JOHNATHAN PARSONS (GB) VS. BERAT YALAZ (TR)
“Just stay down.”
Every word hurt to speak. Nearly as much as every breath hurt to take.
“Please fucking stay down...”
Because he honestly wasn’t sure how much more he could handle.
For a man who had resigned to losing as soon as he’d seen his name opposite Johnathan Parsons’, few had expected the fight to go the way that it had. Berat had endured more rounds than he could’ve hoped for. Landed more hits than he could’ve expected to on a man who’d been doing this for decades longer, and decades better. Yet there he was, in spite of it all, still standing, chest heaving, watching a certifiable monster hunched over in pain before him.
Silently praying he wouldn’t get back up.
By all accounts, the Rutherford didn’t usually let her fights drag on for this long, lest she get bored. But there had been nothing boring about this exchange. Nor did he imagine she wanted someone so respected and feared amongst the British ranks to go down to somebody as insignificant as him. So it was settled: they were still head to head, bloodied and bruised, with eyes so swollen he could barely see the older man in front of him, until one of them could finally finish the job. And Berat truly wasn’t sure he had anything left in the tank to be the one to do it.
The Turk had come out swinging because he knew he had no other choice. He’d faced Johnathan once before (had been lucky to fucking survive that) and knew that his usual just wasn’t good enough to take him over the line. He had to be bold, take risks, grasp at every opportunity he possibly could... and he had.
Not all of the risks had paid off, though. The state they were both in said as much. The men were exhausted, and were in agony even the adrenaline couldn’t mask. Had Lara had any mercy at all, she’d have called it a draw. Ended things before it got truly desperate. But they all knew mercy wasn’t a word in her vocabulary. Berat was concussed. Had lost at least one tooth. The mess his hands were in suggested he’d dished out plenty in return, yet he didn’t much feel like he was doing more than barely surviving. Johnathan’s nose looked broken, and that wasn’t to say the damage that’d been done below the surface.
But no matter what Berat did, the monster kept coming right at him.
They’d both hit the canvas more than once. The last time, he was sure Parsons was going to put his hands around his throat and hold him there until he died.
This time, it was him, though.
Struggling, digging deep to find something to drag him back from the brink.
Maybe Berat should’ve seen it as an opening, a way to finally finish things, instead of a pause to take his own much needed break. Maybe he should’ve lunged and slammed the leader’s head into the fucking ground and just ended it; something he cared more about than the win, at this point. But his legs were like lead. Broken fingers throbbed. Every bone in his body ached. The skin on his face was pulled so damn tight over the swelling it was white hot. And he just couldn’t.
And that summed him up rather neatly, he supposed.
Never quite able to see things through to the end.
A perpetual fucking quitter.
“You think I’m going to stay down for someone like you?”
The words were so icy they were a certifiable gut punch without his opponent even lifting a finger. Berat absolutely despised the Rutherfords with every fibre of his being, but he’d sure never heard one speak to him with such mutual hatred before then. Disdain. Disgust. Determination. So focused was he on retaining consciousness, reaction times sluggish at best, that’d he’d barely had chance to open his mouth to curse before the old man had lurched toward him, new found energy and aggression boiling over.
He hadn’t had chance to get his hands up.
He’d barely had chance to try and steady himself on his feet to brace.
Not that any of it mattered.
When Johnathan collided with him, using the last of his energy in one enormous burst, he rammed the Turk head first into the post. Once by convenient accident. The second time, whilst he was dazed and confused from the first, with both hands, purposefully; maybe with the intention to end him and the fight.
Berat was sure he’d blacked out for a moment.
When his eyes opened again, he was face down on the canvas; skin stuck to the material, caked in blood. The loss was so significant that it’d already started to pool. The Turk struggled to bring his hands to his sides. Leverage to attempt to get himself back to his feet. He could barely breathe; somehow, the excited screaming of the crowd just as asphyxiating as the pain ripping through his chest.
He could hear someone calling his name, but he couldn’t figure out who.
Nor did he have time to try before his opponent dealt a kick so swift to his head that he’d been booted into unconsciousness before he even saw it coming.














