Chapter 686: What's real
The third round began, and most of the arena was already standing. Not just for the fight, but for the man inside it.
Damon Cross had shown something few ever did. Not dominance alone, but control, composure and precision.
That rare balance of physical talent and mental clarity. It wasn't just that he was winning, it was how.
Around the cage, fans murmured, phones lit up, and analysts stared like they were watching something they'd only read about.
There was one name floating silently in their heads.
James Jonas.
He was the bar. The one fighter no one ever truly replaced. In his prime, he wasn't just better—he was untouchable. A fighter who fought like he could see the future. A storm of skill, calculation, and timing.
And while James's name had lost its shine in the years since, marred by scandal, damaged by choices outside the cage, it didn't change what he was inside it.
⁷No amount of controversy had erased the truth. When it came to fight IQ, to that sixth sense in chaos, James Jonas was still the highest level this sport had ever known.
Now, as Damon moved forward into the center of the cage, something felt familiar.
He didn't fight like James. He fought differently. But the feeling was the same. That calm in the storm. That sense that the opponent, no matter how elite, was playing the wrong game.
It didn't mean Damon was the next Jonas. It meant he was Damon.
And for the first time since Jonas left, the world felt like it had someone new to compare, not as a copy, but as a rival to history.
Now, while Damon had no idea what was running through their minds, it wouldn't have mattered even if he did. He wouldn't have flinched.
The comparisons, the noise, the pressure, none of it touched him. His focus wasn't on becoming someone else or living up to a ghost. It was on the man in front of him and the task at hand.
Damon didn't carry himself like someone chasing greatness. He carried himself like someone who already knew he was great.
The commentary spoke up.
Jon Goodman led. "I still can't believe we saw that, how often do you see a light heavyweight hit a German suplex in the middle of a live fight?"
Rich Alvarez agreed immediately. "It's insane. The timing, the grip strength, the balance… that's not something you drill casually. Damon didn't just do it, he nailed it. And on someone like Tereira, who's not exactly small."
Marvin Duke added, "Let's be real. Alex has been struggling. These last two rounds? He's been getting walked down, out-struck, out-grappled, and now slammed. That kind of round messes with your head."
Jon nodded. "Yeah, it's gonna be hard to get back on that horse. He's got three rounds left to work with, but the way this has been going? It's slim. Damon's just ahead in the curve."
The horn sounded, and the third round began.
Damon stepped forward with the same composure he had carried since the opening exchange.
His feet moved with precision, heel barely touching before the ball of the foot carried him into his next step.
He wasn't bouncing wildly, but his motion was constant, an intelligent drift that kept his hips loaded and his balance centered.
Alex raised his guard and stepped out, cautious now. The respect was clear. He didn't dart in like he had in the first round. Damon had made him pay too many times already.
Damon jab-stepped forward, then shifted right with a level change.
He didn't shoot, but his knees bent slightly, and his hands moved like he was about to change levels. Alex bit on the feint.
His guard dropped just enough, knees flexing in preparation to sprawl.
Damon stood tall again and fired a jab to the body, except it passed through, subtle and impossible to track.
The Ghost Punch landed on the ribs. Alex jolted slightly, momentarily unsure what hit him. He backed away.
Jon Goodman raised his voice. "He felt that. That body shot came out of nowhere. Damon's disguising his strikes with these feints, and Pereira has no read on them."
Damon stepped in again, feinted a lead uppercut, then faked a takedown by dipping his shoulder.
Alex lowered his hips, reacting like he expected the shot, but there was no shot. Damon stayed upright and pivoted left, touching the inside leg with a short kick.
Victor shouted from the corner, "Keep touching him! Make him think!"
Alex swung a looping left in response. Damon leaned back and circled, letting it pass wide. He didn't return fire immediately. He made Alex guess.
Then he exploded forward with another Ghost Punch, this one to the liver. Alex folded slightly, his elbow dropping reflexively. Damon saw it.
He touched the guard high with a fake jab, then hammered a real cross to the ribs again.
This time it was visible, audible. The sound of glove meeting body echoed off the cage wall.
Alex's face twitched. He stepped back and fired a teep kick to regain space. Damon caught it on his forearm and turned the angle.
Inside the cage, Damon kept feinting, but now it was layered.
High feint. Step-in. Shoulder drop. Half-step back. Low kick.
He never let Alex see the same look twice.
Alex swung a hard left and actually landed a partial shot to the shoulder. Damon rolled with it and returned a chopping right hand to the body.
Another Ghost Punch followed, this time masked inside a jab. Alex reacted again, hands twitching, hips uncertain.
Damon's pressure was technical.
He moved in and out like a machine programmed to win exchanges by inches.
Every shift of weight, every angle cut, was designed to create hesitation. And it was working.
He feinted another takedown. Alex flinched, stepped back. Damon landed a jab to the face.
Jon added, "This is mental warfare now. Damon's showing him everything, and Alex can't tell what's real."
Damon paused, centered himself, then moved again.