallowed whole.
Both of them, at the same moment, understood what the fight had become.
Not about technique anymore. Not about who had the better answer to the other’s approach. It was attrition now. A question of reserves. Who had more left. Who could hold on longer when everything they had was already on the floor between them.
Elon descended. His feet touched down with control. He rolled his neck once — the only visible acknowledgment of what this had cost him — and raised his hands again. The air that came was thinner. Still responsive, but carrying a faint delay between intention and result that had not been present at the start. A narrowing. A reduction in scale.
Atlas saw it. He had been watching for it the entire second half of the fight, the way you watch for a light to flicker before it goes out. Small erosions. Margins tightening. The gap between wanting something and getting it growing just slightly wider than it had been five minutes ago.
He began closing the distance again, low and steady, hands near the ground. Elon answered with a sustained horizontal push — not explosive, but constant, aimed at Atlas’s chest, the kind designed to grind rather than break. Atlas turned his body sideways to halve his profile, planted his lead foot, and anchored. Stone rose around his legs — not a wall, a base, locking him to the earth so the wind had nothing it could actually move. He leaned into the current like a man walking into a headwind that had been blowing for years, each step paid for deliberately, the stone cracking and rebuilding beneath him with every advance.
Elon pushed harder.
Atlas pushed forward.
Five meters between them. Then four. Then three. Then two and a half, close enough that Atlas could hear Elon’s breathing — short, controlled, but audible in a way it hadn’t been before, the body telling the truth the face was still trying to hide.
The current flickered.
Just once. Just for half a heartbeat.
Atlas lunged. Both palms hit the floor simultaneously and the stone directly beneath Elon erupted in a tight, concentrated pillar — no warning, no buildup, nothing to read before it arrived. It caught him square beneath his footing and drove him backward with the full weight of what Atlas had left. Elon hit the far wall shoulder-first, the impact complete and total, the kind that didn’t allow for a graceful reaction. He slid down to one knee.
The air around him went still.
Atlas stood in the center of everything he had broken over the course of the fight — fractured slabs, scattered ridges, the deep concentric cracks from the bedrock pull still visible in long dark lines across the entire surface. His chest heaved. One knee wanted to fold and he locked it straight through will alone. His hands were still trembling faintly, the deep pull still settling its debt along the length of his arms.
Across the floor, Elon raised his head.
His arms came up slowly. His eyes moved across the arena — the stone, the distance, Atlas — with the same patient, methodical quality they had carried since the very beginning. He was doing what he always did. Running the calculation. Being honest about the result.
His arms lowered.
No ceremony in it. No drama. Just the quiet acknowledgment of a person who had looked at the numbers clearly and found the answer he didn’t want, and accepted it anyway because that was the only honest thing left to do.
Sherlock stepped forward.
"Atlas wins."
The words fell simply into the silence, without decoration or delay. Atlas exhaled through his nose — long, slow, the kind of breath that carries everything you’ve been holding — and let his hands drop to his sides. He looked across at Elon, who had already risen to his feet, already composed again, the brief window of visible exhaustion drawn shut behind that same unreadable expression.
Neither of them spoke.
They didn’t need to. The floor between them had already said everything worth saying.







