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Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 410

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  3. Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner
  4. Chapter 410 - Chapter 410: A sleeping giant
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Chapter 410: A sleeping giant

They were led through more of the underground city, this time toward what was clearly its center. The pyramidal structures grew larger and more elaborate as they approached, and the number of elves they passed increased dramatically. Word of their capture had apparently spread, because many of the elves stopped their activities to watch the procession of humans being escorted through their city.

Their destination was clearly the most important building in the city—a large chamber that had been carved into the highest accessible point of the cavern. The entrance was flanked by guards in ceremonial armor, and the doorway itself was decorated with carved reliefs that depicted what looked like historical scenes.

The throne room, when they finally entered it, was impressive in its simple grandeur. The chamber was large and circular, with a high ceiling that had been carved in a series of concentric rings that drew the eye upward. The walls were lined with more carved reliefs, and the floor was polished stone that reflected the light from strategically placed torches.

At the center of the room, on a throne that had been carved from a single massive stone, sat the Elf Queen.

She was tall—probably close to six feet—with the kind of presence that commanded attention without effort. Her face was angular but not sharp, with high cheekbones and a strong jawline that spoke of authority rather than delicate beauty. Her nose was straight and proportionate, and her lips were full without being overly so. What struck Noah most were her eyes—large and intelligent, colored a deep emerald green that seemed to shift to gold depending on the light.

Her hair was long and white, not the silver-white of age but a pure, lustrous white that fell straight down her back to her waist. She wore it loose, without any of the elaborate styling Noah might have expected from royalty.

Her clothing was practical rather than ornate—a well-fitted tunic and trousers made from finely woven fabric, dyed in deep blues and greens. Over this, she wore a sleeveless coat that reached her knees, its fabric decorated with embroidered patterns that looked like geometric representations of local flora. The only obvious indication of her status was a simple circlet of polished metal that rested on her forehead.

But it was her bearing that truly marked her as royalty. She sat on her throne with perfect posture, her hands resting calmly on the armrests, and when she looked at them, it was with the kind of direct, evaluating gaze of someone accustomed to making important decisions.

“Damn,” Kelvin said quietly, and for once, nobody corrected him.

Even the women in their group were clearly impressed. Sophie was studying the Queen with obvious admiration, Diana had forgotten to maintain her usual composed expression.

“Holy shit,” Kelvin whispered, apparently forgetting every rule of diplomatic protocol. “She’s… that’s not… Remind me why humans can’t look like that again”

The queen’s voice, when she spoke, was like music made audible. “I am Queen Aeliana of the Lilivilian people. You stand accused of trespassing on sacred ground and defiling the forbidden structure. What defense do you offer?”

Noah stepped forward, trying to organize his thoughts despite the queen’s overwhelming presence. “Your Majesty, we came here following the trail of those who attacked our home. We believe the people who built that facility are holding our family members prisoner.”

“The Builder would not take prisoners,” the queen said, but her voice carried less certainty than her words suggested. “He promised to return to us with gifts and knowledge.”

“When did you last see this Builder?” Noah asked.

The queen’s expression grew troubled. “Many cycles have passed. He said his work required long absence, but that he would return when his great project was complete.”

“Your Majesty,” Noah said carefully, “I think your Builder has been lying to you. The facility we found contained evidence of experiments on living beings. Artificial creatures designed to mimic and absorb the abilities of others. This isn’t the work of someone who respects life.”

“Impossible,” the queen said, but her voice wavered. “He was charming, intelligent, caring. He understood our people in ways no outsider ever had.”

“He understood what you wanted to hear,” Lucy said quietly, ignoring the weapons that immediately focused on her. “Predators are often charming. It’s how they gain trust before they strike.”

He spoke of helping our people, of sharing knowledge between our species. He said he would return to build a new civilization together.”

“And instead he left you with that facility,” Lucy said, understanding beginning to dawn in her voice.

“We were forbidden to enter, told it was for preparations for his return. For a century, we believed. We waited. We hoped.” The Queen’s voice carried a weight of disappointment that spoke of decades of broken promises. “But the men who came after him were different. Cruel. They took our people for their experiments, corrupted our forest with their presence.”

“How many of your people?” Sophie asked gently.

The Queen was quiet for a moment, and when she spoke, her voice was carefully controlled. “Enough. Too many. And now…”

Diana stepped forward, her expression growing serious. “Your Majesty, I know this might be hard to hear, but I think you need to understand something,” she paused, collecting her thoughts…

“You were played.”

The Queen’s posture stiffened slightly. “I beg your pardon?”

“This charming man who came to you centuries ago,” Diana continued, her voice taking on the no-nonsense tone she used when cutting through bullshit. “What exactly did he actually build here? What infrastructure did he leave behind? What real partnership did he establish?”

“The facility—” the Queen began.

“No,” Sophie interrupted, understanding where Diana was going. “Not what his people built after he left. What did HE personally construct? What did he give you beyond promises and pretty words?”

The Queen’s green eyes flickered with something that might have been uncertainty. “He… he spoke of knowledge sharing, of cultural exchange…”

“Let me guess,” Sophie said, her voice growing sharper. “He was incredibly attractive, said all the right things about how special and beautiful your people were. Made you feel chosen. Told you about this amazing future you’d build together.” Her tone grew more pointed. “And then he spent a lot of time getting very personally acquainted with your population.”

The Queen’s face went pale, and Noah could see her hands tighten on the arms of her throne.

Diana pressed on, ruthless in her honesty. “Your Majesty, with all due respect, I hope this translator tech is working now because the word I’m about to say now might not exist in your diction. But here goes,” Diana paused dramatically, she exhaled, then looked at the Queen and said…

“He fucked half your population and then disappeared. That’s not love, that’s not partnership—that’s conquest disguised as romance.”

“You don’t understand,” the Queen said, but her voice had lost its earlier certainty. “He was different. He cared about our isolation, our struggles—”

“Did he?” Sophie asked bluntly. “Or did he see a planet full of women who’d never encountered human males before and realized he’d hit the jackpot?”

The Queen stood abruptly, her composure cracking. “How dare you suggest—”

“That you were naive?” Diana continued unflinchingly. “Your Majesty, you’re dealing with a species where males have spent thousands of years perfecting the art of manipulation for sexual conquest. You had no defenses against someone who knew exactly which emotional buttons to push.”

The throne room fell silent except for the sound of the Queen’s slightly labored breathing. Her face had gone through several emotions—denial, anger, and now something that looked suspiciously like dawning realization.

“He said… he said our children would bridge our peoples,” the Queen whispered, her voice barely audible.

“And where are those children now?” Sophie asked quietly. “Are they here? Are they part of your society? Or did he take them with him when he left?”

The Queen’s silence was answer enough. Noah could see tears beginning to form in her eyes, and he felt genuinely sorry for her despite the situation they were in.

“Some of them,” the Queen said finally, her voice breaking slightly. “Some of them are in that facility. We’ve seen them through the years—grown now, twisted, wrong somehow. His men bring them out sometimes, parade them before us as proof of his eventual return.”

The implications hit everyone simultaneously. The creatures they’d fought in the laboratory weren’t just experiments—they were the descendants of the Eighth Ancestor’s manipulation of the elven population.

“Jesus Christ,” Kelvin said softly, his usual humor completely absent.

“How many women?” Lucas asked gently. “How many of your people did he… involve himself with?”

The Queen looked like she was about to collapse back onto her throne. “Nearly half the population of breeding age at the time. He said… he said it was necessary to ensure genetic diversity for our future together.”

“Necessary for him to create vessels,” Uncle Dom said grimly. “He needed hybrid offspring with access to both human awakening potential and whatever natural abilities your people possess.”

The Queen finally sat back down, her regal bearing completely shattered. For the first time since they’d entered the chamber, she looked like what she was—a woman who had spent over a century believing in a lie that had cost her people everything.

“We were fools,” she said quietly. “Complete fools.”

“No,” Diana said, her voice softening slightly. “You were isolated, inexperienced with human manipulation tactics, and dealing with someone who had probably perfected his approach over centuries. You couldn’t have known.”

“But we should have seen—”

She was interrupted by a tremor that ran through the entire chamber. Dust fell from the carved ceiling, and several of the torches flickered. The tremor was followed by another, stronger one that made the stone floor vibrate under their feet.

“What’s going on?” Kelvin asked, his technological instincts immediately analyzing the vibration patterns.

The elf who had escorted them stepped forward, her face pale with genuine fear. “He’s waking up.”

“Who’s waking up?” Noah asked, though he was beginning to suspect the answer would be something he didn’t want to hear.

The Queen rose from her throne, her composure cracking for the first time since they’d entered the chamber. “The planet,” she said, her voice barely above a whisper. “Lilivil itself is waking up.”

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