Counterpunch Now

The dim lights of the "Broken Rib" gym hummed with the smell of old leather and stale sweat. Inside the ring, Elias "The Ghost" Thorne danced. He wasn’t a heavy hitter; he was a surgeon.

But the real "counterpunch" didn't happen in the ring. It happened two weeks later. Counterpunch

"That’s the thing about a counterpunch," Elias’s trainer, Pops, whispered from the corner. "It’s not about being stronger. It’s about letting the other guy’s momentum do the work for you." The dim lights of the "Broken Rib" gym

His opponent, a mountain of a man named Viktor, threw a haymaker that could have decapitated a bull. Elias didn’t flinch. He slipped the punch by a fraction of an inch, the wind of the glove whistling past his ear. In that heartbeat of overextension, Elias saw it: the opening. But the real "counterpunch" didn't happen in the ring