Chapter 453
Chapter 453
The arena held its breath, and waited to see who would walk out to face him.
From the opposite gate, the arena sand stirred as the next challenger emerged, steps measured, posture smooth, head held in eerie calm.
The man was lean, almost wiry, built like someone carved for speed rather than brute strength. His uniform was simple: dark leather reinforced along the ribs, bracers wrapping his forearms, boots strapped tight around narrow calves. But the most striking feature was the pair of weapons hanging at his hips, two long whips made of black braided leather, studded along their lengths with short metal spikes, each spike glinting under the sun like tiny fangs.
A murmur rolled through the stands. Whips were rare. Very rare.
In a world of swords, spears, bows, claws, and spells, whip users were oddities, almost exotic. Too difficult to master, too unforgiving, too strange to most combat styles. Ludger’s brow furrowed as he studied the man.
Two spiked whips. Flexible reach. Unpredictable angles. Control-based combat.
That’s new, he thought.
He clicked his tongue. Not in annoyance, but in interest.
For one brief, ridiculous moment, he pictured an entire Lionsguard division trained in whip combat. Black leather weapons snapping against the night air. Shadows moving like serpents. A guild of nocturnal hunters striking from rooftops.
It would look absurdly cool. And then he blinked the thought away. Because the man was getting closer. And when their eyes met, all humor vanished.
The challenger’s gaze was ice. Cold, sharp, unreadable. No excitement. No fanfare. No arrogance. Just a quiet, lethal focus. Ludger’s instincts sharpened.
Whoever this man was, he wasn’t here to perform. He was here to break something.
Bodies, pride, rules—maybe all three. The narrator’s voice rose again, dramatic and curious:
“ENTERING THE ARENA… A NEW NAME TO THE CAPITAL!”
The man didn’t react. Didn’t bow. Didn’t wave. Didn’t acknowledge the crowd.
His gloved fingers simply closed around the handles at his hips, metal spikes glinting like hungry teeth. And Ludger knew the next fight was going to be nothing like yesterday.
The referee stepped between them, boots crunching softly against the sand. Ludger’s eyes flicked to him out of habit, and then narrowed.
It wasn’t the same referee as yesterday.
Different posture. Different rhythm to his breathing. A coincidence? Or another small lever pulled behind the curtain?
Ludger didn’t like not knowing. But before the thought could settle, the referee raised his arm, voice cutting clean and loud through the arena.
“Begin!”
The word hadn’t even finished echoing when the challenger moved.
Both whips came free in a single, fluid motion. Leather hissed as the weapons uncoiled, metal spikes catching the light as they snapped outward. The man rolled his wrists, and the whips came alive, circling him in wide, controlled arcs like predatory serpents testing their range.
Then mana surged.
Cracks of lightning burst along the length of each whip, dancing between spike and spike, crawling over the braided leather in violent blue veins. The sound wasn’t a crack or a boom, it was a scream, sharp and electric, tearing through the air with a pitch that made teeth ache.
The reach doubled. Then tripled.
Every time the whips snapped, lightning lashed outward beyond their physical length, slashing through the air and striking the sand with explosive sparks. The arena floor scorched in thin, jagged lines where the energy hit, smoke rising in twitching wisps.
The noise was brutal. Thunder layered over tearing metal. Electric shrieks layered over cracking leather. The audience flinched as one. Some covered their ears. Others leaned back instinctively, eyes wide as the whips lashed closer than expected, lightning snapping just short of the barrier wards.
Ludger stood still, but his muscles tightened.
So that’s the trick, he thought.
The opponent didn’t rush. He controlled. He stepped sideways, feet gliding over the sand, whips orbiting him in perfect, deadly symmetry. Every snap was precise. Every arc calculated.
The man’s cold eyes never left Ludger. And in that instant, Ludger understood: This wasn’t a test of strength. This was a test of reach, timing, and nerves. The real fight had just begun.
The whip-user advanced without haste, steps light, shoulders loose, eyes locked on Ludger like a hunter closing distance on trapped prey. Then the calm snapped, literally.
Both arms flicked forward, wrists rolling, and the arena filled with sound.
The whips lashed out in a brutal barrage, arcs overlapping, spikes screaming through the air as lightning chased their paths. One came high, curving in from the right with a snapping hook meant to take Ludger’s head. The other stayed low, skimming the sand before whipping upward, a scything strike aimed for his legs.
Ludger moved. Not backward, sideways.
He slid his lead foot half a step left, torso twisting just enough for the high whip to pass a breath from his cheek. Sparks crackled against his hair as lightning scraped the air where his face had been a heartbeat earlier.
The low whip snapped up, Ludger hopped, not high, not dramatic. Just enough.
The spikes ripped under his boots, lightning detonating against the sand with a sharp crack. He landed already turning, shoulders rolling as the second wave came.
The opponent didn’t pause. Didn’t reset.
The whips crossed mid-air, one reversing direction instantly, the other looping over Ludger’s shoulder in a wide arc meant to wrap and pull.
Ludger ducked hard, knees bending as his spine folded, the whip slicing over his back close enough to tug at his shirt. He pivoted on his heel, letting momentum carry him into a short spin, arms tight to his body as lightning split the space he’d just vacated.
Another snap, faster this time.
Ludger dropped to one knee, palm brushing the sand for balance, the whip cracking overhead and detonating against the barrier behind him in a flash of blue-white light. He pushed off immediately, rolling forward and coming up on the balls of his feet, never giving the weapon a still target.
The barrage intensified.
The whip-user stepped in, wrists blurring as he shortened the arcs, turning wide strikes into rapid, snapping lashes. One came straight at Ludger’s chest, lightning extending its reach by meters.
Ludger twisted his torso sideways, letting the strike skim past his ribs, then leaned back unnaturally far, spine bending just enough for the next whip to slice over his throat. The heat prickled his skin, the ozone stinging his nose.
He backstepped, then side-stepped, then surged forward for half a step before abruptly changing direction again, never predictable, never settling. A whip snapped where his ankle had been. Another where his shoulder should have been.
To the audience, it looked like chaos. To Ludger, it was rhythm. Distance. Timing. Patterns hidden inside the noise.
The sand churned beneath his feet, footprints overlapping, lightning scars crossing each other in jagged lines. And through it all, Ludger’s breathing stayed even, eyes sharp, body loose, slipping through the storm of whips like a shadow that refused to be caught.
For a fleeting instant, Ludger felt the pattern settle into place. The whips had a rhythm now, a cadence hidden beneath the noise and lightning, the subtle delay between recoil and strike, the way the opponent’s wrists tightened just before a change in direction. His body adjusted on instinct, weight shifting, muscles preparing to step inside the next opening.
Now, he thought.
The response came instantly, and brutally.
The whip-user didn’t ease into the next attack. He didn’t telegraph it. The tempo simply jumped. One heartbeat the strikes were fast, controlled; the next they were something else entirely.
The whip cracked from Ludger’s blind side with a shriek of tearing air. He barely had time to turn before it slammed into his shoulder. Spiked leather bit deep, a metal barb punching through skin and muscle with a wet, tearing pain that sent a sharp gasp from his throat.
Then the lightning followed.
Electricity surged through the spike, flooding into his body in a violent pulse. His nerves screamed as the shock tore through his arm, across his chest, and down his spine. Muscles seized instantly. Fingers locked. His breath hitched as his body betrayed him, freezing mid-motion for a fraction of a second that felt impossibly long.
The arena reacted in unison, sharp intakes of breath, startled cries echoing through the stands.
The opponent didn’t hesitate. He flowed into the opening Ludger had given him, pivoting smoothly as the second whip arced forward. The strike was precise and merciless, aimed straight for Ludger’s exposed neck, an execution blow, clean and final.
And then something changed.
The whip-user’s expression shifted, subtle, almost imperceptible. His pupils tightened. His body reacted before his mind could catch up. Without knowing why, he twisted away and leapt backward, boots skidding across the sand as he abandoned the killing strike mid-snap.
The whip cracked through empty air.
He stared at the spot where he should have been a moment ago, eyes darting, senses screaming. There was nothing there, no spell, no visible attack, no surge of mana.
Just danger.
Ludger staggered back as the paralysis faded, blood streaming down his shoulder in thick rivulets, splashing darkly against the pale sand. His arm tingled violently as sensation returned, pain flaring sharp and insistent. He pressed his fingers briefly against the wound and pulled them away, watching red drip from his hand. His brows furrowed, not in fear, but in understanding. Then he used Healing Touch.
That wasn’t luck,
he realized.The man hadn’t reacted to mana or movement. He hadn’t seen an attack. He’d felt something, a threat so immediate his instincts overrode conscious thought.
Across from him, the whip-user stood tense and wary, eyes flicking between Ludger and the empty space he’d retreated from, jaw clenched tight.
In the stands, the noise died completely. No cheering. No shouting. Just stunned silence as the crowd registered what they were seeing. Blood stained the arena floor. Ludger had been hit. For the first time in this duel, he was the one bleeding.
Up in the stands, the reaction was immediate, and visceral.
Elaine froze the instant blood hit the sand. Her hand flew to her mouth, breath catching sharply in her chest as her eyes locked onto Ludger’s wounded shoulder.
Beside her, Arslan didn’t move. He squinted his eyes, jaw tightening, every muscle in his body going rigid. He wasn’t shocked, he was focused. The way a veteran looked when something went from difficult to dangerous.
Viola leaned forward, gripping the railing hard enough that her knuckles whitened.
“How is that even possible?” she demanded, eyes flicking between Ludger and the whip-user. “He’s never, he shouldn’t be getting hurt by someone no one’s even heard of!”
Arslan exhaled slowly through his nose, never taking his eyes off the arena.
“Those are the worst kind,” he said quietly. “The unknown ones.”
He tilted his head slightly, tracking the opponent’s stance, the way the man held his distance, the way his whips never fully rested.
“Famous fighters rely on reputation. Predictable styles. Patterns people expect.” Arslan’s voice hardened. “Someone like that doesn’t care about fame. He came here with a plan.”
Viola swallowed, listening.
“An odd weapon. An unusual fighting style. And enough patience to study yesterday’s matches,” Arslan continued. “Anyone competent would try to wear Ludger down over time.”
His eyes narrowed further.
“But that man didn’t.”
Elaine’s fingers curled into her sleeve.
“Then what did he plan?” she asked softly.
Arslan answered without hesitation.
“To kill him in the opening exchange.”
Viola’s breath hitched.
“The whips,” Arslan went on, “the reach, the spikes, the lightning, they’re not for pressure or control. They’re for paralysis and execution. One good hit locks the body. The next one ends the fight.”
He clenched his fist.
“That wasn’t a duel strategy. That was an assassination plan disguised as a match.”
Down in the arena, Ludger wiped blood from his shoulder and lifted his gaze again.
And for the first time since the contest began, everyone in the stands understood, this fight was no longer about spectacle. It was about survival.
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