Chapter 713 - 713: A Lesson Written in Pressure
Before Kenta can find the words, the hall erupts. The shift is immediate, violent, pulling every eye back to the ring.
Satoru is moving forward with a kind of intensity that wasn’t there before, chasing rather than waiting, cutting space instead of measuring it.
The slow, swaying rhythm he had carried through the earlier rounds is gone, abandoned against an opponent who refuses to stay still long enough for it to matter. There’s no more patience in his steps now, no hint of setting traps. He’s forcing the fight into existence.
Takasugi tries to halt him the same way he has all night, snapping a jab into the midsection to stop the advance.
It lands.
Thud!
But Satoru doesn’t react to it. He drives through it, shoulder turning as a heavy right cross follows, thrown with full commitment rather than calculation.
Takasugi moves to step away, like he always does. But this time there’s no space waiting for him.
Satoru crashes into that retreat, closing the distance before it can reset. Takasugi is forced to bring his guard up tight, the cross slamming hard into his forearms.
DUGH!
It’s not scoring, but loud, heavy, and disruptive. For the first time tonight, the rhythm breaks.
Takasugi steps back again, trying to rebuild distance, but Satoru stays on him, pressing forward without pause, throwing two more punches with the kind of force that doesn’t ask for openings, only creates them.
The arcs are wider now, less controlled, more dangerous. There’s space in them. Takasugi sees it. The opening for counter is there, and he intends to take it.
But Something in Satoru’s expression doesn’t match the pattern anymore. The calm is gone. What replaces it isn’t reckless, but it isn’t measured either. It’s pressure without hesitation, intent without restraint.
For a split second, it throws Takasugi off, and his timing slips.
Instead of countering, he tightens his guard again.
Dugh! Dugh!
The punches crash into his arms, the impact rattling through his frame, numbing the muscles just enough to stall his response.
Satoru steps in again, driving a heavy lead hook into the upper arm.
Dugh!
Takasugi manages to answer at last, slipping a short counter into Satoru’s right ribs.
Thud!
It lands, but Satoru doesn’t slow. His hands keep moving, less precise, but relentless.
A left crashes into the side, followed by a right hook that comes in at a bad angle, grazing past the guard and slipping awkwardly toward the back of the ear.
Thud!
Dsh!
It’s messy, but constant with madness and intensity.
Only one shot that actually digs into the body, the only one that landing properly. But the pace, the pressure, the refusal to disengage starts to build something else entirely. It’s not damage, but discomfort and uncertainty.
Takasugi shifts his feet, trying to reorient, but the rhythm he had earlier doesn’t come back as easily.
“…What’s wrong with this guy all of a sudden…?”
He manages to slip in a short checking punch, just enough to interrupt the surge, then pivots out and reclaims his space.
The reset is there, familiar, practiced. But something in his movement has shifted. It’s subtle, almost unnoticeable from a distance, yet the confidence that once held his rhythm together now shows a faint crack.
His heartbeat climbs, quickened by a pressure that doesn’t fade with distance.
Satoru comes again, without any setup, no hesitation. He just walks forward with both gloves raised high, posture tight, eyes locked in.
The refinement from earlier rounds is gone. No probing jab, no feint, no attempt to draw reactions. The structure has collapsed into something far more direct, as if the fight has turned personal in a way Takasugi doesn’t understand.
The commentators pick up on it almost immediately, their tone shifting with the surge in intensity.
“He looks unsettled out there… like this turned personal all of a sudden!”
“Like Takasugi had insulted his ancestor!”
“Whatever it is, it’s breaking the rhythm!”
“And the crowd likes it. They are going wild now!”
For a while, Takasugi still moves like he’s in control, circling, keeping the range, landing the occasional stiff jab to keep Satoru honest.
But it no longer feels the same. The ease is gone. The flow he enjoyed earlier doesn’t return. This isn’t the kind of fight he knows how to enjoy. It doesn’t feel like a match anymore. It feels like something rougher, something closer to a brawl forced into a ring.
Satoru isn’t trying to outmaneuver him. He isn’t competing in rhythm or technique. Every step forward carries a kind of weight that ignores those things entirely, every swing thrown like it’s meant to break something rather than just scoring.
And for the first time in his career, even as he continues to land those controlling jabs, Takasugi feels something unfamiliar tightening at the edges of his awareness.
Each step Satoru takes forward doesn’t just close distance. It feels like it threatens his very existence.
Another wild swing appears, and this time, Takasugi lands a compact left to the face.
Dsh!
Satoru’s head snaps back, his face twisting from the impact, the pain visible, raw and unguarded. But Takasugi doesn’t read it that way. What he sees isn’t damage, but madness.
Instead of stepping in to follow up, Takasugi pulls back again. He gives up the exchange, the distance coming not from design, but from something closer to fear.
Up on the mezzanine, Kenta’s expression tightens as he keeps his eyes on the ring.
“That’s not him,” he says, low but clear. “He’s forcing it.”
His gaze shifts briefly toward the blue corner, settling on Ryoma. “You’re doing it again, aren’t you…? That same thing you pulled on me.”
There’s no doubt in his tone now, only certainty built from experience. His eyes return to the ring, tracking the way Satoru keeps pushing forward without pause.
“If you think you can turn him the same way, you’re wrong, Ryoma. You are exposing that kid.”
Nakahara doesn’t respond right away. He keeps his eyes on the ring, watching the exchange unfold with the same calm focus he always carries, but there’s a shift in the way he studies it now.
From where he stands, it does look like what Kenta is saying. Ryoma isn’t just asking Satoru to push forward. He’s driving him to the edge, forcing him into a state where hesitation disappears, where the body moves before thought can interfere.
Maybe it’s meant to spike his adrenaline, to make his reactions sharper, more immediate. Or something even riskier than that, pushing Satoru toward that thin, unstable line where instinct takes over completely.
Nakahara exhales quietly. “Yeah… for someone like him, it’s too soon. He’s not ready for that yet. His fundamentals aren’t there to support it. Instinct without structure just turns into ineffective madness.”
But before the thought settles into criticism, his attention shifts. Across the ring, Takasugi is still moving, still landing that stiff jab, still stepping out and reclaiming space the way he has since the opening round. On the surface, nothing is broken.
But the longer Nakahara watches, the more the difference becomes impossible to ignore. The rhythm isn’t as clean anymore. The reset comes a fraction later. The feet don’t carry the same ease when he circles out.
It’s subtle, but to Nakahara’s trained eyes, it stands out. The contrast is too sharp.
Nakahara’s gaze narrows slightly. “…No,” he says, almost to himself at first. “This isn’t just about Satoru. This approach… it’s aimed at his opponent. Maybe Ryoma has seen something in that kid, something we couldn’t see from. here.”
The bell rings, cutting through the noise and bringing the third round to an end. Takasugi still takes the round, but the margin isn’t the same. The control is there, yet it no longer feels effortless.
And as he walks back to his corner, something in him has changed. The lightness is gone. There’s no trace of enjoyment in his face now, only a thin layer of fatigue that doesn’t quite match the damage he’s taken.
Satoru hasn’t landed much clean, but the pressure has stayed on him the entire round, heavy, constant, wearing in a way that doesn’t show clearly on the surface.
At ringside, Takasugi’s mother is already on her feet, leaning forward, calling out to him with growing urgency.
“Renjiro, are you okay?”
Takasugi nods as he reaches the corner, but the answer feels automatic. The grin that had been there earlier doesn’t return.
His coach notices it immediately. With a quick glance, he gestures to the rest of the team, and they close in around Takasugi, forming a barrier that gently but firmly keeps the mother’s voice from reaching him during the break.
Up on the mezzanine, Nakahara watches it all, the pieces settling into place. “…That kid,” he begins, his tone measured as he searches for the right way to frame it. “I don’t know how else to put it…”
His eyes stay on Takasugi as he continues. “He looks like a toddler being pampered by his ever-loving mom. And now Ryoma’s teaching him that this sport isn’t for a spoiled kid like him.”
Then he notices Takasugi’s father stepping closer to the red corner, leaning in as if he were part of the team, speaking with the kind of focus and precision you’d expect from a second.
From there, something clicks. Nakahara recalls Takasugi’s father had been talking earlier, the instructions, the awareness, the timing. There was real understanding behind it.
“…That kid reminds me of Shimamura,” Nakahara says. “I taught him boxing early, when he was still a child. His form isn’t just talent. It’s years of fundamentals drilled in from the beginning.”
He turns to Kenta, a faint, bitter smile forming. “That kid, Renjiro Takasugi, had that kind of support his whole life. But too much of it isn’t always a good thing.
He turns back to the red corner, his expression settling into something more solemn. “It looks like they forgot to teach him the most important part.”
Kenta glances at him. “The most important part?”
“The will,” Nakahara replies. “The determination to push through when things stop being easy, when it’s no longer fun. Because boxing isn’t something you get to enjoy all the time.”
His eyes drift back to Kenta, smiling softly. “You must have understood it better, because unlike that kid, you’ve been through a lot, taking this path from a completely different background.”
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