In less than a second, Su Jieâs mind had already analyzed the strengths and weaknesses on both sides and formulated a strategy.
From the moment the fight began, not even ten seconds had passed.
Su Jieâs brain was like a supercomputer, feeding in every factorâmovement, strength, speed, body type, even aura, terrain, and spaceârunning precise calculations, then controlling his body based on the results. Throughout this process, he struggled to prevent stray, reckless thoughts from intruding.
Most people, even skilled fighters, may set a strategy before a fight, but once inside, subtle factors can throw them off rhythm, causing them to lose.
Even top experts sometimes suffer sudden, uncontrollable impulsesâlike a stray thought flashing across the mindâthat derail them.
This is most often seen in professional chess: a ânumber one playerâ suddenly makes a blunder under tension, throwing away a winning game.
Itâs like the Heavenly Court was peaceful, and suddenly the Monkey King leaps out, wreaking havoc in Heaven and turning the world upside down.
The human mind is the Heavenly Court, and stray impulses outside the plan are the Monkey King.
This time, Su Jie was truly under pressure, forcing himself to squeeze out more potential.
It was different from the threat of bullets and guns.
Bullets brought instantaneous oppressionâa flash of life and death completely beyond his control. But Daruâs pressure was continuous.
Just ten secondsâwithin that brief exchangeâSu Jie already grasped his advantages and disadvantages, set his plan firmly in his mind, and strictly controlled his movements, refusing to act outside the strategy.
Swish, swish, swishâŠ
Su Jie fully unleashed his âHoe Strikeâ footworkâslipping, dodging, crouching, swaying, feinting, running, leaping, dashing. At the same time, he shrank his body inward, making himself a smaller target, bouncing like a projectile.
With this movement at full force, he was like a monkey scrambling along cliffs and ravines, leaving Daru unable to land a clean hit.
Occasionally, Daru accelerated and struck him, but the blows caused little damage.
To truly âland a hitâ in combat, you must concentrate all your force at one precise point, driving power deep into the opponentâs body to cause devastating damage in an instant. Only then is it an effective strikeâthe same principle as a KO punch in the ring.
But against a moving target, this is extremely difficult.
Thatâs why some people can smash bricks, split stones, and pound sandbags with great force, but in real combat they hit people with no effectâthe same even for professionals.
The reason is simple: people move. Even a tiny shift of instinct throws off the focal point of force, reducing the power by ninety-nine percent.
Bricks, wood, sandbagsâthey donât move.
So the fight looked like this: Daru was like a gorilla, chasing a little monkey around the ring, unable to catch him. Even when he landed blows, he failed to cause serious injuryâno fatal strike.
To spectators, it was hardly exciting at all.
But Awasi and Zhang Jinchuan watched with grave expressionsâthey understood.
Su Jieâs strategy was flawless, executed with rigid discipline, showing no weakness at all. He could seemingly keep dodging forever.
And Daru, too, showed no emotional fluctuation, seemingly willing to hunt forever.
âSo thatâs it. So thatâs itâŠ'
While dodging, Su Jie repeatedly spotted openings. His mind sprouted thoughts of risking it all in a single gambleâbut each time, he crushed the impulse, sticking to his plan.
As he moved, realization struck him:
âSo this is what it meansââThe perfected man moves like a machine!â It doesnât mean living like a puppet, but rather never letting wild impulses be born in the heart, never letting them turn into action. Like when the Monkey King jumps outâyou must suppress him with Buddha-nature, bind him, lead him up to Spirit Mountain, where even he attains the scriptures and becomes part of the Dharma.'
The stray, absurd thoughts that arise in the mind are like the Monkey Kingâimmensely powerful. In real life, people sometimes commit sudden crimes precisely because they cannot suppress such impulses, leading to disaster.
At this moment, Su Jie truly understood the meaning of âthe perfected man moves like a machine.â
It was not about living mechanically in daily lifeâthat would kill all spirit.
âMovementâ did not mean the body, but the activity of the mind.
Suddenly, he thought of his father, Su Shilinâsmoking, drinking, sometimes acting roguish, but hiding unfathomable depths.
âBefore, my understanding of âmoving like a machineâ was only skin-deep, superficial. Now I finally get it.'
With that, Su Jie let out a thunderous howl.
Like dragonâs roar, tigerâs cry.
The clear, piercing sound split stone and metal.
Everyone present felt pain in their eardrumsâGale even clutched his ears. He hadnât thought a human voice could reach such decibels.
And in that howl, Su Jie launched his counterattack.
Bang!
Daruâs fist struck his chest at the same moment his fist smashed into Daruâs abdomen.
Normally, this was impossibleâDaruâs reach was much longer. Under usual circumstances, if Daru hit Su Jie, Su Jie couldnât even touch him.
But this time, both landed blows.
Zhang Jinchuan saw clearlyâin that split second, Su Jie had accelerated just enough, rushing in before Daruâs reach fully extended, collapsing the distance so both strikes connected.
The impact exploded!
Daru staggered back, crashing against the wall. Su Jie flew backward, shattering a table.
Neither had the advantage.
âWhat powerâŠâ Su Jieâs chest had momentarily caved in, dispersing the penetrating force of the blow. He hadnât broken bones, but pain flared and stars danced before his eyes.
Looking up, he saw Daru wasnât much better off.
âThatâs enough,â said Awasi, clapping his hands. âItâs a draw. There was no wagerâno need to continue.â He feared Daru would be hurt further. He had faith in Daru, but hadnât expected Su Jie to be so resilient.
Gale was equally shocked. He hadnât thought Su Jie could take one of Daruâs punches head-on and stay standing.
Daruâs fists were like sledgehammers, each the size of a human head. His wrists were thicker than Su Jieâs arms. Even iron men would be crushed. Just how tough was Su Jieâs body?
Thump, thump!
Daru pounded his chest once with one fist, bowed to Su Jie in respect, and left.
âDaru holds you in great respect,â Awasi said. âIâve never seen him so serious before. Youâve earned his recognition.â
âIf we kept fighting, I wouldnât be confident,â Su Jie admitted. Daru was terrifying, and he never underestimated him.
Against Daru, Su Jie never found a chance to use his signature âHoe Strikeâ move. That technique was designed for seizing the upper hand and delivering a sudden, decisive strike. Against such a tall opponent, it was nearly impossible to reach the face.
He reflectedâcompared to Odell, his technique was still far inferior. Odell could drive it in no matter how big, tall, or strong the opponent was.
âWhat a pity this wasnât in the gladiator cage,â Awasi sighed. âIf it were, Daruâs state would have risen even higher.â
The gladiator cage was a brutal arena in these war-torn landsâonly one left alive could exit. Such battles didnât exist in civilized society. Inside, a manâs state could indeed be pushed furtherâor collapse entirely if his will was weak.
âSu Jie, youâre incredible,â Gale said. âDaru never finds a worthy opponent, but youâre so much smaller than him and still fought to a draw. Truly, the weak overcoming the strong!â
Su Jie just waved his hand, breathing hard. It took him a long time to steady his chest. If I hadnât been training that hard qigong all winter break, toughening my body, that punch wouldâve killed me outright.
âYou three should stay here a while longer,â Awasi said. âWhen things settle, then you can leave. In the meantime, get familiar with Galeâthere may be big business opportunities later. Gale, keep learning Chinese from them. Business will only grow, and you canât afford not to know Chinese.â
âYes, Father,â Gale replied.
All that day, Gale pestered Su Jie to teach him martial arts.
Su Jie had teaching experience, so he trained Gale using modules similar to AI learning programs, keeping it fun. He also taught him how to write Chinese characters.
For three days, life passed quietly.
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Su Jie kept reflecting, digesting lessons from the fight with Daru. Heâd hoped to spar more with the iron man, but heard Daru had gone out on a mission.
On the third morning, after training outdoors, Su Jie returned to find Gale rushing toward him, face dark.
âDaru is dead.â
âWhat?â Su Jie was stunned. âWhat happened?â
âCome, Iâll show you.â Gale drove him out of the camp, far into the wilderness.
There, on a stretcher, covered by a white sheet, lay Daruâs huge corpse.
Several military doctors were examining it.
Awasi stood nearby, his face twisted with rage he could barely suppress, listening as a military doctor reported:
âGeneral, Daru was killed in a fight. Neither side used weaponsâit looks like they agreed to barehanded combat. There are footprints showing only one opponent. The wounds are from fists and feet. All the blood here is Daruâsâthe enemy seems unharmed and left safely.â
The doctors were reconstructing the scene.