Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 518
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Chapter 518: Widow the fourth horn 2
Noah’s fists stayed raised, knuckles split and bleeding through gaps where his gauntlets used to be. His chest heaved with each breath, ribs screaming their protest.
Around him, the battlefield stretched in every direction—Eclipse forces locked in combat with Purge operatives, the distant roar of Nyx’s fire, the crack of Storm’s lightning. Their fight had carried them far from the facility’s walls, out into open permafrost where nothing stood except two figures circling each other.
The Widow stood twenty feet away, examining her regenerated hand like she was checking her nails after a manicure. Blood—his blood—stained her knuckles, already drying in the arctic air.
Noah’s eyes never left her. His void energy worked overtime knitting torn muscle back together, sealing cuts, forcing his broken ribs to set properly. Ivy’s regeneration buff layered on top of his natural healing, creating a feedback loop that kept him functional despite the beating he’d taken. Without it, he’d be dead three times over.
But something was bothering him.
Actually, the absence of something.
He’d been watching for them since the fight started—those white lines that appeared in his vision whenever death came calling. Faint streaks in the air that showed him exactly where a killing blow would come from, exactly when he needed to move or die. They’d saved his life more times than he could count. Against Arthur’s clone, the lines had been everywhere, a spider web of potential death surrounding him from every angle. Against Kruel, same thing. Even fighting regular two-horns, he’d catch glimpses of them—thin threads of warning that said dodge here or you’re done.
But looking at the Widow right now? Nothing. Just empty air between them.
The same as their first fight months ago.
‘That makes no sense. She’s been destroying me for fifteen minutes straight. Faster than me, stronger than me, and I’m barely keeping up. So where are they?’
The lines only appeared when death was actually possible. When the threat was real and immediate.
‘She’s not trying to kill me.’
The realization settled over him like ice water. Their first encounter—she’d dominated him completely, broke his bones, shattered his armor, left him bleeding in the dirt. But she’d pulled back every single time she could have finished him. All that talk about maternal instincts and precious children wasn’t just psychotic rambling. It was genuine intent.
‘Someone wants me alive.’
Noah wiped blood from his mouth with the back of his hand, pieces falling into place. Kruel had wanted him captured during their first fight. The Widow had followed those orders despite clearly being frustrated. And now? Same pattern. Same restraint.
The tactical implications started cascading through his mind. She was operating under restrictions he wasn’t. Every move she made had to account for his survival. Every strike had to be measured, controlled, pulled back at the last instant.
Noah moved, and the Widow matched him, circling. His boots crunched through ice and frozen earth.
“You’re intelligent,” he said, his voice rougher than intended, throat still raw. “More than most Harbingers I’ve fought.”
The Widow’s head tilted, and her smile was warm enough to make his skin crawl. “Oh, you’ve noticed? How thoughtful.” She clasped her hands together like a pleased parent. “Most of your kind can’t see past the claws and teeth. But you—you look deeper, don’t you, precious?”
She moved then—explosive speed that covered twenty feet before Noah could blink. Her fist came at his head. He displaced himself sideways, void energy flaring. Her strike created a shockwave that sent ice crystals flying.
“I’ve been thinking about our last conversation,” Noah said, already repositioning. “About evolution. Survival of the fittest. The strong inheriting the future.”
“Such a good student.” The Widow’s tail lashed out, forcing Noah to jump. “Remembering mother’s lessons.”
He came down and immediately launched into a forward roll as her follow-up strike pulverized the ground where he’d been. “But I’m still alive. Despite fighting something that should have killed me ten times over.”
“Fifteen.” Her correction was cheerful as she pursued him across the ice. “Fifteen times I could have ended you, darling. But what would that teach?”
Noah activated Storm Call. The sky darkened instantly, clouds materializing. Lightning began gathering overhead.
The Widow looked up, and her laugh was delighted. “Oh! Using your toys! Yes, show mother where you have improved!”
The first bolt descended. She moved, but Noah had predicted it—the lightning struck where she’d dodge to. Electricity cascaded across her natural armor. She didn’t scream. She hummed, like she’d felt a pleasant tingle.
“Better,” she said, brushing sparks from her shoulder. “Your timing has improved. The void energy more refined.” She took a step toward him, her movements liquid. “You’re ripening so nicely.”
Noah brought Excaliburn around in a horizontal slash. She leaned back, the void blade passing inches from her throat, and her tail came up to sweep his legs.
He jumped, gravity defiance activating. Her tail passed beneath his boots. He came down already moving, creating distance.
“Harbingers showed up a century ago,” Noah said between breaths. “Threatened humanity with extinction. Millions died. And for what?”
“For this.” The Widow gestured at him, at the battlefield, at everything. “For pressure. For growth. For watching clay become sculpture.” She closed the distance in two bounds. “Your species was stagnant, precious and comfortable. Soft.”
Her fist came at his chest. Noah blinked, appeared six feet left. She was already adjusting, her other hand reaching for him.
“So you could end up taking orders from humans?” Noah finished.
The Widow caught his arm, her grip like iron. She pulled him close, and her breath smelled like rotting flowers. “Orders? Oh darling, you really don’t understand what you’re looking at, do you?”
She drove her knee into his ribs. Something cracked. Noah activated Entropy Touch through the arm she held, decay spreading into her flesh. She released him immediately, examining the withering tissue with clinical interest.
“Fascinating how it spreads now. Faster than before.” She bit into her own forearm, severing the decayed portion. New flesh began growing before the old piece hit the ground. “Each time we meet, you’re stronger. More refined. That’s not accident, precious. That’s cultivation.”
Noah hit the ice hard, rolled, came up with Excaliburn ready. His ribs were already healing, but slower than he’d like.
‘She’s not denying working with humans. Not explaining it either. Just deflecting.’
“You talk about evolution,” Noah pressed, moving laterally, “but you’re answering to someone. Following someone else’s plan.”
“Plans.” The Widow’s laugh was like wind through a graveyard. “You think in such rigid lines. This does this, that does that, everyone has their assigned role.” She moved, and Noah barely got his blade up in time to redirect her strike. “But growth doesn’t work that way, darling. It’s messy. Organic. Things converge and diverge and sometimes…” Her smile widened. “Sometimes the most beautiful results come from arrangements your simple minds call contradictions.”
She pressed her attack, each strike forcing Noah backward. He blinked, created distance. She closed it. He used Phase Step, becoming intangible for two seconds. She waited, predatory patience in her stillness, then struck the moment he rematerialized.
Her tail caught him across the chest, sent him tumbling. He rolled with it, came up already moving.
“So what’s the arrangement?” Noah asked. “You work for Arthur? For Kruel? Some combination?”
“Work for?” The Widow’s expression shifted to something that might have been genuine amusement. “Oh precious, you keep using that phrase. Like I’m some subordinate taking orders from superiors.” She closed the distance again, and this time Noah stood his ground.
They exchanged blows—her fists against his blade, her tail against his chi enhanced strikes. Neither gained clear advantage. They broke apart, both breathing harder.
“Let me share something with you, darling.” The Widow’s voice took on a quality like a teacher explaining a complex concept. “When your kind builds things, you think in hierarchies. Leaders and followers. Masters and servants. But that’s because you’re weak. You need structure because without it, you collapse.”
She gestured at herself, at her four horns, at the casual power radiating from her frame. “We don’t. We are the structure. We’re the pressure that shapes everything else. And when we find others—human or otherwise—who understand pressure’s value?” Her smile was radiant and terrible. “Well. That’s when things get interesting.”
Noah activated Void Barrage. Purple projectiles erupted from his hand, dozens of them, converging on her position. She moved through them like dancing through rain—one clipped her shoulder, taking a chunk off her. She didn’t even slow down.
“You’re still not answering the question,” Noah said.
“Because you’re asking the wrong question, precious.” She was on him again, forcing him into pure defensive mode. “You want neat boxes. ‘She works for him’ or ‘he commands her’ or ‘they’re allied because of this reason.’ But reality doesn’t fit in boxes. Not at our level.”
Her fist caught his shoulder. He felt a bone pop. Another hit. More damage. He blinked away, but she was already there, cutting off his escape vector.
“What matters,” she continued, her tone almost gentle, “is that everyone gets what they need. Kruel understands pressure. Arthur understands transformation. And I?” Her eyes gleamed. “I get to watch the most stubborn species in six star systems finally become something worthy.”
She drove her palm into his chest. Noah flew backward, hit the ground hard, rolled. Came up spitting blood.
‘This isn’t working. She’s not going to slip up and give me concrete information. She’s too far gone into whatever insane framework she’s operating under.’
He needed to change tactics. Stop trying to get answers and start making her want to follow him.
Noah started moving faster. Void Striders at full capacity. Mach 2. The world blurred around him as he accelerated across the frozen battlefield.
The Widow matched his speed, staying close but not quite catching him.
‘Good. She’s fast in a straight line. But…’
Noah changed direction sharply. The Widow overshot by three feet, had to adjust. Lost half a second. He immediately blinked perpendicular to his momentum, created thirty feet of separation.
She closed it, but it took effort. Visible effort.
“Running already?” The Widow called out. “But we were having such a nice chat!”
Noah didn’t answer. He led her through terrain—craters, roots, ice patches. Each obstacle forced her to adjust, to slow fractionally, to work harder to maintain pursuit.
And with each exchange, he catalogued her patterns. The slight delay when changing direction. The way she committed fully to each charge. The predictable angles of attack.
“This is what your species does best,” the Widow said, closing to within ten feet. “Flee. Scatter. Hope something saves you.”
“Says the Harbinger who still hasn’t caught me.” Noah blinked again, created more distance.
Her expression shifted. Not quite anger, but the maternal warmth cooled slightly. “Caught you once already today, darling. Had you pinned. Hand around your throat.” She pushed harder, and Noah felt the pressure increase. “Could do it again whenever I choose.”
“Then choose.” Noah led her through a section of churned ice, used Phase Step to pass through intangibly. She hit it at full speed, her feet sank slightly, cost her a full second. “Or is all this talk about cultivation just an excuse for why you keep failing?”
The Widow’s smile finally faltered. Just for a moment, but it was there. “Careful, precious.”
“Careful of what? You killing me?” Noah’s laugh was harsh. “We both know you won’t. Which means every threat is empty. Every time you talk about teaching moments and pressure and evolution, it’s just noise covering for the fact that you can’t finish what you started.”
She moved faster now. Genuinely trying. Her hand caught his ankle mid-blink. She swung him like a club into the frozen ground.
[-60 HP]
Pain exploded through Noah’s body. Something definitely broke around his collar. And his vision blurred. Before he could recover, she was on top of him, knee on his chest, hand around his throat.
“I’ve been patient,” she hissed, and for the first time genuine anger colored her voice. “Kind. I’ve nurtured you carefully, given you time to grow, and this is how you repay mother’s generosity?”
Noah’s hands went to her wrist. “You’re fast, but you can’t adjust. You commit too hard. It’s why I keep escaping.”
“You haven’t escaped, darling. I’ve been letting you run.”
“Sure. That’s what someone who can’t catch me would say.” Noah’s void energy began building, purple light flickering around his hands. “Face it—you’ve been trying to capture or break me, I don’t know, for months. Either your methodology is bullshit or you’re just not as good as you think.”
The pressure on his throat increased dangerously. “Choose your next words very carefully.”
“I choose these: you’re failing. And no amount of psychotic rambling about cultivation is going to change that.”
For a moment, they stayed frozen. Then Noah played his final card.
“But here’s the thing—I’m bored. You chase, I dodge, we repeat. So how about we settle this properly?”
Her grip loosened slightly. “Settle what?”
“You and me. Somewhere with no terrain to exploit. No distractions. Just pure predator versus prey.” Noah’s void energy intensified. “If you can best me there, really best me, I’ll stop fighting. But if you can’t…”
His smile showed teeth.
“Then maybe you’re not the apex predator you claim to be. Maybe you’re just another Harbinger who couldn’t finish the job.”
The Widow’s eyes searched his face. Pride warred with caution. Need fought against common sense.
“Where?” she demanded.
“Somewhere nobody can interfere. Just you and me.” Noah’s said, “Somewhere I can show you what happens when you back a human into a corner.”
He could see her decision forming. The need to prove herself. The requirement to demonstrate superiority. The maternal instinct twisted into something possessive and cruel.
“Anywhere, child.” Her voice carried absolute certainty. “I will follow you anywhere and prove which species deserves to inherit the future.”
The moment the words left her mouth, Noah’s void energy exploded outward.
“Domain travel,”
[DOMAIN TRAVEL ACTIVATED]
[TARGET: HARBINGER WIDOW]
[CONSENT: CONFIRMED]
[INITIATING TRANSFER]
Reality shattered. Purple-black energy erupted from Noah’s body, consuming everything within a hundred-foot radius. The permafrost dissolved. The battlefield vanished. Sound ceased.
The Widow’s eyes went wide. She tried to pull back, but the void had already claimed her. Her body dissolved into purple light, molecules scattering and reforming.
Noah went with her, his physical form unraveling as they fell through reality itself. Every cell coming apart and reassembling in a different space entirely.
The last thing the battlefield saw was a pillar of void-black light shooting upward, and then nothing. Just empty frozen ground where two figures had been.
Silence settled over the crater.
Then Lila’s voice crackled through comms: “Noah? What the fuck just happened? Where did you go?”
No answer came.
Because Noah Eclipse and the Harbinger Widow were somewhere else entirely.
Somewhere that existed outside normal space and time.
Somewhere Noah controlled absolutely.