VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 406: The Invisible Punch

Chapter 406: The Invisible Punch
Ryohei’s face is painted with doubt now. But that doubt doesn’t have time to settle as the referee’s voice cuts through the noise.
“Seconds out!”
Nakahara and Sera hesitate for half a second, exchanging a look that carries all their uncertainty. Neither of them likes leaving Ryohei like this.
But Ryohei solves it for them. He pushes himself up from the stool, legs steady despite the ache beneath his skin.
“I’ll try it,” he says simply. “Let’s see where it takes me.”
There’s no confidence in his tone, no faith in diagrams or perfect answers. It’s just resolve, the sound of a man ready stepping into unfamiliar ground because standing still isn’t an option anymore.
Nakahara exhales and nods once. Sera gathers the towel and bucket, hands moving on instinct. They start clearing the corner.
As they do, Ryoma steps in close, just for a breath of time.
“Here’s the trick,” he says quietly. “Keep your gloves swaying forward. Let him touch them, never your body. The distance stays blurred, but it feels reachable. Keep the pendulum alive no matter how close he is. The rest is up to you.”
Ryohei blinks. “What?”
Ryoma is already slipping through the ropes. “You’ll get it when you get to it.”
That doesn’t help. If anything, it leaves Ryohei more unsettled than before.
But there’s no room left to untangle it now. He turns inward instead, stripping it down to something simple enough to hold onto.
“Gloves forward,” he murmurs. “Let him touch them. Not me.”
Across the ring, Coach Koichi lingers on the apron, one hand gripping the rope. He leans in and speaks low but casual.
“Keep it up. His legs are starting to feel it. Stay on him.”
Uchida nods, jaw set, eyes locked forward.
The corners clear. The ropes stand empty again. And the crowd stirs with anticipation as the previous round showed them how Uchida managed to force the fight into his term.
“This has been a good, competitive fight so far,” one commentator says, filling the moment before the bell.
“Yeah, you can feel it tightening up,” the other adds. “Both guys digging deep now.”
“Ryohei can’t just run anymore, not at this stage.”
“And Uchida’s gearing himself up. This might be the turning point.”
The bell rings.
Ding!
Round Eight.
Ryohei raises his gloves as he moves toward center ring, letting them sway slightly in front of him, testing the motion, the unfamiliar feel.
His pendulum is smaller now, almost contained. Rear foot is almost planted, lead foot sliding back and forth in short strokes, like he’s dancing in place.
Anyone watching could take it as confirmation that his legs aren’t what they were earlier. And it’s true; his legs feel heavier than earlier rounds. He knows that.
He could still widen the steps if he wanted. But he doesn’t.
Instead, he keeps the sway tight, compact, trying to echo Ryoma’s rhythm from memory. Less movement, more weight underneath him. A posture that looks ready to trade.
Uchida watches for a second, and buys it. It’s exhaustion, slowed legs, just like Coach Koichi said.
“It’s my turn.”
Uchida steps in, not reckless, just close enough. Two stiff jabs snap out, followed by a straight.
Ryohei catches them on his gloves, forearms tight.
“Let him touch this…”
Dug. Dug. Dug.
Uchida’s instinct flares. And he steps deeper for a body hook. Ryohei widens the pendulum backward just enough, barely a step.
“Not the body… Don’t let him touch the body.”
But it’s not enough distance, so he folds his elbow down just in time.
The glove scrapes along his forearm instead of sinking into his belly, close enough to feel like a landed punch.
But the near miss is all Uchida needs.
“Almost there…”
His mouth curls into a knowing smirk, certain now that Ryohei is starting to give.
Ryohei’s sway never stops. His gloves keep floating forward, just inside Uchida’s reach.
Uchida sees it and tries again; jab to measure, then a right hook loaded behind it.
Ryohei catches the jab, and pulls his lead foot back, far enough this time that Uchida’s hook hits nothing.
And in that flash, he sees a sliver of chance, a gap that wasn’t there before.
“There…”
His hand twitches, but too late.
He hesitates, surprised by the opening itself, and Uchida’s already filling the space with a left hook to the ribs.
Thud!
Ryohei exhales hard.
“That was sick,” a commentator calls out.
“He must be feeling it now.”
Uchida follows it with hook upstairs, Ryohei covers but the glove still clips his ear.
Dsh!
He fires back more to breathe than to hurt, and his glove thuds against Uchida’s upper arm.
Dug.
It buys him a step. He circles out, shoulders rising and falling, eyes locked forward as he resets.
“Ryohei forced to give ground again,” one commentator notes. “Every time they collide, Uchida’s getting the better of it.”
“Yeah,” the other agrees. “At this range, Ryohei just doesn’t have the tools to stand his ground. If he tries to fight him head-on, it’s only going to get uglier.”
“So the legs are still his lifeline,” the first adds. “Movement, distance. That’s the only way he survives this round.”
***
Ryohei doesn’t fully understand Ryoma’s idea yet. Only that Uchida keeps stepping in. Only that being almost there provokes him to step deeper.
As he reconsidering his options, voices start cutting through the air from somewhere near ringside.
“Stop running!”
“What’s wrong with you?”
Another shout follows, louder and sharper. “The guy in front of you’s a kid! What… are you scared of a brat or something?”
As if on cue, Ryohei stops circling. He settles back into his small pendulum; rear foot anchored, only the lead foot sliding, back and forth.
It’s not really because of the crowd. But because he’s already done what he needed, escaped the corner, reclaimed the center.
Now he’s ready again, laying the bait patiently, waiting for that same narrow window he saw earlier.
But Uchida sees it as what it is; Ryohei agitated by the crowd’s jeer, and now cornered, run out of option. He bumps his gloves together, grin sharpening into something ugly.
“That’s more like it,” he sneers. “Quit being scared. Or what… are you really afraid of my knuckles?”
He opens with a probing jab.
Ryohei’s brows twitch, offended. He doesn’t sway away this time. He plants, leans forward, and blocks the jab fully, gloves tight, weight committed.
Dug.
The sound is solid, satisfying.
And he stays there, giving Uchida exactly what he wants.
“Bring it on.”
Dug. Dug. Dsh!
Thud. Dug. Thud! Dhs!
They trade short hooks in the pocket. Uchida throws with intent, letting punches come if it means landing his own. He really has that much confidence in his own punches.
Ryohei keeps his guard high, lets his body take the toll.
Thud! Thud!
Dug. Bug!
“That hurt, damn it…”
He snaps a compact left…
Dsh!
…landing flush on Uchida’s face.
Eventually, he gives ground again, steps back, almost to the ropes.
“Oh… he can’t stay there,” a commentator says.
“This is Uchida’s fight up close. Ryohei doesn’t want that exchange.”
Uchida pours it on, confidence swelling, pressure relentless.
But quietly, Ryohei’s pendulum returns, barely visible, just enough to breathe life back into the space.
He flicks a half-jab, not really a punch, but a suggestion. It makes Uchida hesitate, only for a moment before he dismisses it.
“I know you’ve got nothing left.”
He steps in anyway, a lead hook brushing Ryohei’s forearm. Then the right comes long and heavy.
Ryohei pulls his lead foot back, spine leaning until it kisses the ropes, rear leg coiling tight.
Uchida’s punch miss, but he throws again, a left hook, greedy.
But out of nowhere, something compact snaps out from Ryohei’s chest, almost invisible…
Dhuack!
…landing clean on Uchida’s jaw.
His head jerks sideways, legs vanish, and his arm flails as his body collapses to the canvas.
Blugh!
For a heartbeat, the arena goes silent. Even the commentators are searching for it.
“What…? Uchida’s down!”
“How did that happen?”
The referee clearly sees it and already waving Ryohei to the neutral corner.
***
As Ryohey walks away, the reply is shown on the big screen. Only then does everyone sees what was happening.
“That was tiny… did you see that?” one commentator blurts out.
“No wind-up at all,” the other answers, disbelief sharpening his voice. “No swing, no load. The punch came from right here… almost off his own chest.”
“That’s why no one saw it,” the first continues. “No drama, no flash. Just a short hook snapping into the jaw.”
“And that’s the danger,” the second finishes, rising with the moment. “It doesn’t look like much, but it shuts the lights off.”
Yes, it was a small punch, no hip rotation, no spine twisting, no commitment. It only needs the knuckle itself, released at the exact moment it matters.
It’s the kind of counter that carries little risk, never asking him to stand in danger, yet still brutal enough to put Uchida on the canvas.
“Just when it looked like Uchida had dragged the fight onto his terms, Ryohei caught him. No… he caught all of us off guard.”
The referee’s count continues.
Three!
Four!
In the neutral corner, Ryohei lifts his right glove slightly, flexing his bicep toward Ryoma with a crooked grin, a silent thank-you for the insight.
“And look at that…” the second commentator catches it. “Ryohei’s signaling to his corner, and… it’s Ryoma… Ryoma’s answering with the same gesture.”
“That wasn’t luck, was it?” The first adds. “There’s no way that was a fluke. They’ve been setting that trap the whole time.”


