Chapter 266: what he’s become
Good," Tongen said.
The word arrived differently than it usually did. Not an instructor’s approval, not the patient encouragement given to someone progressing through a lesson. It was the particular word a person uses when something they were genuinely uncertain about has been answered—when the answer came back better than they were prepared to account for.
Jelo let the Ember Step release and eased out of stance. His shoulder ached where he’d overextended on the feint approach. His breathing was elevated, working harder than normal. The session had been short but it had cost something real, the way sessions with Tongen always eventually did—not through duration but through the quality of what was asked.
It was worth it.
Behind him, Atlas had both arms wrapped around one knee, leaning so far forward he was nearly off the ground—expression open, caught somewhere between admiration and something more complicated. Ken had stood up without noticing at some point during the exchange, drawn to his feet by the movement of it, still standing now with his arms loose and his eyes working through what he had just watched. Mira was doing the thing she always did after Jelo showed something new—watching Tongen, reading his response, forming her own assessment through the lens of his before committing to it.
Tongen walked a slow arc around the open space between them. Not approaching Jelo, not creating distance—just moving, the way he moved when his thoughts were being arranged into a particular order before delivery. The worn ground passed under his feet without sound.
He stopped.
"What you did at the end," he said, "was the correct answer to the problem you were facing." He turned toward Jelo fully. "You recognized that raw force was functioning as resource collection for my ability—that the harder you hit, the more material you were handing me to work with. So instead of continuing to provide it, you changed the question entirely. You made the feint carry genuine physical pressure through Ember Step, which meant Dominion responded to it as a real incoming force because it was a real incoming force. Then you came through the inside with Wing Burst before the redirect had time to complete." He paused. "That isn’t a drill solution. Drills teach you patterns. What you just demonstrated was the ability to construct a new answer in real time from the materials available to you. Those are entirely different things."
Jelo was quiet, absorbing it.
"The feint would have been cleaner at proper Wing Burst range," he said. "I wasn’t confident I could get there."
"You couldn’t have," Tongen agreed. "The clip you landed represents the maximum available from that angle given the timing. The technique was right. The range management is the next layer." He looked at him steadily. "Ember Step solves that problem, but only if you’re loading it across the full approach rather than using it as a single-step initiator. Five or six properly sequenced steps before contact—consistent, not rushed, each one building rather than firing—means whatever you deploy at the end carries everything that came before it. The Wing Burst doesn’t need to be at ideal range. It arrives with the weight of the entire approach behind it."
"He’d still absorb the burst itself," Ken said. He was working through it openly now, not challenging the point but following the logic out to its end. "If Dominion takes the momentum from the Wing Burst at contact—"
"The Wing Burst is the only thing he’s sending at me," Jelo said, catching it before Tongen answered. The reasoning had come clear while he was fighting and it was still clear now. "The Ember Step momentum is in my body—it’s kinetic energy in my movement, in the approach. It’s not aimed at him. He can only take what I direct at him. So I direct the Wing Burst. He absorbs the Wing Burst. But by the time it fires I’ve already closed the distance carrying everything the steps built. The burst is almost secondary—it’s what I’m doing with the space after the close that matters."
Tongen nodded.
Not the slow confirming nod of someone hearing something for the first time. The nod of someone hearing their own lesson come back to them properly understood.
"That’s exactly right," he said.
Atlas exhaled through his nose. "So Jelo has just been quietly getting more dangerous this whole time and all of us were just watching it happen."
"I wasn’t watching it happen," Mira said without inflection. "I was tracking it."
"She was tracking it," Ken confirmed.
"It’s not a comfort that she was tracking it," Atlas said.
Jelo didn’t say anything. He looked down at his hands. The residual heat was still there—sitting beneath the skin of his palms and the tips of his fingers, the particular warmth of Ember Step cycling back down after exertion. Barely visible if you knew to look. Gone in seconds. Dragon energy returning to wherever it lived in him between uses, quiet and patient, present without announcing itself.
He had spent a long time not fully understanding what lived in him. The dragon system had always been there—from before he understood what it was, from before Chloro had given him a language for it, from before Tongen had taken over and begun working it into something structured and deliberate. For most of that time it had felt like something separate. Something he carried and occasionally accessed. Something that belonged to a version of himself that hadn’t fully arrived yet.
Ember Step didn’t feel like that.
Ember Step felt like something that had grown from inside the movement he already had. From the way he already occupied space. From the particular thing that lived in how he ran toward things rather than away from them, which had always been his instinct even before he had an ability that made the instinct structurally useful.
He thought about the dream again—plainly, without the weight of three in the morning pressing down on it. The city in ruins. The smoke. The Ihe moving through all of it, invisible and deliberate. The Daba’s grip.
The way he had run toward it anyway.
Even in the dream, knowing it was probably too late, knowing the distance was wrong and the timing was wrong and nothing about his position in that moment was favorable—he had run toward it anyway. That was just what he did. That was just how he was built.
And the ability that had appeared in him was about exactly that.
