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The Seoul Olympic Stadium practically pulsed with energy, the air thick with the tension of the Inter-High Emperor Trials. Inside, the different arenas were buzzing with the quick rhythm of combat. Right now, the Taekwondo preliminary rounds were heating up, the sound of sharp kicks cutting through the air, mixed with the roar of the crowd. Scuffed but sohow still gleaming, the tatami mats lay under the harsh lights, while drones humd overhead, beaming every single mont to anyone watching around the world. For the Independent Alliance, every move felt heavy; it wasn't just about winning, but about standing up to the Committee's ever-tightening control.

Tucked away in a quiet corner of the Taekwondo locker room, Jin Hae-Won double-checked his black belt, tying it with practiced precision. Even with sweat already beading on his forehead, his dobok looked sharp. His opponent? Kim Tae-Joon. His forr senior from Hwarang High's Taekwondo Club, the guy who'd basically taught him the ropes. Now, Tae-Joon saw him as a traitor just for joining Baek's team. Yeah, that betrayal hurt, but Jin’s pride was battling sothing deeper: a burning need to prove he’d made the right choice, that honoring the art itself mattered more than sticking to rigid tradition.

Nearby, Baek Seung-Ho leaned against a locker, his grayed white belt swaying gently. Its symbols – balance, flow, courage, freedom – stood out under the fluorescent lights. His hoodie was pulled down, earbuds dangling, a faint ani tune probably playing, just grounding him in the chaos. He’d already successfully coached Nam through a surprise Wrestling win. Now it was Jin's turn, and this match felt intensely personal, not just another step in the competition. The Committee was playing dirty, too – ssing with schedules, damaging gear – all looming threats. But Baek just focused on his team, relying on Park’s legacy as their shield against it all.

Nam Do-Kyung, still riding the high from his victory, stretched out, his patched singlet a sort of battle badge. Yuuji Ryang, looking loose in his own dobok, tossed a stress ball from hand to hand, the scar on his face catching the light with a restless energy; his Boxing bracket wasn tomorrow. Over by the wall, Yuna Seo, glued to her tablet, kept tabs on her Seoul Strike channel, her live footage turning their defiance into sothing everyone could see. They weren't a perfect group, maybe a little fragile, but Baek’s quiet determination sohow held them all together.

Jin adjusted his belt again, his voice barely a whisper, tight with tension. “Tae-Joon’s… perfect. Every form, every kick – it’s straight out of the textbook. He taught at least half of what I know. How am I supposed to beat that?”

Baek popped his gum, stepping closer, his eyes scanning Jin's posture. “You don’t beat perfection, Jin. You go around it. Tae-Joon’s stuck, he’s rigid, tied down by tradition. Use that. Take a deep breath, shift your weight back a little – feel the ground under you, don’t just think about the move.”

Jin frowned, clearly skeptical. “That’s… that’s not in any manual. Where’d you even learn that?”

Baek’s smirk was barely there, his fingers lightly touching the symbols on his belt. “Park. He always said Taekwondo wasn’t just a bunch of kicks. It’s about flow, like water smoothing stone. Just try it. Breathe in when you pivot, breathe out with the strike. Let your weight move, don’t lock it up.”

Jin hesitated for a mont, his pride warring with a flicker of trust, but then he nodded, practicing a slow roundhouse kick. His breathing naturally synced up, his balance felt subtly sharper. Nam watched, looking impressed. “Seriously, Seung-Ho, you’re full of surprises.”

Yuuji grinned, tossing the stress ball playfully towards Yuna. “Better be ready to teach so of those ‘flow’ tricks for Boxing tomorrow, coach.”

Yuna caught it without looking up from her tablet, a smirk playing on her lips. “Focus on not getting yourself disqualified first, Ryang. I’m filming Jin’s match, so don’t start distracting .”

Baek’s eyes crinkled slightly at the corners, a rare sign of warmth. “Okay, team, keep it together. Jin, you’ve got this. Go show Tae-Joon what you’re really made of.”

The Taekwondo arena felt like a furnace, the mats surrounded by a crowd practically vibrating with energy. Red and blue banners for Hwarang High waved everywhere. The air itself seed to sll like linint and pure anticipation, the constant hum of the drones a low heartbeat. Right in the center of the mat, Tae-Joon waited, his dobok spotless, black belt catching the light. His stance was exactly as it should be, every angle perfect, his gaze freezing Jin the mont their eyes t. The referee, looking like a Committee lackey straight out of Dae-Sung’s shadow, watched them closely, whistle already poised.

Baek stood just outside the mat's edge, Yuna filming as discreetly as she could, Nam and Yuuji flanking him. A small pocket of spectators, calling themselves “style purists” and dressed in traditional hanbok, muttered loudly enough for everyone to hear. Their leader, an older man with a gray beard, gripped a fan tightly. “That traitor Jin is disgracing Taekwondo,” he declared, his voice carrying clearly. “Mixing forms? It’s a sacrilege!”

Jin stepped onto the mat, his heart hamring against his ribs. Tae-Joon’s judgnt felt heavier than the weight of the whole crowd. The whistle blew, and Tae-Joon attacked instantly. A front snap kick sliced the air, fast and utterly flawless. Jin managed to block, but the sheer force of it still pushed him back, his stance wobbling. Tae-Joon didn't hesitate, following up with a roundhouse, then a double kick – each move like it was torn straight from a training manual, relentless in its perfection.

Jin struggled, his blocks coming a beat too late, his attempts to counter easily predictable. Tae-Joon’s kicks landed solid hits – chest, thigh – racking up points on the board, the referee’s calls coming swiftly. The purists jeered from the sidelines, their voices a chorus: “Tradition! Respect the form!” Jin felt his pride flare, his years of training screaming at him to match Tae-Joon's precision, but then Baek’s words echoed in his mind: *Breathe deep, shift your weight.*

He inhaled, pivoting slightly, letting his weight naturally shift to his back foot. Just as Tae-Joon launched a textbook, lethal spinning heel kick, Jin exhaled, stepping inside the arc of the kick, his balance suddenly fluid. His counter – a low side kick – only just grazed Tae-Joon’s ribs. It wasn't a powerful blow, but it was enough to throw his rhythm off. The crowd gasped. The purists erupted in shouts: “Improper form!”

Tae-Joon’s eyes narrowed, and his next series of attacks ca even faster – jab kicks, axe kicks, a furious barrage of pure tradition. But Jin moved with a new kind of flow, Baek’s lesson seeming to co alive in his muscles. He breathed with every step, every movent, his weight shifting like water, dodging a high kick by what felt like an inch, countering with a crescent kick that sohow scored a point. The referee hesitated, clearly annoyed, but the scoreboard still updated, Jin’s na flashing.

The purists roared, their leader actually standing up. “This isn't Taekwondo! He’s making a mockery of our heritage!” But elsewhere in the arena, others started cheering, drawn in by Jin’s ability to adapt, Yuna’s cara capturing the clear split in the crowd.

Tae-Joon’s perfect composure finally cracked. His kicks beca reckless, fueled by frustration. Jin saw it instantly – the rigidity Baek had warned him about. He inhaled, faking a front kick, then spun into a back kick, his footwork loose, totally adaptive. The strike landed clean on Tae-Joon’s chest, sending him stumbling backward. The whistle blew. The referee, looking thoroughly displeased, raised Jin’s hand anyway. “Victory goes to Jin Hae-Won!”

The arena exploded. The Alliance’s supporters – the Hapkido, Boxing, and Wrestling teams – were on their feet, cheering wildly. The purists, however, stord out, their loud protests swallowed up by the applause. Yuna’s tablet was live-streaming the entire upset, her grin wide and fierce. Nam clapped Jin on the shoulder as he stumbled off the mat, panting, his dobok definitely scuffed now. Yuuji smirked, tossing him a towel. “Not bad, Captain. You actually made those old guys cry.”

Baek’s smile was subtle, almost hidden, the only sound the quiet pop of his gum. “You felt it, Jin. That’s the art working.”

Jin wiped sweat from his eyes, his voice rough. “I thought I knew Taekwondo. You… you changed everything out there. How did you even know those little things – about the breath, the weight? You don’t learn that in any regular dojo.”

Later, in the stadium’s relatively quiet lounge, the team regrouped. The roar of other matches was just a distant hum now. Jin sat on a bench, still catching his breath, his victory feeling like a small but significant spark of hope. Nam was happily eating kimbap, Yuuji was back to juggling his stress ball, and Yuna was already editing footage, the screen of her tablet casting a blue glow on her face. Baek leaned against a vending machine, the grayed belt coiled in his hands, its worn symbols a quiet anchor for him.

Jin’s question hung in the air, his eyes fixed on Baek. “Seriously, Seung-Ho. How do you understand Taekwondo like that? You don't even have a rank.”

Baek’s fingers traced the belt, a mory of Park’s voice playing in his head: *The art exists to shield.* “Park taught ,” he said softly. “He believed that underneath all the different styles – Taekwondo, Judo, Boxing, everything – there are fundantal truths. Things like breath, balance, flow. They’re all different rivers, but they empty into the sa ocean. He stripped away all the extra stuff, showed the core.”

Jin’s earlier pride seed to soften, replaced by sothing like awe. “You make it sound… simple. But it’s not. You’re more than just a coach, aren’t you?”

Nam nodded, swallowing a mouthful of kimbap. “He’s right. You’re teaching us how to *see* the art, not just how to fight.”

Yuuji tossed the stress ball to Baek, who caught it effortlessly with one hand. “Careful, Jin. You’re starting to sound a little like a fanboy.”

Yuna chuckled, her tablet beeping. “He’s earned it. Jin’s win is already trending. People are calling you the ‘Flow Master,’ Seung-Ho.”

Baek snorted softly, popping his gum. “Great. Another nickna.” But seeing their trust, their growing understanding, felt like a warmth spreading through him. Park’s legacy was alive, right here, in their growth. The Trials were a battlefield, yes, but his team? They were his strength. Each victory, big or small, felt like a step closer to truth.

Jin stood up, pulling his dobok a little straighter. “I turned my back on my old club for this. For you guys. Please don't let regret it.”

Baek t his gaze, his eyes steady and unwavering. “You won’t. We’re just getting started.”

Just then, the stadium’s main platform lit up, and the announcer's voice bood out, echoing through the entire building. “Attention, competitors! To ensure the integrity of martial arts traditions, a special committee of style preservation experts will join the judging panel, effective imdiately.”

The lounge went dead silent. Yuna’s tablet screen seed to freeze mid-edit. Nam’s brow furrowed instantly. “Style preservation? That’s clearly aid at us.”

Yuuji’s grin vanished, his voice dropping low. “Dae-Sung’s really tightening the screws now. They hate what we’re doing.”

Baek slowly tied his belt around his waist, the gray undertones looking stark under the lights. “Let them try,” he said, his voice calm despite the shift in atmosphere. “They can’t judge what they don’t understand.” His composure seed to steady the team, but inside, he knew the Committee’s move was a clear warning. Dae-Sung’s shadow was growing longer, his power over the referees felt like a blade hanging directly over their heads.

anwhile, in a private box high above the arena, Ms. Park watched the footage of Jin’s match, her tablet screen glowing with streams of data. Director Kang leaned back in his chair, his Committee pin glinting faintly. “The Alliance is like an infection,” he growled, clearly frustrated. “That Jin’s win wasn't traditional at all. It’s Park’s Vision, spreading.”

Ms. Park’s voice was as cold as ever, but for a split second, a flicker of doubt crossed her eyes. “The style experts will curb it,” she stated flatly. “They’ll penalize any deviations. Keep the Alliance in check.”

Kang clenched his fist, his voice tight with anger. “It’s not enough. Dae-Sung needs to take direct action. Disqualify them. Break their spirit completely.”

Ms. Park’s gaze lingered on Baek’s profile on her tablet screen, the image of his grayed belt magnified. “Baek isn’t fighting,” she said, almost to herself. “He’s teaching. *That’s* the real threat.”

Back in the lounge, Baek stood up, his team naturally gathering around him. Jin's victory was a small fla in the darkness, but the Committee's new judges felt like a storm cloud gathering overhead. The Trials were about more than just skill on the mat; they were testing sothing deeper – truth. Baek's resolve hardened, Park's legacy his unwavering guide. The grayed belt swayed slightly as he moved, a quiet symbol of his own shift from the shadows into the light. The prelims were really heating up now, and he knew he had to lead his team through it all – not for glory, but for the sake of the art itself.

You are reading The Eternal White Belt Chapter 18: Style Versus Substance on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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