Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 497
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- Chapter 497 - Chapter 497: From Hero to Ziro
Chapter 497: From Hero to Ziro
The basketball hit the concrete with a rhythmic bounce, echoing off the faction building’s exterior walls. Kelvin dribbled twice, faked left, then drove right past one of his recruits who’d committed too early to the feint.
“Come on, Marcus!” Diana called from the sideline. “He does that every time!”
Marcus recovered, but Kelvin was already at the makeshift hoop—really just a metal ring welded to a support beam. He went up for the layup, the ball arcing toward the rim.
Diana’s hand appeared from nowhere, swatting the shot away with the kind of timing that came from enhanced reflexes and years of combat training.
“Blocked!” she shouted, landing and immediately pivoting to grab the loose ball.
“That was a foul!” Kelvin protested.
“That was clean defense.” Diana dribbled toward the opposite end, her team scrambling to keep up. “You’re just mad because you thought you had an easy two points.”
The game had started maybe twenty minutes ago, born from boredom and the nervous energy that came with pre-mission preparation. Kelvin’s team—three recruits who’d drawn the short straw—versus Diana’s squad of equal size. The score was close, mostly because Diana played with the same tactical precision she brought to actual combat, while Kelvin relied on unpredictable chaos and trash talk.
Valencia stood near the building entrance, watching with amusement. “Should we tell them Sophie’s looking for everyone?”
“Let them finish,” Seraleth replied from beside her. The elf had been observing human recreational activities with fascination, trying to understand how competition without actual stakes functioned. “They seem to be enjoying themselves.”
Diana drove toward the basket, drawing defenders. At the last second, she passed to one of her recruits—a woman named Chen who’d shown decent court awareness. Chen caught the pass, went up for the shot.
Kelvin appeared from nowhere, his cybernetic arms giving him reach advantages no normal human could match. He blocked the shot, caught the ball mid-air, and landed already planning his counterattack.
“Cybernetic enhancement!” Chen complained. “That’s cheating!”
“That’s using available resources,” Kelvin corrected, dribbling back toward his team’s end. “Diana’s been stopping some of my dunks with her nullification . I’ve got fancy arms. We’re all working with what we’ve got.”
He passed to Marcus, who immediately passed back when Diana pressured him. Kelvin caught the return pass, pulled up from maybe fifteen feet out, and released a shot that looked terrible the moment it left his hands.
The ball hit the rim, bounced straight up, came back down, and somehow fell through the hoop.
“And that’s game!” Kelvin pumped his fist. “Ugly but effective! The Kelvin Pithon story!”
“That was luck,” Diana said flatly.
“Luck is just skill you can’t explain.” Kelvin grinned, wiping sweat from his forehead. “Face it, you got outplayed by superior—”
“Everyone inside,” Sam’s voice called from the entrance. “Sophie wants full team briefing. Five minutes.”
The recreational atmosphere evaporated immediately. Players became faction members again, the transition instant. They filed inside, grabbing water bottles and towels, the easy banter replaced by focused professionalism.
The briefing room was already set up when they arrived. Holographic displays showed maps of the Northern Cardinal, weather patterns, facility layouts based on Lila’s intelligence. Sophie stood at the head of the table, her expression carrying the weight of someone who’d spent hours planning every detail.
Noah was already present, along with Lila and several of the more experienced recruits. Seraleth took position near the wall, her height making standard seating impractical.
“We leave at 0600 tomorrow,” Sophie began without preamble. “Travel time to the Northern Cardinal is approximately six hours by transport. We’ll be using two vehicles—Seraleth’s ship for the main team, and a ground transport for equipment and supplies.”
She pulled up climate data, and Kelvin whistled low at what the display showed.
“The north averages negative fifteen degrees Celsius this time of year,” Sophie continued. “For those of you who grew up in the Eastern Cardinal where winter means maybe ten degrees if we’re unlucky, negative fifteen is a completely different experience. Exposed skin will develop frostbite in under ten minutes. Normal tactical gear won’t cut it.”
Diana leaned forward, studying the temperature readings. “The Harbinger war screwed up global climate patterns. I remember reading about it, the seed being planted, orbital bombardment, atmospheric disruption, all the energy weapons firing created localized weather anomalies that never fully stabilized.”
“Correct,” Sophie confirmed. “The Northern Cardinal bore the brunt of several major Harbinger attacks during the first invasion. The environmental damage compounds every year. Some projections suggest the region will be uninhabitable within a decade without serious terraforming efforts.”
She gestured, and new images appeared—specialized suits, bulkier than standard tactical gear, with integrated heating elements and enhanced insulation.
“Sam coordinated with suppliers to get thermal gear rated for extreme conditions. Full body coverage, climate control systems, emergency heat packs. You’ll hate wearing them because they’re restrictive compared to what you’re used to, but you’ll hate frostbite more.”
“How restrictive are we talking?” one of the recruits asked.
“Imagine your regular tactical suit, but add twenty pounds of insulation and reduce your range of motion by about fifteen percent,” Diana replied. “You can still fight in them, but you’ll need to adjust your combat style. No fancy acrobatics.”
Kelvin raised his hand. “What about equipment? Electronics don’t love extreme cold.”
“Everything’s been cold-tested,” Sam said from his position near the displays. “Scanners, communication devices, weapons systems. We’re not taking anything that hasn’t been certified for arctic operations.”
Sophie pulled up facility layouts next—incomplete, based on satellite imagery and Lila’s intelligence gathering, but detailed enough to work with.
“The target facility sits approximately forty kilometers outside the nearest settlement. It’s built into a valley system, using natural geography for concealment and protection. Satellite imaging shows at least six major structures, multiple smaller outbuildings, and heavy security presence.”
The structures looked massive even from orbital perspective. The main building had to be at least three hundred meters long, maybe eighty meters wide, constructed from reinforced materials that showed up as dark shapes against snow-covered ground. Support buildings clustered around it like satellites, connected by covered walkways that protected against the brutal climate.
“Security estimates?” Diana asked.
“Conservative guess puts it at two hundred personnel minimum,” Lila replied, speaking up for the first time. “Purge operations of this scale typically require significant manpower. Guards, researchers, logistics support, command structure. And that’s not counting whatever automated defenses they’ve installed.”
“Two hundred against our team of…” Kelvin counted mentally, “maybe fifteen if we bring everyone qualified for field operations. Those are terrible odds.”
“Which is why we’re not engaging directly,” Sophie said firmly. “This is reconnaissance only. We observe, we gather intelligence, we identify what they’re actually doing with those shipments. No heroics, no cowboy bullshit. We get the information we need and we extract.”
Noah had been quiet through most of the briefing, but now he spoke up. “What’s the extraction plan if things go sideways?”
“Seraleth’s ship remains on standby at our forward position,” Sophie replied. “If we trigger alarms or get compromised, we retreat to the ship and leave immediately. The Grey family interceptor is faster than anything the Purge has in that region. We can be airborne and gone before they organize pursuit.”
“And if we can’t reach the ship?” Diana pressed.
Sophie’s expression darkened slightly. “Then we improvise and hope our combat capabilities are sufficient to create an opening. But that’s worst-case scenario. If we do this correctly, they’ll never know we were there. Plus, we have Noah. Extraction shouldn’t be a problem if everyone sticks to the plan,”
She pulled up team assignments, names appearing beside specific roles.
“Noah, Diana, Kelvin, and Lila—you’re primary reconnaissance. You’ll be eyes on the facility, gathering intelligence, identifying key targets and security patterns.”
“Seraleth and Valencia—you’re overwatch. Positioned on high ground with clear sightlines to the facility. If primary team needs extraction support or covering fire, you provide it.”
“Marcus, Chen, and three others—you’re security for our forward base and equipment. Nothing gets close to our position without you knowing about it.”
She paused, and something in her expression shifted. Not quite vulnerable, but close. Everyone in the room who’d known her more than a week recognized the look.
“I’ll be staying here,” Sophie said. “Coordinating from base, managing faction operations while the primary team is deployed.”
The silence that followed was heavy. Noah opened his mouth to say something, but Sophie cut him off with a look.
“This mission hits closer to home for me than I’d like,” she continued, her voice carefully even. “My father was the Minister of Defense for the Eastern Cardinal. On the day of the interschool tournament attack, he revealed himself as a Purge operative. My mother—who abandoned me when I was hitting my teens—returned that same day as part of the attack.”
Several recruits who didn’t know Sophie’s full history shifted uncomfortably.
“Unlike Lila, who’s hunting her parents to stop them, I made my position clear when I last saw mine.” Sophie’s jaw tightened. “I told them that if I ever saw them again, I’d put them down myself. No hesitation, no second chances. They chose terrorism over their daughter, and I chose to move forward without them.”
Lila’s expression was unreadable, but her eyes held something like understanding.
“So I’m not going north,” Sophie finished. “Because if I encounter my parents during this operation, I’ll compromise the mission. I’ll make it personal. And we can’t afford that.”
Noah wanted to argue, wanted to say she should come anyway, that they’d handle it together. But he understood her reasoning. Sophie Reign was nothing if not tactically sound.
“Understood,” he said instead. “We’ll bring back everything we find.”
“See that you do.” Sophie’s professional mask was back in place. “Dismissed. Get your gear ready, get rest, and be ready to move at 0600. We don’t get second chances if this goes wrong.”
The meeting broke up, people filing out to handle preparations. Kelvin caught Noah and Lila in the hallway.
“Heavy stuff in there,” he said quietly. “Sophie okay?”
“She’s handling it,” Noah replied, though he wasn’t entirely sure if that was true.
“What about you?” Kelvin looked at Lila. “Your parents are potentially at this facility. That’s not going to be easy.”
Lila’s smile was cold. “I’ve had months to process how I feel about them. If they’re there, I’ll do what needs doing. No hesitation.”
“Right.” Kelvin didn’t look convinced, but he knew better than to push. “Well, I’m going to go obsessively check equipment for the next twelve hours. Anyone want to join me in productive anxiety?”
“I’ll help,” Diana said, appearing from behind them. “Someone needs to make sure you don’t over-engineer our gear and make it useless.”
They headed toward Kelvin’s workshop, leaving Noah and Lila standing in the hallway.
“You should talk to Sophie,” Lila said after a moment. “Before we leave.”
“I will.”
“Noah.” Lila’s tone made him look at her properly. “If we find something tomorrow—something about my parents, about the Purge, about what they did to create me—I need you to know I’m okay with however it goes. Whatever we discover, whatever we have to do.”
“We’ll handle it,” Noah said.
“Yeah.” She smiled, but it didn’t reach her eyes. “We will.”
—
The next morning came too quickly. Noah had managed maybe three hours of sleep, his mind too active to fully shut down. By the time 0600 rolled around, he was already geared up, thermal suit sealed, checking equipment one final time.
The team assembled in the landing bay. Seraleth’s ship sat ready, its Grey family engineering apparent in every sleek line. The ground transport was loaded with supplies and backup equipment.
Sophie was there to see them off, her expression carefully neutral as she went through final checks with each team member.
When she reached Noah, she pulled him aside briefly. “Be careful. If it’s actually as bad as I feel—” she paused and gestured towards her fingers. Noah saw a small spark coming out of her fingers and immediately held her hand to conceal it from the others. Any one who knew Sophie knew what that spark meant.
“We’ll observe and extract,” Noah promised. “No heroics.”
“Good.” She kissed him, quick and professional, then stepped back. “Come home safe.”
“Always do.”
And with that they all board the ship and set their sight for North.
The flight north was six hours of increasingly hostile terrain. Green gave way to brown, then to white as snow coverage became total. The temperature readouts dropped steadily, hitting negative twelve, then negative fifteen, then negative eighteen.
Through the viewport, Noah watched the landscape transform. Cities became sparse, then disappeared entirely. What remained were scattered settlements—hardy people who’d chosen to stay in hostile territory rather than relocate south. The scars of Harbinger attacks were visible even from altitude: impact craters kilometers wide, entire regions where nothing grew, areas where the ground itself looked wrong, like reality had been damaged and never fully healed.
“There,” Lila said, pointing. “That valley system. Matches the satellite imagery.”
Seraleth adjusted their approach, bringing the ship down in a designated landing zone approximately twenty kilometers from the target. The location provided natural concealment—a rocky outcropping that blocked direct line of sight while offering elevated positions for observation.
They disembarked into cold that hit like a physical blow despite the thermal suits. Noah’s first breath of northern air felt like inhaling knives.
“Jesus,” Kelvin muttered, his voice slightly distorted by his suit’s climate control. “How do people live here?”
“They adapt,” Seraleth replied, apparently unbothered by the temperature. “My homeworld had regions far colder than this.”
They established forward base quickly, setting up equipment and confirming communication systems. Marcus and his security team took positions around the perimeter. Seraleth and Valencia moved to high ground with scanning equipment and long-range observation tools.
That left Noah, Diana, Kelvin, and Lila for the actual reconnaissance approach.
They moved out at 1400 hours, using terrain features for concealment, maintaining radio silence except for essential communication. The valley system provided natural approaches—ravines and rock formations that hid their movement.
Two hours of careful advance brought them within visual range of the facility. Diana found them a position on a ridge that offered clear sightlines without exposing them to security patrols.
Through his scanner’s magnification, Noah got his first clear look at the operation’s scale.
The main building was even larger than satellite imagery suggested—easily four hundred meters long, maybe a hundred meters wide at its widest point. Three stories visible above ground, but the construction suggested significant underground levels. The exterior was reinforced concrete and steel, designed to withstand both climate and potential attack.
Surrounding structures were connected by enclosed walkways, creating a network that allowed personnel to move without exposing themselves to the brutal cold. Guard towers sat at strategic positions, manned by figures in black tactical gear that was noticeably more advanced than standard Purge equipment.
“Count at least forty guards just in visible positions,” Diana whispered, her breath fogging despite the suit’s climate control. “Probably triple that inside the buildings.”
Transport vehicles sat in a designated area near the main entrance—heavy cargo haulers rated for extreme conditions, flanked by military-grade security vehicles. Some were being loaded with equipment, others unloaded, the operation moving with fast and efficiently.
“There,” Lila said quietly, adjusting her scanner. “That convoy just arrived. See the escort formation?”
A group of vehicles had just pulled through the facility’s main gate. Unlike the cargo haulers, these were clearly designed for personnel transport. The lead and rear vehicles bristled with weaponry. The center transport was unmarked, heavily armored.
Personnel emerged from the vehicles, moving with military precision. Most wore standard Purge tactical gear—black suits with minimal insignia, weapons carried with practiced ease.
But three figures stood out immediately.
Two wore armor that was distinctly different from standard gear. Heavier plating, more advanced design, and most notably—striping across the chest plates. One had four horizontal stripes in a dull silver color. The other had five.
“Elite guards,” Diana breathed. “Like the shadow soldiers from Arthur’s forces.”
The third figure was younger, maybe early twenties, with brown hair that was slightly disheveled from travel. He moved with casual confidence, not the rigid military bearing of the guards but the relaxed posture of someone who knew they were untouchable.
Noah’s blood went cold.
“No,” he whispered. “That’s impossible.”
Kelvin had his scanner focused on the figure, his face visible through his helmet’s visor going pale. “That’s Arthur. That’s fucking Arthur.”
Diana’s hand moved to her weapon instinctively. “The Eighth Ancestor. Here. Why would he—”
“That’s Arthur?” Lila’s voice cut through their shock, confusion evident. “You’re sure?”
“That’s him,” Noah confirmed, his mind racing. “Or his clone. We fought him before. That’s the man who trapped Lucas in the shadow dimension.”
“I know that man. No, I know the face. The Purge calls him Ziro,” Lila said quietly. “He is rumoured to be the founder. The one who started everything many years ago.”