Chapter 701: Two Faces, One Outcome
Chapter 701: Two Faces, One Outcome
Villanueva hesitates at first, still wary of the trap. But when he sees Ryoma edging closer to the ropes without urgency, he finally steps forward, tightening the space and taking away that freedom.
Ryoma shifts left in response, then settles his feet there, lowering into a slight crouch with both gloves hovering around chest level. The posture is open, almost reckless, like a direct invitation to trade.
“Come on. Let’s end it here…”
He flicks his head once, then again, a small, taunting motion that dares Villanueva to act, while his right hand stays coiled, ready beneath the surface.
“…He’s doing it again,” the lead commentator says, a sharp edge of disbelief in his voice. “Look at that posture. That’s not defense. That’s an invitation.”
“And not a safe one either,” the second adds quickly. “He’s lowering himself right in front of him, gloves down, chin in range. That’s a straight-up challenge.”
Villanueva watches carefully, eyes tracking the posture, the positioning, the right hand. He recognizes the setup, understands the risk, but also knows that Ryoma’s right is limited to only compact punch, not something that can fully explode.
There is danger in it, but it is a danger he decides to accept.
So be it.
Let’s trade it out.
He steps in with a probing left, cutting it short as a feint before pulling it back and firing a right hand immediately after.
But Ryoma doesn’t wait to read and react. His feet shift in a quick shuffle, stance flipping into southpaw in one smooth motion as his right hand shoots forward in a tight, compact hook.
“Oh, look at that!”
“He’s switching stance!”
It isn’t aimed for the head or body, but at Villanueva’s lead hand itself, striking it more like a shove than a punch, knocking it across and into his rear hand.
Both of Villanueva’s arms are displaced in that instant, drawn together and away from the center.
The opening appears. And Ryoma drives the left cross straight through it…
Dhuack!
“What a setup!” the lead snaps.
“He moved the hands first!” the second adds. “That opening was created!”
The punch lands flush in the middle of the face. It’s only the left, but the weight behind it is enough. Villanueva’s vision flashes white for a split second as the impact snaps through him.
Ryoma follows in one continuous motion, shifting his stance again as he fires a quick left, then steps his lead foot out to widen the angle and swings a hook to the head…
Dsh! Dsh!
…before driving a heavy shot into the body.
BAM!!!
“Sharp shots up top…!”
“BODY SHOT!!!”
“OH MY GOD!!! RIGHT TO THE LIVER!!!”
It’s the same sequence, one the arena has already come to recognize.
But this time, Villanueva has nothing left to defend with.
That same liver shot lands for the third time tonight.
And again, he goes down.
“And again! Ryoma drops him for the third time!”
But this time, Villanueva can’t even hold himself on one knee. His body gives out completely, collapsing onto the canvas as his hand clamps over his right side.
The referee steps in and looks down at him for a brief moment, reading the condition clearly, before raising both arms and waving it off without hesitation.
“That’s it! It’s over! He’s seen enough!”
“Ryoma Takeda stops him in the third!”
Ryoma simply turns and walks back toward his corner, one hand raised in acknowledgment, his steps unhurried.
There’s no burst of celebration in him, no visible thrill. His face stays composed, almost indifferent, as if this outcome had already been settled long before the final exchange.
Behind him, Villanueva struggles to push himself up. His first instinct is to protest, a flicker of frustration rising at the referee’s decision to stop it without a count.
But the motion stalls halfway. He remains on one knee, his breath uneven, as the sound of the arena crashes down around him.
The reaction is unmistakable. The same crowd that had held back, measured in their support, now lets go.
The roar spreads through the arena, loud and unfiltered, some voices shouting in triumph, others offering steady applause in recognition of Villanueva’s effort.
“Dante! You fought like a champ!”
“Hold your head up, Dante!”
“That was a war, man!”
“Still our guy, Dante!”
“Respect! Respect!”
And hearing it, Villanueva understands that he gave them what they came for. He met their expectations and fought the kind of fight they wanted to see. The only truth he can’t escape is that the man across from him is simply beyond what he could handle.
Even if the fight had continued, he has no answer for what just happened, no path forward that he can see through the pain and the clarity of it all.
The argument he intended to have with the referee dies before it can take shape. Villanueva exhales, shoulders dropping slightly, and accepts it.
Slowly, he rises to his feet without protest. The moment he turns, Mendosa and his team are already there, stepping through the ropes to meet him, hands steady on his arms, guiding him back toward the corner.
“Easy… take it slow.”
“We’ve got you, champ.”
“Don’t force it, just breathe.”
“Good fight… you did your part.”
“Lean on me, we’ll get you back.”
His steps are uneven. There’s a slight drag in his movement, one side guarded as his hand presses against his body.
Taking the same shot twice was already punishing. A third, delivered in the same exact way, crosses into something harsher, something that feels less like defeat and more like being unraveled piece by piece.
He’s been outplayed completely. And there’s no part of him left that can deny it.
***
The noise lingers for a few moments longer, then gradually settles as the ring announcer steps through the ropes. His polished shoes touch the canvas with quiet authority, his posture straight as he moves toward the center.
He lifts the microphone, waiting just long enough for the last waves of sound to fade into a low murmur.
“Ladies and gentlemen…”
The words carry cleanly across the arena, drawing every eye back to the ring.
“We have a stoppage. The official time; two minutes, sixteen seconds of round number three.”
He turns slightly, one arm extending toward the red corner.
“The referee has called a halt to the contest. Your winner by TKO… and now the unified champion…”
His voice rises, cutting through the space with full force.
“RYOMA ’THE CHAMELEON’ TAKEDAAAA!!!”
The arena rises to its feet, a wave of applause rolling through the stands. It’s loud, sustained, but measured. No one calls his name yet. Even those who came just to see him fight decide to hold back themselves, choosing restraint out of respect for the local hero.
Ryoma acknowledges it with a small gesture, stepping out of his corner and raising both ungloved hands. He turns slightly as he walks, accepting the applause without drawing more from it than it offers.
He glances briefly toward Aqualis’ group at ringside, his eyes meeting Fujimoto’s. They exchange a quiet nod, no words needed, but Ryoma is already aware of the role he carries now as a brand ambassador.
In that instant, Dr. Mizuno catches the shift in him, the same contrast he had labeled as adaptive intelligence. But he isn’t the only one who sees it. Fujimoto has been aware of that side of Ryoma all along, and more than that, he’s been using it.
“I’ve always believed he’s just a good kid with a soft heart,” Fujimoto says, leaning slightly toward Mizuno, his eyes still on the ring, “someone who genuinely wants to make everyone around him happy. But that’s not always possible in this world. You just can’t make everyone happy all the time.”
Mizuno glances at him, a hint of curiosity lifting his brow.
“The part I like about him,” Fujimoto continues, “is that he knows when to shut that side off… and become something else entirely.”
Mizuno looks back toward the ring, nodding slowly as he keeps clapping along with the crowd.
“I see what you mean,” he says. “In a sport like this, softness doesn’t get you far. I just hope that side of him stays in the ring… nowhere else.”
Novel Full