The spear pierced through bone and tal and fla.
The fusion broke.
The Dullahan’s head rolled from its hand.
The light in the beast’s eyes died out.
And Dirga collapsed to one knee.
Breathing like he’d just co out of a war.
Again.
But the arena didn’t shift.
Didn’t pull him back yet.
Sasa appeared above him in a throne of floating dice.
"You survived. Again. I’m so proud," he said with a wink.
Dirga just held up a single finger.
"One. Day. Off."
Sasa gave him a salute.
Snap.
And Dirga vanished — returning to his penthouse, where rest and mory waited for him.
...
The peace was familiar now. Almost comforting.
First ca the hot shower — water tracing the cuts and bruises that hadn’t fully healed.
Then the silence.
Then sleep. Deep. Still. Dreamless.
The next morning, the ritual continued.
He dressed simply: hoodie, sweatpants, and quiet determination.
Took the motorcycle.
Visited Naya.
Telling him about what just happened
He always kissed her forehead before he left.
And he always whispered the sa thing:
"Wait for . I’ll save you."
Back in the penthouse, ti passed like breath.
The next wave was coming.
Round Three.
The pattern had solidified:
Fifty fights, a break.
Then push to the boss.
Now? It would be harder.
Sasa appeared while floating on his back in midair, eating popcorn from a bag labeled "Suffering – Extra Crunchy."
"199 fights this ti," he said cheerfully. "Then the boss at 200. Should be fun."
Dirga’s jaw clenched.
"How many days has it been?"
"Fifteen." Sasa grinned. "You’re halfway through the month."
Dirga knew what that ant.
Fifteen mosquitoes.
And they weren’t just insects anymore.
The camouflage had evolved — so now shimred with light-refraction cloaking, others could phase slightly out of space.
So were fast enough that even sensing them wasn’t enough.
And the bite?
It burned.
Like venom.
Like betrayal under the skin.
Even the Crimson Core struggled now.
It did its best — forming needles, shields, shifting into weapons and tools in response to Dirga’s will — but the sheer number of threats strained even his sharpened instincts.
And still, he endured.
By the third round of training, sothing in Dirga had changed.
His stamina, reflexes, and precision had all sharpened — honed through pain, repetition, and an endless swarm of enemies and mosquitoes.
He wasn’t just fighting anymore.
He was evolving.
This ti, Dirga pushed through 145 brutal matches before needing a break.
But the boss at Match 200?
A zombie.
Not just any zombie — this one looked like it crawled out of the worst kind of apocalypse.
A monster.
Towering taller than most ogres, its fra looked like it had been chiseled from rotting stone — slabs of dense, decaying muscle stitched together over bones thick as steel girders. Veins bulged black and pulsing. Flesh sloughed and regenerated constantly, like it didn’t know whether it was dying or healing.
It didn’t speak. It didn’t grunt.
It just ca at Dirga — a storm of raw instinct and monstrous brutality.
No rhythm. No form. No tactics.
Just force.
And Dirga?
He liked that.
No mind gas. No illusions.
Just strength against strength.
But this one... this one was too strong.
Every strike Dirga landed, it shrugged off.
Every slash, every blow — repaired.
Torn muscles regenerated before the blood hit the ground.
Bones cracked back into place with sickening snaps.
Eyes that should’ve been gone blinked back open.
It was unstoppable.
Unless...
Dirga narrowed his eyes.
One blow. That was the answer.
He focused his breathing. Centered his weight.
Then reached for the Crimson Core.
It pulsed in his hand like it already knew.
With a thought, he unraveled it — the dice transforming into a crimson bandage, winding tightly around his arm, glowing faintly like burning thread.
He flexed his fingers. Closed his fist.
And whispered—
"Punch Style: Collapsing One Point."
His body moved like a coiled cot.
He leapt — pulled the creature toward him with gravity — and t it halfway with a punch that carried everything he had.
Everything.
The world cracked.
The air folded in on itself.
And the zombie’s chest caved in — not like sothing that had been hit, but like sothing that had been devoured by a singularity.
A dying star collapsing in its center.
The beast didn’t get up.
It couldn’t.
Silence followed.
Dirga stood there, breathing hard, arm trembling, blood dripping down his jaw.
Then he exhaled.
Another monster down.
And the path forward still endless.
...
After another brief return to peace, Dirga did what had beco routine.
A shower to wash away the blood and grit.
A change of clothes — yet another pair tossed into the garbage, too torn and stained to salvage.
A quiet visit to the hospital, to Naya.
He didn’t say much. Just held her hand. Whispered he was still fighting.
Then he ca back.
Back to the arena.
Back to war.
Round Four.
Three hundred ninety-nine matches.
Match 400 was the boss.
The final trial.
And the day?
Day 22.
Twenty-two mosquitoes.
They no longer ca in singles.
They arrived like storms.
So ca in clouds — drifting low, humming with death.
Others shot through the air like cursed bullets, their camouflage so advanced it was almost supernatural.
Each bite was fire.
Each sting was agony.
And yet—
Dirga stood.
His senses had evolved into sothing alien.
His perception no longer blinked.
No longer hesitated.
He could see them — anticipate them — feel the air shift as they moved.
Most of them, he killed before they even had a chance to think about stinging him.
But still, they ca.
And still, he fought.
...
Dirga had expected the final round to be 250.
That was the pattern.
That was the logic.
But of course, Sasa never followed logic.
Now... it was 400.
Dirga didn’t argue.
He just trained harder.
From match 200 to 299, Dirga didn’t use a single rest.
He’d stockpiled every minute, every al, every breath.
But from 300 onward — the tone had changed.
The monsters grew tougher. Faster. Smarter.
So bled acid.
So exploded on death.
One had mimicked his own telekinetic attacks.
He bled more.
He scread more.
He learned more.
And he fought.
Harder. Smarter. Desperate.
He used three full rests between match 300 and 399.
And now, standing in the echoing silence after match 399, he could feel it.
The end.
His body was a battleground.
Mosquito welts burned like curses across his arms and neck.
Crimson carved rivers along his ribs.
His right thigh bled openly from a deep gash, soaking the arena floor in dark red pools.
Dirga stood alone in that broken colosseum of hell.
Breath ragged.
Limbs shaking.
And without hesitation, he lifted his head and said to the sky:
"Use all of it. Rest. Food. Water. Everything."
He didn’t care if the final fight killed him.
But he wasn’t going to crawl into it half-prepared.
Because the final boss was waiting.
And Dirga... would et it head-on.
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