Dạ Nam Gym always smelled the same—old sweat soaked into worn mats, chalk dust clinging to rusty weight racks, and the faint tang of disinfectant that never quite covered the violence in the air. Minh stepped inside just as dawn cracked open the sky, the light barely slipping through the high windows.
Lãnh Phong was already there.
No music. No warm-up. No greeting.
Phong stood in front of a battered heavy bag, hands wrapped, sweat already forming on his neck. He wasn't a hero, or a mentor, or a comforting presence. He was a force—sharp, durable, unwavering.
Minh swallowed. "I… came."
Phong didn't turn. "Good. Start stretching."
Minh obeyed. His muscles twitched beneath his skin—Khí flickering in pulses that didn't match his heartbeat. Every stretch felt wrong. Too loose. Too tight. Too fast.
Phong finally faced him.
"Your problem isn't power," he said. "It's timing. Your body reacts faster than your thoughts."
He tapped Minh's forehead with two fingers.
"That is not control. That is instinct overriding function."
Minh swallowed. "Then what counts as control?"
Phong lifted three fingers.
"First: breath. If your breath breaks, your khí spikes."
One finger lowered.
"Second: intent. If you don't choose a target, your body chooses the nearest threat."
Another finger lowered.
"Third: contact. Khí leaves easiest through touch. Hands, elbows, knees, feet. Panic turns every touch into a weapon."
The last finger lowered.
"Today you learn brakes. Not speed."
Minh's breath shook.
Thiên Phú's voice surfaced, cool and sharp:
"His assessment aligns with your symptoms."
Gomboc growled beneath the words:
"…he's slow… let me show you real speed…"
Phong pointed to the mat. "Stand."
Minh stepped forward.
"Hands up."
Minh raised his guard—slightly too fast.
Phong saw it instantly.
"We're doing reaction taps. Your job is to touch my shoulder before I tap yours."
He moved without warning.
Minh flinched early—too early—and Phong tapped his shoulder cleanly.
"Again."
Minh tried to predict. Phong tapped the other side.
"Anticipation is panic," Phong said. "And panic is death. Again."
Minutes blurred into an hour.
Sweat soaked Minh's shirt. His chest burned. His legs trembled.
Sometimes his body lunged forward violently—Gomboc pushing instinct.
Sometimes he froze—Thiên Phú analyzing too much.
Phong stopped again.
"You're fighting two opponents," he said. "The voices. They're pulling you apart."
Minh's eyes widened. "You… can tell?"
"I don't need to hear them to know," Phong said. "Your body betrays you."
He stepped closer, lowering his voice.
"This time, don't hit. Don't dodge. Just breathe."
Phong tapped Minh's chest—
Light.
Controlled.
Testing.
Minh didn't jerk.
Didn't overreact.
Didn't explode.
For one moment, one breath—
he controlled the pulse.
Phong nodded once.
"That's progress."
"Because I didn't move?"
"Because you chose not to move."
Minh almost collapsed.
Phong tossed a towel at him. "Tomorrow. Same time."
"No break?" Minh gasped.
"That was warm-up."
Minh stared, half horrified, half hopeful.
He could quit. The thought came cleanly for once.
He could go home, block Hạ Yên's messages, avoid Thuận, avoid Lao, avoid every hallway where people whispered his name.
Then he remembered the boy he had thrown in PE.
He remembered Long in the hospital.
He remembered Lâm tied up because of him.
"Tomorrow," Minh said, voice rough. "Same time."
Phong studied him.
"That's a choice?"
Minh nodded.
"Mine."
But as he walked out of Dạ Nam Gym—shaking, drenched in sweat—he felt something unfamiliar:
A sense of control.
One pulse.
Just one.
But it was his.
Thiên Phú:
"Progress confirmed."
Gomboc:
"…next time… break something…"
Minh exhaled, steadying himself.
Tomorrow would be worse.
But he would return.
He had no choice.
----------------------
The counseling office smelled faintly of chamomile and aging paper—an artificial calm layered over the tension that clung to Minh's skin. Afternoon sunlight filtered through the blinds in thin slashes, striping the floor like bars of a cage.
Minh sat stiffly in the chair across from Hạ Yên's desk.
His leg wouldn't stop shaking.
His fingers wouldn't unclench.
Hạ Yên closed the door behind her, soft steps, unreadable expression. She set her clipboard down and sat with practiced grace, eyes sharp enough to pick apart every twitch in Minh's posture.
"Minh," she began gently, "you said something serious happened during training this morning."
Minh swallowed. "I… I think I'm losing control."
"How so?"
He hesitated.
The old Minh would have hidden the worst parts and hoped she guessed enough to save him.
That had not worked.
So he chose the truth, even the ugly parts.
"There are voices inside my head."
Most counselors would've reacted with visible alarm.
Not Hạ Yên.
She tilted her head slightly, resting her chin on her hand.
Calm. Curious. Composed.
"Tell me about them," she said. "Both."
Minh stared at the floor.
Then spoke.
"One voice… is cold. Controlled. Logical. Like it's analyzing everything. It feels like it knows what I'm about to do before I do it."
He hesitated.
"That one calls itself… Thiên Phú."
Hạ Yên wrote nothing down. She only watched him.
"And the other?" she asked softly.
Minh's breath grew shallow.
"The other one… is different. It's loud. Hungry. It pushes me when I fight. It wants me to move first. Hit first. Tear through anything in the way."
He closed his eyes in shame.
"I call it Gomboc."
Silence settled between them.
Hạ Yên leaned back slowly, fingers tapping the armrest once, twice, three times—analyzing without showing it.
Internally, she connected the dots:
- Trauma
- Overstimulation
- Fight-or-flight dysregulation
- Dissociative symptoms under stress
In her eyes, this wasn't supernatural.
This was psychological fragmentation.
But she didn't dismiss him.
Didn't say he was imagining it.
Didn't treat him like he was broken.
Instead, she leaned forward, voice soft but grounded.
"Minh… these voices—do they fight each other?"
He nodded.
"They argue. They try to take over when I fight. Sometimes I can't move because they're pulling in opposite directions."
"And what do they want?" she asked.
Minh swallowed.
"Thiên Phú wants me to survive.
Gomboc wants me to fight."
"Good," she murmured. "That means they represent something real—parts of you that are in conflict."
She spoke soothingly, carefully.
"You're dealing with identity fragmentation. Not madness. Not possession. Not whatever rumors students spread."
Minh lifted his head, eyes wide.
She didn't laugh at him.
Didn't judge him.
Didn't flinch.
She was treating his voices as real parts of his psyche.
And that… calmed him.
"Minh," she said softly, "you are not losing yourself. You're divided. And division can be managed."
She placed her pen gently on the desk.
"I want you to treat them as two parts of you—not enemies. Not monsters. Voices with purpose."
Minh's breath steadied slightly.
"Can… can I really do that?"
"Yes."
Her eyes locked onto his.
"But only if you keep talking to me. Only if you don't hide it."
For the first time, Minh nodded with certainty.
Hạ Yên smiled faintly.
"Good. Tomorrow after last period, come to me again. We'll go deeper."
As Minh stood to leave, she spoke one last time—voice dipped low, thoughtful.
"And Minh… if the voices get louder tonight… don't try to fight them alone."
He froze.
She didn't clarify.
She didn't need to.
He stepped out of the room—
heartbeat calmer,
mind heavier,
future more uncertain than ever.
Thiên Phú murmured:
"Well, she clearly doesn't know what's going on."
Gomboc whispered:
"…she has no idea what I am…"
Minh tightened his fists.
The coffee shop was small, warm, and deliberately forgettable.
Muted yellow lights.
Soft pop music playing too quietly to enjoy.
The kind of place students went to pretend they weren't afraid of anything.
Thanh Thuận chose it for that reason.
He sat at the corner table, back to the wall, a plastic cup of milk tea in his hand. Less sugar. Extra ice. It was the same order every time — a habit that survived even when everything else changed.
Across from him sat the Tân brothers.
Tân Thành looked out of place in the cramped shop. Broad shoulders, thick forearms, posture straight like he was still on a judo mat. Every time he shifted, the chair creaked in protest.
Tân Phong sat beside his brother, smaller, lighter, eyes constantly moving. He had his phone face-down on the table, but his attention was on reflections in the glass, the door, the shadows behind passing customers.
Three men.
No raised voices.
No dramatic gestures.
This wasn't a meeting of delinquents.
It was a planning session.
Thuận took a slow sip of his milk tea before speaking.
"Lao is no longer just a school problem."
Tân Thành's jaw tightened. "He crossed that line when he broke Tùng."
Phong nodded. "And when Long got sent to the hospital."
Thuận didn't argue. He didn't need to.
"He's using territory that doesn't belong to him," Thuận continued calmly. "The senior's gym. He's pulling in outsiders. Street kids. People who don't care who gets hurt."
Phong frowned. "That means he's desperate."
"No," Thuận corrected. "It means he's confident."
He set the cup down gently.
"Confidence makes people reckless."
Tân Thành leaned forward. "So we fight?"
Thuận didn't answer immediately. He stirred the ice in his milk tea, eyes unfocused for a moment.
"We don't rush into violence," he said. "We build structure first."
Phong raised an eyebrow. "Structure?"
"Numbers. Roles. Discipline." Thuận's gaze sharpened. "Lao rules through fear. Fear collapses under pressure. Structure doesn't."
Tân Thành exhaled slowly. "And Minh?"
That name hung in the air.
Thuận's fingers tightened around the cup.
"Minh is unstable," he said honestly. "But he's also the one Lao is afraid of."
Phong hesitated. "Are we relying on him?"
"No," Thuận said flatly. "We're preparing for reality."
He lowered his voice.
"There's something else you need to understand."
The brothers leaned in slightly.
"Only a few of us have ever touched what Lao is obsessed with," Thuận said. "The pill. The method."
Tân Thành stiffened. "Khí."
Thuận nodded once. "That's what they call it. I don't pretend to understand it. The senior warned us not to dig into võ lâm matters without guidance."
Phong frowned. "Then why did Lao—"
"Because Lao doesn't fear consequences," Thuận cut in. "He only fears being weak."
Silence followed.
"We don't chase shortcuts," Thuận continued. "No forced awakening. No experiments. Discipline first. Control first."
Tân Phong tapped the table once. "Then what do we do if Minh loses control in the middle of this?"
Thuận answered without hesitation.
"Distance first. Clear ordinary students. No hero moves. No grabbing him from behind."
Tân Thành frowned. "And if Lao corners him?"
"Then we give Minh space to breathe before we give him enemies to hit."
The rule sounded almost too simple.
But in a room full of boys preparing for violence, it mattered.
Tân Thành nodded slowly. "Then give the orders."
Thuận met his eyes.
"Thành, you rally the ones who can stand their ground. Athletes. Kids who've been threatened."
Thành nodded. "Understood."
"Phong," Thuận said, turning. "You watch. You listen. You track Lao's movement. No heroics."
Phong smirked faintly. "That's my specialty."
Thuận picked up his milk tea again.
"We don't strike first," he said quietly. "But we prepare for the moment Lao forces our hand."
Outside, rain began tapping against the windows.
Tân Phong glanced at the door. "He'll feel this shift soon."
Thuận took another sip.
"I know."
His reflection stared back at him from the plastic lid — calm, composed, already committed.
"This won't end quietly," Thuận said. "So we make sure it ends cleanly."
The Tân brothers stood.
--------
Night settled heavy over the old kickboxing gym.
The sign outside still carried the Senior's name, its paint chipped, lights flickering like a dying heartbeat. Once, this place had been neutral ground — a shelter where discipline mattered more than dominance.
Now, it belonged to Lao.
Inside, the air reeked of sweat, blood, and metal. The mats were torn in places, taped back together carelessly. Heavy bags hung unevenly, some chains replaced with thick ropes after snapping under abuse.
Dã Lao stood in the center of it all.
Shirtless.
Knuckles wrapped.
Breathing steady.
Around him were his lieutenants.
Hữu Lực leaned against a pillar, massive arms crossed, bruises blooming across his chest like badges of honor. Every inhale rattled with barely restrained violence.
Văn Lâm paced near the lockers, light on his feet, eyes sharp, constantly checking reflections in the cracked mirrors. He smiled too often — a habit formed from cornering weaker opponents.
And in the shadows near the back wall sat Hạo Kỳ.
Still.
Observant.
Watching everything.
A boy knelt in the center of the mat, shaking.
"Again," Lao said calmly.
The boy swallowed. "But—"
Lao stepped forward and drove his palm into the boy's chest.
Khí exploded outward — raw, unfiltered, violent.
The boy screamed, collapsing as his body convulsed. Foam gathered at the corner of his mouth.
Hữu Lực laughed. "Too weak."
Văn Lâm clicked his tongue. "Didn't even last ten seconds."
Hạo Kỳ said nothing.
Lao crouched beside the fallen boy, gripping his jaw.
"This is what power costs," Lao whispered. "If you can't pay it, crawl away."
Hạo Kỳ watched the boy's fingers twitch against the mat.
Forced awakening always looked the same at the start: heat, shaking, false strength.
Then came the bill.
Memory gaps.
Broken nerves.
Rage without direction.
Lao knew the cost.
He simply considered other people cheaper than weakness.
The boy didn't answer.
Two others dragged him off the mat like dead weight.
Lao stood and turned to the remaining recruits.
"Fear is the only rule that works," he said. "You want protection? You become the strongest thing in the room."
Some nodded desperately.
Others trembled.
Hạo Kỳ finally spoke. "Thuận is moving."
Lao smiled.
"Of course he is."
"He's gathering structure," Kỳ continued. "Discipline. Roles. Control."
Lao scoffed. "Structure is for cowards who can't dominate."
Văn Lâm grinned. "They're scared. That's enough."
Lao shook his head. "Fear fades."
His eyes burned.
"But breaking someone in front of everyone… that lasts."
He turned toward Hữu Lực.
"You're first if it comes to blows."
Hữu Lực cracked his neck. "I'll fold their big guy."
Lao looked at Văn Lâm next. "Watch their scout. Don't rush. Let him think he's invisible."
Văn Lâm bowed slightly. "Already tracking him."
Finally, Lao's gaze settled on Hạo Kỳ.
"And Minh?"
Kỳ hesitated — just a fraction.
"He's unstable," Kỳ said carefully. "But he's adapting. If he learns control—"
Lao's fist slammed into the wall, cracking plaster.
"He won't."
The gym fell silent.
"I don't care about Thuận," Lao said slowly. "I don't care about rules. I don't care about factions."
He smiled, wide and dangerous.
"I want Minh to step forward willingly."
The recruits stared.
"When he does," Lao continued, "I will break him in front of everyone."
A chain snapped somewhere above as a heavy bag fell to the floor with a deafening crash.
No one flinched.
The Senior's gym had become something else entirely.
And whatever was born here tonight…
Would spill blood soon.
----------------
Minh felt the shift before anyone said a word.
At Lương Thế Vinh High, the atmosphere changed subtly, like pressure building before a storm. Conversations didn't stop when he walked by — they thinned. Friends hesitated before speaking. Teachers glanced at him a second longer than usual, unsure why he suddenly felt… heavy.
Thiên Phú surfaced calmly:
"Environmental change detected. External conflict bleeding inward."
Gomboc's response was simpler:
"…they're circling…"
Minh knew he didn't belong to Lê Quý Đôn High.
But whatever was happening there was reaching him anyway.
–––––
The tension was no longer subtle.
Two factions moved through the same halls, shared the same stairwells, breathed the same air — and refused to acknowledge each other openly.
Thanh Thuận's side moved quietly.
Tân Phong appeared in places he shouldn't be — at the far end of corridors, near bike racks, at corners where fights usually started. He never stayed long. He didn't need to.
Tân Thành stayed visible.
He trained openly after school in a borrowed room near campus, judo mats taped together, doors half-open. Students passed by and slowed down, reassured by the sight of someone strong who didn't glare at them.
Thuận watched from a distance.
No speeches.
No declarations.
No threats.
Just preparation.
Dã Lao did the opposite.
He wanted presence.
Hữu Lực walked the halls like he owned them, shoulders wide, daring teachers to question him. Lockers slammed harder when he passed.
Văn Lâm lingered near stairwells and exits, smiling at people who looked away too quickly. Rumors followed him like a shadow.
"They're picking targets."
"They said someone's going to get crippled."
"They're watching who sides with Thuận."
Fear spread faster than facts.
Hạo Kỳ observed everything quietly, already mapping reactions.
It didn't come from an official account.
It didn't carry a name.
But by midday, every group chat at Lê Quý Đôn High had it.
**Faction fights.
No weapons.
Neutral ground.
Bring that kid, Minh, Lương Thế Vinh High
Loser disbands.**
Screens lit up across the school.
Excitement.
Dread.
Relief that something had rules now.
Then a second message followed.
Final match: Thuận vs. Lao.
The hallway erupted in Lê Quý Đôn High.
Minh read the forwarded message during lunch at Lương Thế Vinh.
His fingers went cold.
Thiên Phú:
"This is deliberate provocation."
Gomboc:
"…they want you to walk into their territory…"
Minh hadn't agreed to anything, but eyes followed him in the hallway.
His name was already weaponized.
–––––
Thuận read the message once.
Then he locked his phone.
"They dragged him in," Tân Phong said quietly. "On purpose."
Thuận nodded. "Lao wants control over the narrative."
Tân Thành clenched his fists. "This could turn into a school-wide fight…"
Thuận exhaled slowly.
"This ends the moment it stops being contained," he said. "We protect people here first."
No talk of glory.
No talk of winning.
Just containment.
–––––
That evening, Minh sat alone in Dạ Nam Gym, the heavy bag still swaying from his last punch.
The court lights buzzed overhead.
He stared at the floor, replaying the message again and again.
He wasn't part of their school.
He hadn't joined their faction.
He hadn't chosen this war.
And yet —
They had pulled him into it anyway.
Because he was dangerous.
Because he was visible.
Because his existence threatened balance.
Minh clenched his hands.
Thiên Phú spoke:
"Refusal will not prevent escalation."
Gomboc pressed closer:
"…running makes it worse…"
Minh closed his eyes.
If he stayed silent, the conflict would spread.
If he stayed away, others would be hurt in his place.
He opened his eyes slowly.
Whatever Lao was planning at Lê Quý Đôn High —
Whatever Thuận was trying to prevent —
It was no longer contained by school boundaries.
The lines had been drawn.
And Minh stood directly between them.
For once, he did not tell himself he had no choice.
He had one.
He could let Lao choose the place, the rules, the first strike.
Or he could walk in with his eyes open, with breath in his lungs, and with enough control to keep other people from paying for his fear.
Minh wrapped his knuckles again.
"Then I choose control," he whispered.
Thiên Phú said nothing.
Gomboc laughed softly.
But neither voice moved his hands.
This time, Minh did.
