Extra To Protagonist
Chapter 150: Spars

Chapter 150: Spars

The second bell cracked across the yard.

Bradan didn’t have to shout. He just lifted one hand. Pointed.

Pairs formed again. But this time, no drills. No mirrored steps. The line of recruits spread into two uneven arcs, each standing five meters apart from a partner.

"Sparring matches," Bradan said, still not raising his voice. "No flaring. No injuries you can’t walk off."

He scanned the line.

"Call your intent. No points. Just learning."

Rethan stood third from the end.

Across from him: a boy with a crooked nose and the type of haircut you got when no one liked you enough to fix it. He bounced on his feet, just a little. Nervous energy, or maybe too used to being ignored.

"Begin," Bradan said.

No horn. No magic pulse. Just the word.

Crooked-nose charged in too fast.

Rethan sidestepped.

’Too heavy on his right leg.’

The boy swung anyway, low, wild, no guard.

Rethan blocked it with his forearm. Stepped in. Shifted his weight forward and tapped the kid in the chest with his open hand. Hard enough to knock him off-balance, not hurt him.

The boy stumbled back.

"Sorry," he muttered.

Rethan didn’t answer. He reset his stance.

’He’s not angry. Just trying not to suck.’

Across the ring, another pair hit the ground.

Grunts. A short scream.

Bradan didn’t flinch. He just pointed. "Next two. Swap."

Rethan rotated down the line. New partner.

Tenel.

She grinned. "Miss me?"

"Didn’t know you left."

She rolled her neck, stepped into place.

"You’re holding back."

"I’ve never done this before."

"Then you’re scary good at faking it."

He didn’t reply.

She moved first. A faint lean. Testing. He mirrored it, not attacking. Just watching. Her balance was centered low, hips, not shoulders. That meant she’d go for a sweep.

He blocked it before she got halfway.

Tenel blinked.

"Okay. You do fight."

"I try."

They circled. Light steps. The others blurred into background noise. He caught snippets, someone coughing, another panting. Bradan’s boots grinding against gravel.

Tenel lunged again. This time sharper. A jab at the shoulder.

He ducked.

Tapped her wrist.

Not hard. But precise.

She hissed and stepped back, flexing her hand.

"That hurt."

"Did it?"

"No. I’m lying."

"You’re bad at it."

"You’re worse."

They reset.

She narrowed her eyes.

"Where’d you learn footwork like that?"

He didn’t answer.

"You’re not like the others," she said.

’Yeah. No kidding.’

Rethan kept still.

"You’re quiet. You don’t ask questions. You don’t flinch at noise. You didn’t scream your first night."

"I didn’t need to."

"Bullshit."

He shrugged.

She didn’t press further.

But her expression stayed skeptical.

Next pair rotated.

The match that followed was slower. A tall girl and a thin boy with a brace on his knee. They barely made contact. Just dodges and corrections. Quiet. Hesitant.

Tenel nudged him once with her elbow.

"You’re up again in two. They’ll make you fight Emor."

He raised an eyebrow. "Who’s Emor?"

"That." She pointed.

The tallest kid in the line. Muscles like rope, eyes half-lidded like he’d been bored for a decade. He held his arms crossed and hadn’t moved all morning.

But when the next bell rang, he stepped into the ring without looking.

"Great," Rethan muttered.

Tenel smirked. "Just don’t bleed."

Two pairs later, Bradan called his name.

Not "Rethan." Just, "You. Again."

He walked forward.

Emor didn’t blink.

Bradan’s eyes flicked between them. "No breaking anything."

That was it.

Start.

Rethan barely had time to settle into stance before Emor moved.

Fast.

Like stone slamming forward.

Rethan ducked the first hit. Spun. Came up into a guard.

But the pressure was different now.

Real.

’He’s testing me.’

Not showing off.

Not taunting.

Just... pushing.

The next hit landed. Barely clipped his shoulder, but it still sent him half a step back.

’That would’ve floored me a week ago.’

He gritted his teeth. Refused to lose ground.

Emor pressed again.

No flair. No power bursts. Just speed and mass and too much confidence.

Rethan dodged two more swings. Let the third graze him.

Then stepped inside the arc and tapped Emor on the thigh with his palm.

Off-balance.

The big kid blinked.

Then backed off.

That was it.

No smiles. No nods.

Just understanding.

And something in Emor’s stance changed.

Not approval.

Respect.

Bradan called for a stop.

"Get water," he said.

Rethan breathed out.

Hard.

The aches weren’t bad.

The stares from the others, though?

They were worse.

Tenel sidled up beside him again as they walked to the wall.

"You didn’t just hold your own," she said. "You read him."

Rethan didn’t reply.

She nudged him again.

"Fine. Be mysterious."

"I’m not."

"Then be honest."

"I’m tired."

"Okay," she said, grinning. "That’s fair."

She handed him a flask.

He drank.

It tasted like old tin and something floral.

He didn’t hate it.

He passed it back.

The others gathered again in small clusters, murmuring now. A little louder than yesterday.

Rethan let his shoulders sink just a bit.

Not to rest.

Just to feel the gravity again.

’I’m not here to win. I’m here to remember. But... that wasn’t just muscle memory. That was me.’

He looked up at the sky. Still gray. Still low.

And in the corner of his vision—

[The Crownless Mother continues watching.]

[The Messenger tilts their head.]

[Observation: Quiet Aptitude.]

Rethan exhaled through his nose.

’Yeah. I see you.’

Then he walked back to the line.

And waited for the next order.

They were still recovering from the last set when Bradan called it.

No fanfare. No setup.

"Rethan."

He stood straighter before he even processed it.

"You’re not sitting out," Bradan said, without looking up from his clipboard. "Get back in the ring."

Someone near the back muttered, "Didn’t he just finish?"

"Yeah," someone else answered. "Guess he’s not tired."

Bradan raised one hand.

Three fingers.

"Yorran, Elik, Sarrin. With him."

A rustle. Movement. The three stepped forward. Yorran was the tallest, lean muscle, sharp elbows.

Elik moved stiff, like he still didn’t know how to use his limbs without overthinking. Sarrin was short and twitchy, but quick. Always the first to get water. Always the last to start drills.

Bradan didn’t explain. He didn’t need to.

The spacing alone said enough. Ten meters between them. No one matched up across from him.

Rethan rolled his neck once. Stretched his fingers.

’One on three. Classic. Humbling experience, or trap disguised as a lesson. Probably both.’

Tenel, now leaning against the rail with a smear of dirt across her jaw, called out under her breath, "Good luck."

She didn’t sound hopeful.

Bradan finally looked up. "No head strikes. No magic. Everything else is fair."

’Translation: don’t die, but get close enough to feel it.’

Yorran cracked his knuckles.

Sarrin bounced on his feet.

Elik didn’t move.

"Start."

Bradan didn’t shout it. Just dropped the word like a stone in water.

Yorran came first. Of course.

Big guys always opened.

Rethan didn’t meet him head-on. He pivoted just enough to put the angle wrong, make Yorran overextend. It worked. The kid’s momentum dragged him half a step off-line.

Sarrin was already darting in from the side.

Rethan ducked, caught him low with a shoulder, and turned the move into a shove. Not hard. Just enough to trip him into Yorran’s hip.

"Elik!" Sarrin snapped, trying to untangle himself.

Elik still hadn’t moved.

’Frozen. Not scared. Waiting. He wants an opening.’

Rethan didn’t wait for them to sort themselves out. He stepped toward Elik, quick, low to the ground. Elik flinched.

That was enough.

He didn’t strike. Just raised his hand like he might. Elik backed off.

Yorran had recovered. Charging again. Sloppy now.

’He doesn’t like being made to look dumb.’

This time, Rethan met him. Two steps. Pivot. Heel down.

Yorran threw a wide punch. Rethan ducked, jammed his elbow into the other kid’s ribs, and pushed off. Not to injure, just to rattle.

Sarrin came again from the side. Low kick aimed for the knee.

Rethan caught it with his shin. Winced. Pain bloomed up the side of his leg.

’That’s gonna leave something.’

He stepped back. Three on one meant one thing: stamina. Not winning. Surviving.

He turned to the side. Forced them into a line. Yorran cursed. Sarrin adjusted. Elik still hung back.

"Help!" Sarrin barked. "Damn it, Elik, do something!"

Elik blinked.

Then moved.

Finally.

He ran in. Arms tucked, stance tight.

Rethan didn’t wait.

He moved forward too. Closed the gap early. Met Elik’s shoulder with his own, bounced off, used the turn to redirect Sarrin’s strike into Yorran’s leg.

It connected.

Yorran yelped. Shoved Sarrin.

"What the hell, man?!"

Sarrin shouted back, "It wasn’t me!"

Rethan stood between them now, breathing hard.

’They’re falling apart faster than I am.’

Elik backed away, hands lifted like he wasn’t part of it anymore.

Bradan didn’t stop the match.

Because technically?

It was still going.

Sarrin lunged.

Rethan met him, redirected, wrapped his arm around the smaller boy’s waist, and dropped him with a pivot. Not elegant. Not even proper. Just force and angle and luck.

Sarrin hit the ground.

Didn’t get back up.

Rethan straightened.

Yorran was staring at him, chest heaving, sweat lining his forehead.

"You done?" Rethan asked.

Yorran’s jaw worked. He didn’t answer.

Then he turned and walked off.

Elik was already retreating toward the rail.

Bradan scratched something on his clipboard.

"That’s enough."

He didn’t say good job.

Didn’t say stop.

Just scribbled.

Rethan bent over at the waist. Not dramatic. Just to breathe. His hands on his knees. His lungs scraped. His leg ached from the shin kick. His shoulder buzzed.

He stayed that way until Tenel showed up beside him.

She offered a canteen.

"Wasn’t pretty," she said.

He drank.

"Wasn’t supposed to be."

"Still. One on three? That’s gotta feel good."

He didn’t answer.

Not because she was wrong.

Because she wasn’t.

[The Messenger pauses.]

[The Judge with No Mouth does not blink.]

[Observation: Stress Response – Controlled.]

Rethan wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.

’Still watching. Good.’

He walked off the field.

No smile.

But a little straighter than before.

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