Chapter 147: Chapter 146: First Tournant Battle
Morning did not so much arrive at the Imperial Championship Arena as it erupted.
The first light of dawn barely touched the uppermost edges of the colossal structure before the noise began swelling again, louder than it had been the previous day, heavier, denser, layered with expectation that bordered on desperation. If the opening ceremony had been spectacle—carefully crafted, dazzling, theatrical—then today was sothing far more honest, far more brutal.
Today was where illusion ended.
Today was where strength would either stand or shatter.
From the highest tiers of the arena to the lowest stone corridors beneath it, the entire structure pulsed with life. Vendors shouted from elevated walkways, their voices overlapping into a chaotic chorus as they sold food, flags, lucky charms, and rumor-laced predictions. Nobles reclined in private suites draped with silk and guarded by silent retainers, their expressions composed yet their eyes sharp with calculation. Students from dozens of academies waved banners in coordinated groups, chanting the nas of their champions with fervor that bordered on fanaticism. Bookmakers scribbled frantically, adjusting odds every few minutes as whispers of yesterday’s performances continued to spread like wildfire.
No one wanted to miss the beginning.
No one wanted to be wrong.
Because the first matches of the National Championship were not just about victory—they were about *statent*.
And every team stepping onto that battlefield knew it.
Beneath the arena floor, in the competitor corridors carved from reinforced stone, the atmosphere was entirely different. The noise above filtered down as a distant, constant roar, like waves crashing against unseen cliffs, but here the tension was contained, compressed, and sharpened into sothing far more dangerous.
Tars stretched their limbs beside their contract beasts, murmuring quiet commands or reassurances. So moved through rehearsed sequences of motion, testing reflexes, checking balance, grounding themselves in familiarity before chaos. Instructors leaned close to their teams, issuing final warnings in low voices, their words precise and deliberate. A few contestants sat cross-legged with eyes closed, breathing slowly in ditation, attempting to steady their minds against the storm waiting above. Others were less composed—leaning against pillars, pale-faced, swallowing nausea, or stepping aside to vomit discreetly where no one important would notice.
Every reaction was valid.
Every reaction ant the sa thing.
They understood what was coming.
Near one of the designated gates, slightly apart from the densest clusters of competitors, stood the representatives of Skygate Academy.
Valen was the most visibly alive among them. He rolled his shoulders in slow, deliberate motions, muscles shifting beneath his clothing like coiled cables preparing to snap into action. There was an unmistakable energy radiating from him—anticipation sharpened into hunger, excitent bordering on aggression. He looked less like a competitor awaiting a match and more like a predator waiting for the cage door to open.
Liora stood a short distance away, her composure forming a stark contrast. Her fingers adjusted the silver clasp of her battle coat with precise, unhurried movents, her posture straight, her expression calm. There was no visible tension in her, no wasted motion. Yet the stillness she carried was not softness—it was control, absolute and deliberate, like a blade resting in its sheath, waiting for the exact mont to be drawn.
Aether leaned against the stone wall behind them, his posture relaxed to the point of appearing almost indifferent. His eyes were half-closed, as though he might drift into sleep at any mont, yet there was nothing unfocused about him. He was listening—to the footsteps, the voices, the subtle shifts in energy around him. Observing. asuring. Preparing in a way that required no visible effort.
Sowhere unseen, the Fallen Succubus lounged comfortably, her voice slipping into the space between them with quiet amusent.
"Of the three of you," she murmured lazily, "only one is preparing in a way I actually approve of."
Valen imdiately pointed at himself, grinning with absolute confidence. "Obviously."
She did not respond.
She did not need to.
Instructor Rowan approached them shortly afterward, his expression set in the familiar mix of irritation and focus that had beco his default during the past few days. He crossed his arms as he stopped in front of them, his gaze sweeping briefly across each of their faces before settling into sothing more serious.
"Your first opponent," he began, his voice low but firm, "is Blackstone Combat Institute."
Valen’s grin widened slightly.
Rowan continued, ignoring him. "Three-man team. They specialize in direct assault doctrine—no subtlety, no layered tactics. They rely on overwhelming force, durable beasts, and early montum. If they get ahead, they don’t slow down."
Valen cracked his knuckles softly. "So, what you’re saying is... they’re straightforward."
"I’m saying," Rowan replied flatly, "that they’re dangerous if you let them dictate the pace."
Liora tilted her head slightly, considering. "Their beasts?"
"Durable. Impact-focused. Built to break formations."
Aether opened his eyes fully, his gaze sharpening just slightly. Rowan t it.
"Captain?"
Aether’s answer ca without hesitation. "Valen leads."
For a fraction of a second, even Rowan paused.
Then Valen’s grin broke into sothing broader, sharper, almost feral.
"Now that," he said with clear satisfaction, "is proper leadership."
Liora glanced sideways at Aether. "Or an efficient way to avoid unnecessary effort."
Aether pushed himself off the wall. "Both can be effective."
The call ca soon after.
The announcer’s voice surged through the arena above them, amplified and resonant, carrying a weight that made even the stone beneath their feet seem to vibrate.
"First Round Match Seven!"
The roar of the crowd swelled in response, anticipation spiking.
"Representing the eastern champions..."
A pause—intentional, calculated.
"Skygate Academy!"
The reaction was imdiate and overwhelming. Even from within the corridor, the intensity of the sound could be felt, the chants rising, spreading, taking shape.
Their gate began to open.
Light spilled in.
Valen stepped forward first.
He did not rush, did not hesitate. Each step was heavy, deliberate, confident, as though the arena floor already belonged to him. His presence alone seed to press against the space around him, commanding attention without needing to demand it.
Liora followed, her movents smooth and controlled, every step asured, her expression unchanged. If Valen was force given form, she was precision embodied—quiet, composed, and no less dangerous.
Aether walked last.
Hands behind his back.
Expression neutral.
As though he were entering a quiet hall instead of a battlefield watched by tens of thousands.
The reaction from the crowd shifted almost imdiately.
"He’s at the back?"
"Where are his beasts?"
"Is he injured?"
"Or is he just arrogant?"
Speculation spread rapidly, fueled by rumor and expectation.
Aether ignored all of it.
Across the arena, the opposing gate slamd open with a heavy tallic crash.
The Blackstone Combat Institute team entered like a unified force of impact and intent.
Their armor was functional, scarred, devoid of ornant. Their movents were direct, purposeful, aggressive. There was no attempt at spectacle, no interest in presentation. Everything about them communicated a single ssage:
They were here to break things.
Their beasts erged alongside them, each one a reflection of that philosophy.
The Ironhide Boar snorted heavily, its plated hide gleaming with a dull tallic sheen, hooves cracking against the stone with each step. The Stonejaw Hound prowled low to the ground, muscles coiled, jaws slightly parted to reveal crushing teeth built for tearing through armor. The Twin-Horn Rhino Lizard moved with slow, terrifying weight, each step deliberate, each breath a low rumble of contained force.
The crowd responded with approval.
There was sothing universally respected about raw, visible power.
The referee, an elder standing atop a floating spirit platform, raised his hand.
"Three-on-three tactical elimination," he announced clearly. "Victory conditions: surrender, incapacitation, ring-out, or beast defeat."
His gaze shifted briefly toward Blackstone.
"No lethal strikes. No deliberate crippling."
One of the Blackstone tars spat to the side.
The elder did not react.
The teams took their positions.
Distance stretched between them.
Silence fell.
The Blackstone captain looked across the field, his gaze landing on Aether at the rear. A slow, mocking grin spread across his face.
"So this is the famous champion?" he called out, his voice carrying easily. "You send your servants first?"
Valen stepped forward imdiately, his smile sharpening into sothing dangerous. "Say that again," he said, voice low but clear, "and take your ti with it."
Aether’s voice ca from behind him, calm, unhurried.
"Break them quickly."
Valen did not look back.
"Gladly."
The gong struck.
Blackstone moved instantly.
There was no hesitation, no testing phase, no probing attacks. The mont the signal sounded, all three tars surged forward in a tight wedge formation, their beasts charging alongside them with thunderous force. The ground shook beneath the synchronized assault, the air itself seeming to compress under the weight of their montum.
"They’re not holding back!"
"They’re going for an imdiate break!"
The crowd reacted in waves, voices rising as the speed and aggression of the charge beca clear.
Valen moved to et them.
A burst of bronze light exploded outward as he summoned his beast.
The Titancrest Fangbear appeared with a heavy impact, its massive fra slamming into the arena floor with enough force to crack the stone beneath it. It was larger than before—significantly larger—its muscles thicker, its presence heavier, its aura denser. Bronze-striped fur layered across its body like natural armor, its fanged maw opening in a low, rumbling growl that vibrated through the air.
Gasps rippled through the crowd.
"It evolved!"
"That wasn’t its form before!"
"When did that happen?!"
The Ironhide Boar hit first.
It charged directly, unstoppable, its montum built for one purpose—to crush anything in its path.
Valen raised one hand, pointing forward.
"Stop it."
The Fangbear t the charge head-on.
The collision detonated with a thunderous crack, the force of impact splitting the stone beneath them and sending a shockwave outward. Dust erupted into the air, obscuring the imdiate aftermath for a fraction of a second.
Then the shape of the struggle beca visible.
The boar was not pushing forward.
It was being pushed back.
Slowly at first.
Then faster.
Then lifted entirely as the Fangbear surged forward, its strength overwhelming the charge, flipping the massive beast aside and sending it crashing across the arena floor.
The Stonejaw Hound lunged from the flank, jaws aid for Valen’s throat.
At the sa ti, the Rhino Lizard barreled toward Liora, its path direct, unstoppable.
Aether did not move.
He watched.
asured.
Silver light blood beside Liora.
The Moondream Hare appeared.
Small.
Elegant.
Deceptively unassuming.
Several nobles frowned, confusion flickering across their expressions.
"A rabbit?"
It vanished.
It reappeared behind the charging Rhino Lizard in an instant so precise it seed like reality itself had skipped.
A single, gentle kick landed against the beast’s hind leg.
The effect was imdiate.
A crescent-shaped pulse of force rippled outward, disrupting the creature’s balance at the exact mont of maximum forward montum. The massive beast stumbled, its charge collapsing sideways as its center of gravity shifted beyond recovery.
It crashed directly into its teammate.
The impact was catastrophic.
The crowd erupted.
"What was that?!"
"Teleportation?!"
"No—controlled displacent!"
anwhile, Valen caught the Stonejaw Hound mid-leap.
With his bare hands.
He twisted with the montum, redirecting the force downward, slamming the beast into the arena floor with bone-rattling impact. The Fangbear followed imdiately, its massive paw descending like a falling boulder, striking the ground beside the hound’s head with enough force to crater the stone.
The ssage was clear.
Yield.
The beast did.
The Blackstone captain roared, desperation creeping into his voice. "Get up!"
It did not.
Everything collapsed from there.
Coordination broke.
Montum shattered.
Liora’s Hare moved like a phantom, appearing and disappearing in rapid succession, striking precise points that disrupted footing, balance, and timing. Every attempt at regrouping fell apart before it could form.
Valen advanced like a storm given form, laughter breaking from him as he drove forward, his beast tearing through resistance with overwhelming force.
The Rhino Lizard was seized by its horn, lifted, and thrown into the Ironhide Boar, both beasts crashing into the arena barrier in a tangle of defeated mass.
One Blackstone tar broke formation.
Desperate.
He rushed toward Aether.
For the first ti, Aether moved.
One step.
One shift of weight.
One precise strike.
His palm connected with the attacker’s chest, not with brute force, but with perfectly directed impact.
The man flew backward, breath leaving his body as he hit the ground and rolled, coughing violently.
He raised his hand.
"I yield!"
Silence.
Then explosion.
The referee’s voice cut through the noise.
"Winner—Skygate Academy!"
The arena erupted.
Not just with cheers—but with realization.
They had dominated.
Completely.
And Aether had barely acted.
Valen returned first, grinning broadly, energy still radiating from him. "I think I handled most of it."
Aether nodded slightly. "You handled enough."
Liora stepped closer, her gaze settling briefly on Aether. "You were inefficiently inactive."
"Efficient," he corrected.
She exhaled softly. "You repeat that word often."
"It remains accurate."
Above them, in the royal balcony, Lion’s smile had thinned.
"They’re stronger than expected," one advisor murmured.
Lion did not look away from Aether. "No," he said quietly. "They’re more controlled than expected."
As the team exited the arena, the chants followed them, echoing through the corridors.
Valen absorbed it openly.
Liora tolerated it.
Aether ignored it.
But beyond the visible celebration, in the shadows where attention shifted from admiration to analysis, observers wrote quickly, urgently.
Because what had just been displayed was not full strength.
Not even close.
And that made it far more dangerous.
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