Chapter 67: Chapter 67

"Remember our strategy," Coach Tsugawa said, his voice low but firm, echoing through the locker room. "We can’t play our game if you’re not cold-headed. Don’t get provoked. Don’t get pulled into their rhythm."

"Alright," he nodded. "Now go out there... and break a leg."

We rose together, the sound of sneakers scuffing against the locker room floor filling the silence. Time to walk into the fire.

Rakuzan entered the arena first—their red and black jerseys glinting under the lights, faces unreadable, confident. Cold. Asahi Tenma led them with that calm arrogance of someone who expected to win just by showing up.

Then it was our turn.

Dirga leads them, eyes sharp. Behind him, Rei flicks his wrist like he’s already knocking down shots. Aizawa’s got his usual grin—half hype, half danger. Taiga rolls his shoulders, quiet and coiled. And Rikuya? Calm as ever. A Budha in motion.

The announcer’s voice boomed over the PA system.

"Now entering the court—Horizon High! After dismantling the Twin Giants of Hyōgo in their previous match, Horizon has made it clear: they’re not just a rising team—they’re a storm on the move!"

Another voice chimed in, this one rougher, almost skeptical.

"They tore through that last game, sure—but can they handle Rakuzan? This team plays a different kind of basketball. Tough. Calculated. And ruthless. Horizon’s biggest test starts now—not just on the court, but in the mind."

The crowd cheered as we walked out. Flashes of cameras, the smell of polished hardwood, sweat, and anticipation filled the air. Dirga scanned the stands briefly—no sign of Ayaka. She said she’d come tomorrow... if we win today.

That "if" weighed more than anything else right now.

Dirga shifted his focus back to the court.

There he was—Asahi Tenma, standing tall near half-court, adjusting his wristband like a prince getting ready to duel. His jet-black hair slicked back, uniform pristine. He looked less like a point guard and more like the heir to some basketball dynasty.

But Dirga knew better.

Asahi wasn’t just style. He knew the game inside and out. To exploit the rules the way he did, you had to understand them first. He played like a tactician with a silver spoon—smart, quick, and always looking to tip the scales in his favor.

Then Dirga’s eyes shifted.

The shooting guard. The punk. If Asahi looked like the young master, Kaname was the street-brawler who fought his battles in the alley. Tape around his fingers. Smirk on his face. His eyes scanned us like a wolf looking for weak points.

This was the guy who’d do the dirty work. Elbows. Taunts. Cheap fouls. The kind of player who’d spit a threat under his breath while smiling at the ref. And worse? He was good at it.

Dirga narrowed his eyes.

Not just skill versus skill.

This is a battle of composure.

The Kyo Arena is already awake—

not just buzzing—growling.

The sound isn’t mere noise. It breathes.

It thrums in the concrete, rattles the rails, settles into your lungs like smoke.

The crowd is rabid—impatient, bloodthirsty.

Reporters kneel low along the baseline, lenses trained, fingers twitching over camera shutters like they’re drawing weapons.

Every breath feels like a countdown.

And the air—thick, charged, alive with something more than electricity.

It isn’t just a game.

Rikuya steps into the center circle.

Horizon’s anchor. Calm. Colossal.

He cracks his neck once, eyes forward.

Across from him—Rakuzan’s center. Kido Tatsuma.

Broad. Brutal. Built like a wrecking ball.

He doesn’t nod. Doesn’t flinch.

Cold. Disrespectful. Absolute.

Not an ounce of recognition.

To him, Horizon isn’t a rival.

[Echo Scan: Rakuzan Starting Lineup]

Dirga narrows his eyes.

Two players with S-rank Mentality on one team.

This isn’t just going to be basketball.

It’s going to be psychological warfare.

He glances back—Horizon’s formation behind him.

This is their unit. Always has been. Dirga (PG), Rei (SG), Aizawa (SF), Taiga (PF), Rikuya (C).

The referee raises the ball.

The ball arcs like a moonshot—and Kido snatches it mid-air, like he owns the sky.

Rakuzan explodes into motion.

Every step, every screen, like choreography burned into muscle memory.

Tsukasa flows into the lane. Kick out. Asahi catches—mid-range.

But it’s not the bucket that hits hardest.

Horizon inbounds. Dirga calls for the ball.

But Rakuzan’s pressure comes early—too early.

They’re not easing in.

Dirga dribbles left—shoulder drops.

Tsukasa Yunagi’s already there.

Not a full hit. Just enough to knock his balance.

Not enough for a charge.

But not clean either.

It’s a cheap shot, cloaked in footwork.

The ref raises a hand.

Dirga doesn’t react. Doesn’t look.

That was intentional.

Rakuzan plays the long game.

They bait you. Provoke you.

Push you just far enough to feel heat—but never enough to burn themselves.

From the sideline, Coach Tsugawa’s voice barks out:

"Stay cold! Don’t let them drag you out of rhythm!"

Dirga wipes his palms on his shorts.

The offense moves—but it’s not smooth.

Rakuzan’s defense is a cage made of shadows and angles.

They anticipate. Predict. Trap.

Every time Dirga sees a seam—it’s already sewn shut.

It’s like playing chess with a mirror that’s three moves ahead.

But Horizon doesn’t blink.

Then—Kaito gets the ball at the arc.

A jab right. Quick cross.

He slices through the seam. Contact—no whistle.

But he stays up. Finishes.

The arena groans. Whispers. Some cheer. Some doubt.

Dirga jogs back, chest rising.

Not from exhaustion—from focus.

The scoreboard says tie—but this isn’t a numbers game anymore.

This is where the true war begins.

Not just on the hardwood.

They’re not just here to win.

They’re here to make you break.