Chapter 265: Dominion
Right now?" Atlas said, sitting up straighter.
"Right now," Tongen said. He hadn’t looked at Atlas. His eyes were on Jelo.
Jelo felt the shift move through him—the specific internal change that happened when something crossed from preparation into reality. Not anxiety exactly. Not excitement exactly. Something that lived between the two, in the chest, that made the edges of everything sharpen. The training ground felt smaller suddenly. The worn stone under his feet felt like something worth knowing the exact texture of.
He looked at Tongen and understood without needing it explained that this wasn’t going to be a controlled demonstration. Tongen wasn’t going to stand in place and let Jelo perform technique at him. This was a test—the real kind, the kind where nothing was arranged for Jelo’s benefit, where Tongen found out what Jelo actually had rather than what Jelo thought he had.
He settled into his stance.
Tongen didn’t take one.
That had always been the most disorienting thing about fighting him. He simply stood—hands at his sides, posture neutral, weight perfectly balanced—existing in a state of total stillness that looked identical whether he was about to move or not. There was no tell. No weight shift, no micro-adjustment of the shoulders, no narrowing of focus that leaked into the body. The transition from still to moving happened without announcement, and by the time you registered it the movement was already three steps ahead of your response.
Jelo moved first.
He pushed off his back foot and drove forward, three running steps, each one loading deliberately—not rushing the sequence, not trying to close distance faster than the build allowed, letting the Ember Step accumulate the way Tongen had just described. He could feel it layering, the heat and pressure stacking beneath each stride, the fourth step ready to carry everything the first three had built. He launched a straight drive toward Tongen’s center mass, putting the full load of the approach behind it.
The punch had genuine weight. He felt it in his knuckles before contact—the dragon energy coiling through the motion, dense and real, the compression of four loaded steps arriving at a single point.
Tongen’s hand came up.
Not a block. Not a parry or deflection. He placed his palm flat in the path of the strike and simply stopped it. Not with opposing force—there was no impact, no collision of energies meeting each other head on. There was contact, and then there was nothing. The momentum Jelo had built across four steps reached Tongen’s palm and ceased to exist. Like arriving somewhere and finding the destination had been removed. His fist was there. The force wasn’t.
Jelo pulled back immediately, resetting his feet, reassessing.
His knuckles felt strange. Not injured—just hollow. Like something that should have been there was gone.
"You felt that," Tongen said.
"It disappeared," Jelo said.
"Yes." Tongen lowered his hand calmly. "Dominion doesn’t oppose force. It removes it. Your motion happened—your fist arrived. The momentum didn’t. I took it out of the equation at the point of contact." He paused. "Try again. Different entry."
Jelo circled.
The first rule Tongen had ever drilled into them—the one that sat underneath every other lesson—was that repetition was a gift to your opponent. You never gave the same answer twice. He moved left, drawing Tongen’s attention laterally, then cut hard right and drove in low, targeting the side rather than center, Ember Step loading through the sharper angle of the cut—
Tongen pivoted into it.
Not away—toward. He turned into Jelo’s approach and as the strike came around, Tongen’s hand found his forearm and redirected. Not absorbed this time. Redirected—took the momentum Jelo had built and sent it somewhere other than its intended destination. Jelo’s own force carried him sideways, two full lurching steps past where Tongen had been standing, his body following the redirected line of energy like he had been caught in his own current.
He caught himself at the far edge of the training ground.
Turned around.
Tongen was still in the center. Hadn’t moved from it.
"He threw you with your own punch," Ken said from the side. Not unkindly. Just observing.
"I noticed," Jelo said.
He came back in. Shorter approach this time—less buildup, but he abandoned the power strike entirely and fired Dragon Claw energy at close range, sharp and targeted at Tongen’s shoulder. He wanted to know whether Dominion required physical contact to function or whether it could operate at distance.
Tongen let it hit.
The claw energy connected with his shoulder and dissolved. Same mechanism—same immediate absence of force at the point of contact, the energy simply removed from the moment it arrived. Tongen’s shoulder didn’t move. His body didn’t adjust. His expression didn’t change. He looked like someone who had been breathed on.
And then he stepped forward.
One step.
That step landed with a weight that moved through the stone and up through Jelo’s feet from ten feet away—a dense, low resonance that arrived in the ground before it arrived in the air, a vibration that Jelo’s legs registered before his mind did, his balance shifting involuntarily as his body tried to compensate for something it hadn’t been given time to anticipate.
"Momentum stored," Tongen said quietly. "From your last three attacks."
Jelo understood what was coming before it arrived.
He moved—
Too late.
Tongen stepped again and released a fraction of what he’d collected—not everything, just a portion—and the shockwave that came off that single step moved through both the ground and the air simultaneously. It hit Jelo across his entire body despite zero direct contact, a wall of returning force that staggered him sideways three steps and dropped his shoulder before he could brace properly.
He found his feet.
His breathing had climbed.
"That," Tongen said, standing still and entirely composed, "is what stored momentum looks like when it’s returned at once. Not at you—just near you." He paused. "What I released just now was roughly a third of what I collected."
Jelo straightened.
He circled slowly, thinking through it clearly, letting the picture of the problem form properly before he moved again. The issue wasn’t power. More power fed Tongen more material. Every Ember Step approach, every Dragon Claw strike, every redirection he failed to prevent—all of it was going somewhere. All of it was being stored and held and would return at a time and angle Tongen chose, not Jelo.
Which meant attacking harder was not the answer.
Which meant something else was.
He thought about it while he circled—not frantically, just working—and the answer arrived from Tongen’s own words, from ten minutes ago in this same training ground.
Speed makes you difficult to track. Pressure makes you difficult to survive.
But neither of those solved the specific problem in front of him. What he needed wasn’t speed or pressure in isolation.
He needed to create a question Dominion couldn’t cleanly answer.
He stopped circling.
He let Ember Step load across his footwork—not pointed at Tongen, not building toward a charge, just flowing through his movement as he shifted weight, small lateral adjustments that kept the pressure accumulating without committing to a direction. He watched Tongen’s hands. Watched the subtle distribution of weight across his feet.
Then he feinted left—hard, complete, full body commitment, Ember Step firing on that foot so the feint carried genuine pressure. Real force behind a false direction.
Tongen’s weight shifted.
Jelo cut inside it.
Close range. Abandoning the power strike entirely. Wing Burst at nearly zero distance—not a full charge, not something that announced itself from across the ground but something that arrived from inside Tongen’s own response to the feint, from the space the redirect had briefly opened.
It clipped.
Not a clean connection—Tongen had already begun turning, Dominion working in the direction of the feint’s force, and he was most of the way through the correction. But the Wing Burst caught his shoulder and chest at the edge of the turn, and for the first time since the fight had started, Tongen’s foot scraped back across the stone.
One step.
He straightened.
He looked at Jelo.
And the corners of his expression moved—not broadly, not in any way that anyone who didn’t know his face well would notice.
But Jelo noticed.
