Chapter 208: Chapter 208
Evan stepped up to the free-throw line.
His hands trembled—not from fear.
His heart pounded like a drum in his ears. The kind of rhythm that usually meant go, run, fight. But now, he had to stand still. One shot. One point.
He’d practiced this shot more times than he could count.
The repetition was muscle memory. The form etched into his bones. But this wasn’t practice. This was war. The air was heavy, thick with breathless silence. A thousand eyes bore into him from the stands. Teammates held their breath. Opponents watched like predators in still grass.
And somewhere in that forest of noise and light, the weight of an entire quarter rested on the rim.
Behind him, just outside the arc, Lucas stood tall.
Didn’t even glance at Evan.
His eyes were locked forward—focused solely on him.
Number 5. The shadow walker. The tempo thief.
Elijah hadn’t moved since the foul was called. Hands on his hips, eyes like coiled wires. Calm, unreadable. A statue—except this one crackled with hidden voltage. You could feel it, even if you weren’t looking. Like the tension before lightning struck.
That cocky grin he wore earlier?
What lingered now was something older.
Hard-earned. Grit-forged. The kind that only came when you met someone willing to bleed to keep up.
Evan closed his eyes briefly.
He sucked in a full breath. Then exhaled.
The ball arced clean through the air.
It kissed the front of the rim.
and for a second, time stopped.
Swish off the backboard.
Ayumi shot up, fists pumping.
Coach Fred let out a single, quiet exhale.
The crowd exploded like thunder in a bottle—cheers, stomps, chants.
He didn’t even blink.
His sneakers scraped against the floor with quiet defiance as he turned to face the Forest side of the court. As if he were walking into enemy territory, step by step, with no fear in his bones.
He was no longer reacting to Elijah.
No longer trailing a genius.
He was becoming the pace.
(You’ve led long enough.)
And as the final seconds of the third quarter ticked away, something shifted.
The battle wasn’t about pressure anymore.
And Lucas Graves had taken the baton.
Elijah caught the inbound.
But this time, Lucas stepped forward early.
(You test me? I test back.)
Elijah stopped just past halfcourt. Calm.
Kael motioned to screen—
Elijah waved him off with a flick of the wrist.
(He wants isolation.)
They circled each other.
A falcon and a tiger.
One soaring, reading from above.
One grounded, waiting in the tall grass.
Lucas shifted his stance—lower now.
(What’s it gonna be, Rainn?)
Left cross. Push step back.
No panic. No overreach.
(You’re fast. But not faster than focus.)
Motion stirred behind them.
Micah darted baseline.
Kael slid to the opposite wing.
The court was moving—but they weren’t watching.
This wasn’t five-on-five anymore.
Smooth. Elevation perfect.
Lucas jumped with him.
(You’re taking this shot—)
But Elijah didn’t shoot.
Forest 70 – Vorpal 68.
Lucas landed, turned—eyes trailing the arc of the ball as it sank.
(...No. He respected me enough to pass. Even now... he’s not playing for glory.)
Elijah didn’t celebrate.
A soldier acknowledging another.
Coach Fred didn’t say a word.
Coach Nguyen didn’t either.
This wasn’t just Quarter 4.
But of something deeper.
Of who would blink last.
The gym wasn’t loud anymore.
Voices were muffled behind adrenaline. The world narrowed to sneakers, sweat, and breath.
As Lucas jogged back to the top of the key...
(Just me... and the fire left in my chest.)
Bent slightly at the knees.
(Let’s finish this right.)
Forest: 70 – Vorpal: 68
The ball was inbounded to Evan.
His hands caught it clean—muscle memory smooth as silk.
But he didn’t sprint.
No rush. No recklessness.
His eyes flicked over the defense like a general reading the battlefield.
Elijah Rainn waited at the top of Forest’s zone.
No bouncing on his heels.
His arms hung loose, but his fingers twitched faintly with each movement Vorpal made.
Every step of the offense.
Every switch of the wings.
Every staggered dribble.
It all sent pulses through him.
(Lucas is at the three. Not slashing.)
(Evan’s slower this time. Not penetrating.)
(They’re spreading the floor wider. Creating pockets.)
Elijah didn’t need to shout.
Didn’t need a signal.
Like flipping a switch inside his mind.
Like syncing his rhythm to theirs—
To beat them before they even moved.
From the bench, Ayumi Brooks didn’t cheer.
Didn’t clap. Didn’t blink.
She just narrowed her eyes.
A cold draft flipped a page of her notebook.
She didn’t even look down.
Just clicked her pen—
Lucas stood near the left wing.
Eyes locked—not on the ball.
Like a hawk watching a storm cloud churn over open skies.
From the sideline, Ayumi Brooks didn’t blink.
This wasn’t just basketball anymore.
This was chess played at full speed.
Only thought versus thought.
Ryan stepped up, body low, hands angled perfectly
Josh sliced along the baseline.
Elijah’s eyes twitched toward the movement
But his body never shifted.
Stayed locked on Lucas like a compass pointing north.
(He knows the cut’s a decoy.)
A darting flash inside the arc.
Threw a bounce pass, just a little slow.
Fingers grazed air missed by an inch.
Ayden rotated to help.
He felt Brandon sealing hard inside.
Elijah read the fake, anticipated the kickout to the top.
(He’ll swing it to Evan.)
Behind-the-back dish to Josh—
Josh caught it in rhythm—
Fadeaway from the elbow.
Ryan leapt—got hands on it—
Elijah pushing the tempo.
"He’s testing what they’ll do out of sync..."
Elijah crossed half-court solo.
Lucas stayed with it.
Didn’t fall for the pace change.
They were moving as one now.
Like shadows in the same body.
Elijah did something odd.
Something had clicked.
Lucas raised an eyebrow.
Elijah took one step forward.
"You’re not copying me."
He tilted his head slightly.
"You’re copying the whole game."
Ayumi’s breath caught.
She scribbled two words in her notebook:
"Lucas is becoming the court."
Jogged back on offense.
Coach Fred didn’t say a word.
Because he saw it too.
The game was tilting.
This was Lucas’s territory now.
"Then let’s both become the court."
Evan took the inbound, but this time—
Josh shifted to the weak side corner.
Ryan cut high, then veered off like a decoy.
Evan paused, eyes scanning—
But something strange happened.
He didn’t look for the open man.
Lucas Graves – Basketball Snapshot
Position: Wing / Guard
Special Ability:Absolute Mimicry — copies styles, rhythms, and plays in real-time
IQ: Exceptionally high; reads defenses and tempo like a seasoned coach
Playstyle: Adaptive, unselfish, rhythm-based
Defense: Mirrors opponents perfectly, elite on-ball discipline
Offense: Precise passer, deceptive scorer, master of spacing
X-Factor: Can "become the court" — influences game flow without scoring
Noted By: Ayumi Brooks and Elijah Rainn as a unique, game-shaping player