VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 493: The Den Is Full of Predators
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- Chapter 493: The Den Is Full of Predators

Chapter 493: The Den Is Full of Predators
Contrast to Jakarta, March still holds winter in Tokyo, especially in the early afternoon, when the sun is present but offers no warmth it intends to keep.
Inside the managerial office, Nakahara sits behind his desk, staring at a sheet of paper that refuses to rearrange itself into something workable.
“Half a million,” he mutters, not looking at anyone in particular. “Half a million just to secure the night.”
Sera sits across from him, arms folded, expression neutral but alert.
Nakahara rubs his temples. “And then there’s Arman Sargsyan, OPBF number two. Ten thousand dollars. Necessary, yes. But still money that doesn’t come back immediately.”
Nakahara pushes his chair back slightly and stands, pacing once behind the desk before stopping at the window.
“Two strong fights,” he says. “That should be enough. It should be enough.”
“But?” Sera prompts. “Six thousand seats don’t fill themselves on two names alone. not at that price point.”
“I know,” Nakahara nods, and then turns back around. “And this is where it becomes a problem for us. Except Satoru, all pros here are Class A fighters. On paper, it looks impressive. A stable stacked with ranked fighters. Promoters love that. Fans love that.”
He gestures sharply with his hand. “But I can’t put them all on the same card.”
Sera shifts in his seat. “Okabe is ninth at featherweight, Aramaki fifth at super featherweight. Cheap fights aren’t an option for either of them anymore. This is the part nobody sees. People think undercards are filler. They’re not. They’re investments. And investments can bleed us too.”
“We can’t stack the card with Class A bouts,” Nakahara says more quietly. “One upset and suddenly the night that was supposed to elevate us becomes a liability.”
“And we can’t go too light either,” Sera adds. “Not with Ryoma headlining.”
“Exactly,” Nakahara says. “You don’t spend half a million dollars and then ask the audience to sit through mismatches.”
He looks down at the list again, jaw tightening. “For years, the goal was to build depth. Now we have it. And suddenly depth is expensive.”
“So what’s the plan?” Sera asks. “We can’t use both Okabe and Aramaki. But for six thousands spectators, another class A fighter is doable.”
Nakahara doesn’t answer right away. He keeps looking at the list, thumb tapping once against the paper as if testing its weight.
“For Aramaki,” he says finally, “there’s nothing to decide yet.”
Sera tilts his head slightly. “Because of Champion Carnival.”
“Yes,” Nakahara replies. “Serrano versus Miyamoto Rikiya sets the board. Until that’s over, Aramaki waits. I can’t afford to spend him as undercard filler for Ryoma’s title fight.”
“And Okabe’s been asking for a rematch against Noguchi Naoya,” Sera says.
Nakahara nods. “Noguchi himself, to prove a point, wants the same. But he will have a title fight next month. If he wins and secures the belt, I doubt he will accept a rematch with Okabe anymore.”
“That leaves Okabe drifting,” Sera says.
“Yes,” Nakahara nods again. “That will be dangerous.”
After a moment, Nakahara slips his coat back on and picks up the van keys from the desk.
“Either way,” he says, “we wait for Champion Carnival next month. Until then, nothing moves.” He pauses, already halfway toward the door. “I need to secure the arena. The gym’s yours.”
Sera nods and stands as well, falling in step behind him as they leave the office.
Out on the gym floor, Nakahara calls Kenta’s name and tosses him the keys.
“You drive.”
Kenta catches the keys without comment, grabs his coat, and follows Nakahara outside.
With them gone, the gym settles into a different rhythm. Okabe, Aramaki, and Ryohei have all left before noon. Only the younger fighters remain.
The high schoolers, fresh from roadwork, line up along the edge of the floor under Hiroshi’s supervision, skipping rope in uneven unison.
In the ring, Satoru moves with Ryoma. He’s the only professional among them, the only one whose future already has a bracket attached to it.
In a few days, he’ll compete in the first round of the East Block rookie tournament. And Ryoma has officially been assigned as the coach responsible for his career.
“Offense is what excites people,” Ryoma says, his voice even. “But defense is what keeps predator alive, and lets it keep hunting.”
He raises the mitts, not as targets, but as weapons; jab-cross-hook.
The pattern is clean and restrained with the same rhythm every time. Satoru doesn’t throw back. He reads, focused on defending while maintaining the distance.
First sequence: contact defense only.
“One-two-there,” Ryoma names the cues, throwing jab-cross-hook.
Satoru parries the jab, tightens his left guard to absorb the cross, and then shifts his right to the side of his head to catch the hook on his forearm.
“Again. One-two-three. Mix it.” Ryoma calls out.
This time, for the second sequence, it’s a mix defensive pattern.
Satoru parries the jab, slips inside the cross, and then rolls under the hook.
Ryoma doesn’t change the pace. “Third sequence. Keep your distance.”
Jab-cross-hook combo comes again.
This time, Satoru steps back from the jab, slips outside the cross. When the hook swings, he rolls under it, rising on the other side, and takes another step back.
Ryoma stops and tilts his head.
“Look at the ropes.”
Satoru turns, and sees the ropes are closer now.
“When you defend like this, you give ground,” Ryoma says. “That’s the trade. But predators don’t look over their shoulder to check the cage. The moment you take your eyes off your opponent, he punishes you. And if you realize it too late, you’re already cornered.”
“So what should I do?” Satoru asks.
“Learn the space,” Ryoma says. “That’s why we drill this. As an out-boxer, defense isn’t just technique. It’s knowing where you are, how much room you have, and how to take it back.”
He lifts the mitts again. “And when you feel the ropes, you move sideways. Pivot. Throws a probing jab, and take the space back.”
Ryoma throws the same sequence; jab-cross-hook.
Satoru defends, then steps laterally. He sends a short jab, not to score, but only to check. Then he pivots again, slipping past Ryoma’s shoulder.
Their positions switch.
“Good,” Ryoma says. “Now you are back in the center. Let’s continue.”
They repeat it, again and again.
Same pattern, same pressure, until Satoru learns not just how to survive the attack, but also how to decide where the fight lives.
***
By the time Ryoma changes the drill, Satoru is already near the edge of himself. His breathing has grown louder, less controlled. The movements are still correct, but they no longer come freely.
“Take a moment,” Ryoma says at last.
Satoru nods, hands on his knees, drawing air in through his nose.
Ryoma steps aside and straps on the body pad, tightening the velcro with practiced efficiency. There’s no explanation. Satoru already understands what this means.
“Same pattern,” Ryoma says. “Now make him pay with counters.”
They reset, using the same jab-cross-hook combo.
Satoru parries the jab, and absorbs the cross on his left guard. As the hook swings in, he catches it on his right forearms, and throws a left hook to the body at the same time.
Bugh!
“Good! Again!”
Ryoma throws the same jab-cross-hook.
Satoru parries the jab. And this time he slips outside the cross, and throws a left hook into the body pad in one motion. Ryoma’s lead hook comes and Satoru rolls under it, comes up long enough to drive a right into the body before stepping back out of range.
But Ryoma presses forward without pause. “Again. One-two-three!”
The third sequence comes faster. Satoru pulls his head away from the jab, slips outside the cross, and sends the left hook to the body.
Bugh!
Then he rolls under the hook and steps in, closing the space, checking Ryoma’s forward momentum. He pivots quickly, switches position.
After the space is reclaimed, Ryoma lifts the mitts. “One-two!”
Satoru fires a jab-cross combo.
Pak-pak!
The mitts catch the punches with a dull snap.
They reset and do it again, and again, until Satoru reaches the ropes on the other side.
The pattern doesn’t change. The pressure doesn’t ease. The only difference now is that Satoru is no longer just surviving the attack. He’s learning where to hurt, when to move, and how to leave without giving anything back.
His legs begin to feel heavy, the burn creeping upward from his calves into his hips. Sweat runs into his eyes, stings, blurs the edges of the ring. But this is exactly where Ryoma keeps him.
Ryoma doesn’t raise his voice. He keeps the pressure steady, deliberate, forcing Satoru to work not from instinct, but from concentration.
“Listen well, Satoru,” Ryoma says after finishing one sequence. “Counters don’t come from anger or courage.”
Then he throws the jab-cross-hook again. And Satoru responds with the same cadence.
“They come from clarity,” Ryoma continues. “And clarity only survives when the mind refuses to drift even if the body is tired.”
Around the ring, the younger fighters have stopped what they’re doing. They watch the same combination repeat, simple enough to memorize in one glance. And yet, what unfolds in front of them doesn’t look simple at all.
Satoru’s movements stay clean despite the exhaustion. He angles off instead of backing straight up. He pivots instead of panicking. When he counters, it’s not wild or desperate. It’s measured and placed with intent.
And for that improvement, Sera watches with mixed feelings. Just awhile ago, they were counting costs, worrying about how many Class A fighters the gym could afford to carry on one card.
And now, in front of him, Ryoma is quietly shaping another one.


