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Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 480

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  3. Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner
  4. Chapter 480 - 480 Home coming
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480: Home coming 480: Home coming Morning light came through Sophie’s windows, bright enough to wake Noah up.

He smelled food cooking, which was strange.

Kelvin had made breakfast yesterday, and Diana definitely wasn’t the cooking type.

He pulled on clothes and headed downstairs.

Sophie stood at the stove, hair pulled back in a ponytail, wearing casual clothes instead of her usual tactical gear.

“Morning,” she said, glancing over her shoulder.

“Figured it was my turn to cook.” “You can cook?” “Don’t sound so surprised.

I practically lived alone with my dad being always busy and my independent drive, I had to learn basic survival skills.” Noah moved to stand beside her, looking at the pan where eggs were actually cooking properly instead of burning.

“Smells good.” “It’s edible at least.” She plated the food with care.

“Can you grab plates from the cabinet?

We should probably feed everyone before we start planning world domination.” They worked together in comfortable silence, setting the table while Sophie finished cooking.

The domestic normalcy of it felt almost surreal after months of military rations and constant crisis.

Just two people making breakfast like regular humans with regular lives.

Seraleth emerged from her room looking curious about the morning routine.

Her height made her seem almost comical in the human-sized house, like she’d been scaled wrong for the environment.

She wore simpler clothes than her military uniform, though finding anything that fit her seven-foot frame had required some creative solutions.

Sophie’s clothes mostly.

“Good morning,” she said, her accent making the greeting sound musical.

“Is this a human breakfast tradition?” “Pretty standard,” Noah replied.

“Though usually people don’t have alien warrior princesses as houseguests.” She smiled at that.

“On Lilivil, we would gather for morning meal as a community.

Sharing food is important to my people.

It builds bonds.” “Same here,” Sophie said, bringing plates to the table.

“Just usually with less formality.” Diana appeared next, looking like she hadn’t slept well.

She claimed a seat without comment, accepted food with a nod of thanks, and seemed content to just exist quietly while the world woke up around her.

As they ate, Seraleth watched everything with that intense curiosity she showed toward human customs.

She asked questions about the food, about morning routines, about how humans typically started their days.

Noah found himself explaining things he’d never really thought about-why people drank coffee, why breakfast foods were different from dinner foods, why some people were morning people and others weren’t.

“You’re very patient with my questions,” Seraleth observed.

“You came here all the way from Raiju, abandoning your people,” Noah replied.

“Answering questions about breakfast seems like the least I can do.” After they finished eating, Noah headed upstairs to brush his teeth and handle the usual morning routine.

He’d barely made it to the bathroom when Seraleth appeared in the doorway, watching with fascination.

“What are you doing?” she asked.

Noah paused, toothbrush halfway to his mouth.

“Brushing my teeth.

You know, dental hygiene?” “We have similar practices on Lilivil, but the tools are different.” She stepped closer, studying the toothbrush like it was advanced technology.

“May I observe?” This was going to be his life now, apparently.

Teaching an alien princess about bathroom routines.

He demonstrated brushing while Seraleth watched with the kind of attention usually reserved for important military briefings.

She asked about the toothpaste, the technique, how often humans did this, whether different people used different methods.

“You’re really interested in everything,” Noah said after rinsing his mouth.

“Your culture fascinates me,” Seraleth replied simply.

“And you fascinate me specifically.

The human who saved my world and tames dragons and builds factions.

I want to understand how you think, how you live.” There was something in her tone that made Noah acutely aware of Sophie’s earlier behavior, of the attentiveness his girlfriend had shown toward Seraleth.

He filed that awareness away for later consideration and continued his morning routine with an audience of one very curious elf.

By the time they made it back downstairs, Kelvin had finally emerged from his room looking like he’d been hit by a truck.

His hair stuck up in directions that defied physics, his eyes were barely open, and he moved with the coordination of someone still half-asleep.

“Coffee,” he mumbled, heading straight for the kitchen.

“Need coffee or I’m going to die.” “Dramatic much?” Diana called from the living room where she’d claimed the couch.

“I stayed up looking at network feeds after getting back last night,” Kelvin explained, pouring coffee with the desperation of the truly exhausted.

“The Eclipse Faction thing exploded way bigger than I expected.

People are talking about us everywhere.” He shuffled to the living room with his coffee, pulled out his tablet with his free hand, and started scrolling through feeds while drinking like his life depended on the caffeine.

“Okay, so the underground networks are still going crazy,” Kelvin said, his voice gaining energy as the coffee hit his system.

“We’re trending hard.

Lots of speculation about who we are, what we want, whether we’re serious or just making a statement.” “What are they saying specifically?” Sophie asked, settling into a chair near the window.

“Mixed reactions.

Some people think we’re heroes in the making.

Others think we’re cocky kids who’ll get ourselves killed within a month.

A few conspiracy theorists think we’re a front for one something bigger” He grinned.

“They’re not entirely wrong about that last one.” “What about recruitment interest?” Noah asked.

“Anyone actually trying to find us?” “That’s the thing,” Kelvin scrolled through more feeds.

“Lots of people talking about wanting to join, but nobody knows how.

We made a dramatic entrance but didn’t exactly leave a contact number.” Diana snorted.

“Kind of hard to recruit when people can’t find you.” “We’ll figure that out,” Sophie said.

“First we need to establish what we’re actually offering.

Structure, mission parameters, what kind of people we want.

Can’t recruit effectively if we don’t know what we’re building.” They were settling into planning mode, discussing logistics and structure, when a knock at the front door interrupted the conversation.

Everyone froze.

Sophie’s house was isolated enough that random visitors weren’t common, and the security system should have alerted them to anyone approaching.

“I’ll get it,” Noah said, standing up.

Diana moved to a position where she could see the door but stay out of immediate sight line.

Old combat habits reasserting themselves.

Noah opened the door to find a young man standing on the front step, hands visible and empty, posture non-threatening but confident.

He looked to be around their age, maybe nineteen or twenty, with dark skin that suggested mixed heritage and sharp features that gave his face an almost predatory quality.

His black hair was cut short, practical rather than stylish, and his eyes were the kind of brown that looked almost black in certain lighting.

He wore clothes that were clean but clearly not expensive-a gray jacket over a black shirt, dark pants that had seen better days, shoes that were functional rather than fashionable.

Everything about his appearance suggested someone who came from the lower districts.

But what stood out most was his expression.

Not nervous, not aggressive, just calm and calculating.

Like he’d already assessed the situation and decided exactly how to play it.

“Noah Eclipse,” the young man said, and his voice carried the kind of confidence that came from knowing you had something valuable to offer.

“I was hoping we could talk.” “Who are you and what do you want to talk about?” Noah asked, not moving from the doorway.

“About the fact that you just announced a new faction to the entire underground network without any infrastructure to support it.

About how you made a dramatic entrance but have no way for interested parties to actually contact you.

About how you’re sitting on potential that you don’t know how to capitalize on.” He smiled, and it was the smile of someone who’d made this pitch before.

“I’m Sam Torres.

And I can fix all of those problems.” Noah studied him for a moment, then stepped aside.

“Come in.” Sam entered with the easy confidence of someone who’d been in plenty of situations where they weren’t entirely welcome but knew they could talk their way through it.

His eyes swept the living room, cataloging faces, noting positions, processing information faster than most people his age would manage.

“Sam Torres,” he repeated, addressing the whole room now.

“I’m what you’d call a facilitator.

I connect people who need things with people who can provide them.

And right now, you need quite a few things.” Kelvin looked up from his tablet with interest.

“How did you find this place?” “Asked around about Sophie Reign’s properties,” Sam replied without hesitation.

“Daughter of the former Minister of Defense, parents now wanted by the military for Purge connections.

You’d want somewhere isolated but not too far from the city.

Property records are public if you know where to look.

Took me about three hours to narrow down possibilities.” “Guy knows his shit,” Kelvin said with genuine appreciation.

Sam’s smile widened slightly.

“I make it my business to know things.

And right now, the entire faction network is talking about Eclipse Faction-the group that summoned a dragon to crash a territory dispute.

Everyone wants to know who you are, what you want, and how they can get involved.” He pulled out a tablet of his own, projected some data into the air above his device.

“In the twelve hours since your demonstration, underground network activity related to your faction has increased by three hundred percent.

You’re trending above established groups that have been operating for years.

That’s impressive.” “It’s also a problem,” Sam continued.

“Because right now, you’re all potential and no structure.

You don’t have a base of operations, no recruitment process, no way to vet interested parties, no legal framework for operating as an independent faction.

You made a statement, but you don’t have the infrastructure to follow through on it.” Sophie leaned forward, her mind engaging with the problem.

“And you can provide that infrastructure?” “I can facilitate it,” Sam corrected.

“I know people who handle faction registration, legal frameworks, territory agreements.

I know which officials can be bribed, which ones actually care about doing their jobs, and which ones to avoid entirely.

I know how the underground economy works, where to find equipment, how to negotiate contracts that won’t get you killed.” He gestured to the data still hovering above his tablet.

“You’re soldiers.

You’re good at fighting, at surviving, at handling threats.

But running a faction requires different skills.

Public relations, contract negotiation, recruitment vetting, financial management, legal protection.

That’s where people like me come in.” Diana’s voice carried skepticism.

“And what do you want in exchange for these services?” “Ten percent of all faction earnings,” Sam replied without hesitation.

“Plus a seat at the table when major decisions get made.

I handle the business side, you handle the fighting side, and we both profit from Eclipse Faction’s success.” “That’s a lot to ask from people you just met,” Noah observed.

“It’s market rate for what I’m offering,” Sam countered.

“And honestly?

You need me more than I need you.

There are a dozen factions that would hire me tomorrow.

But you’re the ones who made a dramatic entrance without having any idea what comes next.” The honesty was almost refreshing.

No false humility, no pretense of just wanting to help.

This guy, Sam, was here because he saw an opportunity, and he was smart enough to be upfront about it.

Before anyone could respond, Seraleth spoke up from where she’d been observing silently.

“There are ships approaching.” Everyone turned to look at her, then toward the windows.

Sure enough, two vessels were descending from the upper atmosphere, their profiles distinctly different from civilian craft.

These were military transports, bearing markings that Noah recognized immediately.

Grey family insignia.

The ships landed on the hillside near where Seraleth’s interceptor was parked, their arrival precise and professional.

Ramps extended, and soldiers began filing out wearing the distinctive blue and white military gear of Grey family forces.

They moved with practiced coordination, immediately beginning to unload cargo from the transport holds.

Crates of supplies, equipment cases, sealed containers that suggested medical gear or technical equipment.

Everything was organized, labeled, handled with the kind of care that suggested this wasn’t just random support but carefully planned logistics.

Sam had moved to the window, watching the unloading process with an expression that suggested rapid calculation.

“Grey family?

Who are they?

Don’t tell me a big power house is supporting you” “Lucy Grey sent them,” Sophie confirmed, noticing a holographic projector being set up by one of the soldiers.

The projection activated, displaying Lucy Grey’s image at life-size resolution.

She wore formal Grey family attire, her bearing every bit the princess and military commander.

Her resemblance to Lucas was striking, though her expression carried a weight her brother had never shown-the burden of leadership that came from managing three planets’ worth of territory and politics.

“Noah Eclipse, Sophie Reign, and the rest of Team 7,” Lucy’s recorded message began.

“I received your communication and have discussed the situation with my mother and our family council.

The Grey family officially recognizes Eclipse Faction as an independent organization and offers our support in your mission.” The hologram gestured to the unloading supplies.

“These shipments include medical equipment, communication systems, survival gear, non-lethal defensive equipment, and sufficient earth credits stored in storage equipments of earth origin to fund your initial operations.

We cannot provide weapons through official channels due to Earth’s import restrictions, but everything else you need to establish your organization is here.” Lucy’s expression softened slightly.

“My brother is missing because of Arthur’s actions.

King Aurelius is missing.

A former EDF officer, Bruce Hilton, is missing.

The Grey family wants them back, and we believe you represent the best chance of finding them.

Use these resources wisely.

Build something that can stand against the threats the EDF refuses to acknowledge.” The hologram paused, then Lucy’s voice took on a more personal tone.

“Noah, Lucas trusted you more than anyone.

Bring him home.” The message ended, leaving silence in its wake.

Sam Torres stood at the window, watching Grey family soldiers efficiently unload military-grade supplies onto Sophie Reign’s property, and his smile was the kind that suggested he’d just watched all his calculations prove correct.

“Well,” he said, turning back to face them.

“I’d say the campaign just became a lot easier.” CREATORS’ THOUGHTS RetardedCulture I desperately need a push this month.

One super gift would do it.

Help me..

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