Chapter 158: Chapter 158

Toyonaka Horizon High 50 - Nagano Kurotsuki High41

"Another quarter of Dirga’s vision! He really is the maestro!"

"Maestro, phantom, tempo-breaker—he’s writing this game like a symphony."

"Yeah, but Kurotsuki doesn’t break. They bend. Let’s see what they’ve been hiding."

Laughter—not loud, but low and warm, like jazz under breath.

Taiga draped his towel like a cape, smirking beneath it.

Aizawa elbowed Rikuya in the ribs, murmuring a box-out joke only they could hear.

Dirga drank water slowly, eyes half-lidded, listening—not to voices, but breath.

They were breathing in rhythm.

Coach Tsugawa barely needed to speak.

He just gave a small nod and said:

"Don’t slow down. Just finish the piece."

Kaito stepped forward.

No more hand on ribs. No grimace. He stood like stone warmed by fire.

"Coach," he said, steady. "I’m going."

Tsugawa raised one brow.

Kaito held up two fingers.

"First two minutes. Then rest."

"Put me back in the last two."

Kaito turned to Dirga.

Dirga gave the faintest smile.

"Don’t drop it when you come back."

Kaito’s smirk was razor-thin.

"I’m the final verse."

Coiled tension in the lungs.

Sho leaned forward, elbows on knees, glare carved into the court like it owed him something.

Toshiro rubbed his jaw, wrist tape biting too tight.

Coach Renji finally moved, voice just above a whisper.

"They’ve boxed us into structure," he said.

"They’re dictating the echo."

He raised his eyes, cold and sharp.

"I won’t let them end on harmony."

To the quietest one on the bench.

The only starter who hadn’t owned a moment.

"No more shadows. No more screens."

"You’re the distortion."

Just a nod—measured, weightless.

Like he’d been waiting for this all game.

Not forgotten. Just loading.

Sho inbounded to Eiji.

Kurotsuki didn’t move back onto the court.

Eiji brought it up with a slow jog, eyes unreadable, hands feathering the ball like it might break.

Horizon matched them in formation—

Taiga and Rikuya communicated in low grunts,

Aizawa scanned angles like a machine,

Dirga already shifting, anticipating the weakside hedge before it even formed.

The real action was behind the current.

Unmentioned since tipoff.

He drifted like mist across the baseline, half a step behind the paint.

A single brush behind Sho at the high elbow.

A whisper in defensive rhythm.

Half a step. A heartbeat. A fragment of instinct.

Taniguchi sold a flare cut high, dragging Kaito’s attention by the thread.

Toshiro jabbed into a dive down the middle, baiting Aizawa into a premature slide.

Slipped beneath the elbow—

Cut precise as a scalpel.

Behind them all, Ryōta turned.

Planted himself behind the play like an echo that had always been there.

Sho caught it mid-post.

A soft midrange floater.

Just the thunk of the net and quiet steps back.

Kurotsuki didn’t need applause.

They weren’t chasing momentum.

They were chasing rhythm.

Dirga caught the inbound.

But he couldn’t name it.

Couldn’t place the note.

Only that it was rising.

Dirga brought it upcourt—

Fingers dancing, reading the shape before him like sheet music.

Kurotsuki wasn’t pressing.

No suffocating pressure.

But something was off.

It looked like the same 2–3 shell—

Like fabric with hidden tension in the weave.

Kaito curled around a stagger screen from Aizawa. The rhythm was sharp.

Rikuya flared baseline. Space opened.

Dirga motioned—swing.

Kaito exploded off the first step.

Two defenders collapsed inward.

He fired a bounce pass across the key—

Not even a real deflection.

A whisper of contact—

It spun off course, half a meter wide.

Aizawa reached—missed.

It tumbled toward the sideline like a skipped stone.

Nothing looked wrong.

He called a brush motion.

Aizawa curled left—caught the ball in full stride.

Sho stepped in—cutting off the lane.

But Aizawa didn’t panic.

The defense sagged—just enough.

Dirga shifted out to the wing, calling for the swing pass.

But the ball never made it.

Just exactly when it would hurt most.

He stepped into the lane like he’d always been there.

The ball deflected forward, loose.

Caught it mid-bounce.

Pull-up three in transition.

"HORIZON TURNOVER—AND KUROTSUKI MAKES THEM PAY!"

"That wasn’t a bad pass. That was a perfect read... by someone."

But the broadcast didn’t name him.

Didn’t even catch it.

Ryōta didn’t raise a hand.

Already jogging back.

Already fading into the next moment.

He rewound it in his head.

There hadn’t been a trap.

A pass just slightly wrong.

That was interference.

Dirga took the inbound again.

His grip on the ball tightened.

Not too much. Just... tighter.

Eyes scanning not for defenders—

But for what was beneath them.

It had just taken on a new shape.