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Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 496

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  3. Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner
  4. Chapter 496 - Chapter 496: Building something big
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Chapter 496: Building something big
The team had all gone out for various contracts.

Sophie took Diana and five recruits to handle a Category Three infestation in the western industrial zones. Kelvin went with another group to investigate unusual energy signatures near an abandoned mining facility. Sam stayed at base coordinating logistics and monitoring communications.

That left Noah with Seraleth and three recruits—Valencia, Marcus, and a newer member named Kira—heading toward a settlement request that had come in marked urgent.

The coordinates led them to the edge of a dried lakebed, where buildings clustered around what remained of a water source that had probably sustained the region decades ago. Now it was just cracked earth stretching for miles, broken only by a thin stream that barely qualified as water. Heat shimmered off the ground, distorting distant shapes into wavering mirages.

They’d landed Seraleth’s ship about half a kilometer out to avoid spooking the settlers. The walk gave Noah time to assess the terrain—open ground, minimal cover, nowhere to hide if things went sideways.

“Settlers reported coordinated attacks,” Valencia said, checking her scanner as they approached. “Category Three and Four beasts working together. Sound familiar?”

“Too familiar,” Noah muttered, remembering Area 52 and those apes with their crude weapons.

The settlement coordinator met them at the perimeter—a woman in her fifties with sun-damaged skin and eyes that had seen too many people die. “Eclipse Faction? Thank god. They hit us again last night. Took three people before we could drive them off.”

“What kind of beasts?” Seraleth asked.

“Scaled things. Move on four legs but they stand upright when attacking. Fast, coordinated. They don’t just hunt—they strategize.” The woman pointed toward the wasteland. “They come from out there. Always from the east, always at dusk.”

Noah checked the sun’s position. Maybe two hours until evening.

“We’ll handle it,” he said. “Get your people inside. Stay there until we give the all-clear.”

The woman nodded, retreating toward the settlement’s central buildings. Noah turned to his team.

“Valencia, Marcus, Kira—you three set up a defensive perimeter at the settlement edge. Anything that gets past us, you stop it before it reaches civilians.”

“What about you two?” Marcus asked.

Noah looked at Seraleth. “We’re going hunting.”

They moved out into the wasteland, leaving the recruits to establish their position. The cracked earth crunched under their boots, the heat pressing down like a physical weight. Seraleth moved with that effortless grace her species possessed, barely disturbing the ground.

“You feel that?” she asked after they’d walked maybe half a kilometer.

Noah nodded. His system had been pinging warnings for the past few minutes, threat indicators increasing as they moved farther from the settlement.

[HOSTILE ENTITIES DETECTED: MULTIPLE]

[CATEGORY: 3-4]

[DISTANCE: 400 METERS]

[RECOMMENDATION: PREPARE FOR ENGAGEMENT]

“They’re watching us,” Noah said quietly.

“Good.” Seraleth’s smile was predatory. “Let them watch.”

The attack came from three directions simultaneously.

The first beast erupted from the dried lakebed to their left—scaled, reptilian, maybe seven feet long with a tail that ended in a spiked club. It moved fast, closing distance in seconds, its jaws opening to reveal rows of serrated teeth.

Noah blinked sideways, purple energy flaring as he reappeared five feet to the right. The beast’s jaws snapped on empty air.

Seraleth was already moving. Her fist caught the creature mid-lunge, the impact creating a visible shockwave. The beast flew backward, crashed into the cracked earth hard enough to create a crater.

Two more emerged from the right—larger, bulkier, their scales darker and reinforced with what looked like natural armor plating. Category Fours, built for endurance and raw power.

“Switch!” Noah shouted.

Seraleth’s head snapped toward him, understanding immediate. She felt the pull of his Domain Link, felt space preparing to fold.

[RECIPROCAL SWAP ACTIVATED]

They switched positions instantly. Noah appeared where Seraleth had been standing, directly in the path of the charging Category Fours. Seraleth materialized behind them, her momentum already building.

Noah’s fist blazed with void energy. He drove it into the lead beast’s skull.

[NULL STRIKE ACTIVATED]

Matter ceased to exist where his fist connected. The beast’s head unmade itself, the erasure spreading through its neck before stopping. The corpse collapsed, momentum carrying it past Noah in a sliding tumble.

The second Category Four pivoted, faster than something that size should move. Its spiked tail came around in a sweeping arc aimed at Noah’s midsection.

Seraleth hit it from behind. Her Echo Strike ability activated—first impact from her fist, second impact from the displaced force hitting the exact same spot milliseconds later. The beast’s spine shattered audibly. It dropped, paralyzed but still alive.

Three more beasts emerged from the lakebed—Category Threes, smaller and faster than their larger cousins. They moved with pack coordination, spreading out to flank from different angles.

“Domain skill incoming!” Noah called out.

[VOID RIFT ACTIVATED]

Space tore open in front of him, a jagged wound in reality that pulsed with purple energy. The rift expanded to maybe six feet across, its edges crackling with void power.

The Category Three on the left charged. Noah didn’t move, just stood there as the beast leaped toward him.

It hit the rift and disappeared, absorbed into his Domain. The void consumed it completely, redirecting the beast into a space where time and physics worked differently.

The other two hesitated, their predator instincts screaming warnings about the impossible thing they’d just witnessed.

Seraleth didn’t give them time to reconsider. She closed distance in three strides, her elven speed making her a blur. Her fist caught the first beast in the ribs, the Echo Strike shattering bone and pulping organs. The second beast tried to retreat, but she grabbed its tail, swung it around, and slammed it into the ground with force that created spiderweb cracks in the dried earth.

“Behind you!” Noah shouted.

She spun. Another Category Four had emerged from the lakebed, this one even larger than the first two. Its scales were almost black, reinforced to the point where they looked like armor plating. When it roared, the sound carried across the wasteland, a challenge and a threat.

[THREAT LEVEL: CATEGORY 4 ALPHA]

[WARNING: ENHANCED STRENGTH AND DURABILITY]

“That’s the pack leader,” Seraleth observed, falling into a ready stance.

The alpha charged, and the ground trembled under its weight. It moved with purpose, not the wild rush of the smaller beasts but the calculated assault of something that knew how to fight.

“Switch!”

[RECIPROCAL SWAP ACTIVATED]

They swapped positions again. Seraleth appeared in the alpha’s path, Noah behind it. The coordination was seamless, practiced despite having only trained together for a week.

Seraleth met the alpha head-on. Her fist connected with its armored snout, the Echo Strike sending shockwaves through its skull. The alpha’s head snapped back, but it recovered immediately, its tail sweeping low to take out her legs.

She jumped, planted one foot on the tail, used it as a springboard to launch herself higher. Her knee came down on the alpha’s spine with all her strength and momentum behind it.

The alpha stumbled but didn’t fall. Its armor had absorbed most of the impact, distributing force through its entire body.

Noah was already moving. He channeled white chi through his legs, crossed the distance in a blur, and drove his void-enhanced fist into the alpha’s exposed flank.

[NULL STRIKE ACTIVATED]

The armor held for maybe half a second before void energy erased it at the molecular level. The strike punched through scales, through muscle, through ribs. The alpha screamed, a sound of genuine pain rather than aggression.

It pivoted faster than something that size should move, its jaws snapping toward Noah’s extended arm. He blinked backward, reappearing ten feet away.

“Surge incoming!” Noah called out.

[SURGE ACTIVATED – LINKED TARGET: SERALETH]

He channeled void energy through their Domain Link, feeding power directly into Seraleth’s next attack. She felt it immediately—her strength amplifying, her speed increasing, her next strike carrying power beyond what her biology alone could provide.

She hit the alpha with an uppercut that lifted all several tons of it off the ground. The beast went airborne, rotating slowly, completely helpless.

Noah opened another void rift directly above where it would land.

The alpha fell into the rift, disappeared into his Domain, gone.

Silence settled over the wasteland. The remaining beasts—the ones still alive and conscious—stopped moving. Their pack leader was gone, erased by something they couldn’t understand.

They ran. All of them, simultaneously, retreating back toward whatever den or territory they’d come from.

Noah let them go. The threat was neutralized, the settlement safe. Chasing down fleeing animals served no purpose.

“Impressive,” Seraleth observed, not even breathing hard despite the exertion. “Your Domain abilities create significant tactical advantages.”

“They’re more useful when I have someone who can actually keep up,” Noah replied.

She smiled at that. “The swap technique is particularly effective. Most opponents cannot adapt to sudden position changes mid-combat.”

“Works better when my partner knows it’s coming. The callout system helps.”

They started walking back toward the settlement, leaving corpses and craters behind them. Valencia’s voice crackled through Noah’s comm.

“We saw the whole thing from here. That was insane. Did you just… delete a Category Four?”

“Two of them,” Noah corrected. “Check the settlement perimeter. Make sure nothing circled around while we were engaged and no need to get the cores off them, I already did,”

“Already on it. Perimeter’s clear.”

The settlement coordinator was waiting at the edge when they returned, her expression shifting from worry to relief. “They’re gone? All of them?”

“Pack leader’s eliminated, rest scattered,” Noah confirmed. “They won’t be coordinating attacks anymore. Might still have individual beasts in the area, but nothing your security can’t handle.”

“Thank you.” The woman’s voice cracked slightly. “We’ve been requesting EDF support for weeks. They kept saying we were low priority.”

“You’re not low priority to us,” Seraleth said.

They stayed long enough to confirm the settlement was secure, to collect payment through Eclipse Faction’s standard contract processing, and to ensure the settlers understood how to contact them if the beasts returned.

By the time they boarded Seraleth’s ship for the flight back, the sun was setting, painting the wasteland in shades of orange and red.

Valencia, Marcus, and Kira were animated during the flight, discussing the fight, asking questions about Domain abilities and coordination techniques. Seraleth answered patiently, breaking down combat theory with patience.

Noah sat near the cockpit, watching the landscape pass below. His system had logged the encounter, updated his stats, processed everything with mechanical efficiency.

[MISSION COMPLETE]

[CATEGORY 3 BEASTS ELIMINATED: 5]

[CATEGORY 4 BEASTS ELIMINATED: 3]

[CATEGORY 4 ALPHA ELIMINATED: 1]

[1000 XPERIENCE GAINED]

By the time they reached Eclipse Faction headquarters, night had fallen completely. The building’s lights were visible from several kilometers out, a beacon in the industrial district.

They landed on the designated pad, filed out of the ship. Noah noticed other vehicles in the landing area—Sophie’s team was back. Kelvin’s group too, judging by his modified transport sitting near the armory entrance.

Sam met them at the main entrance, tablet in hand as always. “Contract processed. Payment transferred. Settlement sent a glowing review through the network. Good work.”

“Where’s everyone else?” Noah asked.

“Briefing room. Lila wanted to start a meeting about an hour ago. Sophie asked her to wait until everyone was back.”

Noah exchanged a glance with Seraleth. “What kind of information?”

“The kind that has Sophie looking worried and Kelvin vibrating with excitement,” Sam replied. “So probably nothing good.”

They headed to the briefing room, the rest of the team falling in behind them. The main space was occupied—Sophie at the head of the table, Diana leaning against the wall, Kelvin in a chair looking like he was physically restraining himself from bouncing.

And Lila, standing near the holographic display, her expression carrying that cold edge that meant she’d found something serious.

“Noah,” Sophie said as he entered. “Lila has intel on the Purge. We’ve been waiting for you.”

Noah moved to the table, Seraleth taking position near Diana. The recruits who’d come with them filed in, sensing this was important enough to include everyone present.

“What did you find?” Noah asked, looking at Lila directly.

She activated the holographic display, pulling up a map of the Eastern Cardinal. “I’ve been talking to contacts. People who work the underground networks, who hear things before official channels pick them up.” Her finger traced a path on the map, highlighting the northern region. “There’s been unusual activity in the Northern Cardinal. Purge operatives moving through areas they normally avoid. Heavy security, tight coordination.”

“How unusual?” Diana asked.

“Convoy-level unusual. Multiple transports, military-grade protection, the kind of operation they only run when moving something critically important.” Lila pulled up additional data—timestamps, location reports, intercepted communications fragments. “My source says they’re moving shipments. Large ones. Frequency increased over the past two weeks.”

Sophie leaned forward, studying the data. “Shipments of what?”

“That’s the question.” Lila’s expression darkened. “But here’s what’s interesting—the timing matches up with when you all encountered that four-horned Harbinger. When Purge agents stole its body through that portal.”

The room went quiet.

“You think they’re connected,” Noah said.

“I think the Northern Cardinal operations started ramping up right after Kruel disappeared through that red-sky portal.” Lila met his eyes. “I think whatever they’re doing with that Harbinger requires resources they’re moving through the north. And I think that’s our chance to figure out what the hell they’re planning.”

Kelvin whistled low. “That’s a lot of assumptions based on timing coincidence.”

“It’s not just timing.” Lila pulled up more data. “One of my contacts got close enough to see partial manifests. Medical equipment, specialized containment systems, energy regulators rated for Category Five outputs. That’s not standard Purge gear—that’s research infrastructure.”

“They’re studying it,” Sophie said quietly. “They stole a four-horned Harbinger and now they’re building facilities to research it.”

“Or control it,” Diana added. “Or harvest from it. None of those options are good.”

Noah’s mind was racing through implications. A four-horned Harbinger under Purge control, being studied, being weaponized. Kruel had killed three hundred thousand EDF soldiers in one engagement. If the Purge figured out how to replicate that power, how to direct it…

“We need to investigate,” Lila said. “Get eyes on whatever they’re building in the north. Figure out what we’re actually dealing with before it’s too late.”

“That’s Purge territory,” Sophie countered. “Going in without proper reconnaissance, without understanding the full scope—”

“Is risky, yes,” Lila interrupted. “But so is waiting until they finish whatever they’re building. By the time we have ‘proper reconnaissance,’ they might have already completed their research.”

“She’s right,” Noah said. All eyes turned to him. “We can’t afford to wait. Not with him…” Noah paused, taking a breather and everyone that had been on Sirius Prime understood ..”Not with Kruel in play,” Noah finished.

Sophie’s expression was carefully controlled, but Noah could see the concern there. “This isn’t like taking contracts for settlements. This is a direct operation against the Purge in their own territory. The risks—”

“Are significant,” Noah agreed. “But so are the stakes. If they’re building research facilities, if they’re working with a four-horned Harbinger, this goes beyond faction politics. This is existential threat level.”

Diana pushed off from the wall. “I’m in. Someone needs to keep an eye on the Purge anyway.”

“Obviously I’m going,” Kelvin said. “You’ll need tech support for infiltration, and I’m the best you’ve got.”

Seraleth spoke up from her position. “My people owe Eclipse Faction a debt for the evacuation. If this threatens your world, I will assist.”

Sophie looked around the room, reading expressions, calculating risks against benefits. Her gaze landed on Noah, held there for a moment.

“Fine,” she said finally. “But we do this smart. We scout first, gather intelligence, identify targets before we commit to direct action. No cowboy heroics.”

“Agreed,” Noah said.

“When do we leave?” Lila asked.

Sophie pulled up the map again, studying the Northern Cardinal geography. “Two days. That gives us time to prepare, coordinate with Sam on logistics, brief the recruits who’ll be holding down operations here while we’re gone.”

“Two days,” Noah confirmed.

The meeting broke up, people filing out to handle preparations or return to their quarters. Lila lingered near the display, still studying the data she’d compiled.

Noah approached her. “Thank you. For bringing this to us.”

“Don’t thank me yet,” Lila replied. “We don’t know what we’re walking into. Could be a research facility, could be a trap, could be nothing.”

“You don’t believe it’s nothing.”

“No.” Her pale eyes met his. “I think it’s exactly what it looks like—the Purge building something terrible with a literal living weapon they stole from us. And I think if we don’t stop them now, we won’t get another chance.”

She left, heading toward her quarters, leaving Noah alone in the briefing room with holographic maps and uncomfortable possibilities.

Sophie reappeared in the doorway. “You okay?”

“Yeah. Just thinking.”

She moved to stand beside him, looking at the same maps. “This could go really wrong.”

“I know.”

“But we’re doing it anyway.”

“Yeah.”

Sophie’s hand found his, fingers interlacing. “Two days. Then we go poke a terrorist organization in their own backyard and hope we survive the response.”

“When you put it like that, it sounds almost reckless.”

“It is reckless.” She smiled slightly. “But it’s also necessary. And that’s what Eclipse Faction does—the necessary things other people won’t touch.”

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