"Next," Bruce said.
The word was a razor, thin and sharp. His tone remained deceptively level, a masterclass in controlled authority, but the air in the room had curdled.
The initial shock had worn off, replaced by a thick, suffocating layer of dread. The enforcers werenât just watching a fight anymore; they were watching a dissection.
The second man stepped forward. He was shorter than Dax, built like a fire hydrant: dense, wide, and solid.
Unlike Daxâs raw, brawling energy, this man moved with a disciplined, rhythmic grace. He raised his hands in a tight, professional guard, his knuckles facing Mike, his eyes locked on Mikeâs center of mass. He was a trained striker, a man who understood the geometry of violence.
Without a word of warning, he exploded into motion.
Pop, pop, crack.
A lightning-fast jab-jab-cross combination hissed through the air. It was technically flawless, a textbook sequence designed to blind an opponent with the first two strikes and shatter their jaw with the third.
To anyone else, it would have been an inescapable wall of leather and bone.
But Mike didnât just dodge; he seemed to exist in the gaps between the strikes. As the first jab flickered toward his nose, Mikeâs head tilted a fraction of an inch, the glove grazing the air of his cheek.
Before the second jab could connect, Mike had already shifted his weight, his torso spiraling in a micro movement that allowed the second strike to pass harmlessly by his ear. Then came the cross, the heavy hitter.
Mike stepped into the punch, occupying the exact pocket of space where the momentum was weakest.
He didnât throw a punch.
He simply drove an open palm into the center of the manâs chest. It wasnât a frantic strike; it was a controlled, explosive burst of kinetic energy.
Thump.
The sound was dull, like a heavy book hitting a rug, but the effect was devastating. The manâs eyes bulged, his entire ribcage collapsing inward for a split second as the air was violently purged from his lungs in a single, surprised
"Hah!" He crumpled to the floor, clutching his chest, his professional guard forgotten as he gasped for a breath that wouldnât come.
The man looked up from the linoleum, his face flushed, his expression one of pure, existential confusion.
"Thatâs... not how that should work," he wheezed, more baffled by the physics of the moment than the pain.
"I know," Mike said, his voice cool and entirely unimpressed.
He didnât even look winded; he looked like he was waiting for a bus.
Bruceâs eyes had narrowed into lethal slits. The amusement was gone, replaced by a grim, calculating intensity.
He realized now that he wasnât dealing with a talented fighter; he was dealing with a predator who operated on a different plane of reality.
"Reyes," Bruce commanded.
The man from the alley, the one who had held the knife, stepped into the light. He had regained his composure, his eyes burning with a desperate, frantic need to reclaim his dignity.
He had convinced himself that Dax was a brute and the second man was a specialist, but Mike was just a lucky dancer. He was determined to prove that luck was a finite resource.
He didnât draw the knife this time. He wanted to do this with his hands and he wanted to feel the impact.
Reyes lunged. He came in with a frantic, high-volume flurry, a whirlwind of strikes aimed at Mikeâs temples, his throat, and his solar plexus.
It was a "death by a thousand cuts" approach, a desperate attempt to overwhelm Mikeâs senses through sheer, unadulterated speed.
Mike stood his ground, a monolith in the center of the storm. To the observers, it was a terrifying spectacle.
To Mike, it was a mathematical equation. One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six.
He moved with a terrifying, economical grace. A slight roll of the shoulder here, a microscopic shift of the hip there, a tilt of the head so subtle it was almost invisible.
He wasnât retreating; he was simply choosing not to be where the violence was. The strikes whistled past him, hitting nothing but the air, the sheer volume of the attack creating a rhythmic, slapping sound that filled the room.
On the seventh strike, a desperate, lunging hook, Mike finally decided the lesson was over.
He didnât just dodge; he intercepted. Mikeâs hand shot out like a viper, his fingers clamping around Reyesâs wrist mid-extension with the strength of a steel vice.
Using the manâs own frantic forward momentum, Mike pivoted his entire body, a violent, sweeping redirection of force. He slammed Reyes into the whiteboard with a sickening boom.
The impact was so violent that a magnetic marker was dislodged from the board, clattering to the floor and rolling under the table in the sudden silence.
Reyes slid down the wall, his legs turning to jelly, and slumped into a sitting position. He sat there, chest heaving, staring at Mike with a hollow, haunted expression.
The realization had finally sunk in: there was no fluke. There was no luck. There was only Mike.
The silence in the room was no longer just a pause; it was a vacuum, pulling the breath from the lungs of every man present. Bruce sat perfectly still, his eyes fixed on Mike, his mind clearly re-evaluating the entire hierarchy of his organization.
He saw the fallen men on the floor: the brute, the specialist, and the frantic striker, and he saw the common thread: they hadnât just lost; they had been dissected.
Bruce opened his mouth, his voice gravelly and heavy with the weight of a man who was about to concede a point. Threeâ"
"Wait!" Reyes barked from the floor.
The interruption was a sacrilege. The enforcers turned to look at him, their eyes wide with a mixture of pity and disbelief.
Reyes was trembling, his lungs burning, his face flushed a deep, bruised red. He was a man driven by the most dangerous of human emotions: the desperate need to not be the fool who gave up.
He scrambled to his feet, his movements clumsy and uncoordinated compared to Mikeâs fluid grace. He looked like a man walking toward a firing squad, but he was walking with his chin up, his eyes blazing with a frantic, dying light.
"Give me... one more," Reyes spat, his voice cracking.
He wiped a smear of saliva and sweat from his lip, his gaze locking onto Mike with a terrifying, unhinged intensity. "It wasnât... it wasnât a sequence."
"It was just... timing... give me one more. Let me show you."
Bruce didnât even look at him. He didnât stop him. He simply watched Mike, a silent command in his eyes that said, "Finish this."
Reyes didnât wait for a signal. He lunged again, but the desperation had stripped away the speed he had possessed moments ago.
He was wide open, his movements telegraphed by the sheer force of his will. He threw a wild, sweeping left hook, a strike born of pure frustration.
Mike didnât move to dodge. He didnât move to counter because he simply stepped through the strike.
As Reyesâs arm swung past, Mikeâs hand shot out, grabbing the man by the back of the neck and the front of his belt. For a heartbeat, they were suspended in a moment of terrifying stillness.
Then, with a sudden, violent explosion of power that seemed to come from the very earth beneath his feet, Mike drove Reyes straight down.
It wasnât a throw; it was an execution.
He slammed Reyes into the concrete floor with a sound so loud and visceral it was like a sledgehammer hitting a slab of meat.
CRACK. THUD.
The impact was so sudden and so absolute that the sound seemed to echo long after the contact was made. Reyesâs body didnât just hit the floor; it seemed to be crushed into it. The air was driven out of him in a final, pathetic wheeze, and his eyes rolled back, his limbs splaying out like a broken marionette.
Mike released him, stepping back with a casual, effortless grace, as if he had just finished dusting off his hands. He stood there, tall and imposing, the undisputed master of the space.
Reyes lay motionless, a broken heap of a man, staring blankly at the industrial ceiling. The heavy, limp stillness replaced the frantic energy that had fueled his lunge.
The silence that followed was absolute. It was the silence of a tomb.
The enforcers didnât even dare to breathe. They looked at the man on the floor, then at the man standing over him, and finally at Bruce, waiting for the world to start turning again.
"Stay down," Mike said. "I need a real challenge."