VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 634: Where Decisions Are Made
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- Chapter 634: Where Decisions Are Made

Chapter 634: Where Decisions Are Made
Miami, Florida.
By the time Hugo Ramirez steps out of his car, the sun is already dipping, casting long reflections across the glass façade of Vanguard Crown Promotions.
The lobby doors slide open, cool air replacing the lingering heat still clinging to his shirt. His mind hasn’t left the gym, not Cabello’s grin, not Rivera’s hesitation, not the conclusion forming at the back of his thoughts.
This isn’t small. And it’s not something to ignore.
For a moment, he keeps walking without really seeing where he’s going, his focus still caught somewhere else until a voice pulls him back.
“Mr. Ramirez.”
His secretary is already standing as he steps into the office floor. There’s a slight pause before she continues, her tone shifting just enough to carry meaning beyond the words.
“They’ve all checked in.”
Ramirez slows to a stop, just for a second, like the words take a moment to reach him, his attention still half somewhere else before it settles back into the room.
“The meeting,” the girl adds.
Ramirez’s eyes flicker, and then narrow slightly as it clicks.
“…Right.”
He exhales once, one hand adjusting the cuff of his sleeve as his thoughts realign. Then, almost immediately, something sharper settles in.
“Perfect timing,” he says, his voice dropping into focus. “I’ll just bring it straight to them.”
The secretary tilts her head. “Should I reschedule?”
“No,” Ramirez cuts in, already moving past her toward his office. “No interruptions. Whatever it is, it waits.”
“Yes, sir.”
The door shuts behind him with a soft click, sealing off the noise of the office outside.
Inside, everything is exactly where it should be; clean desk, dimmed lighting, the laptop already open, screen dark but waiting.
Ramirez doesn’t sit right away. He loosens his collar slightly, rolls his neck once, then lowers himself into the chair, pulling the laptop closer.
His fingers hover for half a second before tapping the key. The screen comes alive, and the call is already running with four faces wait for him.
“Finally,” a voice greets him immediately, smooth and edged with dry amusement. “I was starting to think you’d decided to keep us waiting on purpose.”
It’s Alistair Vaughan. Even through the screen, he looks precise with the quiet confidence of someone who never wastes motion. The kind of presence that built Orion Boxing into what it currently is.
Ramirez leans back slightly. “You’d get bored without me.”
A second voice follows, deeper, carrying an easy authority. “You look tense, Hugo.”
Rafael Mendes leans closer into frame, one arm resting on his desk. Behind him, rows of screens flicker with live feeds, broadcast panels, numbers constantly moving. The nerve center of Mendes Global Sports Network.
“Something you want to share?” Mendes adds, studying him.
Before Ramirez can answer, another voice cuts in. “Oh, don’t start that,” he says, casual, almost amused. “He always looks like that when he’s about to pitch something.”
Jackson Rhodes, shirt half-buttoned, leans back like this is just another passing distraction. It’s the face of NSN Global Promotion, and somehow still acting like the least invested person in the room.
Ramirez exhales lightly. “Still pretending none of this matters, I see.”
Jackson smirks, tilting his head slightly. “Relax, Hugo. You walk in like the building’s on fire,” he says, tone easy, almost amused. “Let me guess… another prodigy, another ’this one’s different’ speech? You really know how to keep things entertaining.”
A fourth presence finally speaks, voice calm but carrying weight without effort.
“That’s enough, Jack. Not the time for jokes.”
It’s Dominic Bowman, the man behind Crownline Boxing, the composed promoter behind reigning champion Celeb Mercer.
Even sitting still, there’s something grounded about him, the kind of authority that comes from holding the WBC champion under his banner.
Silence settles for a moment after that, not awkward, but deliberate. Four different corners of the industry sit connected by the same unspoken interests, each carrying their own weight, their own agendas.
Ramirez lets his gaze move across each of them on the screen, studying reactions, measuring distance, aligning angles, deciding carefully how to frame what comes next.
“We’re already behind schedule,” Vaughan says, tone polite but edged. “This meeting was arranged for a reason.”
Mendes nods once. “Mercer’s camp is moving forward with IBF. If that unification locks in, the balance shifts.”
His fingers tap lightly against his desk. “And Cabello’s situation…” he glances at Ramirez, “…we’re about to place him as WBO champion.”
Jackson lets out a short breath, almost amused. “So yeah, Hugo… if you’ve got something, it better be worth making four busy men wait.”
Ramirez doesn’t answer immediately. Instead, he leans forward, resting his forearms on the desk, fingers loosely interlocked.
“I know why we’re here,” he says calmly. “Mercer unifying WBC and IBF. Cabello positioning for WBO. That’s three belts potentially sitting within reach of this table.”
His gaze shifts, locking briefly with each of them. “And if we manage it right… we control the landscape for the next few years.”
Ramirez lets the silence settle, giving them just enough time to return to the rhythm of the meeting they originally came for. His fingers rest loosely on the desk, but his gaze stays sharp, moving from one screen to another.
“But there’s something else,” he says, more measured this time.
Vaughan tilts his head slightly. “Something relevant, I assume.”
Ramirez nods. “It is.” He leans forward just a fraction, not dramatic, just enough to signal a shift in weight. “That kid. The Chameleon. He’s moving into WBO.”
Jackson’s posture adjusts, subtle but real. “Asia-Pacific route, huh?”
“Unification,” Ramirez replies. “OPBF and WBO Asia-Pacific. December twentieth.”
Mendes exhales quietly, leaning back as he processes it. “So he’s speeding things up.”
“He’s choosing his lane,” Ramirez says. “And he’s choosing it carefully. You all know what that kind of win does in their system. He doesn’t stay where he is after that. Not with the way they structure movement between regional and world rankings.”
Vaughan’s fingers rest against his chin now, thoughtful. “He moves into contention.”
“Yes,” Ramirez says simply. “And the timing is what makes it dangerous.”
He shifts slightly in his seat, letting his point build instead of forcing it.
“Langley moves up. The belt opens. Cabello and O’Connell fight for it at the end of the year. That creates space… space right behind them.”
Jackson lets out a quiet breath, a faint smirk returning, but thinner this time. “And he walks straight into it.”
“Exactly.” Ramirez’s tone stays calm, but there’s weight underneath it now. “And once he’s in that range, he doesn’t need favors. He doesn’t need politics. The rules will do the work for him.”
Mendes stops moving entirely, his attention fully locked in now. Bowman’s expression tightens slightly, the first visible sign of concern.
Ramirez lets that register before finishing the thought. “And if he wins that… then we’re no longer deciding whether he gets in. He’s already there.”
He leans back again, slower this time, eyes still fixed on them. “And at that point, keeping him out of the picture stops being an option.”
The line holds in silence after that, no one rushing to respond. Each of them understands exactly what it means, and how little room it leaves for hesitation.


