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Chapter 105 — THE PRESSURE THAT CHOOSES

The arena did not celebrate Ling Yifan’s fall.

It adjusted.

Stone shifted microscopically beneath Luo Qinghe’s feet as the domain recalibrated. The mineralized lattice running beneath the rigid surface pulsed once, redistributing structural stress across the narrowed platform. The circular stage that remained was smooth, flawless, elevated like an altar at the center of a shattered cathedral.

Below it, fractured terraces hung at crooked angles. Beyond them, the abyss breathed.

Only two remained.

Luo Qinghe.

Bai Qianlan.

The crowd’s roar faded into a dense, anticipatory hush. Tens of thousands leaned forward at once. Even the stabilizing formations above dimd slightly, their light no longer frantic, but strained—like a machine bracing for impact.

Luo stood tall, domain still active, though compressed. The geotry obeyed him absolutely now. No drifting stone. No ambiguous footing. Every line clean. Every edge intentional.

"You’ve outlasted miscalculation," Luo said calmly, eyes locked on Bai. "Now there is no one left to hide behind. No destabilization to exploit."

Bai stood opposite him, hands relaxed at her sides, expression composed.

"I was never hiding," she replied softly.

Luo lifted both hands.

The domain answered in full.

The circular stage tightened another degree, edges sharpening into clean arcs. Beneath the surface, mineralized growth thickened, reinforcing the core. Peripheral fractures sealed. The entire battlefield contracted into a single defined arena.

No blind spots.

No uncertainty.

"This ends with clarity," Luo declared.

He stepped forward.

The air felt heavier—not from gravity, but from compression. The domain was no longer wide and territorial. It was dense. Every inch of space mapped, weighted, accounted for.

Bai did not move.

Luo struck.

The mineralized force erupted in a focused surge aid straight at her center—not to overwhelm, but to test.

Bai pivoted half a step.

The surge passed inches from her shoulder and struck the ground behind her, cracking stone in a precise line.

Luo narrowed his eyes.

"You cannot keep slipping through inevitability."

"I don’t need to," Bai answered.

He moved faster this ti.

A downward strike.

A lateral sweep.

Each movent supported by domain reinforcent beneath his feet. Every angle efficient. Every shift backed by structure.

Bai retreated three steps—not outward, but diagonally, testing the edge of the circular stage.

Her foot landed near the boundary.

The crowd gasped.

One misstep and she would fall.

Luo saw it.

He pressed forward, compressing the platform further.

"Nowhere left," he said.

And then—

He tried to end it.

Both hands ca down.

The domain surged outward in a crushing wave, a full compression strike designed to eliminate both opponent and margin simultaneously.

It was the kind of move that did not leave room for escape.

The kind of move that removed variables.

The circular stage shrank violently.

Stone buckled.

Shockwaves tore outward.

For a heartbeat, both figures were swallowed in mineralized force and dust.

The arena shook.

High above, instructors leaned forward sharply.

"Did he—?"

The dust settled.

One figure stood.

Luo Qinghe.

He exhaled slowly.

Then—

A crack echoed beneath his feet.

Not from Bai.

From the stage itself.

Ling Yifan’s earlier destabilizations had never fully healed. Rong Yueran’s heat fractures had left invisible stress lines beneath Luo’s reinforcent.

And Luo’s final compression strike had concentrated force into the very core he had over-strengthened.

The platform was too rigid.

Too tight.

The stress had nowhere to go.

A spiderweb fracture spread outward from the center of the circular stage.

Luo’s eyes flicked downward.

For the first ti, his domain hesitated.

Bai stepped out of the dust cloud.

Unhard.

She had not dodged the compression strike.

She had moved before it fully ford.

Her illusion had not changed sight.

It had altered anticipation.

Luo had compressed space where he believed she would be.

She had not been there.

"You overcorrected," Bai said softly.

Luo’s jaw tightened.

He attempted to reinforce the fracture.

The domain surged downward.

But this ti—

The arena rejected it.

The stabilizers flared violently, white sigils flashing across the entire battlefield. Warning alarms echoed faintly in the background.

The Dragon Turtle dean’s expression darkened.

"He’s overextended."

The Azure Dragon dean nodded slowly.

"The arena won’t accept further compression."

Luo felt it.

The resistance.

The boundary between domain authority and structural limit.

He had expanded too wide earlier.

Compressed too tightly now.

The system was pushing back.

The ground beneath him shifted—just slightly—but enough.

Bai moved.

Not quickly.

Precisely.

She stepped toward him across the cracking surface.

Luo adjusted his footing.

The fracture widened half a breath later than he expected.

His heel slipped one inch.

Just one.

But in a compressed domain, one inch was catastrophic.

He compensated.

Too much.

Bai’s hand brushed his forearm.

No force.

Just presence.

His body responded instinctively to correct balance in the direction of her touch.

The fracture split.

The circular stage tilted.

Luo’s center of gravity shifted beyond recovery.

The domain surged desperately to reinforce.

The arena rejected the attempt.

The stabilizers flared bright.

Ergency light wrapped around Luo’s body as he crossed the boundary line.

For a split second, suspended in elimination glow, Luo t Bai’s gaze.

Not anger.

Not disbelief.

Understanding.

"You never fought the ground," he said quietly.

Bai shook her head faintly.

"I waited for you to trust it."

Light swallowed him.

ELIMINATION CONFIRD.

The arena froze.

Silence.

Then—

Detonation.

The roar of tens of thousands tore through the sky. The fractured terraces trembled under the sheer volu of it. Stabilizers dimd slowly as the pressure released.

On the cracked circular stage, alone beneath the open sky, Bai Qianlan stood.

No domain.

No flas.

No spectacle.

Only calm.

The illusion dissolved entirely.

There was no need for it now.

High above, the Vermilion dean smiled faintly.

The Dragon Turtle dean folded his arms, exhaling through his nose.

The Azure Dragon dean’s eyes rested on Bai for a long mont.

"...Clarity failed," he murmured.

"No," the Vermilion dean corrected gently.

"Certainty did."

The arena lights flared one final ti.

The announcer’s voice finally returned, strained but steady.

"VICTOR OF STAGE THREE, PART TWO... GRAND PRIX FRESHMAN CHAMPIONSHIP..."

A beat.

"...BAI QIANLAN!"

The na echoed across the stadium like a bell struck in open sky.

In the stands, Long Hao watched quietly, lips curving into the faintest smile.

Longyu huffed in his mind.

"...You planned that."

Long Hao closed his eyes briefly.

"No," he said.

"She did."

On the battlefield below, Bai lifted her gaze toward the horizon—not triumphant, not arrogant.

Simply aware.

The tournant had asked who controlled power.

She had answered with sothing else.

And as the crowd continued to roar, one truth settled across the academy world like a whisper carried by wind—

The strongest presence in the arena had never been the loudest.

For one full heartbeat after the announcent echoed across the arena, there was silence.

Then the stadium detonated.

Sound did not rise gradually—it erupted. A wall of noise crashed outward from every tier, every balcony, every floating platform packed with spectators. Banners snapped violently in the wind generated by sheer collective movent. Spirit-lanterns trembled in midair. Even the reinforced glass of the VIP chamber humd faintly under the pressure of tens of thousands screaming the sa na.

"BAI QIANLAN!"

"ILLUSION QUEEN!"

"AZURE DRAGON!"

So stood on their seats. Others slamd fists against railings. Several gamblers collapsed back into chairs in disbelief, clutching betting slips like sacred relics. The rchant Guild representatives scrambled to adjust projection boards as odds recalibrated in frantic flashes of light.

Below, the fractured circular stage glowed with stabilizing sigils, slowly repairing cracks that had defined the end of the battle. Bai remained standing at its center, still and composed, but the world around her refused to be calm.

On the lower tiers, Azure Dragon students erupted in wild celebration. Chen Wulian leapt over two rows of seats, ignoring the bruises from his own elimination, roaring loud enough to drown out half the arena.

"I TOLD YOU! I TOLD YOU SHE’D DO IT!"

Ouyang Xue’er covered her mouth briefly, eyes shining—not shocked, but deeply satisfied. Qin Shuo adjusted his glasses three separate tis in disbelief, muttering numbers under his breath that no longer made sense.

"She altered probability density under compression..." he whispered. "She didn’t win through variance. She won through forced correction..."

Jin Ruolan punched the air repeatedly. "THAT’S OUR GIRL!"

Above them, Ling Yifan stepped out of the elimination boundary zone, healed but still visibly exhausted. The mont he reappeared in the public stands, a wave of cheers swept toward him as well. So called his na, others applauded his performance, but he did not look at the crowd.

He looked at the stage.

And when Bai finally turned her head slightly toward him, he nodded once.

No regret.

Only acknowledgnt.

In the VIP chamber, silhouettes shifted behind the darkened glass. One figure leaned forward slightly. Another tapped sothing into a data slate. A third simply folded their hands and watched in silence.

The Dragon Turtle dean let out a low laugh, shaking his head. "Hah! No explosions. No dominance. Just... that."

The Vermilion dean smiled softly, eyes warm but sharp. "Control is loud. Mastery is quiet."

The Azure Dragon dean said nothing.

But the faint upward curve at the corner of his mouth was unmistakable.

Back in the arena, the announcent repeated again—louder, clearer—formalizing what everyone already knew.

"CHAMPION OF THE GRAND PRIX FRESHMAN CHAMPIONSHIP—BAI QIANLAN OF AZURE DRAGON ACADEMY!"

Confetti-like spirit fragnts burst overhead, dissolving into shimring motes of light that rained down across the battlefield. Musicians stationed along the outer terraces struck ceremonial chords that rolled like thunder beneath the roar of the audience.

So spectators wept openly.

Others stared in stunned admiration.

Because what they had witnessed was not brute force.

Not divine authority.

Not overwhelming dominance.

They had witnessed a victory built on patience.

And patience, when executed perfectly, felt far more terrifying than power.

At the center of it all, Bai Qianlan finally exhaled.

The noise washed over her.

But she remained calm.

And the world, despite its volu, felt very quiet.

[Chapter ENDS]

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