Chapter 150: Chapter 150

The air in the gym was thick.

Dirga clenched his jaw, his breath shallow, heartbeat pounding in his ears.

Three possessions behind.

No rhythm. No traction.

Every play Kurotsuki made felt like a blade—precise, cold, merciless.

He couldn’t let this spiral.

He had to shatter it. Now.

Dirga barked the call—

Like a command on the battlefield.

Quick pin on the wing, tight and low.

Taiga curled up to the elbow, footwork clean, cutting space.

Rikuya dragged his defender, scraping through the baseline shadows to pull Sho with him.

No feints. No misdirection.

This wasn’t a trick play.

Left side, explosive.

But Dirga didn’t flinch.

Didn’t dump the ball.

Time snapped taut like a bowstring.

A lightning bolt whipped across the hardwood—

Straight into Kaito’s pocket.

The crowd sucked in air.

Eyes locked on Taniguchi.

But the shadow shooter didn’t move.

Like the shot had passed through him without heat.

The fog doesn’t flinch.

You can’t catch what you can’t see.

Kurotsuki possession.

Low shoulders, slow bounce, predator calm.

Taniguchi drifted left.

Aizawa twitched—bit on it.

Ryōta dragged Aizawa across the arc, relentless, tireless.

A grind to blur Horizon’s shape.

Toshiro ghosted into the corner.

No call. No ball. No screen.

Where’s the real play?

Eiji drove—midline pressure—then whipped a no-look.

And there—rising like a phantom from the weak side—

Just the silence that follows a kill shot.

Coach Tsugawa raised a single hand—calm, deliberate.

The whistle cut through the air.

Horizon jogged back—not broken.

As if they’d stepped into something they couldn’t name.

Dirga dropped into his seat, jaw tight, towel already over his head.

Aizawa slumped beside him, elbows on knees, eyes staring at the floor like it held answers.

Taiga and Rei leaned in, shoulders rising and falling with every breath.

Eyes tracking Taniguchi, who drifted—like always—back toward Kurotsuki’s huddle.

Unbothered. Unhurried.

Kaito didn’t say a word.

Not until the whiteboard snapped into view.

Marker strokes—fluid, clean. Surgical.

In seconds, Kurotsuki’s zone defense was exposed like a rigged game:

Slow weak-side rotation. Overcommitting to the middle. False closes on the wings.

"He’s not a shooter," Coach Tsugawa said quietly.

Heads turned. Eyes lifted.

"He’s a shadow. He moves where your eyes don’t."

Not hesitation—comprehension.

Coach pointed to the board again.

"Which means," he said, tapping once, "you stop following the ball."

"Tag the movement, not the pass."

Coach’s gaze shifted.

Tsugawa raised an eyebrow.

"Zone disruptor assignment."

No hesitation this time.

Shoes scuffed. Voices murmured. Horizon stood.

Just one second longer.

Eyes scanned the far corner.

Not calling for the ball.

Like a shadow cast by someone else’s light.

"You’re not gonna vanish again," he muttered.

"Not with me watching."

Kurotsuki set the action.

High screen—tight, efficient.

Slippery post flash from Ryōta, brushing the edge of legality.

One pass. Two. Quick rhythm.

Because Taniguchi wasn’t open.

Kaito was already there.

Eyes not on the ball—

But on the rhythm beneath it.

The breathing of the play.

Taniguchi curved out.

Tried to ghost away—like always.

But Kaito didn’t chase.

The ball came anyway—

Kaito was in his jersey.

Taniguchi snatched it back—but the illusion was gone.

He was forced to pass.

A subtle tilt in the air.

Horizon’s bench rose—just an inch.

Eiji clapped for a reset—recentered the formation.

Tried to punch it back inside—

Ryōta flashing baseline.

Slid hard. Closed the window.

No misdirection left.

The rhythm had snapped.

Hands sure. Elbows wide.

He secured it and snapped the outlet.

The call cut through the air like a blade.

Aizawa dragged wide—left wing, hard angle.

Taiga held the screen—set deep, legs braced.

Kaito looped—baseline cut.

His defender hesitated—

Split between instinct and scouting.

"They finally shut down Taniguchi—and Kaito makes them pay on the other end!"

"You can feel the rhythm tipping now—one beat at a time!"

Like something had been set in motion beneath the floorboards.

Not even in the shot.

He saw it in the air—

It was something older.

Two players shaped not by noise—

But by the silence between shots.

The tension that exists in the seconds no one claps for.

Dirga narrowed his eyes.

But impossible to shake.

"Is this just defense..."

"...or something deeper?"