Deciding to go global felt like a victory. Actually doing it? That was another story entirely. The mont their unanimous "yes" echoed from their cramped storage closet hideout, the abstract dream of the Global Roots Showcase slamd headfirst into the brick wall of reality. Passports, visas, flights. Then there was the mountain of paperwork and the seemingly impossible task of getting Hwarang High School to officially back them, a move that would put the already Committee-targeted school directly in the line of fire.
The next few days were a dizzying ss of frustrating phone calls and dead-end etings. The school administration, a bunch of perpetually nervous folks caught between the Committee's demands and the students' well-being, were hesitant to the point of being frozen solid. The principal, a man who seed to have had his backbone surgically removed, wrung his hands. "Mr. Baek, the Committee's audit... it's still ongoing. Endorsing sothing clearly *outside* their control... it could ruin everything. Our funding, accreditation, even the martial arts program itself."
Baek mostly sat through the etings in silence, popping his gum, his grey belt a quiet statent. Jin, Yuuji, and Nam were there with him, a wordless show of support. Yuna, though, was leading the charge in this particular battle. Ard with regulations, school rules, and an incredibly effective way with words, she navigated the bureaucratic ss. But every step forward t resistance, a subtle dragging of feet that spoke volus about the unseen pressure being applied.
"It's the Committee," Yuna reported back, dropping a stack of forms onto the crate in their hideout with a frustrated sigh. "They haven't directly ordered the school to stop us, not yet. But they're making it clear, through 'recomndations' and 'concerns' about student safety and unregulated international events, that Hwarang will pay the price if they support us."
The threat felt insidious, a slow tightening that threatened to suffocate their montum before they even left the country. At the sa ti, the community center audit intensified, with parents calling Baek, more worried than ever about the demanded "health screenings." The Committee was playing on their fears to remind him of what was at stake back ho.
Just when the mountain of paperwork and administrative roadblocks seed too high to climb, a crack appeared in the wall. An email arrived at the school, copied to a surprisingly long list of local martial arts contacts. It was from Kim Hae-Jin.
Jin read it aloud in the hideout, his voice full of disbelief. Kim Hae-Jin, the poster child for rigid tradition, the captain who had practically disowned Jin for his adapted style, had written a formal letter to the Hwarang administration. It praised Jin Hae-Won's performance at the Emperor Trials, specifically pointing out his "unconventional yet effective application of Taekwondo principles under pressure." It argued that Jin's participation in a global showcase would bring prestige to Hwarang and prove the school's dedication to nurturing diverse martial arts talent, even those who forged their own paths. It was stiff, formal, completely lacking in warmth, but the ssage was clear: Kim Hae-Jin was using his reputation and traditional standing to support Jin, to support the Alliance.
"He's... he's helping us?" Jin stamred, staring at the email on Yuna's tablet. The rivalry, the split in the dojang, still felt raw and unresolved, but here was an unexpected olive branch, delivered in Kim Hae-Jin's typically rigid style.
"Not 'helping us'," Baek said, popping his gum. "Helping Taekwondo. Helping the school. He fights for his roots. This showcase... it's a chance for those roots to prove they can grow anywhere." It was proof of the quiet impact Jin's spar had made – not a win, but a redefinition that had resonated even with his harshest critic.
Kim Hae-Jin's unexpected support seed to inspire others, and soon small pockets of help began to erge. The coach of a rival wrestling team, whose student Nam had defeated in the preliminaries, provided a contact at a sports agency less aligned with the Committee, soone who could speed up the travel docunt process. A forr underground fighter, who had once faced Baek and been quietly influenced by the 'Ghost Belt' legend, offered anonymous financial help with their flights. These were small gestures in the face of a global challenge, but they felt aningful, proof that their fight for independent martial arts had touched people beyond their imdiate circle.
While Yuna battled the bureaucratic beast and logistical nightmare, Nam dove deep into research. The world of international martial arts was huge and complicated, a tangled ss of federations, styles, and political currents. He spent hours in the library, hunched over books and online databases, the glow of the computer screen reflecting in his focused eyes.
"The Emperor system isn't one single thing," Nam reported, flipping through pages of notes in his notebook. "Each major style has its own governing board, its own rules for ranking and choosing Emperors. So are traditional, strict, aligned with the Committee's way of thinking. Others... like MMA with Reyes, or Savate with Moreau, it seems... are more open to new ideas. Wing Chun with Zhou Liang seems more focused on the philosophical side of things." He sketched diagrams, mapping out the relationships between federations, figuring out who might be allies and who might be enemies based on their public statents and past dealings with the Committee.
He also started analyzing the competitive scene of the showcase itself, looking at participant lists, fight records, any available footage of the international fighters. He was building a strategic map of the global stage, his analytical mind spotting patterns and possible weaknesses in styles he'd never seen before. His sidelined shoulder ached, a physical reminder of his limitations, but his mind felt sharper than ever, finding purpose in this intellectual fight.
Yuna, anwhile, wasn't just booking flights and sorting out visas. She was setting up their global information network: encrypted communication channels, anonymous data drops, contacts with independent journalists and online communities in different countries. This was her battlefield, the digital one, where truth could be used as a weapon. She created plans for docunting any sabotage attempts by the Committee during the showcase, setting up backup systems to make sure their findings couldn't be hidden.
"They're already trying to watch what we're doing online," Yuna told Baek, showing him a trace on her tablet – a subtle, almost invisible probe coming from an international IP address known to be connected to Committee interests. "Not just here, but anything linked to the showcase organizers. They're watching."
The reality of the global stage was starting to sink in; it wasn’t just an exciting chance, but a dangerous escalation. The subtle threats weren’t just administrative hurdles. They were warnings. Anonymous ssages popped up in online forums they frequented, cryptic and unsettling. There was a minor delay flagged on their visa applications that seed more than just a simple mistake. And one night, the community center briefly, and inexplicably, lost power. Small things, easily dismissed, but added together, they painted a clear picture.
The Committee knew they were going. And they weren't happy about it.
Yuuji's stress ball got a lot more use as the departure date got closer. The initial excitent about going global was overshadowed by the harsh reality of the opposition they faced. "It's not just about fighting in a ring anymore, is it?" he said, watching Yuna work, a web of glowing lines on her screen showing international data streams. "It's... everything. Paperwork, governnts, hackers..."
"They fight with every weapon they have," Baek said, watching him. "Bureaucracy, money, information. And if they have to... force." The image of Dae-Sung and the Inverse Path flashed in his mind. They weren't just going to a showcase; they were heading to a battleground that stretched across continents and digital networks.
Jin practiced late in the empty Hwarang dojang, the grey sash tied around his waist. The familiar space felt different now, both smaller and more important. He wasn’t just representing Hwarang anymore. He was representing a growing idea, a challenge to a global system. The responsibility felt huge, weighing heavy on his shoulders. His movents, usually fluid, felt a little stiff, weighed down by anticipation.
Nam, studying maps of the host city, looked up, frowning. "They're setting traps. Not just in the fights. Logistical, informational. We need to be ready for pressure from every angle."
The days leading up to their departure were a sprint against invisible opponents, a crash course in navigating the complexities of the global stage. They were crossing borders, yes, physically leaving their ho ground. But they were also raising flags – declaring their presence, their purpose, to a world that was watching, and to an enemy that was already moving in the shadows. The reality of the global fight had hit ho, hard and unavoidable. They were no longer just the independent alliance from Hwarang. They were the unranked, stepping onto the world stage.
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