Chapter 242: Ken wins
Chapter 242: Ken wins
Ken reset his distance.
He didn’t rush back in. Gave himself three full seconds — enough to let the shadow coat redistribute, enough to read what Zarek was doing with the directed pulses, enough to find the pattern in them.
There was always a pattern.
The directed pulses came from Zarek’s leading hand — right hand, slightly forward, index finger extended in the direction of the pulse. A small tell. Barely visible. But Ken’s eyes caught it on the second hit and by the third attempt he was already moving before the pulse arrived.
He sidestepped cleanly.
The pulse passed him.
Zarek adjusted — tried to track the movement mid-pulse — but the directional commitment was already made. You couldn’t redirect a pulse once it was sent. That was the limitation.
Ken had found the edge of the ability.
Now he pressed it.
⸻
He came forward again.
This time the shadow expanded differently — not the coat, not the wall, not the sweeping low construct. Something new. The shadow rose from the ground around Ken in a wider formation and began to move outward in thin extending tendrils, spreading low across the field between them.
Not fast.
Deliberate.
Like roots finding soil.
Zarek sent a pulse into the tendrils and they absorbed it — dispersed, fractured slightly, but held. Shadow didn’t have a single point of failure the way a constructed barrier did. It was distributed. You’d have to hit every piece of it simultaneously to break it cleanly.
Zarek couldn’t do that.
He pulled back, trying to get outside the spread, but Ken moved with him — keeping the tendrils between them, maintaining the coverage, herding without obviously herding.
The crowd around the field had gone completely quiet again.
Watching.
⸻
Jelo saw what Ken was doing.
He was reversing the dynamic. Zarek’s pressure ability worked by compressing space around an opponent — removing options, tightening the zone until there was nowhere comfortable left to stand. Ken was doing the same thing with the shadow tendrils. Filling the space between them. Making every position Zarek moved to feel slightly more occupied than the one before.
Fighting pressure with pressure.
But shadow pressure was different from force pressure. Force you could feel coming. Shadow you had to see — and in the flat grey morning light, on a field where the ground was already dark from wear, the tendrils weren’t always easy to track.
Zarek stepped back on one without seeing it.
The tendril responded — wrapped once around his ankle, not tight, not a full restraint, just enough contact to register.
Zarek sent a pulse downward instantly — broke the contact, shattered that piece of shadow.
But he’d looked down to do it.
And Ken was already moving.
⸻
He crossed the distance in one committed push.
Shadow coat fully active, hardened along both arms now, the offensive density he’d built up during the exchange concentrated and ready. The tendrils dissolved behind him as he moved — he didn’t need them anymore. They’d done their job.
Zarek looked up from the broken tendril and Ken was already inside his range.
He sent a pulse at point blank.
Full power.
The shadow coat took the hit and Ken felt it — genuinely felt it, the force driving through even the coat’s absorption, rattling through his chest. He pulled a sharp breath.
Didn’t stop.
He drove his right arm forward — shadow hardened to its maximum density along the forearm, the construct solid enough to leave no give in it — and caught Zarek across his guard.
The impact was heavy.
Zarek’s guard held but his feet left the ground slightly — a brief lift, weight thrown backward, balance broken. He came down off-center.
Ken was already on him.
No gap. No pause.
The left arm came next — shadow extending outward from his hand not as a blunt strike but as a flat sweeping force, like a wing unfolding, that caught Zarek across his side and drove him sideways.
Zarek stumbled.
Went to one knee.
Sent a final pulse from that position — close, powerful, almost desperate.
The shadow wall rose from the ground in front of Ken in under a second. The pulse hit it and held — the wall buckled, cracked down the center — but held long enough.
Ken stepped around it.
Came to Zarek’s exposed side.
Raised his arm.
⸻
Zarek looked up.
Saw the shadow construct fully formed along Ken’s forearm — dense, absolute, ready.
He looked at the ground.
Then at the official.
"Stop."
His voice was even. No collapse in it. Just a clean, clear acknowledgment of where the math had landed.
The official raised a hand immediately.
"Ken."
⸻
The crowd released again.
Louder this time than after Jelo’s fight — more voices, more noise, less restraint. Ken’s shadow manipulation was known but seeing it operate at this level against Zarek’s pressure ability — seeing it not just survive the zone but dismantle and reverse it — that had landed differently than people expected.
Ken stood in the center of the field.
He didn’t perform anything. Didn’t raise his arm or acknowledge the noise. The shadow coat dissolved off his frame gradually — not all at once, just slowly receding, like water draining — and beneath it he looked exactly the same as he had at the start. Composed. Unhurried.
He looked at Zarek.
Zarek was standing now, rolling one shoulder, testing the side Ken had caught with the sweeping construct. Not seriously hurt. Just assessing.
He nodded at Ken once.
Ken returned it.
Brief. Direct.
Then he walked off the field.
⸻
Jelo watched him come back toward the observers.
His enhanced vision ran over Ken’s signature automatically — reading the cost of the fight in the slight reduction of his essence reserves. Not depleted. Not close to it. But not full either. The coat and the tendrils and the wall at the end had drawn from him steadily across the whole exchange.
He filed the number.
Ken had more left than most people probably assumed.
That mattered.
⸻
Atlas exhaled beside him.
"That tendril thing was new."
"He’s used it before," Jelo said. "Not in a tournament setting."
"The reversal was smart," Mira said quietly. "He used Zarek’s own concept against him."
"Pressure with pressure," Atlas said. "Shadow version."
Jelo nodded.
He didn’t add anything.
His mind was already moving forward — past Ken’s fight, past what he’d just watched, toward what came next.
The semi-finals were set.
Ken. Tessa. Jelo. Joan.
Four fighters.
Four spots.
And somewhere in the remaining matches — his name would come up again.
⸻
He looked at his hand briefly.
The draconic warmth was there. Steady. Patient.
He closed his fingers slowly.
Olmo’s voice carried across the field before the noise had fully settled — cutting through it cleanly, unhurried, final.
"Semi-finals."
⸻
A pause.
Just long enough for the word to land properly.
Then —
"Ken. Tessa."
The crowd stilled.
Jelo looked up.
Ken and Tessa.
Shadow manipulation against fluid precision. A fighter who reversed pressure against a fighter who absorbed and outlasted. A methodical dismantler against someone who built sequences across an entire fight and finished them only when the math was certain.
That was going to be something worth watching.
⸻
And after that —
His name.
Jelo exhaled once.
Slow.
Even.
The draconic essence stirred deep beneath the surface — not restless, not urgent.
Just ready.
novelraw