Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 478
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- Chapter 478 - 478 First impression
478: First impression 478: First impression Seraleth finally released Noah from the hug, stepping back but keeping her hands on his shoulders like she needed to confirm he was actually real and standing in front of her.
“How did you even get here?” Kelvin asked, his brain clearly still trying to work through the logistics.
“Earth has orbital security.
Multiple defense stations.
Automated systems that track every ship entering the atmosphere.
You can’t just show up without clearance.” “I requested a ship from Lucy,” Seraleth explained, her accent giving the words a musical quality.
“When she informed my mother about what happened with your tribunal, I asked permission to come to Earth.
To offer my support to the team that saved my people.” “So Lucy knows we’re here,” Sophie said, understanding dawning.
“She got our message.” “She did,” Seraleth confirmed.
“And she wanted you to know the Grey family stands with you.
Though she couldn’t come herself, given the political situation on Raiju Prime, she sent me as her representative.” Diana looked around the hillside, scanning the area with tactical precision.
“So where’s this ship?
I don’t see anything.” Seraleth smiled, gesturing toward what appeared to be empty air and undisturbed trees about fifty yards away.
“Right there.” They all stared at the apparently empty space.
“I don’t see-” Noah started.
The air shimmered.
What had looked like natural hillside and forest suddenly revealed itself to be something else entirely.
The camouflage technology was so advanced that even knowing where to look, Noah’s eyes struggled to process what they were seeing.
The ship materialized section by section, its hull becoming visible as the cloaking systems powered down.
It was massive.
Not capital-ship massive, but easily three times the size of the transport that had brought them from Vanguard Station.
The design was distinctly Grey family work, sleek lines and aggressive angles that spoke of both speed and combat capability.
Scorch marks on the hull suggested it had seen action, and the weapon emplacements were anything but decorative.
The landing had crushed several trees and left deep impressions in the hillside, but given how isolated Sophie’s house was from the main city, nobody would have noticed or cared.
Up here, away from the urban sprawl, a ship could land without drawing attention.
“Holy shit,” Kelvin breathed.
“That’s a Grey family interceptor.
Those things are worth more than some small colonies.” “Lucy was generous,” Seraleth said simply.
They spent the next hour helping Seraleth settle in, which mostly meant Sophie taking charge with an enthusiasm that made Noah’s suspicions grow.
She showed Seraleth to one of the spare bedrooms, explained how human amenities worked, made sure she had everything she needed.
The whole time, she smiled and laughed and seemed genuinely delighted to have the seven-foot elf princess as a houseguest.
Noah caught Sophie’s eye at one point, and the look she gave him was knowing and slightly mischievous.
They’d talked about this, in quiet moments between crises.
About the possibility of exploring outside the traditional boundaries of their relationship.
An open dynamic where, if they both agreed, Noah could have another partner.
Sophie had been the one to suggest it, actually, saying she didn’t want him to feel trapped or limited just because they’d chosen each other first.
He’d thought it was theoretical at the time.
Looking at Sophie practically glowing as she helped Seraleth unpack, Noah realized his girlfriend might have already made a decision about who that other partner should be.
He wasn’t sure how he felt about that yet.
While Sophie and Seraleth bonded over room arrangements and cultural differences in sleeping habits, Noah retreated to the living room with Diana and Kelvin to continue planning.
“Okay,” Kelvin said, pulling up his holographic display again.
“Based on what we saw today, I think the Void Reapers are still our best target.
Small enough to absorb, desperate enough to listen, established enough to be useful.” “But we still don’t know how to approach them,” Diana pointed out.
“We can’t just walk in and say ‘hi, we’re taking over now.'” “We need leverage,” Noah said.
“Something that makes them want us as leaders rather than seeing us as a threat.” They were still debating approaches when the door chimed, announcing a visitor.
Kelvin checked the security feed and grinned.
“It’s Cora.” She burst in with her usual energy, still wearing her academy uniform but looking like she’d run the whole way from campus.
“Okay, so I’ve been making calls.
Asking around.
Using connections from back when I lived in the settlements.” “And?” Noah prompted.
“And I got something big.” Cora pulled out her own tablet, projecting information into the air.
“There’s a faction takeover happening tonight.
Two small groups, been feuding over territory for months.
They’re settling it the old-fashioned way-leaders fight in a ring, winner absorbs the loser’s faction.” Kelvin leaned forward, studying the data.
“I didn’t see anything about this in my research.” “Because it’s not official,” Cora explained.
“Underground stuff.
The kind of thing that happens in the settlements all the time but the city factions try to keep quiet.
Makes them look uncivilized to the military types.” Diana’s expression sharpened with interest.
“You’re saying we should go watch this?” “I’m saying you should make your presence felt,” Cora corrected.
“Show up.
Let people see you.
Make it clear there’s a new player in town who’s not part of the usual faction politics.” Noah considered this.
“What do you mean, make our presence felt?” Cora’s smile was all teeth.
“You’ll see.” Night fell over the Eastern Sector with the kind of suddenness that came from the city’s lighting systems compensating for natural darkness.
The address Cora had provided led them to the industrial district, where abandoned warehouses and old manufacturing facilities created a landscape of rust and decay.
The makeshift arena was set up in a cleared lot between two warehouse buildings, lit by portable floodlights that cast harsh shadows across the gathered crowd.
Easily two hundred people had shown up, split roughly evenly between two groups distinguished by colored bandanas-blue on one side, red on the other.
Noah and his team moved through the crowd, Cora leading them with practiced ease.
They’d dressed in civilian clothes to blend in, though Seraleth’s height made true anonymity impossible.
People stared at the elf, whispered, but the crowd’s focus was primarily on the ring where two figures were preparing to fight.
“Blue bandanas are the Storm Breakers,” Cora explained quietly.
“Small faction, maybe thirty members, specialize in protection contracts for warehouse districts.
Red bandanas are the Iron Fists.
Slightly larger, forty members, focus on beast hunting in the industrial zones.” “And they’re fighting over territory?” Sophie asked.
“Over everything,” Cora replied.
“Territory, contracts, members.
Winner takes all.” The crowd pressed closer as the fight began.
The Storm Breakers’ leader was a woman in her thirties with the kind of weathered look that came from years of hard living.
When she activated her ability, water seemed to materialize from the air itself, flowing around her arms and hands like living sculpture.
The Iron Fists’ leader was younger, maybe mid-twenties, built like someone who’d spent his entire life in physical labor.
His ability manifested as rock formations that covered his fists and forearms, turning his hands into crude but devastating weapons.
They circled each other in the ring, both cautious, both aware that this fight would determine their faction’s future.
The Storm Breakers’ leader moved first.
Water materialized around her hands, swirling like she’d grabbed hold of a river mid-flow.
She thrust forward and the water shot out in a pressurized stream.
The Iron Fists’ leader brought his arms up.
Stone spread across his forearms, coating them in gray rock that looked rough and uneven.
The water hit and the rock held, steam rising where pressure met solid mass.
He charged forward, closing the distance with surprising speed for someone covered in stone.
His right fist came around in a wide arc.
She ducked under it, bare inches from getting her head caved in.
As she moved, water whipped out from her left hand, catching him across the ribs.
The impact left a red line through his shirt.
He grunted, twisted, brought his other fist down in an overhead smash.
She rolled aside and the stone fist hit concrete, leaving a crater where she’d been standing half a second ago.
Back and forth they went.
He’d swing, she’d dodge or deflect with water shields that barely held.
She’d strike, he’d take it on stone-covered arms that were already showing cracks.
Both of them were breathing hard within minutes, both bleeding from a dozen small cuts.
The Iron Fists’ leader caught her with a glancing blow to the shoulder.
She stumbled, nearly went down.
He pressed forward, sensing weakness.
That’s when his faction moved.
One member in a red bandana stepped into the ring.
Then another.
Then suddenly a dozen Iron Fists were pushing forward, abandoning any pretense that this was a fair fight.
The Storm Breakers reacted immediately.
Blue bandanas surged toward the ring, shouting, weapons coming out.
Within seconds the organized duel had dissolved into a brawl, bodies crashing together, abilities flaring in bursts of light and sound.
Cora looked at Noah, her smirk knowing.
“Told you one of them planned this.” Noah watched the brawl spread, members from both factions abandoning any pretense of rules or honor.
This was what faction conflict looked like when stripped of civilized pretense-desperate people fighting over scraps of territory and influence.
Noah watched the brawl spread, members from both factions throwing away any pretense of rules.
Abilities flaring, people getting hurt over warehouse territory and protection contracts.
He’d seen enough.
“Ivy,” he said quietly.
“Bloom.” The ground underneath them split open.
Roots punched through concrete and soil, thick as tree trunks, covered in thorns that caught the floodlights.
People screamed, scrambling backward as the roots burst up between them.
Someone got caught by a rising vine and was thrown sideways, crashing into three others.
Emerald light pulsed through the roots, spreading outward fast.
More vines erupted wherever the light touched, wrapping around the portable floodlights, the ring posts.
One Iron Fist member didn’t move fast enough and a vine caught his leg, dragging him back.
His friends grabbed his arms, pulling him free before the thorns could dig in deeper.
The air got heavy.
Flowers bloomed everywhere, their scent almost overwhelming.
Underneath it, something metallic.
Blood.
“What the fuck-” someone shouted.
“Get back!
Get back!” A Storm Breaker pushed people away from where the ground was still erupting.
Above the chaos, a flower bud formed.
Massive, at least thirty feet across, held up by roots that wove together in patterns that looked impossible.
It pulsed once.
The crowd went silent, everyone staring up.
It pulsed twice.
Pressure building.
“Run!” someone yelled.
The bud burst open.
Red petals scattered everywhere like blades.
People dove for cover, arms over their heads.
The petals embedded themselves in concrete, in the warehouse walls, in the ring posts.
One faction member wasn’t fast enough-a petal caught his shoulder and he went down screaming.
From where the flower had been, Ivy descended.
Her scales caught the floodlights, shifting between forest green and jade, gold edges gleaming.
She spread her wings and people actually stumbled backward, some falling over themselves trying to get away.
“Is that a fucking dragon?!” “Oh my god, oh my god-” She landed between the fighting factions with enough force to crack the concrete beneath her claws.
Even smaller than Nyx, she was still easily the size of a military transport vehicle, her presence dominating the entire lot.
The fighting stopped.
Everyone froze.
Storm Breakers, Iron Fists, random observers.
All of them staring at the dragon that had just appeared in their makeshift arena.
Noah walked forward through the stunned crowd, his team falling into formation behind him.
Sophie moved with that confident grace she always had.
Diana looked ready for a fight if one started.
Kelvin was grinning like this was the best night of his life.
Seraleth towered above them all, adding to how otherworldly their entrance felt.
Cora brought up the rear, her eyes fixed on Ivy with fascination.
They stopped at the edge of where the ring had been, now surrounded by Ivy’s growth.
Noah looked out at two hundred people who’d forgotten they were fighting.
“Do we have everyone’s attention?” he asked.
Kelvin laughed.
“Well, our whole plan to not intimidate anyone just went out the window.” Cora chuckled, still watching Ivy.
Unlike Nyx and Storm, she’d never seen this dragon before.
Noah had bonded with Ivy on Raiju Prime, after Cora had been left behind on Earth.
“She’s gorgeous.” The crowd stayed frozen, caught between running and staring.
Some of the braver faction members had weapons drawn, but nobody was stupid enough to actually use them.
Not with a dragon between them and their targets.
Noah let the silence stretch, making sure every person present understood exactly who was in control.
The Eclipse Faction had just announced itself.