Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top-Chapter 206: Evening talk

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Chapter 206: Evening talk

They found him where they expected—outside, at the edge of the training yard, standing in the dark like he hadn’t moved since the announcement. The lights from the main building barely reached that far. He didn’t turn when they approached.

"Took you long enough," Tongen said.

"We came as soon as we could," Mira said.

"I know." He turned then, looked at the three of them. "Sit."

There was a low bench along the yard’s outer wall, the kind used during outdoor observation sessions. They sat. Tongen stayed standing.

For a moment nobody said anything. The academy behind them was quieter now—late enough that the corridors had emptied, early enough that the night hadn’t fully settled.

Atlas broke first. "Are we going to be selected?"

"That depends on you," Tongen said. "But yes. Probably."

"All three of us?"

"That’s the plan. Olmo wants a strong showing. So does the rest of the staff." He folded his arms. "The question isn’t whether you’ll be there. The question is what you’ll do when you are."

Jelo stared at the ground. The dirt of the yard was pale in the low light, marked with the scuff patterns of a hundred training sessions. He knew this ground. Knew exactly how it felt underfoot when he planted for a strike.

He didn’t know anything about the ground at another academy.

"What do we know about the other schools?" he asked.

"Some." Tongen crouched, picked up a loose stone, turned it in his fingers. "There’s an institution two regions over—Varen. Strong fundamentals program. Their students tend to fight conservatively, build toward late-round advantages. Dangerous if you let a fight go long." He set the stone down. "There’s another, Kael Institute. Almost the opposite. Aggressive early pressure, high-risk ability usage. They burn out sometimes. Not always."

"And the others?" Mira asked.

"Still waiting on information. We’ll know more as registration closes."

Atlas leaned forward, elbows on his knees. "So what’s the actual plan? We can’t prepare for opponents we don’t know."

"You’re not preparing for opponents," Tongen said. "You’re preparing yourself. There’s a difference." He looked at Atlas directly. "You fight the same whether it’s someone from here or someone from Varen. Your ability doesn’t change because the face across from you is unfamiliar. What changes is your read time. Your margin for error."

"That’s what worries me," Atlas said quietly.

It was the most honest thing Jelo had heard him say in a while. Atlas didn’t offer things like that easily. Jelo glanced at him, then away.

Tongen nodded slowly. "Good. Hold onto that. Use it."

The wind moved through the yard. Somewhere in the main building, a door closed.

Mira had been quiet for a stretch. Now she spoke. "What about our weaknesses. The ones they’ll see that we won’t."

Tongen looked at her.

"When you’ve trained with the same people long enough, you stop seeing certain things," she said. "We’ve been inside these walls for months. We don’t know what we look like from the outside."

"That’s a sharp question," Tongen said. He was quiet for a moment. "You want the honest answer."

"Yes."

"Atlas overcommits when he’s confident. He reads a fight correctly and then pushes past the correct read into something reckless." He said it plainly, no edge in it. Atlas didn’t flinch, just nodded once. "Mira is the opposite. She waits too long. She wants certainty before she moves, and sometimes the window closes."

Mira absorbed that without expression.

Tongen’s eyes moved to Jelo. "And you."

Jelo waited.

"You hold back. Consistently. You have more in you than you show, and you manage it carefully, and that’s not always wrong—but in a bracket format, you can lose a fight you should have won by being too measured. The gap between what you are and what you show is a liability if you’re not careful about when you close it."

The words landed precisely. Jelo said nothing. There wasn’t anything to say.

"So we fix these things," Atlas said.

"You work on them. You don’t fix them in two weeks." Tongen stood back up, rolled his shoulder once. "But awareness is half of it. Now you know what to watch for in yourselves."

They sat with that for a moment.

Then Mira said, "What about Sherlock’s group."

Tongen’s expression didn’t change, but something shifted behind it—a flicker of something that might have been amusement. "What about them."

"They’ll be there. Same tournament."

"Presumably."

"Are we competing against them or with them."

Tongen looked at her for a long moment. "Technically with. In practice, it’s more complicated than that, and everyone in that building knows it." He paused. "Don’t let it become a distraction. Focus on the bracket in front of you. If you end up across from one of Sherlock’s students, treat it the same as anyone else."

"Can we though," Atlas said.

"You’ll have to."

Jelo had been quiet for a while. He was thinking about what Tongen had said—the gap between what you are and what you show. He turned it over slowly, the same way he’d been turning it over since the dragon system first made itself known to him. The weight of it hadn’t changed. If anything, hearing Tongen name the behavior without knowing the reason behind it made it heavier.

He thought about the bracket. Strangers across from him, no data, no read on what he was walking into. And beneath all of it, the system sitting quiet and ready, waiting for him to stop being careful.

He was going to have to find a line. A level of performance that was high enough to win and controlled enough to hide what was underneath. He had been walking that line for months inside these walls. He’d have to walk it sharper out there, in front of people who hadn’t learned to expect certain things from him.

"Tongen," he said.

"Yeah."

"Do you think we’re ready."

Tongen looked at him for a long moment. The yard was dark. The building behind them hummed faintly with the sounds of a building at rest. Atlas had gone still. Mira was watching Tongen the way she watched everything—waiting, reading.

"I think you’re closer than you know," he said finally. "And I think the tournament will show you things about yourselves that I can’t." He paused. "That’s not a bad thing. That’s the point of it."

It wasn’t a yes. But it wasn’t a no either, and from Tongen, that was something.

Mira stood first, brushed off her hands. "Same training schedule tomorrow?"

"Earlier," Tongen said. "First light."

Atlas groaned quietly. Mira almost smiled. It was the closest thing to a light moment the conversation had offered, and it lasted about two seconds before the weight of everything settled back in.

Jelo stood last. He looked at the yard one more time—the pale dirt, the familiar ground—then back at Tongen.

"Thanks," he said.

Tongen just nodded, already turning back toward the dark.

The three of them walked back toward the building in silence. The corridor lights were low, most of the academy asleep by now. Their footsteps were the only sound.

At the point where the hall split—Atlas and Mira’s quarters one way, Jelo’s another—they stopped.

Nobody said anything. They didn’t need to. The conversation with Tongen had done what it needed to do: named the problems, outlined the shape of what was coming, left enough unsaid that there was still something to carry into sleep and think through alone.

Jelo and atlas went left. Mira went right.

He lay awake for a long time after.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​