Chapter 97 — WHEN THE FIELD TURNS HOSTILE
The battlefield did not explode.
It tilted.
At first, no one understood what that ant. There was no sudden roar of power, no dramatic burst of aura that announced a turning point. The air did not scream. The ground did not shatter. Instead, the balance of the arena shifted so subtly that only those who were already sensitive to danger felt it crawl up their spine.
A wrongness.
A sense that the rules everyone had been following had quietly changed.
Luo Qinghe stood at the heart of his domain, posture relaxed, hands folded loosely behind his back as if he were observing a garden rather than a battlefield littered with shattered terrain and eliminated fighters. The erald glow beneath his feet pulsed once, slow and deep, like a heartbeat that had decided to change its rhythm.
The Verdant Sovereign’s Embrace responded imdiately.
Vines thickened. Roots twisted tighter. The greenery that had once rely restricted movent now carried intent. It no longer reacted to threats.
It hunted.
Several fighters noticed too late.
A contestant from a mid-tier academy sprinted along what he believed was a safe corridor, only for the ground beneath him to rupture as roots burst upward, wrapping around his legs and torso. He barely had ti to scream before he was flung bodily across the boundary, crashing hard against the arena wall.
ELIMINATION CONFIRD.
Another tried to retreat through a scorched path opened earlier by phoenix flas. The vines surged across the burned ground, regenerated instantly, and tightened like iron cables around his limbs. His fire sputtered, smothered by sheer density, before he vanished beyond the boundary in a violent arc.
ELIMINATION CONFIRD.
The crowd’s roar shifted.
Earlier, there had been excitent. Anticipation. Now there was sothing else beneath the noise.
Awe.
Fear.
In the instructors’ chamber, several figures leaned forward instinctively.
"He’s compressing the battlefield," a Vermillion strategist said sharply. "Forcing everyone closer."
"He’s done waiting," another muttered.
i Ying’s eyes were locked on one figure in particular. "Ouyang," she said quietly, almost under her breath. "Move."
On the battlefield, Ouyang Xue’er had already felt it.
The cold around her had been steady, controlled, expanding outward in a calculated pattern that froze water channels, stiffened stone, and slowed plant growth. But now, the vines near her position did not retreat.
They adapted.
Leaves curled inward, surfaces roughening. Sap crystallized, reinforcing structure rather than weakening it. Roots burrowed deeper, bypassing frozen layers entirely.
Ouyang exhaled slowly.
"So you finally decided," she murmured.
The ground trembled again, not with the crushing pressure Yue Hanran had wielded earlier, but with sothing more insidious. Everywhere at once. As if the battlefield itself had begun to breathe.
Luo Qinghe opened his eyes fully.
"Azure Dragon has been comfortable," he said calmly, his voice carrying across the fractured terrain without effort. "That ends now."
The domain surged.
Paths closed. Safe zones collapsed. Fighters who had been circling cautiously found themselves cut off from retreat in the space of a single heartbeat. Vines snapped upward like whips, roots erupted beneath unsuspecting feet, and the green-lit canopy overhead thickened into sothing oppressive.
A Frostcloud contestant tried to dash past Ouyang’s zone, desperate to escape the encroaching plant control.
She didn’t even turn.
The temperature around her plunged.
Frost exploded outward in a sharp, controlled arc, ice forming in layered sheets that snapped, shattered, and reford as thermal shock rippled through the terrain. The ground scread as reinforced stone cracked under the sudden cold.
The runner froze mid-step.
Literally.
His legs locked, breath catching as ice crept up from his feet, locking joints, numbing muscles. Ouyang lifted her staff and tapped the frozen ground once.
The ice shattered outward.
The force launched him cleanly off the battlefield and across the boundary, where he skidded to a stop, unconscious.
ELIMINATION CONFIRD.
The crowd erupted.
"ICE QUEEN!"
"THAT WAS INSTANT!"
"AZURE DRAGON IS STILL IN THIS!"
Ouyang didn’t acknowledge it. Her gaze had already shifted.
Three figures converged on her almost simultaneously, drawn by the sudden opening in the battlefield and the perception that she was isolated.
A Vermillion striker lunged from the left, phoenix fla compressed into a narrow, piercing lance ant to break through ice defenses.
From the right, a Dragon Turtle brawler charged head-on, stone reinforcent thickening his limbs as he sought to overwhelm her with raw mass.
Behind her, a Silvermoon support-type slipped forward silently, dagger coated in paralytic toxin aid for the spine.
Ouyang’s eyes flicked once.
Left. Right. Behind.
She exhaled.
The frost condensed.
She spun, staff sweeping low as a circular wall of ice erupted upward, deflecting the fla lance into the air where it dissipated harmlessly. She pivoted mid-motion, palm slamming into the frozen ground.
The ice rose.
Not jagged. Not chaotic.
Smooth. Controlled.
A ramp.
The Dragon Turtle brawler’s charge betrayed him as his feet lost traction instantly. Montum carried him sideways, helpless, sliding directly into a sudden frost spike that erupted beneath him and launched his body beyond the boundary.
ELIMINATION CONFIRD.
The Silvermoon fighter never reached her.
The air behind Ouyang crystallized, freezing moisture in his lungs the mont he inhaled sharply. His body seized mid-step, eyes widening as he collapsed forward, sliding unconscious across the boundary.
ELIMINATION CONFIRD.
The Vermillion striker tried to retreat, flas flaring in panic.
Too slow.
Ouyang flicked her wrist.
A needle of compressed ice pierced the ground at his feet and detonated upward, the blast hurling him cleanly out of bounds.
ELIMINATION CONFIRD.
Three eliminations.
One breath.
The crowd scread, voices overlapping into a deafening roar.
In the instructors’ chamber, a senior observer leaned forward, stunned. "That wasn’t aggression," he said. "That was denial."
i Ying allowed herself a single slow breath. "...She learned."
On the battlefield, Ouyang turned her gaze upward, toward the green-lit canopy above. Luo Qinghe t her eyes across the arena.
Their domains pressed against each other.
Ice versus life.
Stillness versus persistence.
"You’re becoming inconvenient," Luo Qinghe said mildly.
Ouyang lifted her staff slightly. "Good."
Before the tension could snap, the air ignited.
Phoenix flas surged outward in a blinding arc, heat rolling across the battlefield like a tidal wave. Ice hissed violently as fire t frost, steam exploding upward in dense white clouds.
Rong Yueran stepped forward at last.
Her aura changed.
The playful flicker vanished completely, replaced by sothing heavy, controlled, absolute. The flas around her condensed, no longer wild or sprawling, but focused into white-hot streams that distorted the air itself.
"Enough," she said calmly, her voice carrying authority. "You’re not the only one allowed to reshape the field."
She raised her hand.
The fire answered.
A phoenix-shaped inferno erupted outward, carving a blazing corridor straight through Luo Qinghe’s domain. Vines burned to ash instantly, roots blackening and retracting under overwhelming heat.
Ice near Ouyang’s position lted violently, water flashing into steam before refreezing at the edges.
The battlefield groaned.
Luo Qinghe’s eyes narrowed for the first ti. "...So you kept that hidden."
Rong Yueran didn’t smile. "I don’t like wasting power."
She stepped fully into the arena, flas spiraling around her as she claid territory through sheer presence.
The crowd lost its mind.
"VERMILLION STRIKES BACK!"
"THAT FLA—!"
"SHE’S SERIOUS NOW!"
In the VIP chamber, several figures snapped to attention.
"That level of fla control..."
"She’s not burning randomly."
"She’s commanding."
The Dragon Turtle dean laughed loudly. "HAHA! GOOD! NOW THIS IS A FIGHT!"
The Azure Dragon dean sighed, rubbing his temple. "...Why do they all insist on breaking the battlefield?"
Plant, ice, and fire collided.
The arena’s stabilizing formations flared at full output, straining to keep the terrain intact as pressure spiked beyond projected limits. Stone cracked. Water boiled. Roots shattered, regrew, and burned again.
Several remaining fighters fled instinctively, unwilling to be caught between titans.
Two failed.
One was swallowed by collapsing terrain as Yue Hanran reinforced ground elsewhere, either unable or unwilling to save him.
ELIMINATION CONFIRD.
Another misjudged the reach of Rong Yueran’s fla control and was launched out of bounds by a heat shockwave.
ELIMINATION CONFIRD.
Numbers dropped rapidly.
And through it all, Ling Yifan moved.
He did not charge.
He did not shout.
He walked.
Fire split before his path. Ice hardened beneath his steps. Vines recoiled just enough to avoid contact.
A desperate fighter lunged at him, sensing opportunity in the chaos.
Ling Yifan didn’t slow.
The spear reversed grip. One clean strike to the shoulder. Not lethal. Not dramatic.
Balance shattered.
Montum carried the fighter across the boundary.
ELIMINATION CONFIRD.
Ling Yifan didn’t look back.
His eyes were fixed on the center of the battlefield, where Luo Qinghe and Rong Yueran reshaped the world around them.
High above, Long Hao watched without moving.
Inside him, the Eclipse System pulsed harder than before, unseen logs flickering erratically. Longyu hovered uneasily, her glow flickering.
"This is bad," she whispered. "They’re escalating too fast."
Long Hao’s gaze darkened slightly. "...And they’re forcing decisions."
Below, three powers pressed against one another, each refusing to yield.
Plant asserting control.
Ice denying space.
Fire claiming dominance.
The battle royale had crossed its point of no return.
And only those willing to burn, freeze, or crush the world around them would remain standing.
[Chapter ENDS]
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