Chapter 590: Dance Battle, Life
Chapter 590: Dance Battle, Life
Ainen brewed in mid-air, stirring something that smelled like warm spice and lightning while his hips kept time with the beat below. Bottles filled themselves and cups appeared.
He sent them down in a floating tray.
Everyone grabbed one.
The elephant beastfolk pair finished their routine and the crowd pressed in closer from every direction. People who had been walking past stopped. People who had been on other platforms drifted over. The two-headed pig-faced host spun his disk in a slow circle, prismatic balls cycling through deep purples and electric blues, and pointed at Almond’s side of the stage with both sets of eyes.
"Your turn!"
Saffa was already moving before he finished the sentence.
She hit the stage loose and easy, drink still in hand, and just started moving like she hadn’t stopped from earlier. Nothing flashy at first — just footwork, just the low pulse of the beat, her weight shifting side to side with a kind of rhythm that looked effortless in the way that only years of doing something can make a thing look. The crowd watched quietly for a moment. Then she dropped low on a bass hit and came back up spinning and the crowd noise climbed like a tide.
Fraisea jumped in beside her, mirroring her for exactly two seconds before breaking off into something entirely her own — quicker, sharper, using the whole stage, each movement landing on a beat so precisely that it looked choreographed even though it absolutely wasn’t.
The blue-trunked beastfolk on the other side started hollering encouragement or trash talk. Hard to tell which. Possibly both.
Then Galvaren stepped up.
He did not ease into it. He simply opened his wings to their full span — all eight, storm-grey and silver, each feather edged in faint crackling light — and the crowd gave him the entire stage through sheer instinct. He moved through the music like weather moves. Unhurried. Total. Each wing beat a quarter-second behind the rhythm so that the whole thing felt like standing at the edge of a storm. His spear was gone. His hands were open. He turned once, twice, and on the third rotation the prismatic balls above all shifted to white and the host made a noise.
OINK OINK!!!
One of the elephant beastfolk jumped back on, trunk moving in a low figure-eight sweep that the crowd lost their minds over, his footwork crisp and rolling, his whole body liquid on the top and percussive on the bottom. His partner came in from the side and they locked into a synchronized section that was tight enough to draw a long sustained roar from everyone watching.
They were good. They were genuinely, seriously good.
Almond looked at his side of the stage.
Clovelle stepped forward first, calm as always, and then moved in a way that was not calm at all — precise and quick and a little dangerous-looking, like a blade deciding to be elegant for one evening. The floor under her feet lit up in sharp white bursts that followed her footwork exactly.
Then Gopu flew onto the stage.
In his mini-form he was roughly the size of a large cat, scales catching every color the prismatic balls threw out, small wings fanning the air as he landed on the wood. He looked at the crowd. The crowd looked at him.
He started dancing.
A dragon. Dancing.
His tail kept the beat. His little claws tapped out rhythms against the stage floor. He moved his whole body in a low sinuous wave that rolled from his nose to the tip of his tail and back again, scaled body catching the deep house pulse like he’d been built for it, and the crowd’s reaction was not polite or measured or contained. It was immediate and absolute and very, very loud.
The opposing blue-trunk beastfolk broke their composure completely. One of them bent over laughing. The other one pointed at Gopu with something that looked a lot more like delighted disbelief than competitive fury.
Gopu, for his part, did not acknowledge any of this. He was simply in it. Eyes half-closed, tail sweeping, claws tapping. Fully committed, as always.
Almond stepped up beside him, drink finished and set down somewhere, and they did a completely unplanned and somewhat chaotic duet that the crowd chose to receive as intentional. Almond’s footwork was clean and his timing was good and none of that mattered because he was doing it next to a dancing dragon who was three feet tall and absolutely carrying the entire performance.
Lily appeared on his other side.
The floor under the three of them lit up in a riot of color.
The battle went three more rounds.
The beastfolk group pulled in two more from their side, a tall elven woman who moved like water and a human man with the kind of footwork that made you watch his feet specifically, and the stage became genuinely contested. Back and forth. Each side feeding off the other’s energy, each round louder than the last.
Between rounds, Ainen sent down fresh cups from wherever he was still hovering above. Sylvia’s vine platform had acquired a railing at some point and several audience members had claimed spots on it without asking. She hadn’t stopped them. She was watching the beastfolk’s elven member with an expression of pure assessment.
Benedict observed from the edge of the stage for a long time.
Then, in the fourth round, he walked on.
The host went absolutely still.
Benedict moved slowly. One step. Two. The deep red floor-light bloomed enormous under his feet. His armor caught the prismatic colors and scattered them in long crimson beams across the surrounding crowd. He wasn’t doing anything technically sophisticated. He was simply moving with a kind of heavy, deliberate weight that felt like the earth deciding to keep time, each step landing exactly on the downbeat, massive and unhurried and weirdly, completely right.
The opposing side went quiet.
Then the elven woman started laughing and pointing and clapping simultaneously, which was also a form of applause.
The human man across from them looked at Benedict, looked at Gopu still going on the side of the stage, looked back at his group, and shook his head with a grin. "We can’t compete with this."
"You’re competing fine," Fraisea called over.
"I mean spiritually," he said. "Spiritually we cannot compete."
The battle didn’t really end so much as dissolve.
Both sides drifted together at some point, the clear line between teams blurring until it was just people on a stage with various beats underneath them and prismatic light cycling overhead.
Gopu looked fascinated. This was notable because Gopu looked fascinated by most things, but this was a specific quality of fascination.
The two-headed host came over personally to where Almond and Lily had retreated slightly to the side and offered them a small glowing card. "Come back any night. You’ve got a permanent stage invite. All of you." He looked at Gopu. "Especially the dragon."
"He’ll be pleased to hear that," Ainen chuckled.
Gopu’s tail curved upward from where he sat on the stage edge. Not a wave exactly. More of an acknowledgment.
They found a long table on an elevated terrace sometime later, the whole group settling in without any discussion about it, like water finding its level. Food arrived. More drinks. The city spread below them in every direction, lit up and humming, completely indifferent to the fact that these particular people had spent the last several hours wringing every last thing out of it.
Gopu had returned to actually sitting at the table rather than the stage and was working through a plate of something skewered with great focus and satisfaction.
Nyssara sat with a drink she was actually working through this time, slowly, looking out at the twin moons still hanging over the dome projection above them. Her expression was not unreadable. It was just quiet in the specific way of someone who is full, in every sense of the word.
Almond leaned back in his chair and looked at all of it.
This table. This group. The city below. The music still audible from three directions. Gopu’s scales catching the terrace lights. Benedict telling the Roaring Tide crew something that was making them roar with laughter. Galvaren dancing with a crew of demons, matching his style.
Lily bumped Almond’s shoulder with hers, smiling. "It’s fun."
Almond nodded. "We never had fun like this before."
"But this won’t be the last time." Lily grabbed his hand. "We fought a lot and are at the final chasm. Let’s take it easy while enjoying what this other side has to offer."
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