24hnovel
  • HOME
  • NOVEL
  • COMICS
  • COMPLETED
  • RANKINGS
Sign in Sign up
  • HOME
  • NOVEL
  • COMICS
  • COMPLETED
  • RANKINGS
  • Romance
  • Comedy
  • Shoujo
  • Drama
  • School Life
  • Shounen
  • Action
  • MORE
    • Adult
    • Adventure
    • Anime
    • Comic
    • Cooking
    • Doujinshi
    • Ecchi
    • Fantasy
    • Gender Bender
    • Harem
    • Historical
    • Horror
    • Josei
    • Live action
    • Manga
    • Manhua
    • Manhwa
    • Martial Arts
    • Mature
    • Mecha
    • Mystery
    • One shot
    • Psychological
    • Sci-fi
    • Seinen
    • Shoujo Ai
    • Shounen Ai
    • Slice of Life
    • Smut
    • Soft Yaoi
    • Soft Yuri
    • Sports
    • Tragedy
    • Supernatural
    • Webtoon
    • Yaoi
    • Yuri
Sign in Sign up
Prev
Next

Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 499

  1. Home
  2. All Mangas
  3. Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner
  4. Chapter 499 - Chapter 499: The foundations of war
Prev
Next

Chapter 499: The foundations of war
The Eclipse Faction building felt different when they returned. Maybe it was the weight of what they’d witnessed pressing down on everyone, or maybe it was the tension radiating off the team as they filed into the briefing room. Either way, the atmosphere was heavy enough to make breathing difficult.

Sophie was already there, standing at the head of the table with Sam beside her. Her expression was carefully controlled, but Noah knew her well enough to see the concern underneath. She’d been monitoring their communications the entire mission. She’d heard everything.

“Everyone sit,” Sophie said once the team had assembled. The recruits who’d been on the mission took seats along the walls. Diana claimed a spot near the holographic displays. Kelvin sat with his tablet already out, ready to present data. Lila stood near the door like she was considering whether to stay or leave.

Seraleth entered last, her tall frame making the doorway seem smaller. She moved to stand beside Sophie, her alien perspective on human conflict dynamics making her an observer more than a participant.

“Let’s start with what you saw,” Sophie said, pulling up a blank display. “Everything. Don’t leave anything out.”

Noah stepped forward. “We confirmed the facility is operational. Heavy security, military-grade response capability, at least two hundred personnel on-site. They’re moving serious equipment—industrial power cells rated for Category Five energy output, portal frame components, quantum stabilizers.”

“Portal technology,” Sam said, making notes. “Permanent gates?”

“That’s what it looked like,” Kelvin confirmed. “The frame was massive, maybe ten meters across. You could move vehicles through something that size. Or worse.”

“We also saw combat deployment,” Diana added. “A second portal opened during the engagement. Harbingers came through it. Three-horns. Multiple.”

Sophie’s expression tightened. “Controlled deployment. They wouldn’t need to wait for natural incursions if they had permanent gates.”

“There’s more,” Noah continued. “We saw Arthur. The Eighth Ancestor. He was there overseeing operations.”

The room went completely silent. Several recruits who didn’t know the full context of who Arthur was looked confused, but the core team understood immediately.

“You’re certain it was him?” Sophie asked.

“Positive,” Noah replied. “Same person Lucas and I fought. Same person who trapped Lucas in the shadow dimension.”

Lila spoke up from her position near the door. “The Purge calls him Ziro. I knew the face but not the identity. According to Purge doctrine, Ziro is the founder. The visionary who started the organization thirty years ago.”

Sophie’s carefully controlled expression cracked slightly. “Arthur founded the Purge?”

“It makes sense,” Kelvin said, pulling up data on his tablet. “Arthur’s been planning revenge against the other seven original families for centuries. The Purge gives him a ready-made army of people who think they’re serving some enlightened cause while he uses them as tools.”

“Every attack,” Diana added. “The tournament incident, the assassination attempts, all the terrorist operations—they’ve been coordinated by someone playing a game that started before any of us were born.”

Sophie sat down slowly, processing implications. Her parents were Purge operatives. Her father had been the Minister of Defense before revealing himself as a terrorist. Her mother had abandoned her as a child only to return as part of the organization. And now she was learning that everything they believed was a lie created by an ancient immortal pursuing his own agenda.

“My parents,” Sophie said quietly. “They think they’re saving humanity. But they’re just pawns.”

“Everyone in the Purge is,” Lila said. Her voice carried an edge Noah recognized. “Including mine.”

“So we’re facing an ancient immortal who’s got an entire terrorist organization backing him and he’s working with Harbingers,” one of the recruits said. “What are we supposed to do against that?”

Before anyone could answer, Lila spoke up. “We should have hit him when we had the chance.”

The temperature in the room seemed to drop.

Diana stood up from her seat. “Are you seriously bringing that up right now?”

“I’m saying we had an opportunity and we wasted it,” Lila replied, her tone flat. “Element of surprise, limited guard presence. We could have—”

“Could have died,” Diana interrupted. “Could have gotten the entire team killed. Could have compromised the faction and put everyone here at risk. But sure, let’s focus on your missed revenge fantasy.”

“It wasn’t about revenge—”

“Bullshit.” Diana crossed the room, closing distance. “You went rogue because you saw the man who turned your parents into terrorists and you couldn’t control yourself. You put your personal vendetta above the mission, above the team, above basic tactical sense.”

Lila’s expression went cold. “I don’t answer to you.”

“You answer to the faction. You answer to mission parameters. You answer to the people who risked their lives to extract you after you compromised our position!” Diana was in her face now, anger barely contained. “We almost died because of you!”

“That’s enough,” Sophie said, standing up. Her voice carried authority, the tone of someone used to managing conflicts. “Diana, step back.”

Diana held Lila’s stare for another moment before taking two steps backward. But her hands were still clenched into fists.

Sophie turned to Lila. “What you did up there was unacceptable. You endangered the team, compromised the mission, and violated direct orders. In any normal military unit, you’d be facing court martial.”

“Good thing we’re not military then,” Lila said.

“We’re a faction. We operate on trust and coordination. If team members can’t rely on each other to follow tactical decisions, people die.” Sophie’s expression was professional, measured. “You can’t work with us if you’re going to go rogue every time emotions run high.”

“Who asked you?”

The words hung in the air like a slap.

Sophie’s jaw tightened. Noah could see her biting back a response, could see the effort it took to maintain her professional demeanor when Lila had just disrespected her in front of the entire team.

“Everyone calm down,” Noah said, stepping between them before the situation could escalate further. “We’re all exhausted, we’re all processing what we saw, and we’re all scared about what it means. Fighting each other doesn’t help.”

He looked around the room, making eye contact with each person. “What we learned today changes everything. Arthur isn’t just the Eighth Ancestor. He’s the architect behind the Purge. He’s building permanent portal technology. He’s working with Harbingers. And he’s planning something big enough that he’s personally overseeing operations.”

“So what do we do?” Kelvin asked.

“We prepare,” Noah said simply. “And we start with something I learned during my fight with Arthur that I haven’t fully explained to most of you.”

He moved to the center of the room, drawing everyone’s attention. “Chi. It’s a naturally existing energy present in nature. Every human has chi flowing through them, they just need to learn how to cultivate it and use it properly.”

Several recruits looked confused. Sophie’s expression suggested she knew where he was going with this.

“I took martial arts classes at the academy that most of you didn’t,” Noah continued. “Where the instructor taught us about chi cultivation, about internal energy and how to harness it for combat. At the time, I thought it was just supplementary training. But after fighting Arthur, I understand why it matters.”

He held up his hand, letting white chi flow through his meridians until it became visible—a soft glow emanating from his palm. “Arthur knows chi. Advanced chi manipulation beyond anything I’ve seen before. And that’s how his shadow powers could counter my void erasure.”

Kelvin leaned forward. “Your Null Strike can erase almost anything at the molecular level. What stopped it?”

“Chi in its fundamental state can’t be erased,” Noah explained. “Energy can neither be created nor destroyed—that’s basic physics. Chi is pure energy in its most fundamental form. When Arthur wrapped his shadows in chi, they became immune to my erasure effect.”

Diana’s eyes widened slightly. “So he knew exactly how to counter your strongest ability.”

“And he learned it somewhere,” Noah said. “During our fight, Arthur mentioned being buried somewhere for many years, left to die alone. He said he survived by feeding on a strange energy. That energy was chi.”

Lila spoke up, her voice thoughtful. “The first time you encountered dark chi was through Purge agents. I taught you how to use it—how it’s different from the white chi you just demonstrated.”

Noah nodded. “Dark chi is drawn from the environment, from negative emotions, from external sources. It has a distinctive red and black coloration. White chi is internal, cultivated from within your own body’s core. Both serve similar purposes but they’re accessed differently.”

He let the white chi in his hand intensify, then shift. The color changed, became darker, tinged with red as he drew from environmental energy instead of internal reserves. “I’ve had success fusing void energy with chi before. That’s how I created the Null Strike fusion—combining my natural void abilities with chi enhancement.”

“If the Purge uses dark chi consistently,” Noah continued, “then someone taught them. And I believe that someone was Arthur. He learned advanced chi manipulation during his imprisonment, and when he founded the Purge, he passed that knowledge to his operatives.”

Lila’s expression had shifted from defensive to thoughtful. “I’m not certain, but my parents did mention that Ziro taught them techniques beyond normal ability usage. They called it fundamental energy manipulation. I never understood what they meant until now.”

“Arthur is Ziro,” Sophie said, pieces clicking together. “Ziro is Arthur. The same person. The Purge’s founder is the Eighth Ancestor.”

“And he’s been teaching them how to counter abilities like Noah’s,” Diana added. “That’s why Purge operatives are more dangerous than their power levels suggest. They’re don’t use awakened abilities – they’re enhance themselves with chi.”

Noah took a breath, preparing for what came next. “There’s something else you all need to understand about Arthur. He doesn’t just have shadow manipulation. He has access to all seven original family abilities. Lightning from the Grey family. Heat from another. Blood manipulation, all of it. He can wield every ability the first families possessed.”

The room erupted in shocked murmurs.

One of the recruits raised his hand hesitantly. “Wait, how is that possible? I thought awakened humans had one ability, maybe two if you’re lucky. Most people only awaken one primary ability.”

“Arthur is classified above SSS-rank,” Kelvin said, his voice sounded like someone explaining something terrifying. “For those of you who aren’t aware of the ranking system—First gen is basic awakened. Second gens are competent. Third gens are strong. S-rank is exceptional. SS-rank is rare. SSS-rank is what Noah is classified as—the absolute peak of human capability.”

He paused, letting that sink in. “Arthur exists in a category beyond that. He’s been alive for over a thousand years. He’s had centuries to master abilities that would take normal awakened their entire lives to understand. And he can use all seven original family powers simultaneously.”

“More powerful than Noah?” another recruit asked, her voice small.

Noah answered honestly. “Yes. Definitely yes. I haven’t hit my peak yet, I’m still growing into my abilities. But Arthur has had a thousand years to perfect his. In a straight fight, he’s stronger than me.”

The recruits looked at each other nervously. The realization that they were facing someone who outclassed even their faction leader was clearly unsettling.

“But that doesn’t mean we give up,” Noah continued. “It means we get prepared. The fight ahead is going to be tough. Arthur has the ability to counter my greatest weapon. He has access to powers that go beyond normal classifications. And he’s been alive long enough to master everything he touches.”

He looked around the room, making sure everyone was listening. “Starting tomorrow, Lila and I will begin teaching everyone chi cultivation. White chi, dark chi, how to enhance your abilities, how to defend against chi-based attacks. All of it.”

“The real war is coming,” Noah said. “Maybe tomorrow, maybe next month, maybe next year. But it’s coming. And when it does, the Eclipse Faction will be ready. Harbingers, the Eighth Ancestor, the Purge—it doesn’t matter. We’ll face it together.”

The room was silent for a moment. Then Valencia spoke up from the back. “We’re with you. All of us.”

The other recruits nodded, their earlier fear replaced by determination. They’d joined Eclipse Faction knowing the risks, knowing they’d face threats other factions wouldn’t touch. Learning those threats included an ancient immortal and an army of terrorists didn’t change their commitment.

“Meeting adjourned,” Sophie said. “Get rest. Tomorrow we start training protocols. Dismissed.”

People filed out slowly, talking among themselves, processing everything they’d learned. Diana left without looking at Lila. Kelvin paused to speak with Noah briefly before heading to his workshop. Seraleth remained standing near Sophie, her expression thoughtful.

Lila was the last to leave, pausing at the door to look back at Noah. “Thank you. For not throwing me under completely.”

“We’ll talk about what happened up north,” Noah said. “But not tonight. Tonight everyone needs to process.”

She nodded and left, leaving Noah alone with Sophie and Seraleth.

“She can’t do that again,” Sophie said quietly. “Next time someone might actually die.”

“I know,” Noah replied. “I’ll handle it.”

“Make sure you do.” Sophie’s expression softened slightly. “I’m going to review the mission recordings with Sam. Get some rest, Noah. You look exhausted.”

He was exhausted. Physically, mentally, emotionally drained from everything that had happened. But he knew sleep wouldn’t come easily tonight.

—

The red sky stretched endlessly above, casting everything in shades of red and shadow. The planet’s surface was covered in red sand that shifted constantly in wind patterns that never fully ceased. In the distance, rock formations rose like broken teeth from the desert landscape.

A station sat in a valley system that provided natural protection from the worst of the storms. Multiple buildings constructed from materials designed to withstand hostile environments formed a complex that covered several square kilometers. At the center, the main facility rose four stories above ground, though the bulk of the operation existed in underground levels that extended much deeper.

Men and women in black tactical gear moved between buildings with transporting crates that bore warning symbols and technical specifications. Some containers were large enough to require mechanized assistance. Others were smaller but handled with extreme care, suggesting dangerous contents.

On an upper level of the main facility, a man and woman stood at a railing that overlooked the central operations area. They were both in their fifties, wearing tailored clothing that seemed out of place in the industrial setting. The man had silver hair cut short in a military style. The woman’s darker hair was pulled back in an elegant twist.

They watched the activity below with the satisfaction of people seeing plans come together.

“Operations here have been moving smoothly,” the man said, his voice carrying the refined accent of someone educated in upper-class institutions. “The portal stabilization is ahead of schedule. The containment systems are functioning within parameters. We should be ready for phase two within the month.”

“The specimen acquisition went better than projected,” the woman added. “Lord Ziro’s intelligence about the northern facility’s vulnerabilities was accurate. We’ve secured everything we need for the next stage.”

Footsteps echoed from behind them, and they both turned.

Arthur emerged from a corridor, his brown hair slightly disheveled, his expression carrying the cheerful energy of someone who’d just finished an enjoyable task. He smiled broadly when he saw them, seeming impossibly young despite his ancient age.

“The Rowes!” he called out warmly. “I saw you weren’t busy. Walk with me.”

“Lord Ziro,” they both said, inclining their heads respectfully.

Arthur waved off the formality as he approached. “How many times do I have to tell you? Just Ziro is fine. We’re all working toward the same goal here. No need for excessive titles.”

He leaned against the railing beside them, looking down at the operations area with satisfaction. “This facility is impressive. Truly impressive. You’ve built something magnificent here.”

“We’re honored by your approval,” Mr. Rowe said. “Everything has been constructed according to your specifications.”

“And the timeline?” Arthur asked, his tone casual but his eyes sharp. “How long until the project reaches completion?”

“Four weeks at most,” Mrs. Rowe replied. “The final components are being assembled now. Once integration is complete and we run full-system tests, we’ll be operational.”

“Wonderful.” Arthur’s smile widened. “I knew I chose the right people to oversee this. Your dedication has been remarkable.”

He paused, his expression becoming thoughtful. “I ran into your daughter up north, actually. The blonde girl. Lila, correct?”

Both Rowes stiffened slightly.

“She’s grown,” Arthur continued, his tone still light and conversational. “Fierce. Skilled. Fought with impressive capability despite being outnumbered and outgunned. Really quite remarkable for someone her age.”

“She’s made her choices,” Mr. Rowe said carefully.

“Indeed she has. And what a waste.” Arthur shook his head with what seemed like genuine regret. “Among your numerous accomplishments, letting such an asset slip away remains your biggest mistake. She could have been instrumental to our cause.”

“We’ll recover her,” Mrs. Rowe said, her voice hardening. “When the time comes.”

“I look forward to it.” Arthur pushed off from the railing. “Family reunions can be so touching, don’t you think?”

He started to walk away, then paused and turned back. “Oh, before I forget. I brought extra friends. Muscle, really. Just in case those pesky children find a way to get here. There’s something about the boy with the dragons—Noah, I think his name is? He’s a stubborn one. Reminds me of myself at that age.”

Arthur gestured down toward the operations area. “Why don’t you take a look?”

The Rowes moved to the railing, following Arthur’s indication. Their eyes went wide.

In the central courtyard area, visible through the facility’s environmental shielding, stood multiple figures that made the human operatives look insignificant by comparison. Harbingers. Ten feet tall, built like nightmares given physical form, covered in natural armor that gleamed under the red sky. Their three horns caught the light, and their serpentine tails moved with predatory grace.

But it was the figure at the front that drew attention.

She was taller than the others, easily twelve feet, but built differently. Where the other Harbingers were thick and brutish, she was slender and elegant. Her armor was more refined, almost artistic in its construction. Her features were distinctly feminine despite being alien, and when she moved, it was with fluid grace that suggested intelligence far beyond the typical Harbinger.

She looked up toward where they stood, her eyes meeting Arthur’s across the distance.

And she smiled.

Arthur smiled back, giving her a small wave before turning to the Rowes. “I think she’ll fit in nicely here, don’t you? Just in case we get unexpected visitors.”

Mrs. Rowe’s voice was slightly unsteady when she spoke. “Lord Ziro, is that… a four-horn?”

“Close,” Arthur replied cheerfully. “But not quite. She’s something special. Something new. I’m very excited to see what she can do.”

He walked away humming softly, leaving the Rowes staring down at the feminine Harbinger who continued to watch the facility’s upper levels with those intelligent, predatory eyes.

In the courtyard, surrounded by lesser Harbingers who deferred to her presence, she stood perfectly still. Waiting. Patient.

Ready for whatever came next.

“Even from here. I can feel the energy. It’s almost as… nauseating as that other one we retrieved” Mr Rowe said.

“Mmmmm,” Mrs Rowe could only breath in return as her eyes remained fixed on the widow.

Prev
Next
Tags:
Novel
  • HOME
  • CONTACT US
  • PRIVACY & TERMS OF USE

© 2025 24HNOVEL. Have fun reading.

Sign in

Lost your password?

← Back to 24hnovel

Sign Up

Register For This Site.

Log in | Lost your password?

← Back to 24hnovel

Lost your password?

Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email.

← Back to 24hnovel