VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 470: The Beat He Can’t Read
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Chapter 470: The Beat He Can’t Read
Blue corner swarms him the moment he sits. A towel wipes the blood from Shimamura’s mouth while another presses against his cheek. Someone tips the bottle, water sloshing against his lips before he spits red onto the canvas.
His breathing is ragged, chest heaving, sweat pouring freely. But his eyes are wide and bright, locked on the opposite corner with a feverish intensity that does not match the state of his body.
Shoyo leans in, cotton swab ready.
“Your nose…”
Shimamura’s eyes snap toward him, sharp and hostile. Shoyo freezes and instinctively pulls his hand back.
“I need to clear it,” he says quickly. “So you can breathe.”
There is a beat before Shimamura allows him to move closer.
“Make it quick,” he says.
“Y–yes.”
Shoyo works fast, dabbing the nostrils clean. And Shimamura barely tolerates the touch.
The moment it is done, he pushes Shoyo aside, not violently, but firmly enough to leave no room for argument.
“It’s getting fun,” he murmurs, his voice low and breathless. “Come on. Start it already. Before this excitement dulls.”
The other cornermen exchange looks. Concern lingers on their faces, but relief slips in beside it. This is the Shimamura they know: arrogant, bossy, and hungry. If he is going to fight like this, then at least he is fighting like himself.
Across the ring, the champion’s corner is calmer. Yanagimoto sits upright while an enswell presses against a small swelling near his cheekbone. It is nothing serious. He rolls his shoulders once, testing them.
“He’s hurt,” Yanagimoto says evenly. “Badly.”
Coach Yoshizawa nods, clearly pleased. “That’s the price for underestimating you. Trying to set counters against a switch hitter like that.”
Yanagimoto’s eyes flick back toward the blue corner, catching the terrible look on Shimamura’s face.
“I’ll end it next round,” he says.
***
When the referee calls for the seconds out, Shimamura rises from the stool slowly.
His shoulders sag, and his posture looks loose, almost broken. The swagger is back, but it is lazy now, unsteady. His gloves hang low, barely at chest height. Only his eyes still burn.
In the press row, Aki has not taken her eyes off him.
“Five rounds… and he looks spent already,” she says evenly.
Sato nods, his fingers laced together. “I’ve noticed it last round. His legs were already heavy.”
Tanaka exhales through his nose. “That’s the cost of indiscipline. It catches up sooner or later.”
“You think it’s that bad?” Aki asks.
“I heard he only started training seriously again less than three weeks before this fight,” Tanaka says. “I checked. Coach Tadayuki didn’t deny it.”
Sato grimaces. “Three weeks won’t rebuild a body.”
“No,” Tanaka agrees. “It only delays the collapse.”
Nakahara hears them, but he does not respond. His eyes stay on the ring, his face unmoved.
They are right about the body. He knows that.
But his mind drifts back to the moment at the end of round five, when the camera caught Shimamura’s face as he turned toward the corner. There was blood at his lip, his breathing uneven, and behind it all, his eyes too bright and too awake.
Nakahara has seen that look more times than he wants to remember. It never appears when Shimamura is fresh. It only surfaces when he is already worn thin, standing on the edge.
And once Shimamura reaches that place, once he starts tasting that ecstasy, he becomes far more dangerous than he looks.
***
From the red corner, Yanagimoto studies his opponent with calm narrowing eyes. Shimamura’s sagging shoulders and labored breathing all point to the same conclusion.
“He is finished.”
The bell for round six finally rings.
Ding!
Yanagimoto steps out with a quiet smile tugging at his mouth, his shoulders loose and his stride unhurried.
Across the canvas, Shimamura drifts out of the corner with a careless sway. His steps are heavy, his rhythm uneven, his shoulders rolling as if he is already drunk. His gloves remain low, and his head tilts from side to side in lazy arcs.
Yanagimoto narrows his eyes.
“What a lunatic.”
“I’ll end this boring fight, and then you can go drink yourself stupid.”
From southpaw, he steps in with a sharp one-two, a right jab followed by a left cross.
Shimamura slaps the jab aside, but the cross sneaks through and thuds into his shoulder near the chest. His posture dips slightly on that side, but he grins anyway.
“Stop hitting the body,” he taunts, tapping his own cheek. “Aim here.”
One of the announcers lets out a short, incredulous laugh. “That is not something you see often from a challenger in the sixth round,” he says. “He’s breathing through his mouth, he’s taken clean body shots, and he’s telling the champion where to aim.”
His partner’s voice comes in more measured. “It looks like bravado, but it’s also a risk. Yanagimoto is not a fighter you invite forward unless you are prepared to pay for it.”
“Either Shimamura sees something we don’t, or he’s leaning into chaos because he feels the fight slipping away.”
“And if it’s the latter, this round is about to get dangerous very quickly.”
Yanagimoto ignores it and steps in again with a right jab and a lead right hook, and then a left cross upstairs.
The jab is blocked. The hook digs in under the armpit. The cross only grazes the cheek as Shimamura tilts his head away at the last second, never bothering to lift his guard.
Yanagimoto presses forward. His punches come in a steady rhythm now. Shimamura blocks what goes downstairs with tight elbows. Everything aimed at the head slips past, missed by inches as his torso sways in awkward, irregular patterns.
It is not clean, and it is not pretty. The form looks wrong, like exhaustion masquerading as movement.
In the commentator booth, the tone shifts.
“That movement is familiar,” one of them says slowly. “It doesn’t look like defense in the conventional sense, but he’s taking Yanagimoto just off the center line every time.”
His partner leans closer to the monitor. “It’s messy,” he says, “but it’s starting to follow a rhythm. He’s not reacting late. He’s moving at the same beat as the punches.”
The first commentator nods. “That’s the style people argue with him about. Hands low, head drifting, everything looking wrong until it suddenly isn’t.”
There is a pause as another exchange slips past Shimamura’s face by a fraction.
“This is where he gets dangerous,” the second says quietly. “Not because it’s sound, but because he’s comfortable there.”
The reaction ripples outward from the ring. From the stands, voices cut through the noise.
“There it is!”
“That’s it! That’s how he fights!”
“Don’t stop now! Make him miss!”
A scattered chant starts to rise, uneven and uncoordinated, but hungry.
“Shi-ma-mu-ra!”
“Shi-ma-mu-ra!”
It does not sound like confidence. It sounds like anticipation.
Yanagimoto lands a few shots, but never cleanly. The more he throws, the more his rhythm falters. He slows, not from fatigue, but from hesitation.
Shimamura still has not thrown a single punch. His gloves hang low. He looks finished, and yet every time Yanagimoto commits to the head, it is gone at the last beat.
And as the seconds pass, the champion’s jabs lose their snap and turn into probing touches, less about damage than about tracking Shimamura’s motion, trying to pin down a head that refuses to settle.
***
Shimamura keeps rocking his torso as if he is dancing to music only he can hear, the motion loose and exaggerated, his shoulders rolling too wide and too slow to look purposeful.
Yanagimoto watches it with faint irritation, his eyes tracking the sway, waiting for the moment it finally becomes predictable.
It almost does.
He snaps another jab toward Shimamura’s face, confident this time. The rhythm looks right. The head is there.
But Shimamura suddenly stills. And the punch slips past his cheek by a breath as his torso tilts at the last instant.
From that awkward angle, his left glove shoots up from below.
Thud!
It lands clean against the champion’s face, snapping his head just enough to draw a murmur from the crowd.
Yanagimoto barely reacts. He resets and fires back immediately, convinced the first was an accident. Shimamura’s movement is too slow, too sloppy, too obvious to fool him twice.
The cross from the champion comes in hard. And Shimamura sways again, leaning to his right like a drunk losing his balance, and the punch whistles past empty air.
His glove swings back almost lazily, knuckles smacking against Yanagimoto’s cheek.
Dsh!
This time, Yanagimoto blinks.
“What’s going on here?”
In the booth, the first commentator inhales sharply. “That was not a conventional counter. That punch came from below the line of sight.”
His partner’s voice rises a notch, urgency creeping in. “He froze the rhythm. Yanagimoto threw where the head was supposed to be, not where it ended up.”
They fall quiet for a moment as it happens again. Yanagimoto steps in with a jab that misses by inches. Shimamura answers with a crooked shot that lands flush.
Another punch slides past empty space. And another sloppy counter thumps home, each one thrown from a position that looks wrong until it works.
The second commentator speaks again, faster now. “Every miss is being paid for,” he says. “It’s not clean boxing, but the timing is exact.”
“And Yanagimoto is starting to hesitate,” the first adds. “That hesitation is dangerous.”
In the ring, the pattern takes shape. Yanagimoto throws. Shimamura sways. The punch misses. The counter lands.
Thud!
Again.
Dsh!
And again.
Dsh!
The crowd noise rises, no longer scattered this time, as realization spreads that something in the rhythm of the fight has shifted.


