Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner-Chapter 366: Synchronized strike

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Chapter 366: Synchronized strike

Hours ago...

Moving through hostile environment were a group of young soldiers.

Sophie’s hand cut through the air in a sharp halt signal, her entire squad dropping into combat positions behind crystalline rock formations. A purple rift that had torn open above them cracklimg with energy that was similar to Noah’s domain manifestations, unmistakable even from this distance.

"Stay low," she whispered into her comm, exhaustion making her voice hoarse after three days of constant fighting. They all looked like hell—gear torn, faces streaked with dirt and dried blood, movements slower than they should be.

Storm’s massive form emerged from the portal like some prehistoric nightmare given wings. The wyvern’s scales caught the alien sunlight as he dove toward the horizon, his familiar roar echoing across the barren landscape of Sirius Beta.

"Storm!" Lyra breathed, lowering her sniper rifle. "Noah got out. He actually got out."

Diana’s expression—usually controlled to the point of being called an ice queen—cracked with visible relief. "Thank God. When Pierce held back support and Noah got captured fighting that Harbinger alone..."

"Don’t," Sophie said sharply, her jaw clenching. The memory of that clusterfuck was still too raw. Noah disappearing after fighting something impossible while Pierce’s "tactical assessment" kept them from providing backup. "We’re not talking about that right now."

"Sophie," Lyra called out from her position, "we’ve got movement. Multiple contacts, two klicks northeast."

Through her binoculars, Sophie could make out figures moving through the crystalline formations—human figures, but moving with the tactical movements of trained soldiers rather than panicked civilians.

"Vanguard movement patterns," she said, recognizing the formation. "Could be Lucas."

Storm had brought Lucas and his team here but had since then been abusing his new found skills while they made the effort of keeping up with the Wyvern on foot as only he knew where the rest were.

Twenty minutes later, the two groups converged in a natural depression surrounded by towering crystal spires. Lucas looked like he’d been through hell—his gear was scorched, his tactical vest torn, and exhaustion lined his face. But he was alive, and he’d managed to keep eight vanguard recruits from his original team breathing.

Kelvin was with him, and the sight of their friend made Sophie’s chest tighten with a mixture of relief and concern. The young man’s robotic arms caught the light as he worked on a portable device, the advanced prosthetics being a reminder of what this war had cost them all.

"Well, well," Kelvin said, his grin somehow managing to be both exhausted and mischievous. "Look what the cosmic cat dragged in. Sophie’s rebel alliance, complete with our momentum-killing ice queen and our favorite newbie."

Diana’s expression didn’t change, but Sophie caught the slight softening around her eyes. "Kelvin. Still making jokes while the world burns, I see."

"Someone has to maintain morale," he replied, though his tone grew more serious. His robotic fingers moved with precision across his device’s interface. "Besides, after what I’ve discovered about this system, a little dark humor is the only thing keeping me sane."

Sophie looked at her friend’s mechanical hands, guilt twisting in her stomach. They’d all lost things in this war, but Kelvin had paid a particularly visible price. "Kelvin, I’m sorry we—"

"Don’t," he said firmly, but not unkindly. "We’re all here, we’re all breathing, and we’ve got bigger problems than my new party tricks." He flexed his robotic fingers. "Besides, these things are actually pretty useful for interfacing with tech."

Lucas approached, his remaining team spreading out to establish a perimeter. "Sophie, thank God. We’ve been trying to reach command for hours, but all we’re getting is static."

"Same here," Sophie said grimly. "Three days of radio silence. No contact with the Ark, no word from Vanguard base. We’re completely cut off."

He activated his portable holo-display, his robotic fingers dancing across the interface as tactical data filled the air between them. "Friends, we’ve been fighting a war against our own people. And they don’t even know it."

The hologram showed a three-dimensional map of the Sirius system, with pulsing red dots scattered across all three planets. Each dot was labeled with coordinates and energy signatures.

"Signal amplification nodes," Kelvin explained, his voice losing all trace of humor. "Forty-three of them total, broadcasting on frequencies that bypass normal communications but interface directly with human neural patterns. There’s a technopath at the center of it all, probably S-rank or higher, using these nodes to control every human in the system."

Diana studied the display with her characteristic intensity. "Two hundred thousand people."

"Give or take," Kelvin nodded. "Every civilian, every soldier, every commander who’s been here longer than forty-eight hours. They’re all puppets dancing to someone else’s tune."

Lucas sank down onto a crystal formation, the weight of the revelation hitting him. "The refugees who cornered us. The coordinated attacks. The perfectly timed ambushes..."

"All orchestrated," Sophie finished. "And Pierce..." She paused, her expression hardening. "Pierce isn’t compromised. He’s just incompetent. Which might actually be worse right now."

Lyra had been quiet, but now she spoke up. "The question is, what do we do about it? Forty-three nodes across three planets, and we’ve got maybe twenty vanguard recruits between us."

"We coordinate," Kelvin said, but his expression was troubled. "The nodes have to be taken down simultaneously, or the feedback will kill the technopath and everyone they’re controlling. It’s like defusing a bomb while it’s connected to a dead man’s switch."

"How do you know all this?" Diana asked, her eyes fixed on Kelvin with laser focus.

Kelvin opened his mouth to respond, then paused, a confused look crossing his face. "I... actually, I’m not sure. I remember analyzing the signal patterns, but some of this information feels like it came from..." He trailed off, pressing his palm against his forehead.

That’s when the purple light erupted around him.

It wasn’t gradual—one moment Kelvin was standing there looking puzzled, the next he was consumed by swirling void energy that they all recognized as Noah’s domain power. The light was intense, forcing everyone to shield their eyes, and when it faded...

Noah stood in Kelvin’s place.

He looked tired, like all of them, but there was something else—a sharpness to his movements, a depth to his eyes that spoke of experiences none of them could imagine.

"Noah!" Sophie breathed, and this time her voice carried pure relief. She wanted to run to him, but something in his posture made her hesitate.

"Hey," he said, his voice carrying the same warmth it always had. "I’m sorry about this. I know it’s confusing, but I don’t have much time. Kelvin is safe—he’s where I was, and he’ll be back in a few minutes."

Lucas was on his feet, exhaustion forgotten in the face of seeing his friend alive. "Jesus, Noah. We heard Pierce held back support and you got captured. I thought—"

"I know," Noah said quietly. "And we’ll talk about all of that later. But right now, we have a job to do."

Diana stepped forward, her usual composure cracking slightly. "Where have you been? We’ve been fighting for our lives while you were gone."

"I’ve been in the Harbinger command facility on Sirius Prime," Noah replied, and the casual way he said it made everyone freeze. "I found the technopath. His name is Bruce Hilton, and he’s not working with the Harbingers willingly."

"He’s being tortured," Noah continued, his voice carrying an edge of controlled fury. "Held in a psychic amplification chamber that’s slowly killing him while forcing him to control everyone in the system. The Harbingers aren’t just using mind control—they’re using it to turn us against each other while they harvest resources and study our military capabilities."

Sophie felt pieces clicking into place. "That’s why they didn’t just wipe us out. They wanted to watch us fight."

"Exactly. But I while there I figured out the node’s location and shut down protocol amongst other things. We have one chance to do this right." Noah’s eyes swept across the group, meeting each of their gazes. "I need you to trust me. All of you."

"Always," Sophie said without hesitation.

"The nodes have to be destroyed within a ninety-second window," Noah explained. "Too early, and the remaining ones will compensate. Too late, and the feedback will kill Bruce and everyone he’s connected to. I’ve already sent Storm to help other survivors who are in immediate danger, but we need teams at every location."

He gestured to the holographic display, and tactical assignments began appearing next to each node location.

"Sophie, you take Diana and Lyra with three of Lucas’s people. You’re hitting the northern continent installations. Lucas, you take the rest of your team and coordinate the southern hemisphere strikes. I’ll handle the primary nodes on Sirius Prime."

"What about the rest of our people?" Lucas asked. "Storm’s out there, but where are the others?"

"They’re alive," Noah said, and Sophie caught something in his tone that suggested he knew more than he was saying. "But they’re scattered, and some of them are in situations that require immediate attention. That’s why I can’t stay long."

Diana had been studying the tactical display with her usual intensity. "The timing window is impossibly tight. Even with perfect coordination, we’re looking at a margin of error measured in seconds."

"That’s why we’re not relying on conventional communications," Noah said. "I’ll maintain Domain Link with key personnel on each team. When I give the signal, you’ll know instantly."

Purple light began gathering around Noah again, but this time it was controlled, purposeful. "I have to go back. Bruce is alone, and there’s still one Harbinger in the facility that I suspect is still active. But I need you to know—all of you—that we’re getting out of this. All of us."

"Noah," Sophie called out as the void energy intensified. "Be careful in there."

His smile was tired but genuine. "Always am."

Before anyone could respond, the purple light flared, and Noah vanished, leaving only the lingering scent of ozone and the familiar echo of his domain power.

---

Kelvin materialized in the exact spot Noah had vanished from, stumbling slightly as he adjusted to his new surroundings. The industrial facility around him was a monument to destruction—twisted metal and shattered concrete stretched in every direction, punctuated by perfectly circular holes where matter had simply ceased to exist.

"Jesus Christ," he whispered, running his technopathic senses across the devastation. His robotic arms automatically began cataloging the energy readings, their sensors more sensitive than biological limbs would have been. "Noah, what the hell did you do?"

The energy readings were off the charts. Not explosive damage—that would have left different patterns. This was erasure, pure and simple. Matter deleted from existence withouts compromise.

He could see the bodies of Harbinger scattered throughout the facility, each one missing critical components. Not cut or burned away, but absent, as if they had never existed in the first place. Arms, legs, torsos—all removed with the clean edges that only void manipulation could achieve.

’My friend did this,’ Kelvin thought, a mixture of awe and concern warring in his chest. Between one horns and two horns, they all fell. ’He’s gotten so much stronger.’

He was making his way toward the massive energy signature he could sense at the facility’s center when purple light flared around him again. The sensation of dimensional displacement was becoming familiar, but no less disorienting.

When the light faded, he was back with the others, who were already moving with the urgency of people who had places to be and lives to save.

"Welcome back," Sophie said, shouldering her pack. "Hope you enjoyed the sightseeing tour."

"Noah leveled an entire Harbinger facility," Kelvin said, still processing what he’d seen. His robotic fingers automatically adjusted their grip on his equipment. "I mean completely leveled. There’s nothing left but rubble and very precisely erased Harbinger corpses."

Diana paused in her equipment check. "How many?"

"Ten, maybe eleven. Hard to tell when some of them are missing significant portions of their anatomy."

Lucas was coordinating with his remaining team members, but he looked up at Kelvin’s words. "And he’s still in there?"

"Protecting the technopath," Kelvin nodded. "Bruce Hilton. I got a good look at the psychic amplification chamber on my way out. It’s..." He shuddered. "It’s not something I’d wish on anyone."

Sophie slung her ravager gun across her back and activated her tactical display. "Then we make sure Noah doesn’t have to stay there any longer than necessary. Everyone knows their assignments?"

Nods all around.

"Synchronized strike in T-minus four hours," Diana said, "We hit fast, we hit hard, and we all go home."

As the group split up to begin their individual missions, Kelvin couldn’t shake the image of what he’d seen in that facility. Noah had always been powerful, but this was different. This was the kind of destructive capability that could reshape battlefields.

And somewhere in the back of his mind, he wondered what other changes his friend had undergone during his time in that Harbinger stronghold.

--- 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶

Noah stood beside Bruce Hilton’s restraint chair, watching the screens that showed thousands of human perspectives simultaneously. The technopath’s body was wracked with tremors, his face pale and drawn from the constant psychic strain.

"Just a little longer," Noah said quietly, his hand resting on the armrest of the chair. "My team is in position. We’re going to get you out of here."

Bruce’s eyes fluttered open, focusing on Noah with effort. "The... the nodes... if the timing is off..."

"It won’t be," Noah said with conviction. "I’ve got the best soldiers in the Vanguard coordinating this operation. They’ve never let me down before."

He moved to the observation deck that overlooked the facility’s central command area. From here, he could see where he and the widow fought. He hadn’t gotten any notification for such a significant Victory.

That...that told him everything he needed to know. The widow survived.

Noah pulled up his evolved status display, studying the numbers that represented his growth through this hellish mission:

[DISPLAYING UPDATED STATUS]

[Name: Noah Eclipse]

[Level: 58]

[Class: Void Reaper]

[Health Points: 3,200/3,200]

[Void Energy: 4,800/4,800]

[Experience: 0/32,000]

The numbers told a story of exponential growth. He was stronger, faster, more resilient than he’d ever been. But more importantly, his abilities had evolved in ways that made him genuinely dangerous to beings that had previously been beyond human capability to challenge.

His Domain abilities had reached a level where he could affect reality on a tactical scale. The Reciprocal Swap that had allowed him to trade places with Kelvin was just the beginning. He could feel other capabilities waiting to be unlocked, powers that would make him an even more effective force on the battlefield.

And Storm... Noah could sense his companion through their bond, engaged in brutal combat with something that radiated power like a small sun. The wyvern had grown as well, developing new abilities that mirrored Noah’s own evolution.

’We’re all getting stronger,’ he thought, watching the screens that showed his teammates moving into position across three worlds. ’But we’re also getting further from what we used to be.’

The thought should have been troubling, but instead it filled him with grim satisfaction. The universe was a dangerous place, filled with beings that viewed humanity as nothing more than resources to be harvested or obstacles to be eliminated.

If becoming something more than human was the price of protecting the people he cared about, then it was a price he was willing to pay.

His tactical display chimed softly, indicating that all teams were in position. In ninety seconds, they would either save two hundred thousand lives or condemn them all to death.

Noah Eclipse stood in the heart of an enemy facility, surrounded by the evidence of his own growing power, and prepared to find out which future awaited them all.

’We’re all getting out of this,’ he thought, his void energy beginning to build in preparation for the final phase of their mission. ’Every single one of us.’

The screens showing thousands of controlled human perspectives flickered, as if sensing that change was coming.

They were all going to be free soon. Or...

Or they would all be dead.

Noah preferred the first option, and he had the power to make it happen.