Chapter 80: Chapter 80: The Round of Sixteen — The Final Cut (Part 3)
The battlefield had fallen into a strange and oppressive silence, one that pressed down upon the arena like an invisible weight. It was not the silence of exhaustion, nor the quiet that followed the end of a battle. Instead, it was the kind of silence that erged when a fight had reached its most dangerous and decisive mont.
Every person present could feel it.
Even those who lacked combat experience instinctively understood that what ca next would determine everything.
At the center of the arena stood Aether.
He did not move.
His posture remained relaxed, almost deceptively so, as if he were rely observing rather than participating in a life-or-death confrontation. His breathing was slow and controlled, so steady that it seed unaffected by the intensity of the battle.
Yet his stillness was not passivity.
It was precision.
His eyes remained fixed ahead, sharp and unwavering, taking in every subtle detail of the battlefield. The shifting air currents, the faint distortions caused by rapid movent, the almost imperceptible fluctuations in his opponent’s rhythm—nothing escaped his awareness.
He was no longer simply reacting to the battle.
He was anticipating it.
Across from him, the atmosphere had changed.
His opponent, who had once moved with seamless confidence, now stood with a subtle tension in his posture. It was not obvious, not sothing easily noticed by the average observer, but to Aether, it was unmistakable.
The rhythm had broken.
The sleek, blade-like creature that had previously dominated the battlefield with its terrifying speed continued to move, but its presence had shifted. It no longer vanished completely into motion. Instead, it flickered in shorter bursts, reappearing in calculated intervals, circling at a distance as if searching for an opening that no longer existed.
The precision was still there.
The lethality remained.
But sothing fundantal had changed.
There was hesitation.
Not weakness—
But interference.
The opponent exhaled slowly, his gaze never leaving Aether.
"I have to say," he began, his voice calm but carrying a faint trace of tension that had not been present earlier, "I underestimated how quickly you would adapt. Most people struggle just to follow the movent, let alone understand it. But you... you didn’t just react. You observed, analyzed, and then you dismantled everything I built."
Aether remained silent.
Not because he had nothing to say, but because he did not need to say anything. Words would not influence the outco of what was about to happen.
The opponent gave a small, almost self-aware smile.
"I suppose I shouldn’t expect a response from you," he continued. "You’re the type who lets your actions speak. In a situation like this, that’s probably the most efficient approach. Still... it would have been interesting to hear what you think of my technique."
Still, Aether said nothing.
Inside his mind, the familiar voice spoke once again, calm and perceptive.
"He is hesitating," she said softly. "It is subtle, but it is there. His confidence has been disrupted, and that hesitation is now affecting his execution."
Aether responded just as quietly.
"Yes. Before, his movents were continuous. Now, they are interrupted by thought."
"That interruption will grow if pressure continues," she added. "He is beginning to doubt the consistency of his own rhythm."
That difference, though small, was critical.
Instinct allowed for fluidity. It allowed for seamless transitions between attack and movent, where each action flowed naturally into the next. But once thought entered the process, even for a fraction of a second, that flow was disrupted.
And in a battle of this level—
That disruption was enough.
The creature moved again.
It surged forward in a sudden burst, its body cutting through the air with razor-sharp precision. The attack was direct, aid at a vital point, designed to end the battle instantly.
But Aether saw it.
Not the movent.
The hesitation.
Just a fraction of a second.
Enough.
"He’s thinking now," the voice in his mind observed.
Aether nodded slightly.
"And that ans he’s slower," he replied.
Not in speed.
But in timing.
"Maintain forward pressure," Aether said calmly. "Do not allow him space to stabilize his rhythm again."
The Fla Sovereign Pup responded imdiately.
It advanced.
Not aggressively, not recklessly, but with controlled intent. Its flas burned steadily, tightly condensed around its body rather than flaring outward. The heat remained present, but it was contained, ready to be directed at any mont.
Every step it took was asured.
Every movent intentional.
The opponent’s expression shifted slightly as he watched this.
"You’re not retreating anymore," he said slowly. "You’re reducing the distance deliberately. That ans you’ve already understood what my advantage depends on... and you’re actively dismantling it piece by piece."
Aether did not respond.
Because the answer was obvious.
Speed required space.
Without space, speed lost its edge.
By closing that space, Aether was not simply reacting—he was dismantling the foundation of his opponent’s strategy.
The creature vanished again.
But this ti, it did not reappear imdiately.
Aether’s gaze sharpened.
"He’s preparing sothing," the voice said.
Aether nodded.
"Yes. This will be his final attempt. He is gathering everything into a single decisive strike."
Across the battlefield, the opponent raised his hand slowly. The hesitation that had once lingered in his expression disappeared, replaced by a singular focus.
All distractions were gone.
Only intent remained.
"Let’s end this," he said firmly.
The creature responded instantly.
Its entire body began to compress, the tallic surface along its form shimring as all of its energy condensed into a single point. The air around it grew unnaturally still, as though even the environnt recognized the concentration of power.
Even the spectators felt it.
A pressure.
A warning.
Sothing decisive was coming.
Then—
It disappeared.
Not like before.
This was not speed.
Not movent.
Not even a blur.
It was simply gone.
The audience leaned forward, confusion spreading among them.
"...Where did it go?"
"I can’t see anything... not even a trace..."
Aether did not move.
Because he understood.
"This isn’t speed," he said quietly. "It’s concealnt. He has removed all unnecessary motion to eliminate detection."
The battlefield fell into complete stillness.
No movent.
No sound.
Even the wind seed to have stopped.
Ti itself felt suspended.
Aether closed his eyes briefly.
Not to shut out the world—
But to perceive it more clearly.
Without relying on sight, the distortions beca clearer. The shifts in air pressure, the subtle displacent of energy, the faintest indication of movent—
All of it pointed to a single location.
Aether opened his eyes.
"It’s above us," he said calmly.
At that exact mont—
The creature reappeared.
Directly overhead.
Its entire form had sharpened into a single, devastating strike, all of its speed and precision condensed into one final attack. It descended like a blade from the sky, aid with absolute accuracy.
The opponent’s voice followed.
"This is the end," he said.
The Fla Sovereign Pup moved.
Not backward.
Not to evade.
But forward.
The opponent’s eyes widened slightly.
"You’re intercepting it?" he said in disbelief. "You’re choosing to et that attack head-on? Do you even understand how much force is concentrated in that strike?"
Aether finally responded.
"There is no need to avoid sothing that can be stopped at its weakest point."
Ti slowed.
The descending strike and the rising counter closed the distance between them.
"Now," Aether said.
The Fla Sovereign Pup struck.
Not at the body—
But at the trajectory.
Its flas condensed to their absolute limit, the heat intensifying to such a degree that the air warped visibly. Every ounce of energy was focused into a single point.
Not to overpower—
But to disrupt.
The claw t the attack mid-air.
The collision was imdiate.
A massive explosion erupted across the battlefield, the shockwave spreading outward with trendous force. The platform trembled, and the audience instinctively shielded their eyes as the arena was engulfed in light and smoke.
For a mont—
Nothing could be seen.
Silence followed.
Heavy.
Uncertain.
Then slowly—
The smoke began to clear.
Two figures stood at the center.
The Fla Sovereign Pup remained standing, its flas still burning, though slightly dimd from the intensity of the clash. Its stance, however, remained firm.
Unshaken.
The tallic creature stood opposite it.
Completely still.
Then—
A crack appeared.
A thin line across its surface.
Then another.
And another.
CRACK.
The sound echoed across the arena.
The creature’s body fractured, breaking apart into countless fragnts that dissolved into light before reaching the ground.
Silence filled the arena.
The opponent stood motionless, staring at the empty space where his beast had been.
After a mont, he exhaled slowly.
"So that’s the difference," he said quietly.
He looked at Aether.
"You didn’t just match my speed, and you didn’t simply counter my attacks. You understood everything—my rhythm, my intent, even my limits. And once you understood it... you ended the fight without hesitation. You didn’t leave room for recovery."
Aether did not respond.
Because the outco spoke clearly enough.
The opponent gave a small nod.
"I surrender."
The instructor’s voice echoed across the arena.
"Winner—Aether."
This ti, there was no surprise.
Only acknowledgnt.
"He controlled the entire battle..."
"He didn’t rush..."
"He waited for the exact mont..."
Aether turned away calmly, his expression unchanged.
The Fla Sovereign Pup returned to his side, its flas settling into a steady, quiet glow, as if the intensity of the battle had never existed.
Within his mind, the voice spoke again.
"You’ve grown stronger," she said softly. "Not just in power, but in understanding. Your ability to read and dismantle your opponent has improved significantly."
Aether replied quietly.
"Not enough."
Because he could still feel it.
The gap.
The distance between himself and those at the very top.
As he stepped down from the platform, the atmosphere around him shifted once more. The remaining participants no longer saw him as just another competitor.
He was a threat.
A real one.
From sixteen—
To eight.
The tournant had reached its next stage.
And ahead—
Stronger opponents waited.
Valen.
Liora.
And others who had yet to reveal their true strength.
From the stands, two figures watched silently.
Valen’s gaze remained calm, but focused, as if already analyzing how this battle would influence his own strategy.
Liora’s eyes lingered on Aether, a faint smile forming, one that carried both interest and anticipation.
"You’ve co this far," she whispered. "But the real battles... are just beginning. I wonder how far your understanding can truly take you."
Back in the preparation area, Aether stood quietly.
The noise of the arena faded behind him.
"You’re getting closer," the voice said.
Aether nodded.
"Yes."
There was no hesitation.
No doubt.
Only clarity.
Because from this point onward—
There would be no more holding back.
No more observation without consequence.
Only true battles.
Only absolute control.
Only—
Victory.
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