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Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 492

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  3. Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner
  4. Chapter 492 - Chapter 492: Confessions
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Chapter 492: Confessions
Sophie moved to where Sam stood, her footsteps measured and deliberate. Diana stayed at the table, arms Roweed, her expression caught between curiosity and something that might have been amusement. The recruits shifted uncomfortably, sensing the sudden tension but not understanding its source.

Sam held out his tablet, the security feed showing the front gate in high definition. Sophie took it, her eyes dropping to the screen.

The girl standing outside wore a black jacket over a plain tank top, dark jeans that looked lived-in, and combat boots that had seen serious use. Her blonde hair was longer than Sophie remembered, falling past her shoulders in loose waves. Dark eyeshadow gave her face a gothic edge, but it was the posture that caught Sophie’s attention—relaxed but ready, like someone who knew exactly how dangerous they were and didn’t need to advertise it.

Lila Rowe for sure.

The busty blonde junior who’d liked her junior boyfriend back in the academy. Who’d left after the Purge attack when her parents were exposed as terrorists. Who Sophie hadn’t seen in months, hadn’t thought about in weeks, hadn’t expected to ever deal with again.

“It’s really her,” Sophie said quietly.

Noah was already on his feet, moving to see the screen. Sophie handed him the tablet without a word, watched his expression shift from confusion to recognition to something complicated that she couldn’t quite read.

“Holy shit,” Kelvin said, appearing beside Noah to look at the screen. “Lila’s here. Like, actually here. At our base.”

“You know her?” one of the recruits asked.

“Academy classmate,” Kelvin replied, his usual humor sliding into something more cautious. “Year one. We all went on our first field expedition together.” He glanced at Noah. “Remember that cat three beast that almost killed you guys?”

Noah’s jaw tightened slightly. “Yeah.”

“She’s been obsessed with him since then,” Kelvin added, then immediately looked like he regretted saying it out loud.

Diana laughed, short and sharp. “This is going to be fun.”

Sophie felt eyes on her, felt the weight of unspoken questions. She kept her expression neutral, professional, the same face she wore when negotiating contracts or dealing with faction politics. But inside, something twisted.

Lila Rowe was the only person who’d ever genuinely threatened her position in Noah’s life. Not because of some dramatic confrontation, not because of anything overt, but because of the way Noah looked at her sometimes. Like she was a puzzle he wanted to solve. Like she was dangerous and fascinating in equal measure.

Sophie had thought she was past that jealousy. Had convinced herself she’d grown beyond petty insecurity. But seeing Lila on that screen, looking different but still fundamentally her, brought back feelings she’d buried months ago.

“We should let her in,” Sophie said, her voice steady. “She came all this way.”

Noah nodded. “Yeah.”

Sam tapped his tablet, speaking into the security system. “Gate’s opening. You can come in.”

They watched through the camera feed as Lila walked through the gate, her movements fluid and confident. She took her time, looking around the compound like she was cataloging everything, assessing threats and exits and tactical positions out of pure habit.

“She moves different,” Diana observed. “More dangerous than I remember from the academy tournament.”

“She’s been working solo,” Kelvin said. “Underground contracts, settlement work. Probably seen some shit.”

The main door opened, and Lila stepped inside.

The first thing Sophie noticed was her eyes. They’d always been intense, that pale blue that seemed to see through you. But now there was something else in them—something cold and unstable, like ice that could crack at any moment. The smile on her face was familiar, that slight curve of lips that never quite reached her eyes, but the energy behind it felt sharper.

Lila’s gaze swept the room, cataloging faces. She nodded to Diana. “Ice Queen. Didn’t expect to see you here.”

“World’s full of surprises,” Diana replied.

Then Lila’s attention landed on Noah, and her smile widened. “Noah Eclipse. Heard you quit the military. Thought I’d see what you’re building.”

Her voice was the same—light, almost playful, but with an edge underneath that suggested violence was always an option. She crossed the room, stopping maybe five feet from where Noah stood, close enough that the familiarity between them became obvious to everyone watching.

“Lila,” Noah said. “It’s been a while.”

“Months,” she agreed. “You look different. Taller? Or maybe it’s the whole ‘faction leader’ thing. Suits you.”

Sophie stepped forward, extending her hand. “Lila. Welcome to Eclipse Faction.”

Lila’s eyes flicked to her, that smile taking on a different quality. “Sophie Reign. Still keeping him in line?”

“Someone has to,” Sophie replied, her tone light but her grip firm when they shook hands.

They held the handshake just a moment longer than necessary, both of them measuring, both of them aware that everyone in the room was watching this interaction with varying degrees of interest.

Kelvin broke the tension by laughing. “Oh great. Noah’s psychotic ex whose parents nearly took out this region is here. This is fine. Everything’s fine.”

“Kelvin Pithon,” Lila said, releasing Sophie’s hand and turning to him. “Still hiding behind jokes?”

“Love what you’ve done with your hair, by the way,” Kelvin said, completely ignoring her question. “Very ‘I’ve murdered people and might do it again.’ Really commits to the aesthetic. Ten out of ten, would be terrified.” He paused. “Wait, am I allowed to say that? Is there like a manual for talking to your best friend’s dangerous ex? Because if there is, nobody gave me a copy.”

Lila’s laugh was genuine, some of that cold edge softening. “You’re still an idiot.”

“It’s one of my best qualities,” Kelvin agreed cheerfully.

Seraleth had been standing near the wall, observing this entire exchange with the fascinated confusion of someone watching a play in a language they didn’t speak. Her height made her impossible to miss, and Lila’s attention eventually landed on her.

“And you are?” Lila asked.

“Captain Seraleth,” the elf replied. “Of Lilivil.”

“An elf,” Lila said, like she was filing that information away. “Interesting company you’re keeping, Noah.”

“Things have changed,” Noah said.

“Clearly.” Lila looked around the briefing room, taking in the displays, the equipment, the organized chaos of a faction still getting established. “Eclipse Faction. Heard the name on the underground networks. Two category fives on your first mission. That’s bold.”

“That’s necessary,” Diana said. “We handle threats other factions won’t touch.”

Lila’s smile sharpened. “Harbingers?”

“Among other things,” Sophie confirmed.

“That why you quit the EDF? Bureaucracy getting in the way of actually doing the work?” Lila’s question was directed at the room generally, but her eyes stayed on Noah.

“Something like that,” Noah replied.

There was a pause, the kind of conversational gap that felt heavy with unspoken history. The recruits shifted uncomfortably. Sam had retreated to his workstation, clearly wanting no part of whatever interpersonal drama was unfolding. Seraleth continued watching with that alien curiosity.

Kelvin, never comfortable with silence, spoke up. “So what have you been doing? Heard you’ve been taking solo contracts.”

“Here and there,” Lila said vaguely. “Settlement work mostly. Beasts, occasional Purge remnants. Whatever pays.”

“Solo,” Diana emphasized. “That’s risky.”

“I like risk.” Lila’s smile suggested she liked it a lot. “Besides, easier to work alone. No complications, no one slowing me down.”

“No one watching your back either,” Noah said.

Lila’s eyes locked with his. “I can handle myself. You of all people should know that.”

The way she said it, the weight behind those words, made it clear she was referencing something specific. That cat three beast from their first expedition, probably. The fight that had apparently cemented whatever obsession she’d developed.

Sophie felt that twist in her chest again, pushed it down with practiced ease.

“So why are you here?” Diana asked, her directness cutting through the tension. “You’ve been working solo for months. What changed?”

Lila shrugged, the movement casual but calculated. “Heard Eclipse Faction was making waves. Figured I’d see it for myself. Maybe take some contracts if the work’s interesting.”

“You want to join?” Sophie asked.

“Join? No.” Lila’s smile widened. “But I’ll work with you. See how it goes. I don’t do permanent commitments.”

Kelvin snorted. “Commitment issues and a penchant for violence. You’re really selling the whole package here.”

“We’d need to discuss terms,” Sophie said, shifting into business mode because that was safer than whatever personal territory this conversation kept threatening to wander into. “Payment, contract selection, coordination with other members.”

“Sure,” Lila agreed easily. “Business talk. That’s fine. But first—” She looked at Noah again, that smile taking on a teasing edge. “Can I talk to you? Alone? Catch up properly?”

The room went very quiet.

Sophie felt multiple sets of eyes land on her. She kept her expression neutral, kept her posture relaxed, kept every micro-expression under control.

“Sure,” Noah said, his voice carefully even. “We can talk.”

Kelvin made a small noise that might have been suppressed laughter. Diana’s smirk had returned full force. Seraleth tilted her head, clearly picking up on social dynamics she didn’t fully understand but found fascinating.

Sophie met Noah’s eyes for just a moment. He looked apologetic, or maybe uncertain, or maybe just tired of complicated interpersonal situations that kept finding him despite his best efforts to focus on faction work.

“Take your time,” Sophie said, her voice perfectly professional. “We’ll finish reviewing these contracts.”

Lila’s smile suggested she’d won something, though Sophie couldn’t identify exactly what. “Thanks, Sophie. You’re very understanding.”

The condescension in those words was subtle but present, designed to needle without being overtly hostile. Sophie smiled back, equally polite, equally fake.

Noah moved toward the door, and Lila fell into step beside him with the easy familiarity of someone who’d done it a thousand times before. They walked out together, Lila saying something too quiet for the room to hear that made Noah’s expression shift into something Sophie couldn’t read.

The door closed behind them.

Kelvin let out a long breath. “Oh man. Oh man, she’s back. This is—” He looked at Sophie, his usual humor dying completely. “Are you okay?”

“I’m fine,” Sophie said, and her voice didn’t waver.

“Because if you need to talk—”

“I’m fine, Kelvin.” She turned to the holographic display, pulling up contract listings like nothing had happened. “We have work to do. Diana, what’s your assessment of the Category Four contracts in the northern sector?”

Diana studied her for a moment, then apparently decided not to push. “Manageable if we send a full team. Valencia and Marcus could probably handle it with support.”

They fell into tactical discussion, reviewing contracts and deployment schedules and resource allocation. Professional, focused, exactly what faction leadership was supposed to be.

But Kelvin kept glancing at Sophie when he thought she wasn’t looking, his expression caught between concern and something that looked like understanding.

He knew Lila better than anyone in this room except Noah. He’d been there during year one, had watched the obsession develop, had seen firsthand how Lila looked at Noah like he was the most interesting puzzle in the world.

He also knew that Sophie Reign didn’t fear much. But Lila Rowe? Lila was someone Sophie genuinely respected and, if he was being honest, feared just a little bit.

Not because of any direct threat. But because of what she represented—the one person who might actually pull Noah’s attention away from everything they’d built together.

Kelvin didn’t say any of that out loud. He just watched Sophie’s face, cataloging the micro-expressions she thought she was hiding, and kept his mouth shut for once.

Outside, in the hallway leading away from the briefing room, Noah and Lila walked side by side.

“You’ve changed,” Lila said quietly, her playful edge softening into something more genuine. “Not just physically. Something else.”

“We all changed,” Noah replied. “After everything that happened.”

“Yeah.” Her smile faded completely. “Everything.”

They walked in silence for a moment, the weight of months and complications and unfinished conversations hanging between them.

“I missed you,” Lila said finally, and for once, there was no teasing in her voice. Just honesty, raw and unfiltered.

Noah stopped walking, turned to face her properly.

She looked up at him with those eyes, that unstable edge still present but momentarily overwhelmed by something more vulnerable.

“I know everything’s complicated,” she continued. “I know you’ve got Sophie, and the faction, and a thousand things that are more important than whatever this is. But I missed you, Noah. I needed you to know that.”

Noah opened his mouth to respond, but whatever he was going to say died in his throat as Lila’s smile returned—soft, dangerous, and entirely her.

“Don’t worry,” she said. “I’m not here to make things difficult. I’m just here to see what happens. That okay?”

“Yeah,” Noah said, his voice quiet. “That’s okay.”

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