Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 408
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- Chapter 408 - Chapter 408: Test tube baby
Chapter 408: Test tube baby
The first thing Noah noticed about Lilivil Prime as their transport descended through the atmosphere was how surprisingly ordinary it looked from above. He’d been expecting some kind of ethereal alien paradise based on Kelvin’s increasingly dramatic speculation during their journey, but the planet spread out below them looked almost… familiar.
Rolling green hills stretched toward distant mountain ranges, while vast forests of what looked remarkably like Earth trees covered much of the visible landscape. Rivers carved silver paths through valleys that could have been lifted from any number of human-settled worlds. The only immediate difference was the subtle variation in the light—something about the planet’s sun cast everything in a softer, more golden hue than he was used to.
“Well that’s disappointingly normal,” Kelvin muttered from his position at the viewport. “I was expecting floating crystal cities or at least some bioluminescent forests. This looks like… well, like a really nice camping destination.”
Sophie peered over his shoulder. “What did you expect? Neon signs advertising elf tourism?”
“Yes, actually,” Kelvin replied without shame. “Maybe some tasteful architecture that emphasized the whole ‘otherworldly beauty’ aesthetic. This just looks like someone took Earth and applied a really good photo filter.”
Their transport’s scanner array was painting a more detailed picture as they descended. Lucas, monitoring the navigation displays, frowned as he studied the readouts. “That’s strange. The scanners are picking up very few artificial structures. For a civilization of two million individuals, there should be cities, infrastructure, transportation networks…”
“Maybe they build underground?” Lyra suggested, consulting her data pad. “Or they use building materials that don’t show up clearly on our sensors.”
Noah was only half-listening to the conversation. His attention was focused on something else entirely.
[MASSIVE ENERGY SOURCE DETECTED]
[CLASSIFICATION: UNKNOWN]
[POWER LEVEL: EXTREME]
[DISTANCE: 47.3 KILOMETERS NORTHEAST]
‘That’s… bigger than anything I’ve ever seen,’ Noah thought, studying the system readout with growing concern. The energy signature was enormous, easily dwarfing anything he’d encountered during their missions. It felt stable, contained, but the sheer magnitude was unsettling.
[SECONDARY ENERGY SIGNATURES DETECTED]
[COUNT: MULTIPLE]
[CLASSIFICATION: CRYSTALLINE STRUCTURES]
[RECOMMENDATION: INVESTIGATION ADVISED]
“There,” Noah said aloud, pointing toward a cluster of structures barely visible through the forest canopy to the northeast. “We need to check that area.”
Lucas adjusted their course without question. He’d learned to trust Noah’s instincts about energy signatures, especially when they were investigating potential threats.
As they approached the coordinates Noah had indicated, the structures became clearer. What had appeared to be a small compound from a distance revealed itself to be a sizeable facility built into a natural clearing in the forest. The buildings were constructed from some kind of dark material that seemed to absorb light rather than reflect it, giving the entire complex an ominous appearance that contrasted sharply with the natural beauty surrounding it.
“Definitely not elf architecture,” Diana observed as they circled the facility. “Too angular, too… aggressive.”
The compound looked recently abandoned. Landing pads showed scorch marks from hasty departures, and several of the building’s doors stood open as if someone had left in a hurry. Equipment containers were scattered around the perimeter, some overturned, others left half-open with their contents spilling onto the ground.
“Looks like someone cleared out fast,” Uncle Dom commented, pressing his face against the viewport. “Very fast indeed. The question is whether they left because they finished their work or because they were interrupted.”
They set down on one of the intact landing pads, and the team disembarked with weapons ready. The air was breathable, as expected, but carried strange scents that Noah couldn’t quite identify—something metallic mixed with an organic smell that reminded him unpleasantly of medical facilities.
Kelvin’s cybernetic arms were already extending various scanning devices, his eyes taking on that green tint that indicated his technopathic abilities were active. “I’m picking up power signatures from several of the buildings. Whatever this place is, it’s still partially operational.”
“What kind of power signatures?” Sophie asked, moving to cover the perimeter while the others examined the immediate area.
“That’s the weird part,” Kelvin replied, manipulating his scanner displays. “I’m detecting energy sources that look like cores, but they’re not quite beast cores. The crystalline structure is different, more complex. And the power output is…” He paused, double-checking his readings. “Actually kind of insane.”
Noah’s system was providing its own analysis of the energy sources Kelvin had detected:
[ENERGY SOURCE ANALYSIS COMPLETE]
[TYPE: HYBRID CRYSTALLINE MATRIX]
[COMPOSITION: UNKNOWN ORGANIC/INORGANIC FUSION]
[POWER OUTPUT: 347% ABOVE STANDARD BEAST CORE EFFICIENCY]
[WARNING: ENERGY PATTERN SUGGESTS ARTIFICIAL ENHANCEMENT]
‘Artificial enhancement,’ Noah thought grimly. ‘Someone’s been experimenting with core technology.’
They approached the largest of the buildings, a squat structure that dominated the center of the compound. The main entrance stood ajar, revealing a darkened interior that their flashlights barely seemed to penetrate.
“Stay together,” Lucas said quietly, lightning already beginning to crackle around his fingertips. “We don’t know what we might be walking into.”
The interior of the building was a maze of corridors and rooms that had clearly been designed for scientific research. Clean, sterile surfaces covered everything, and the walls were lined with equipment that looked both familiar and alien. Some of it resembled medical devices Noah had seen in EDF facilities, while other pieces were completely incomprehensible.
“This is definitely not elf technology,” Lyra said, examining a control panel covered in symbols that bore no resemblance to any language in their databases. “The design philosophy is completely different from what we know about their culture or don’t know at all,”
They moved deeper into the facility, finding room after room filled with research equipment in various states of abandonment. Some areas looked like they’d been hastily cleared out, with empty storage containers and disconnected machinery. Others appeared to have been left exactly as they were when the facility was evacuated.
“Here,” Kaia called from a storage room near the back of the building. She held up several small devices that Noah recognized as the subcutaneous trackers she’d described. “They pulled these out of the beasts before moving them.”
“So they knew about your father’s tracking system,” Diana observed. “Which means they specifically didn’t want to be followed.”
“But they left the trackers here instead of destroying them,” Sophie pointed out. “Why keep them at all?”
Uncle Dom, who had been poking through a pile of discarded equipment, looked up with sudden interest. “Oh, that’s easy. Trophies. When you’re running a secret operation, you keep souvenirs of your successful raids. Proof of how clever you are.”
Noah’s system pinged with another alert:
[ADDITIONAL ENERGY SIGNATURES DETECTED]
[LOCATION: SUBLEVEL ACCESS CONFIRMED]
[POWER LEVEL: SIGNIFICANTLY HIGHER THAN SURFACE READINGS]
[CAUTION: UNKNOWN OPERATIONAL STATUS]
“There’s something below us,” Noah said, scanning the room for access points. “Something big.”
They found the entrance to the sublevel hidden behind what appeared to be a standard equipment storage cabinet. When Kelvin’s technopathic abilities revealed the hidden controls, the cabinet slid aside to reveal a staircase descending into darkness.
The lower level was different from the research areas above. The walls here were covered with symbols that definitely weren’t in any human database—an infinity symbol repeated over and over again in various sizes and configurations. Some were carved into the walls themselves, others were painted in what looked like different colors of paint, though it was difficult to tell in the artificial lighting.
“Infinity symbols,” Lyra said, taking pictures with her data pad. “Mathematical concept, but also philosophical. Representing endlessness, eternal cycles, unlimited potential…”
“Or someone with a really unoriginal symbol design sense,” Kelvin muttered, but his usual humor was strained. The atmosphere in the sublevel was oppressive in a way that made everyone uncomfortable.
They explored several rooms filled with more advanced equipment, all of it bearing the same infinity symbol motif. The technology here was clearly more sophisticated than what they’d found above, and much of it was still operational.
“Power cores are still active down here,” Kelvin reported, his scanner readings becoming increasingly erratic. “But I’m getting some really weird feedback from my instruments. It’s like the energy sources are… responding to my scans somehow.”
Noah was about to investigate Kelvin’s readings more closely when Sophie’s voice called out from across the corridor.
“Hey, there’s a sealed chamber over here that I can’t figure out how to—”
Her words were cut off by the sound of something heavy unlocking, followed by a mechanical hiss as hidden seals disengaged.
“Oops,” she said weakly.
The chamber door slid open, revealing an interior that made everyone take an involuntary step backward. The room was filled with cylindrical tanks, each one containing what appeared to be a humanoid figure suspended in some kind of fluid. But these weren’t quite human, and they definitely weren’t quite alien either.
The creatures in the tanks were clearly attempts at creating something, but the results were horrifically wrong.
Some had extra limbs, others had features that seemed to blend human and alien characteristics in disturbing combinations. A few appeared to be more developed than others, showing signs of consciousness despite their suspended state.
“What the hell is this place?” Diana whispered, her voice tight with revulsion.
Before anyone could answer, Uncle Dom’s curiosity got the better of him. While the others were staring at the tanks, he’d wandered over to a control panel and begun examining the various buttons and displays with obvious fascination.
“Don’t touch anything, Uncle Dom,” Lucas called out, but it was too late.
Dom had already pressed something that looked important.
Immediately, alarms began blaring throughout the facility. Emergency lighting bathed everything in red, and the tanks began draining their fluid with mechanical efficiency. Within moments, the creatures inside were beginning to stir.
“Well,” Kelvin said with forced cheerfulness as the first of the experimental humanoids began clawing its way out of its tank, “this day just keeps getting better and better.”
The creature that emerged was roughly human-shaped but moved with an unsettling, jerky motion that suggested its nervous system wasn’t quite properly integrated. Its skin had a waxy, artificial appearance, and when it turned toward them, its eyes held an intelligence that was distinctly not human.
“Everyone stay calm,” Noah said, reaching for Excaliburn. “We don’t know what these things are capable of—”
The creature lunged at Sophie with inhuman speed, its movements too fast and too wrong to be natural. She slashed at it with the twin energy blades she had brought for the trip, the superheated plasma cutting cleanly through its torso.
For a moment, Noah thought the threat was over. Then the creature’s severed halves began to regenerate, new tissue growing to bridge the gap between upper and lower body. Within seconds, it was whole again, and its hands were beginning to glow with heat that suggested fire-based abilities.
“That’s not good,” Sophie muttered, dodging a fire-enhanced punch that left scorch marks on the wall behind her.
“Take formation!” Lucy commanded, electricity crackling around her as she stepped into a leadership stance. “Lucas, with me on the left flank. Everyone else, coordinate your attacks!!”
More tanks were opening now, and more creatures were emerging. Lucy and Lucas moved in perfect synchronization, their combined lightning assault overwhelming one of the creatures in a brilliant display of electrical fury. But when the smoke cleared, the creature was already regenerating, and now it was wreathed in its own electrical field.
“They’re learning from whatever we hit them with,” Lucy realized, narrowly avoiding a lightning bolt that the creature hurled back at her. “Everyone, rotate damage types!”
Uncle Dom stepped forward with surprising agility, his own lightning powers crackling to life. “Allow me, dear niece!” His electrical blast was different from Lucy and Lucas’s—more raw, less controlled, but equally devastating. The creature he targeted absorbed the energy and began generating its own chaotic electrical field.
“Three lightning users and now we’ve got three electric monsters,” Kelvin observed, transforming his right arm into a plasma cannon. “Let me try something different!”
The cannon fired with a sound like thunder, the plasma bolt punching a massive hole through one creature’s chest. But instead of falling, the creature regenerated around the damage and began forming its own energy projectiles in its palms.
“Wonderful,” Kelvin said dryly. “Now it’s armed.”
Lyra shifted into her hybrid form, her body taking on the characteristics of something between a gorilla and a bear. She grabbed one of the newly emerged creatures and began tearing it apart with enhanced strength and claws. The creature let her dismember it completely before regenerating—and now it had developed its own set of razor-sharp claws and enhanced musculature.
“Physical enhancement isn’t working either,” she called out, dodging a swipe from claws that matched her own.
Kaia swung her Category 4 baton weapon in a wide arc, the energy field around it designed to disrupt beast nervous systems. The creature she struck convulsed and fell—then stood back up with its own energy disruption field crackling around its hands.
“This is getting ridiculous,” Diana said, using her momentum nullification to stop a charging creature cold. But even that backfired when the creature learned to nullify its own momentum mid-attack, allowing it to change direction impossibly.
Noah void-blinked between two creatures, Excaliburn carving through them with void energy. Unlike the others, these creatures actually stayed down where his blade touched them—the void energy preventing regeneration entirely.
“Noah’s the only one who can permanently damage them,” Lucas shouted over the growing chaos as more and more creatures emerged from their tanks. Each new arrival seemed more advanced than the last.
“But I can’t fight all of them,” Noah replied, cutting down another creature before it could fully develop whatever ability it was copying from Kaia’s weapon. “There are too many, and they’re learning faster than I can stop them.”
Lucy assessed the battlefield with tactical precision. They now faced nearly a dozen creatures, each one armed with different combinations of abilities they’d learned from the team’s attacks. Some had fire and lightning, others had enhanced strength and energy disruption, and the newest ones were developing multiple abilities simultaneously.
“We’re giving them too many weapons,” Lucy decided. “Every second we stay here, we’re making them stronger. We need a new strategy!”
“The strategy is we leave,” Noah agreed, cutting down one more creature to clear a path. “Everyone grab onto me!”
The team quickly formed a circle around Noah, each person maintaining contact with at least one other member of the group. The creatures were beginning to surround them, their movements becoming more coordinated as they learned from each encounter.
[Void blink activated]
And just like that, reality folded around them.
They materialized outside the facility in a tumbling heap, landing hard on the grass surrounding the compound. For a moment, everyone just lay there, breathing heavily and trying to process what they’d just experienced.
Then Kelvin started laughing.
It began as a nervous chuckle but quickly escalated into full-blown, slightly hysterical laughter that proved contagious. Soon, the entire team was laughing, the absurdity and terror of their situation combining into something that couldn’t be expressed any other way.
“Regenerating experimental humanoids that copy our abilities,” Kelvin gasped between fits of laughter. “Just when I thought this mission couldn’t get any weirder.”
“At least we got out before—” Sophie began.
“Uh, guys?” Kelvin’s laughter stopped abruptly. His voice had taken on a tone that made everyone immediately alert. “We’ve got company.”
They looked up to see that they were surrounded. Hundreds of figures had emerged from the forest around the facility, moving with the kind of fluid grace that spoke of natural agility rather than technological enhancement.
The figures were undeniably beautiful in a way that seemed almost too perfect to be natural. Their skin had a pale, almost translucent quality with the faintest hint of pink undertones that suggested a circulatory system subtly different from human norm. Their ears were elongated and pointed, and their eyes were larger than human standard, with colors that seemed to shift between various shades of green and blue depending on the lighting.
They wore clothing that was both practical and elegant—strips of what looked like woven plant fiber that wrapped around their torsos and waists in complex patterns that provided coverage while allowing for complete freedom of movement. Their weapons were clearly functional rather than ceremonial, with blade edges that caught the light in ways that suggested they were extremely sharp.
And every single one of them was female.
Kelvin’s expression shifted rapidly from alarm to something approaching religious awe. “Oh,” he breathed, staring at the assembled figures with the expression of someone who had just discovered that all his childhood fantasies were real. “Oh, this is… this is actually happening.”
His voice dropped to a whisper that was somehow audible to everyone. “They’re gorgeous. They’re absolutely, completely, impossibly gorgeous, and they’re all pointing weapons at us, and I have never been more confused about whether I should be terrified or excited.”
The nearest of the elven figures stepped forward, her weapon—some kind of elegantly curved blade that seemed to be made from a single piece of polished metal—held in a position that was clearly threatening but not immediately aggressive.
When she spoke, her voice carried an accent that was both musical and completely unfamiliar. “Humans. You will explain your presence on Lilivil Prime, and you will explain it now.”