***
Match Type
Iron Man Match
Victory Conditions
Win by having the most points by the end of the time limit. Conditions will cycle after each fall. The first fall is only by pinfall, the second is submission, the third must be by knockout, fourth by orgasm, and it cycles from there until time runs out.
***
The halls backstage reek of fluorescent lights and false promises. Tomás Ferreira rolls his neck from side to side as he walks, bare feet padding silently over the cold concrete floor. The faint hum of the crowd is already worming its way through the walls—low, restless, growing louder with every second. He doesn’t hear it. Or rather, he refuses to.Match Type
Iron Man Match
Victory Conditions
Win by having the most points by the end of the time limit. Conditions will cycle after each fall. The first fall is only by pinfall, the second is submission, the third must be by knockout, fourth by orgasm, and it cycles from there until time runs out.
***
They’ll be screaming his name in mockery. Booing. Hoping to see him fall again. Not because he’s a villain in their eyes. No. That’d be too easy to wear, like armor. They boo because he’s not a showman. He doesn’t dance to their tune. He doesn’t smile for the camera. Because when he fights, he fights. And now, they only seem to care how much he suffers before someone finally puts him down.
He pauses at the gorilla position, jaw clenched tight. His lean, scarred frame is already damp with the light sheen of pre-fight sweat. Black Muay Thai shorts hug his hips, matte and unadorned, like everything else about him. No boots. No pomp. No theatrics. Just skin, sinew, and silence.
The match tonight is an Iron Man. One hour. Constantly shifting win conditions after every fall. A grueling, grinding test of endurance, adaptability, and pain tolerance. Exactly the chaos LAW has learned to weaponize against him. One fall must end by pin. Another by submission. Another by knockout. And another… by orgasm. He snorts faintly at that last one. Typical LAW.
And his opponent? Miriam Molina. That’s the name on the card. A name, nothing else. He scoured the archives, the tape, the forums. Nothing. Which either meant she was new or she was dangerous enough to keep the records scrubbed. Maybe both. LAW loves a dramatic surprise. Doesn’t matter. He’s not here to be surprised.
The music cue hits—his theme—and Tomás walks out into the boiling lights of the LAW Arena. Tokyo greets him the way it always does: like a predator scenting blood. Cheers twisted into jeers. Chants that sound like mockeries. Signs waving with insults scrawled across them. Somewhere in the chaos, someone probably painted a cartoon of him getting wrecked. Cute.
Tomás doesn’t look up. Doesn’t play to the camera. His eyes are fixed dead ahead, sharp as a blade drawn from its sheath. The ring waits like a crucible under the lights, and he climbs into it like stepping into war. He stands in his corner, silent, hands resting on the top ropes behind him, breathing slow and steady. Every match now feels like it’s being scripted to break him. LAW management stacking the deck. Bending the rules. Booking matches that twist the knife just a little deeper each time.
Let them. He’s still standing.
Tonight, it’s him and this unknown, Miriam Molina. One hour. Multiple falls. No room to breathe. No space to hide. And she’ll get to see exactly who Tomás Ferreira is when the clock starts ticking and the world fades to black around the edges. He closes his eyes for a moment, shutting out the crowd, the noise, the lights. He opens them again as the announcer begins the introductions.
Let her come. Let her bring whatever fire she’s got. He’s ready.