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Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 509

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  3. Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner
  4. Chapter 509 - Chapter 509: Going live 2
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Chapter 509: Going live 2
The battle was everything Kelvin had hoped for.

The beast horde approached from the northwest—a churning mass of Category Two herbivores driven by Category Three predators who’d learned that large groups meant easier hunting. Steel Union’s defensive positions were solid, their fighters experienced, but they were outnumbered and the horde’s momentum was overwhelming.

Eclipse Faction hit the horde’s flank hard.

Nyx descended from altitude with a roar that made the ground tremble, his mere presence scattering the forward elements. Storm came in low and fast, ice and lightning tearing through predator ranks and breaking their coordination. Ivy manifested in the horde’s path, her botanical growth creating barriers that redirected the mass away from Steel Union’s base.

Diana’s team engaged directly, her momentum nullification creating dead zones where beast charges simply stopped. Seraleth moved through combat with devastating efficiency, each strike enhanced by white chi that made her already formidable strength overwhelming.

Lila’s squad provided precision support, her time manipulation creating windows where dangerous threats could be neutralized before they reached defensive lines.

And through it all, Kelvin’s drones captured every moment. The dragons in flight. Diana stopping a charging behemoth mid-stride. Seraleth punching through a Category Three’s natural armor. Valencia’s coordinated team work. The new recruits proving their capability under fire.

The horde broke within thirty minutes. What remained scattered into the wilderness, no longer a unified threat. Steel Union’s base was intact, casualties were minimal, and Eclipse Faction had demonstrated exactly what they’d promised.

Professional. Effective. Spectacular.

Kelvin ended the broadcast as teams began cleanup operations, his hands shaking slightly from adrenaline and excitement.

“Check the analytics,” he said, pulling up viewer data.

The numbers were staggering. Peak concurrent viewers had hit fifty thousand across the eastern territories. The chat had been moving so fast during combat that individual messages were impossible to read. And the recording was already being shared across social networks.

Sophie leaned over to read some of the archived comments as they scrolled past:

*W ECLIPSE*

*that girl with the momentum powers is scary hot*

*DID YOU SEE THAT DRAGON???*

*im simping for the busty blonde with the telekinesis not gonna lie*

*The tactical coordination is actually insane*

*Sophie Reign giving military commander vibes I’m here for it*

*NOAH ECLIPSE CAN CONTROL CATEGORY FIVES??…WHAT ARE DRAGONS EVEN SCALED AS?!

*real life elf woman just made my year*

*This is better than anything on regular entertainment feeds*

The comments kept coming. People analyzing tactics. Others focused on individual team members. Debates about whether the dragons were awakened abilities or something else. Speculation about Eclipse Faction’s origins and capabilities.

“We’re trending,” Kelvin said, his voice carrying disbelief. “Across multiple platforms. ‘Eclipse Faction’ is the number three search term in the eastern territories right now.”

“Number three?” Diana asked.

“Weather alerts are number one, and there’s a major sporting event happening,” Kelvin explained. “But yeah, we’re ahead of literally everything else. This worked. Holy shit, this actually worked.”

Noah watched the numbers continue climbing even after the broadcast ended. People were watching the recording, sharing clips, creating response content. Eclipse Faction had inserted themselves directly into public consciousness in a way that bypassed traditional reputation building entirely.

Reeves couldn’t compete with this. His political influence relied on controlling information flow, on being the trusted voice that settlements listened to. But if settlements could watch Eclipse work in real-time, see the quality and professionalism for themselves, his words became irrelevant.

“We’re going to need more broadcasting equipment,” Sam observed, already making notes. “If we’re doing this regularly, Kelvin can’t handle it alone.”

“I can train operators,” Kelvin replied. “Set up standard procedures, automate more of the process. Give me two weeks and we’ll have a full production team.”

The flight back to headquarters was celebratory. Even the new recruits, who’d been nervous about their first mission, were energized by the success. They’d proven themselves under fire, and the entire eastern territories had watched them do it.

When they landed, the faction building’s common areas were packed with off-duty members who’d been watching the broadcast. They erupted in applause as the combat teams entered, congratulations and excitement filling the space.

Noah let himself enjoy the moment. They’d countered Fourth Brigade’s political maneuvering with innovation. They’d demonstrated capability in front of thousands of witnesses. They’d begun building the reputation that would make Eclipse Faction undeniable.

It was good momentum going into the northern assault.

As the celebration continued, Noah’s comm device buzzed. He checked it, found a priority message from Lucy Grey.

Detailed intelligence packet attached. Facility schematics, guard rotations, confirmation that Arthur had been present within the past forty-eight hours. New information about underground levels they hadn’t known existed. And something else—energy signatures that matched the portal technology they’d observed.

The assault was still six days away.

But now they had everything they needed to plan it properly.

Noah saved the intelligence packet and returned his attention to the celebration. Tomorrow would bring new training, new preparation, new complications.

Tonight, Eclipse Faction had earned the right to celebrate a victory.

They’d take it.

_____

The faction building had settled into late evening energy—that buzzing excitement that came from success and recognition and knowing tomorrow would bring more of both. Small groups occupied the common areas, replaying broadcast highlights, reading comments, basking in the reality that Eclipse Faction had just announced itself to the entire eastern territories.

Noah found himself wandering the corridors, restless despite the exhaustion pulling at his limbs. Too much adrenaline from the mission, too much mental stimulation from watching Kelvin’s analytics climb, too much awareness that in six days they’d be assaulting Arthur’s northern facility with military backing and no room for error.

He ended up near the quarters section, intending to just collapse in his room and force his brain to shut down for a few hours.

“Can’t sleep either?”

Noah turned. Lila leaned against the wall maybe ten feet away, still wearing her tactical gear from the mission. Her blonde hair was pulled back in a ponytail, a few strands having escaped to frame her face. She looked tired but wired, same restless energy he felt.

“Too much happening,” Noah admitted. “Brain won’t turn off.”

“Yeah.” Lila pushed off from the wall, moving closer. “That was insane today. Fifty thousand people watching us fight. I keep thinking about all those eyes, all those comments. It’s surreal.”

“Kelvin’s losing his mind over the analytics,” Noah said. “Pretty sure he’s not sleeping tonight either.”

“Diana’s with him, right? She’ll make sure he doesn’t work himself to death.” Lila stopped maybe an arm’s length away, close enough for conversation but not invading space. “Everyone’s paired off tonight. Sophie and Seraleth are doing… something. I saw them heading toward Sophie’s quarters with what looked like cosmetics supplies.”

“Makeup?”

“I think Sera wanted to learn human beauty standards or something.” Lila’s smile was slight. “Which leaves me wandering around like a ghost because apparently I’m the only one who doesn’t have someone to decompress with.”

“You could join the recruits,” Noah suggested. “They’re still celebrating in the common area.”

“Could.” Lila studied him for a moment. “But I wanted to talk to you. Just us. No missions, no contracts, no cameras. Just… talking.”

Something in her tone made Noah’s chest tighten slightly. “Okay. What do you want to talk about?”

“Remember that time at the academy?” Lila’s voice went softer, more intimate. “When you took me into your domain? Just the two of us, alone, where nobody could interrupt or judge or complicate things?”

Heat rose in Noah’s face immediately. “Lila—”

“You’re blushing,” she observed, her smile widening. “That’s adorable. But yeah, I remember it too. Those were good times, Noah. Really good times. You were attracted to me then. I know you were. I could feel it every time we were close.”

“I was also attracted to Sophie,” Noah said carefully. “It was complicated.”

“It was,” Lila agreed. “And that one time we had together made it even more complicated. Because suddenly it wasn’t just theoretical feelings—it was real. We’d crossed a line, and then neither of us knew what to do with that information.”

She moved closer, and Noah found himself hyperaware of the space between them shrinking.

“But here’s the thing,” Lila continued. “I know you and Sophie have something strong. I’m not stupid. I can see the way you look at her, the way she looks at you. It’s real, it’s solid, it’s the kind of foundation people build lives on.”

“Then why—”

“Because I also know the elf likes you,” Lila interrupted. “Seraleth. She’s not subtle, even if she thinks she is. The way she positions herself near you, asks for help with things she doesn’t need help with, lights up when you pay attention to her. She’s interested.”

Noah opened his mouth to argue, then closed it. He couldn’t honestly deny what Lila was saying.

“And here I am,” Lila said, her voice taking on that slightly manic edge he recognized from their academy days. “The girl who had her chance and was too lethargic to take it seriously. Too caught up in my own chaos to realize what I had until you’d already chosen Sophie. If I’d been smarter, faster, more direct—I’d be in the position she’s in now. But I wasn’t, so I’m not.”

She laughed, the sound carrying bitterness and self-awareness in equal measure.

“I’m the crazy one, right? The unstable blonde with time powers and parent issues and a tendency to go rogue when emotions run high. I know what people say about me. Hell, I know what you probably think about me half the time.”

“Lila—”

“Let me finish.” Her pale blue eyes held his, intensity burning underneath the casual conversation. “I’m wondering… is there still a place in your heart for me? Even with Sophie, even with Seraleth orbiting around you, even with everything being so complicated it makes my head hurt—is there still room for me somewhere in there?”

The question hung between them like a physical thing.

Noah took a breath. “Yes.”

Lila’s expression shifted—hope, surprise, something vulnerable that she rarely let show.

“There is,” Noah continued. “Sophie and I talked about this. On Raiju Prime, after everything with evacuating the elves. We discussed the possibility of an open relationship. Where I could have more than one partner as long as there was respect and honesty and genuine care for everyone involved.”

“An open relationship,” Lila repeated slowly.

“Not like… casual or meaningless,” Noah clarified, trying to find the right words. “Real partnerships. Multiple people who matter, who are valued, who know about each other and are okay with it. Sophie suggested it because she knows I care about you. She knows there’s history, and feelings, and that just because we chose each other first doesn’t erase everything else.”

He ran a hand through his hair, aware he was rambling but unable to stop.

“I’ll always have a place in my heart for you, Lila. Because I care about you. Because what we had wasn’t nothing, and what we could have isn’t impossible. And to be completely honest—maybe Sophie doesn’t fully realize it herself, but I think she cares about you too. Not romantically, necessarily, but… she wants you to be happy. She wants you to be okay.”

“But?” Lila prompted.

“But right now, it’s chaotic,” Noah said. “The Eighth is still out there planning whatever horror comes next. The Purge is building portal networks. Harbingers are cooperating with human forces somehow. Lucas is missing, trapped in a dimension we can’t access. In six days we’re assaulting a terrorist facility where your parents work and Arthur might be present.”

He met her eyes directly.

“I can’t ask you to solve complicated relationship homework while all that’s happening. Hell, I can barely solve them myself. And the last thing I want is for you to think you’re an afterthought or a convenience or something I’m pursuing because it’s available.”

Lila was quiet for a long moment. Then she smiled—genuine, warm, with only a hint of that dangerous edge.

“Those things are going to be tackled eventually,” she said. “Arthur’s going to be dealt with. The Purge will be stopped. Lucas will be rescued. Harbingers will be fought. All of it gets resolved eventually because we’re not the type to give up.”

She moved closer, closing the distance until she stood maybe six inches away.

“So how about now?” Lila asked softly. “What do we do right now? You just told me Sophie doesn’t mind. You just said there’s still room in your heart. So I’m guessing this wouldn’t be completely insane to do.”

She rose up on her tiptoes, her hands coming to rest on his chest for balance, her face tilting up toward his.

And that’s when he heard the giggling.

Two voices, feminine and approaching fast from around the corner. Sophie and Seraleth, talking excitedly about something, their footsteps getting closer.

“—wait until he sees this,” Sophie was saying. “Sera, you look amazing—”

They rounded the corner and stopped dead.

Sophie’s eyes went from Noah to Lila to the six inches of space between them to Lila’s hands on his chest to her position on her tiptoes. The trajectory was unmistakable.

Seraleth’s expression showed confusion, then understanding, then something complicated that her alien features couldn’t quite articulate.

Lila looked over her shoulder at them, her smile widening into something playful and knowing. She stepped back from Noah casually, like she’d just been having a normal conversation instead of nearly kissing him.

“Saved by the cavalry,” Lila said, her tone light. “Guess the universe has timing opinions.”

She turned to face Sophie and Seraleth fully, her posture relaxed despite the charged moment.

“We were just talking,” Lila continued, though her smile suggested otherwise. “Catching up on old times. Academy memories. You know how it is.”

Sophie’s expression was carefully neutral, but her eyes tracked every micro-movement.

“Right,” Sophie said. “Old times.”

“Anyway,” Lila said, already moving toward the hallway exit, “I should let you show Noah whatever’s got you two so excited. We can finish our conversation later, Eclipse.”

The way she said his name carried promise. It was quite certain that this moment was postponed, not canceled.

She walked past Sophie and Seraleth with that confident stride, offering them a small wave as she disappeared around the corner.

Noah stood there, very aware that he was now alone with Sophie and Seraleth, both of whom were staring at him with very different expressions.

Sophie studied him for another moment, then her expression softened slightly. “That looked… complicated.”

“It was,” Noah admitted.

“I figured.” She didn’t push, didn’t demand explanations. Just accepted the moment for what it was.

Seraleth tilted her head. “Was Lila attempting courtship behavior? I am still learning human romantic customs, but the proximity and body language suggested—”

“Sera,” Sophie interrupted gently. “Let’s maybe save that analysis for later.”

“Of course,” Seraleth agreed, though she still looked curious.

Sophie moved closer, took his hand briefly—a gesture of connection, reassurance, claiming without being obvious about it. “Get some sleep, Noah. You look exhausted.”

“I am.”

She squeezed his hand once, then released it. “Come on, Sera. Let’s show him the makeup some other time.”

“But I wished to see his reaction—” Seraleth started.

“Tomorrow,” Sophie said firmly, already guiding the elf back down the hallway.

Noah watched them go, then finally headed toward his own quarters.

The hallway was empty now. Quiet. The earlier tension dissipated but not forgotten.

He’d just navigated a minefield without stepping on anything explosive.

Barely.

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