Chapter 218: No Match for the Apex
Zhang Hongqing was too strong.
Strong enough that Su Jie had stopped thinking about winning and started thinking about finding a gap — any gap — to get out alive. Two or three exchanges had been enough to make the measure of the distance absolutely clear. But he hadn’t despaired. He could still see threads of possibility.
It was the same logic as the ring match against Feng Hengyi. Feng Hengyi had been far beyond him then too, but the risk of a mutual destruction outcome had given Su Jie room to operate. He hadn’t won — the referee’s stoppage had been all that saved him — but he hadn’t been simply finished either.
Tonight was more dangerous than that fight. Both sides had drawn weapons. A blade doesn’t care whose side you’re on.
For Zhang Hongqing to kill Su Jie without cost — that, Su Jie thought, was going to require more effort than the Dragon Head had perhaps planned for.
He wasn’t what he had been.
And he had come prepared. He had known, before arriving in San Francisco, that a confrontation with Zhang Hongqing was a real probability. He had spent time developing specific tools — thrown weapons especially. That first needle had registered on Zhang Hongqing. He had felt the slight recalibration.
“The thrown-weapon technique comes from Gu Yang,” Zhang Hongqing said. The short rod turned slowly in his hand — a viper finding its angle. “The Judgement. Many serious practitioners have ended under his toothpicks. That penetrating needle system of his is the kind of thing that gives even ghosts pause. You haven’t just absorbed the core of it — you’ve built past it.”
The moving rod reminded Su Jie of something he’d read once — a fictional weapons ranking in which the top position went to a short staff. Perceiving the mechanism of heaven. The short rod in Zhang Hongqing’s grip, though wood, had exactly that quality: inexhaustible transformation, a reach that seemed to extend or contract according to some logic other than its physical length. Dried blood was visible in the grain. It had seen considerable use.
Su Jie’s back was still speaking to him. The Thirteen Protectors Iron Body qigong — the full system of Diamond Indestructibility — was as developed in him as it had ever been, and even so, one blow from that rod through an instrument of that quality had nearly dropped him.
His martial foundation was primarily unarmed — the Hoe Strike, refined through thousands of repetitions, fully integrated into his body as a system of bare-hand combat. Against weapons, against a practitioner of this depth, that foundation showed its limits. Against an ordinary master he could move freely. Against a figure of Zhang Hongqing’s historical rarity, the comparison was uncomfortable.
He focused on breathing — driving qi to the back, forcing circulation through the damaged area. The numbness that had settled in was the concerning part. Normally, a strike from a fist, a staff, or even a hammer produced a momentary disruption that cleared quickly when he moved and breathed. Numbness that persisted meant something different.
“Your back is compromised,” Zhang Hongqing said. “Your mobility is affected. How do you propose to threaten me now?”
Su Jie had settled into a posture — neither fully crouched nor standing, arms coiled around each other, the blade held inside the grip. The shape of it was the monkey on a branch: compressed, capable of exploding in any direction, attack or defense or full-output strike without transition.
Zhang Hongqing’s concern was not the posture. It was the needles.
The needles Su Jie carried were not off-the-shelf items. He had designed and fabricated them specifically for protecting Larich — engineered for ballistic consistency and maximum penetration at close range. A refinement of what Gu Yang had shown him, applied to a better delivery medium than toothpicks. Each one was capable of doing what he intended.
“It seems you’ve decided today is the day,” Su Jie said. He was smiling — genuinely, openly — despite everything. His body was still shaking slightly, but under the effort of breath-driven circulation, the back was beginning to respond. The numbness was retreating. It felt like something being kneaded back to life from the inside.
“Hmm.” Zhang Hongqing paused — something he hadn’t quite anticipated. Then a slight nod, something close to appreciation: “Youth is something. Recovery at that speed — the Honey Badger Training Camp has extensive data from practitioners at this level, but nothing from anyone who reached it before twenty. I don’t necessarily need to kill you. Taking you into the training camp as a research subject would also serve the purpose.”
“Then I have no choice but to go all in,” Su Jie said, still smiling.
He moved.
The blade swept upward.
Three needles left simultaneously, placed in a triangle around Zhang Hongqing’s available paths — a pyramid formation — and in the same motion Su Jie reversed direction entirely, driving away from the confrontation toward the open street.
Zhang Hongqing had apparently anticipated this. As the needles launched, his rod described a brief arc and all three disappeared — deflected to somewhere unknowable. The short rod functioning as a shield.
He gave immediate chase, launching into a straight sprint that matched Su Jie’s pace, closing the distance within a few strides, the rod descending again toward Su Jie’s skull.
In that instant, Su Jie spun back — a complete reversal of momentum — and a second blade had appeared in his left hand. Both blades came up around his head like two sharp horns braced to receive the blow.
Stubborn Ox Turns Back.
The Hoe Strike system’s answer to the huí mǎ qiāng — the horseback return-spear. Where the spear technique operated in a single line, this technique drove from two contact points simultaneously.
The ox in the fields was famously immovable — patient, obedient, capable of sustained labor without complaint. But when an ox finally turned, it turned without reservation and without regard for its own safety. The technique took that moment as its model.
Su Jie had modified it further and embedded it in his thrown-weapon arsenal: at the instant of the turn, both blades left his hands in the same motion that brought them up — not a block but a throw, the motion of an ox violently tossing its horns, the horns becoming blades in flight.
The geometry was precise: Zhang Hongqing’s rod descending toward Su Jie’s skull; Su Jie spinning back; blades flying toward Zhang Hongqing’s sternum and throat simultaneously.
Mutual destruction logic.
If Zhang Hongqing completed the strike, he caved Su Jie’s skull. If he completed it, both blades entered him through vital points.
Zhang Hongqing had apparently read the technique forming before it fully arrived. His rod shifted left and right on the descent, knocking both blades off course. Then it transitioned — a thrusting extension, like a spear without a head, aimed at Su Jie’s Dantian pressure point at the sternum.
A blunt rod in Zhang Hongqing’s hands didn’t need a tip to be fatal. The question of whether something without a point can kill a person has a clear answer.
The thrust was immaculate — water flowing from high ground, nothing wasted, nothing forced. With no external disruption, Su Jie was dead.
But the two deflected blades weren’t done.
Each one had a cord attached — transparent filament, nearly invisible in the dark. The blades arced out, reached the end of their range, and swung back on the cords: returning, now aimed at Zhang Hongqing’s flanks from both sides.
If he completed the thrust into Su Jie, both blades entered his sides.
“Hmm.” Zhang Hongqing registered it — the transparent cords, the return arc. The Stubborn Ox had seized his attention at full intensity for that fraction of a second, and the cord setup had been laid in that cover.
The technique of attaching a cord to a thrown weapon and controlling its return flight was an ancient one — the shéng biāo, the rope dart. Extraordinarily difficult to develop. Beginners regularly strike themselves. A practitioner who had genuinely mastered it could direct the weapon through complex paths with precision.
Su Jie had clearly been working on this for a significant period. The execution had produced something Zhang Hongqing had not fully modeled.
He couldn’t complete the thrust. He drove backward — a genuine retreat — and the returning blades again found nothing.
Su Jie had landed no hit. But Zhang Hongqing had been pushed back. A real step backward, not a tactical repositioning. He had not anticipated the depth of the variation.
The blades swung on their cords and didn’t stop. Su Jie’s arm and body moved together — one blade redirected on the cord toward the retreating Zhang Hongqing, and the other swung and drove deep into the wall of a building beside them.
Su Jie pulled.
The cord went taut, the embedded blade held, and Su Jie was carried up the wall faster than climbing — faster than a monkey — and over the top, dropping into the property beyond.
Clang!
Zhang Hongqing’s rod moved, severing the blade from its cord. Then his arm — a flash of something cold passing through the dark, a thrown weapon reaching Su Jie’s body in the instant before he disappeared over the wall.
Then Su Jie was through a window. Gone.
Zhang Hongqing didn’t pursue. Climbing the wall meant his body in the air — movement constrained, no stable ground — and Su Jie would have the thrown-weapon angle he needed. Even at this level, that was not a position Zhang Hongqing wanted to be in.
He stood and looked at what remained: one blade on the ground, one embedded in the wall, transparent cord trailing from both.
“The boy actually got away.” He studied the arrangement. “Terrain, thrown weapons, flying blades, the rope dart — each piece necessary, none sufficient alone. Half a beat slower at any point and this ends differently.” He permitted himself a small measure of something like respect.
*****
Su Jie was already two buildings away when he stopped to take stock.
He removed his outer layer. On the back of the bulletproof vest beneath it was a small steel ball — embedded in the material where it had stopped. Zhang Hongqing’s thrown weapon, fired in the instant before the wall. Without the vest, it would have entered his body.
He was Larich’s last line of defense. When bullets were incoming, his job was to stand between them and his employer. He hadn’t been arrogant enough to go without protection.
The vest had also absorbed most of Zhang Hongqing’s rod strike. Without it, that blow would have ended the fight immediately.
He breathed carefully for a long moment.
Zhang Hongqing was beyond what he had imagined. The man’s capability, the depth of his technique, the completeness of his combat thinking — all of it exceeded the picture Su Jie had constructed in advance.
Tonight had been luck. The specific geometry of the environment had given him the one option that worked. On open ground, with no walls to use, no cords to anchor, he had no answer that would have served.
The gap between himself and Zhang Hongqing was substantial.
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