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Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 506

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  3. Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner
  4. Chapter 506 - Chapter 506: Streamer faction
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Chapter 506: Streamer faction
Two hours after returning from the Fourth Brigade encounter, the entire faction gathered in the main briefing room.

Noah had insisted on it—every member present, from the newest recruit to the founding team. Eclipse Faction wasn’t building a military hierarchy where decisions flowed down from the top. They were building something different. A family, however dysfunctional. Everyone got a voice.

The room was packed. Forty people crammed into a space designed for maybe twenty-five. Some sat on equipment crates. Others stood along the walls. The founding team occupied the front—Noah, Sophie, Diana, Kelvin, Seraleth, and Lila—while Sam stood near the holographic displays with data already queued up.

Valencia, Marcus, Chen, and Kira sat together near the middle, still processing the migration contract that had turned into a political ambush. The other recruits murmured among themselves, confusion evident. They’d heard Fourth Brigade had shown up, but details were scarce.

“Alright,” Noah said, his voice cutting through the noise. “Let’s get everyone on the same page. What happened today at the migration site.”

He gestured to Sophie, who activated the displays. No recordings—Fourth Brigade had been too careful for that—but schematics of the location, timeline of events, basic breakdown of what transpired.

“Fourth Brigade engineered the encounter,” Sophie explained. “Commander Reeves admitted it directly. He told the settlement to post an open contract specifically to draw us out. They arrived first, handled the problem themselves, and used the opportunity to deliver a message.”

“What message?” Valencia asked.

“Join them or face consequences,” Diana said bluntly. “He wrapped it in friendly language, but the threat was clear. Work with Fourth Brigade, coordinate with them, defer to their political influence, or they’ll make our operations difficult.”

Murmurs spread through the room. Some recruits looked angry. Others seemed worried.

“How can they make things difficult?” Chen asked. “We handle threats they can’t. That has to count for something.”

“It counts for less than you’d think,” Sam said, stepping forward. He activated another display—data streams showing contract postings, settlement communications, faction reputation metrics. “Fourth Brigade has been operating in the eastern territories for twelve years. They have relationships with settlement coordinators, standing agreements, political capital we haven’t built yet. If Reeves advises settlements that hiring Eclipse is premature or risky, they’ll listen to him over us.”

“That’s bullshit,” Marcus said. “We saved Settlement Gamma-7. We handled that Category Five threat.”

“We also destroyed half the settlement doing it,” Sophie said quietly.

The room went silent.

Sophie continued, her voice careful. “Reeves used our Nyx deployment against us. Pointed out the property damage, the fires, the craters. Made a valid argument that our combat capability comes with collateral damage settlements might not want to risk.”

“That wasn’t our fault,” Kira protested. “Darius attacked. We responded. What were we supposed to do, let him destroy everything?”

“Of course not,” Noah said. “But Reeves doesn’t care about context. He cares about perception. And right now, the perception he’s building is that Eclipse Faction is powerful but reckless. Talented but inexperienced. Capable of handling threats but likely to cause as much damage as we prevent.”

“So what do we do?” Valencia asked. “Just accept his terms? Work under Fourth Brigade’s oversight?”

“Hell no,” Diana said immediately.

“Agreed,” Noah said. “We’re not joining Fourth Brigade. We’re not deferring to their political games. But we also can’t ignore the reality that they have influence we don’t. We need a counter-strategy.”

“That’s why we’re all here,” Sophie added. “This affects everyone. The solution needs input from everyone. So let’s hear ideas.”

For a moment, nobody spoke. Then one of the newer recruits—a guy named Torres—raised his hand hesitantly.

“What if we just… do better?” Torres said. “Like, handle contracts so professionally that settlements can’t ignore our quality. Make our reputation speak for itself.”

“That’s the foundation,” Sam agreed. “But reputation building takes time. Months, maybe years. Reeves can damage us faster than we can prove him wrong.”

“Then we take contracts Fourth Brigade won’t touch,” another recruit suggested. “Higher risk, higher threat level. Show we can handle things they can’t.”

“That plays into Reeves’ narrative,” Sophie countered. “He’s already saying we’re reckless. Taking increasingly dangerous contracts just reinforces that perception.”

“What if we document everything?” Kira offered. “Like, record our operations. Show exactly what we do, how we do it, the precautions we take. Make it transparent so settlements can see we’re not just cowboys with dragons.”

“Documentation helps,” Sam said. “But who watches it? How do we distribute it? And what stops Reeves from cherry-picking the worst moments and using them against us?”

The suggestions kept coming. Some were tactical—target specific settlements, offer better rates, provide services Fourth Brigade doesn’t. Others were political—build alliances with other factions, find leverage against Reeves personally, expose his methods as manipulative.

Diana had been quiet through most of this, her expression growing increasingly frustrated. Finally she stood up.

“This is stupid,” she said. “We’re sitting here trying to out-politic a politician. That’s not our strength. Our strength is we can do things nobody else can do. We have three dragons. We have SSS-rank combat capability. We beat Category Fives on our first mission.”

“And that scares people,” Sam pointed out.

“Good!” Diana’s voice rose slightly. “Let it scare them. Let settlements know that when shit gets real, when threats show up that Fourth Brigade can’t handle, Eclipse Faction will be there. We don’t need to play nice. We need to be so damn effective that settlements have no choice but to work with us.”

“That’s aggressive,” Sophie said.

“We’re in an aggressive situation,” Diana shot back. “Reeves isn’t going to stop because we asked nicely. He’s going to keep undermining us, keep spreading doubt, keep using his political capital to freeze us out. The only way to counter that is to be undeniable. Take the contracts nobody else will touch. Handle threats so decisively that our reputation becomes bulletproof.”

Valencia nodded slowly. “She’s not wrong. I understand you guys spent time worrying about what the EDF thought of you. Then quit and built this. Maybe we stop worrying about what Fourth Brigade thinks and just prove we’re better.”

“Prove it how?” Marcus asked. “By taking suicidal contracts?”

“By being smart about which ones we take,” Diana replied. “High threat, high visibility, situations where failure would be catastrophic but success is undeniable. We stack wins that matter.”

Sam was tapping on his tablet, pulling up data. “There are settlements Fourth Brigade hasn’t serviced in months. Places they consider too remote or too low-profit to bother with. If we prioritized those—”

“We’d be filling gaps they left,” Sophie finished, understanding dawning. “Building relationships in areas they’ve neglected. It wouldn’t conflict directly with their claimed territory, but it would demonstrate we’re willing to work where they won’t.”

“And if those settlements start preferring us?” Kelvin added, speaking up for the first time. “If we build enough goodwill in the margins, eventually it spreads. Word gets around that Eclipse actually shows up, actually cares about settlements Fourth Brigade ignores.”

“That’s long-term thinking,” Sam said. “Won’t solve the immediate problem.”

“Nothing solves the immediate problem except time,” Sophie said. She looked at Noah. “Unless we want direct confrontation.”

“Which we don’t,” Noah confirmed. “Not yet. We’re too new, too vulnerable to political pressure. But Diana’s right that we can’t just play defense either. We need to be proactive.”

“So we do both,” Lila said. Everyone turned to look at her. She’d been silent through the entire discussion, just listening. “We take the high-threat contracts that build our combat reputation. And we service the neglected settlements that build our reliability reputation. Hit them from two angles—show we’re capable AND responsible.”

“That’s double the workload,” Sam pointed out.

“We have forty people now,” Noah said. “We can handle it. Split teams, coordinate operations, make sure we’re covering enough ground that Reeves can’t dismiss us as a one-trick faction.”

“Still doesn’t solve the perception problem,” Torres said. “Reeves is telling settlements we’re dangerous. Even if we do good work, he can spin it as luck or make people afraid of the collateral damage.”

The room fell into frustrated silence. They had pieces of a strategy—reputation building, gap-filling, high-visibility successes—but nothing that directly countered Fourth Brigade’s political influence.

Then Kelvin sat up straighter. “Wait. What if we broadcast it?”

“Broadcast what?” Diana asked.

“Everything.” Kelvin’s grin was spreading. “Our operations. Live. Or near-live anyway. Actual footage of contracts in progress, showing exactly what we do and how we do it. Not edited highlights—full operations. Documentation so transparent that nobody can spin it because they’re watching it happen.”

Sam’s eyes widened. “Streaming. You want to stream contracts.”

“Why not?” Kelvin was animated now, hands gesturing as he worked through the idea. “Other factions keep operations secret because they’re protecting proprietary techniques or hiding mistakes. We don’t need to do that. We’re not selling secrets—we’re selling capability and professionalism. Show settlements exactly what they’re getting when they hire Eclipse.”

“That’s insane,” Marcus said.

“That’s brilliant,” Valencia countered. “Reeves can tell settlements whatever he wants, but if they can watch us work? See the precautions we take? Watch us handle threats with minimal collateral damage? His words don’t matter anymore.”

“It’s risky,” Sophie said, though her expression suggested she was seriously considering it. “Broadcasting operations exposes our tactics, our team composition, our capabilities. Other factions could study us. Find weaknesses.”

“Let them,” Diana said. “We’re already the faction with dragons. It’s not like we’re subtle. And if other factions want to copy our methods, good. Raises the standard for everyone.”

“The technical requirements would be significant,” Sam said, already pulling up new data. “We’d need recording equipment, broadcasting infrastructure, real-time editing to protect sensitive information, storage for archives—”

“I can build all of that,” Kelvin interrupted. “Give me a week, maybe two. I’ll have a system that captures operations from multiple angles, processes it through filters to protect mission-critical details, and broadcasts to a public channel anyone can access.”

“Settlements would watch,” Kira said. “I know I would. Seeing faction operations in real-time? That’s entertainment AND practical assessment. They could evaluate us based on actual performance instead of reputation.”

“It changes the game entirely,” Sophie said. She was pacing now, working through implications. “Reeves can’t compete with live footage. His political influence relies on controlling narrative. If we bypass narrative entirely and just show reality, his advantage disappears.”

“It’s also unprecedented,” Sam added. “No faction operates with this level of transparency. It would set us apart immediately.”

“Which is exactly what we need,” Noah said. “We can’t out-politic Fourth Brigade. But we can be so different from them that direct comparison becomes impossible. They operate through relationships and backroom deals. We operate in the open, let our work speak for itself.”

The energy in the room had shifted. What had started as frustrated brainstorming had coalesced into something concrete. Not a perfect solution—there were obvious risks—but a strategy that played to their strengths rather than trying to match Fourth Brigade’s established advantages.

“Show of hands,” Noah said. “Who thinks we should move forward with this?”

Every hand in the room went up. Some hesitant, some enthusiastic, but unanimous.

“Then that’s what we do,” Noah confirmed. “Kelvin, you’re lead on technical infrastructure. Sam, you coordinate with settlements about consent and privacy. Sophie, you develop protocols for what gets shown versus what gets filtered. Diana, you make sure our operations are worth watching.”

“On it,” Kelvin said immediately.

“Everyone else,” Noah continued, “keep training, keep improving. When we go live with this, we need to be impressive. Professional. The kind of faction people want to work with AND watch work.”

The meeting broke up gradually, recruits filtering out in small groups, discussing the plan, some excited and others nervous. The founding team remained behind with Sam, working through immediate implementation details.

“This is going to take resources,” Sam warned. “Broadcasting equipment, infrastructure, bandwidth. It’s not cheap.”

“We’ve got Grey family backing for equipment,” Noah said. “Use it.”

“And Reeves?” Sophie asked. “When he realizes what we’re doing?”

“Let him react however he wants,” Diana said. “By the time he figures out a counter-strategy, we’ll already have settlements watching us. Hard to undermine what people see with their own eyes.”

They spent another thirty minutes hammering out specifics before finally calling it. The plan wasn’t perfect, but it was actionable. Real steps they could take immediately rather than abstract strategies that might work eventually.

As people dispersed to their evening routines, Noah felt some of the tension from the day ease. Fourth Brigade had ambushed them, demonstrated superior political positioning, made threats they couldn’t ignore. But the Eclipse had responded.

Reeves wanted to play politics? Fine. Eclipse would change the game entirely.

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