I Died on the Court, Now I'm Back to Rule It
Chapter 120: Horizon VS Toyonaka : Maestro’s Last Note Once again 1
CHAPTER 120: HORIZON VS TOYONAKA : MAESTRO’S LAST NOTE ONCE AGAIN 1
"What a turnaround! Toyonaka clawed back from a 9-point deficit, despite coming off an overtime battle against Heian Gakuen in the last round!"
"The big question now — stamina. Toyonaka’s proven their toughness, but can Horizon keep up? Can they adapt under this pressure?"
"This might be the best final in years. The intensity, the swings — next-level basketball. It’s Black Thunder, Masaki, versus Horizon’s Maestro, Dirga."
...
On the Horizon bench...
The players sat like warriors between battles — heads down, chests rising, sweat pooling at their feet. Every breath was a struggle. Every muscle trembled.
Dirga was the most visibly spent.
His Flow State had pushed Horizon into the lead — but it hadn’t sealed the win. And now, his body screamed.
Legs heavy. Arms numb. Even his bones felt tired.
Coach Tsugawa knelt down, eyes steady.
"Dirga, you okay?"
Dirga looked up slowly, sweat dripping off his chin.
"I’m okay," he said. But his body told a different story.
He couldn’t be benched now — not when Horizon still needed a conductor. But Coach Tsugawa already had a decision.
"We’re rotating," the coach said. "Kaito at point guard. Rei at shooting guard. Hiroki at small forward. Aizawa power forward. Rikuya holds the paint."
Dirga blinked. "Wait—what?"
Taiga leaned forward too. "Why take me out?!"
Coach Tsugawa’s tone stayed calm, but firm.
"You’ve both given everything. Taiga, your hustle has kept Masaki grounded. But it’s been five minutes of nonstop overtime. You’ll sit for two minutes. Dirga—three. We need you sharp at the end."
Both players clenched their jaws.
The frustration showed. The will to fight hadn’t faded.
But then—
Kaito stood.
He looked at both of them, eyes unwavering.
"You don’t trust me?" he asked softly.
Dirga and Taiga froze.
"No, Captain," they said in unison.
How could they forget?
In the Prefecture Final, Kaito had played injured — held back by pain. But tonight, he was ready.
Kaito placed a hand on Dirga’s shoulder.
"Dirga, I can see it. You need rest — not because you’re weak, but because you’ve carried us this far. Two minutes. That’s it."
He turned to Taiga.
"You too. One minutes. We’ll hold the line."
Dirga met his captain’s eyes.
"...Yes, Captain."
Taiga nodded slowly, fists clenched.
"...Okay."
The baton had been passed — just for now.
But every second of rest would be measured in sweat, pain, and trust.
Horizon stepped onto the court.
"Oh? We don’t see the maestro, Dirga, or the defensive engine, Taiga!"
"Yeah, both of them likely catching their breath. Dirga’s been operating at max output and Taiga’s hustle was insane."
"Now it’s up to Horizon’s captain — Kaito Nishida. Can he hold the tempo and keep them alive?"
"Let’s see. Five minutes. One overtime. The future of the finals on the line."
...
Center court. Jump ball.
Rikuya vs. Haruto.
Titan vs. Tower.
The ref raised the ball.
The gym held its breath.
Whistle. Jump.
Rikuya exploded upward—clean tap.
The ball floated—
Hiroki grabbed it.
But—
Yuto was already pressing.
Body low. Eyes locked.
Daichi joined—trap!
Two defenders. Nowhere to turn.
Hiroki panicked.
Pivot. Twist. Look.
Kaito sprinted toward him—"Pass!"
Too late.
Masaki slashed in like a predator.
Swipe — steal.
He was gone in a heartbeat, heading for the Horizon basket.
But Horizon wasn’t giving it up that easy.
Rikuya and Aizawa were already back.
Aizawa angled his body—cutting off Masaki’s right.
Rikuya sealed the paint—shoulders wide, hands up.
A perfect double team.
But Masaki didn’t slow.
He bounced the ball — low and sharp — to the floor.
The defenders blinked—looking for the pass target.
There was none.
Because it was for himself.
Masaki broke through the gap between Rikuya and Aizawa,
slipping through like lightning.
He caught his own pass.
And laid it in.
Effortless. Clinical. Cold.
"WHAT A MOVE! Masaki with the self-pass through the double!"
"How do you stop that? You don’t. You pray."
83 – 85
Toyonaka takes the lead.
On the bench, Dirga and Taiga sat forward, jaws tight, eyes locked.
Because Masaki wasn’t just scoring.
He was sending a message:
I’m still here. And I’m not done yet
Inbound to Kaito.
The ball touched his fingers like it belonged there.
He stepped across half-court — into Toyonaka’s side — steady, focused.
This team had started with him.
Before Dirga. Before Rikuya. Before any of them.
It was Kaito who first believed Horizon could be more than a forgotten name.
He built the foundation.
Then Dirga came — the strategist.
Rikuya — the anchor.
Rei. Taiga. Hiroki. Aizawa.
But it all began... with Kaito.
He had always loved basketball.
Since the age of five, he never left the court.
But in the third year of middle school, something happened.
During a game, with the ball in his hands and his teammates calling out to him—
He collapsed.
Just dropped, like his body had shut down mid-dream.
The diagnosis came swiftly:
A heart condition.
A wall too high for any athlete.
Most would have walked away.
But Kaito didn’t.
He didn’t fight the wall.
He learned how to flow around it.
For two years, he trained differently.
He refined his movement to the essentials.
No waste. No flash.
Only purpose.
He learned to breathe through pressure.
To meditate mid-dribble.
To calm his heart — even when the world screamed around him.
Now, under the lights of the final...
That memory returned.
Calm.
Breathe.
Find your rhythm.
The ball bounced against the floor.
One.
Two.
Three.
Each bounce synced with his heartbeat.
His breath slowed.
Yuto stepped up — tight, aggressive.
But Kaito didn’t answer with speed.
Or strength.
Or power.
He moved like wind.
Smooth. Controlled. Elegant.
Like a dancer across a silent stage.
Like a ballerina in battle.
Fast enough to be untouchable.
Slow enough to be unreadable.
Yuto twitched—
Overcommitted by just half a step.
That was all it took.
Kaito slipped past him, body low, elbow sharp.
He rose into his motion.
The elbow jumper.
His form — picture-perfect.
The release — effortless.
The arc — pure.
Swish.
85 – 85.
04:11 minutes
The crowd roared, but there was no time to breathe