VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 445: The Voice That Won’t Let Him Rest
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- Chapter 445: The Voice That Won’t Let Him Rest

Chapter 445: The Voice That Won’t Let Him Rest
The roar doesn’t vanish all at once. It thins first, peeling away into pockets of uneasy noise, shouts dying mid-breath as people realize something is wrong. Eyes shift from celebration to concern, from the spectacle to the man tangled in the ropes.
Ryoma isn’t moving. And the referee still hasn’t started counting. That realization ripples through the arena, confusion spreading faster than fear.
Jade has already turned away. He has taken one step toward the nearest corner. Then another, not toward the neutral corner yet, but toward the blue corner, one hand leaning on the top rope.
His legs betray him. A tremor runs through his right thigh. The motion makes his head swim, the world tilting slightly to the left.
“Hold on,” one of the commentators says, excitement draining into surprise. “The referee hasn’t started the count yet.”
“And look at McConnel,” the other adds quickly. “He’s not exactly sprinting to that neutral corner.”
His right ear is still ringing. Not the dull echo of fatigue. This is sharp, intrusive, like a tone drilled straight into his skull. That left hook Ryoma threw earlier, the one that landed near the base of the ear, still throbs like a screw that never finished digging.
For the first time tonight, the champion looks human.
“He’s hurt,” the first commentator says flatly. “There’s no way he came out of that exchange clean.”
“No chance,” the second agrees. “Those were heavy collisions. You don’t walk through that without paying something.”
The camera lingers on Jade’s posture; the slight hitch in his breathing, the way his shoulders rise unevenly, the subtle shake in his legs as he steadies himself.
“But the bigger question,” the first commentator continues, “is Takeda. Can he get up?”
“He’s only taken two clean shots to the head all night,” the second replies. “That’s it. We’ve seen him eat worse than that in previous fights.”
“He can take a punch.”
“So if anyone can beat the count here…”
“It’s him.”
That same calculation is happening in the blue corner.
Nakahara doesn’t move. The towel stays in his hands, clenched tight. But he doesn’t lift it.
Ryoma didn’t come into this fight at his best, yes. But in terms of damage, real damage, this is still nothing compared to what he’s endured before.
Two head shots, that’s all.
And Ryoma’s eyes are still wide open, alert. That tells Nakahara everything he needs to know that the mind is still there.
So Nakahara stays silent. He doesn’t command, doesn’t plead. He doesn’t tell Ryoma to rise or stay down.
Because this choice can’t belong to a corner. If Ryoma wants to continue, he’ll move. If he can get up, he will. If he wants to stop it here, Nakahara will accept it.
There’s still time on the clock. More than a minute and a half left in the round. But the champion is hurt too. For a moment at least, his power won’t come as easily.
There is a path forward. But Nakahara won’t push Ryoma onto it. He just waits, leaving the decision where it has always belonged, with the fighter on the canvas.
***
As the champion struggles reaching the neutral corner, Ryoma actually gets the chance to rest.
Time stretches, and Jade still hasn’t gone, still only two steps away. He turns slightly, eyes searching, and then starts moving again.
But he doesn’t go straight toward the neutral corner the ref gestured earlier. He drifts along the ropes, toward the blue corner.
“Uh… wait,” one of the commentators says. “Why is McConnel walking that way?”
“That’s not where he’s supposed to be,” the other adds. “He’s only a couple steps from Takeda and he’s… yeah, he’s disoriented.”
Jade’s glove slides along the rope as he walks. His posture stays upright, proud even, but there’s stiffness to it now, like the balance is something he has to negotiate rather than trust.
Mark’s voice cuts through from the apron. “Jade! Go over there!”
Jade slows again, blinks, turns his head, following the direction of Mark’s pointing.
He sees it, he knows where it is, but it’s so far away. For a moment, he lets go of the rope, trying to turn across the ring instead of circling it.
But the legs still betray him. They wobble, a visible break in rhythm that forces him to catch himself mid-step.
“Ohhh…” one commentator exhales. “That’s telling.”
Jade immediately reaches back for the rope, jaw tightening. There’s no choice now. He keeps moving the long way, hand dragging along the cable, step by careful step.
“And that,” the other commentator says, voice dropping, “is damage. Real damage.”
The crowd notices the contrast. The champion still struggles walking. But the challenger, still down, gets the chance to rest.
And suddenly, voices rise from the stands, urgent instead of excited.
“Get up, Ryoma!”
“He’s hurt too!”
“Don’t stop now!”
“You’ve got him. Don’t give up!”
The chant isn’t loud yet. It’s hopeful and desperate.
But Ryoma doesn’t really hear them.
The ringing in his ears has dulled into something softer, constant, like rain tapping against a roof far away. The roar of the crowd blends into it, meaningless noise without edges.
His body feels warm and heavy. It’s pleasant, too pleasant.
For a moment, he wants nothing more than to stay like this. Knees on the canvas, back against the ropes.
Let the night pass, let morning come. Sleep would be easy.
But the only thing that prevents him from closing his eyes is the voice. It’s still there, still clear, still irritatingly sharp.
<< How can you be comfortable here? >>
<< Is this really where you want it to end? >>
<< You could go home, you know. Say the same thing again. >>
<< Poor preparation. Short notice. Bad conditioning. >>
<< It sounds reasonable. >>
<< It always does. >>
<< But are you sure you can live with it? >>
<< Like before? Like those days? >>
<< Night after night, replaying everything that went wrong. >>
<< Cursing the timing. The debut lose. The truck. Kaede. Yourself. >>
<< You came up with a thousand excuses back then. >>
<< Did any of them help? >>
<< Did even one night pass in peace? >>
<< Or did you lie awake, knowing the truth you refused to face? >>
The voice doesn’t raise itself. It doesn’t need to.
<< You are pathetic, Ryoma. >>
<< You were given a second chance. >>
<< The best gift a boxer can only dream of. >>
<< A body capable of this. >>
<< A mind sharpened beyond reason. >>
<< A cheat installed right here. >>
<< And now, when it hurts, you want excuses again? >>
<< Really? >>
The rain keeps falling in his ears. But the comfort finally begins to rot. The pain from his previous life comes rushing back.
Not the physical kind, but the other one. The nights, the silence, the taste of failure that never left his mouth no matter how many excuses he swallowed.
It’s vivid now; not just the image of himself as a loser, but the anger that followed, the resentment, the helpless fury.
His jaw tightens until his teeth grind. A hand moves, searching blindly, and finally reaches
the top rope.
His fingers curl around it. The shift is small, barely visible. But the arena catches it.
The crowd stirs. A ripple runs through the stands, surprise bleeding into hope.
“He’s moving,” a commentator calls out. “Ryoma Takeda is moving.”
The noise swells, no longer confused now, no longer distant.
“RYO-MA!”
“GET UP!”
“DON’T STOP NOW!”


