Ultimate Dragon System: Grinding my way to the Top

Chapter 358: The Floor Remembers



Chapter 358: The Floor Remembers

Varen’s evasive movement carried him toward a specific section of the arena floor—not randomly, the direction chosen based on memory rather than current sight, the shatterpoint he had catalogued in the opening seconds of the fight sitting in a location he could navigate toward using general spatial awareness rather than precise vision. His eyes couldn’t read structure clearly through the brightness still present at the edges of his visual field. But memory wasn’t reading. Memory was fixed. The floor hadn’t moved since the fight began, and the shatterpoints he had catalogued before the first burst fired were still exactly where he had found them.

Zara fired another chain—tracking his movement, the bursts converging toward his new trajectory, the four-point output aimed at the space his movement was carrying him into.

Varen reached the floor section.

He struck it—not Zara, the floor, a single precise strike at the shatterpoint he remembered being present at this location. No visual confirmation. Memory-guided, the strike landing where his cataloguing had told him the weak point lived.

The floor collapsed.

Not dramatically—a section of stone giving way beneath the strike, a depression forming, the structural failure at the shatterpoint producing exactly the kind of localized collapse that Varen’s ability specialized in. The stone didn’t crumble widely—it gave at the specific point where the least force produced the most structural change, the failure contained and precise.

The depression was roughly Varen’s size.

He dropped into it—not falling, stepping down, the depression providing cover below the arena floor’s normal level, his head and shoulders dropping beneath the surface height his body had occupied a moment before.

Zara’s incoming chain passed over him—the bursts traveling at the height his body had been occupying, the depression putting him beneath their trajectories, all four detonations missing.

The bursts hit the far wall.

No exposure. No flash reaching his eyes.

His vision began to clear—the recovery gradient finally able to progress without new exposures interrupting it, the brightness fading toward shapes, shapes toward detail. Each second without a new flash was a second of recovery. He had been unable to string together even two consecutive seconds since the fight began.

Now he had time.

"He found a shatterpoint he’d already read," the announcer said. "Memory, not live reading—the floor doesn’t move, so the catalogue from before the fight is still accurate. He collapsed a section and used it as cover."

Zara looked at the depression.

At Varen, partially hidden below the floor’s surface level, his silhouette visible but his position protected. She could see him recovering—the specific quality of someone whose visual processing was returning, the head turning, the eyes beginning to move with the purposeful quality that indicated function rather than recovery.

She needed to reach him before the recovery completed.

She fired downward—a burst angled into the depression, the trajectory adjusted to reach below the normal floor level, the angle steeper than any she had used in the fight.

Varen’s vision had cleared enough—not fully, but enough. He read the burst’s trajectory and the depression’s geometry simultaneously, finding the angle within the depression that the downward-angled burst couldn’t reach. The depression provided geometry that the arena’s flat surface hadn’t—angles and walls that existed specifically because he had created them, walls that he understood completely because he had made them.

He moved to the protected angle.

The burst hit the depression’s wall.

Flash and force against stone—the detonation real and significant, the wall absorbing everything, no exposure to Varen, the depression’s geometry providing exactly the protection he needed.

His vision continued clearing.

Detail was returning—not the precise structural reading his ability required at full clarity, but more than shapes, the intermediate level where he could see configuration rather than just outline.

He looked at Zara—her palms, her feet, the structures he had been trying to read before the flash exchanges began. The detail was there now, assembling, the shatterpoint information coming into focus.

Zara understood the depression was buying him time she couldn’t afford to give him.

She needed to eliminate the cover or force him out of it before the detail level he needed arrived.

She fired a burst directly at the depression’s center—not angled this time, straight down, the trajectory that would reach Varen regardless of which wall he was using for cover, the geometry that had been protecting him neutralized by the direct vertical approach.

Varen’s vision had cleared enough to read this trajectory too—and to read something else simultaneously. The depression itself. The shatterpoint he had created when he collapsed the section. A fresh shatterpoint—the structural failure that had produced the depression had created new weak points along its edges, the collapsed stone’s fracture lines forming new vulnerabilities that hadn’t existed in the original floor. Structural failures always created new shatterpoints along their edges. Varen had known this since the first time he had collapsed something and immediately seen the next strike’s location appear in the new configuration.

He struck the fresh shatterpoint on the depression’s wall—the section facing Zara’s position, the precise new vulnerability created by the collapse.

The wall folded inward, creating an angled surface where flat stone had been.

The incoming direct burst hit the angled surface and deflected—the trajectory redirected by the new geometry, the flash and force traveling along the deflection rather than into the depression, spending themselves against the arena wall behind Zara’s position.

No exposure.

Varen’s vision was nearly fully clear now—shapes had become structures, structures had become detail, the final layer of shatterpoint-reading precision assembling itself in the seconds the deflection had bought.

He looked at Zara’s right palm.

The shatterpoint was there—visible now with full detail, the structure of the generation mechanism showing its weak point clearly. A specific location on the palm, the tendon-and-muscle configuration that produced ignition carrying a vulnerability that a precise strike would disrupt—the same kind of vulnerability every physical structure carried, just harder to read on a living surface than on stone because a living surface moved.

Zara’s right palm was not moving.

It was extended in the post-fire configuration from the deflected burst—stationary, the shatterpoint stable for the moment the post-fire held it.

He climbed out of the depression.

Zara fired again—she had been rebuilding charge during the deflection exchange, the burst ready, aimed at Varen as he emerged.

He read it.

Full clarity now—the trajectory, the timing, the burst’s approach all processed with the precision his ability was built for, the vision finally operating at the level that shatterpoint-reading required. He moved—not away from Zara, toward her, a lateral approach that brought him closer while avoiding the burst’s path. The burst passed behind him, hitting the depression he had just left, the flash contained within the collapsed section’s walls.

He reached striking range.

Zara’s right palm was extended—the burst having just fired from it, the post-fire configuration holding the shatterpoint stable.

He struck it.

A single precise hit—minimal force, exactly the kind of strike his ability specialized in—landing on the shatterpoint location with the accuracy that full visual clarity made possible.

The generation mechanism failed.

Not destroyed—disrupted, the structural configuration that produced ignition collapsing the way a building’s shatterpoint collapsed the building, the palm’s ability to generate Mirage Burst from that hand failing completely. The palm was still physically functional. The generation capability was gone.

Zara’s right palm went dark.

"He found it," the announcer said. "The shatterpoint in the generation mechanism itself. Her right palm can’t fire anymore."

Zara felt the loss immediately—the right palm’s warmth gone, the ignition capability simply absent, the hand functional but the ability’s primary output on that side disrupted.

She stepped back—creating distance, assessing the configuration she now occupied.

Three remaining sources. One disabled. The chain technique that had been keeping Varen’s vision compromised required all four limbs cycling—with one disabled, the chain rate dropped by twenty-five percent, the gaps between bursts widening from the tight-succession that had overwhelmed his visual processing into something slower and more readable.

Wider gaps meant more recovery time for Varen’s vision between exposures.

His vision was already fully clear.

He was reading her left palm now.


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