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Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 442

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  3. Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner
  4. Chapter 442 - Chapter 442: Fail safe
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Chapter 442: Fail safe

[LOCATION: Ares Fleet Formation – Secondary Briefing Room]

[LOCAL TIME: 10:17 Fleet Standard]

The team sat around a smaller conference table, surrounded by hastily gathered materials—star charts pulled from the ship’s archives, mathematical reference texts, computational tablets, and holographic displays showing constellation patterns. Everything they could find to recreate the riddle that had vanished with Kelvin and Lyra.

Diana stared at the mess of information with undisguised frustration. “This is bullshit,” she said flatly. “Kelvin is the only one good at this kind of analysis. The rest of us are just fumbling around with concepts we barely understand.”

Lucas looked up from a star chart he’d been studying for the past hour. “We have to try something. We can’t just sit here waiting.”

“Waiting for what?” Diana’s voice rose. “For Noah’s mysterious plan that he won’t explain? For Kelvin to magically escape from shadow terrorists? For the Eighth to get bored and release our people out of charity?”

Sophie was working through mathematical calculations on her tablet, but her efforts seemed more like busy work than genuine progress. “The riddle referenced pi and constellation positions. Maybe if we work through all the possible interpretations…”

“Sophie, you are a soldier, not an astronomer. At the most, you majored in combats operational arts” Diana said, not unkindly but with brutal honesty. “None of us have Kelvin’s computational abilities or his intuitive grasp of complex mathematical relationships.”

Uncle Dom had been quiet throughout their attempts, occasionally offering observations about mythological references, but even he seemed overwhelmed by the scope of the problem. “The astronomical calculations alone require specialized knowledge we simply don’t possess.”

All eyes turned to Noah, who had been sitting silently at the head of the table, watching their efforts without participating.

“For now, we can’t do anything,” he said simply.

Diana’s tablet clattered to the table as she threw it down. “That’s it? That’s your contribution? We can’t do anything?”

“Diana—” Lucas started.

“No!” She stood up, her momentum nullification abilities activating unconsciously. Several objects on the table—pens, tablets, papers—lifted into the air and froze there, suspended in defiance of gravity. “I’m tired of this mysterious leader act. People we care about are in enemy hands, and Noah’s response is to tell us to wait!”

Noah met her gaze steadily. “I understand your frustration, but—”

“Do you? Because from where I’m sitting, it looks like you’re content to let Kelvin and Bruce rot in captivity while you sit on whatever secret plan you and Kelvin cooked up.”

Just like the first time she walked away again and just like that everyone else left one after the other few minutes apart. They all made excuses of needing time to come up with something on their own.

Sophie approached Noah later, after the others had dispersed in frustration. She found him standing at the viewport in his quarters, staring out at the fleet formation.

“What’s the plan, Noah?” she asked quietly. “I’m not asking as a teammate or a soldier. I’m asking as someone who loves you and is trying to understand why you seem so calm when our friends are in danger.”

Noah turned to face her, his expression carrying weight she hadn’t seen before. “The plan is simple. We wait. I’m sure of it, Sophie. Everything we set in motion is still working.”

“But Kelvin—”

“Kelvin knows what he’s doing,” Noah said firmly. “More than anyone else, Kelvin knows what he’s doing.”

Sophie studied his face, looking for doubt or uncertainty. She found none, which somehow made her more worried rather than reassured.

“I trust you,” she said finally. “But I need you to trust me too. If something goes wrong, if your plan doesn’t work, promise me you’ll tell us what we’re really dealing with.”

“I promise,” Noah replied, though his tone suggested he didn’t expect to need to keep that promise.

Sophie brushed past him on her way out, pausing just long enough to touch his arm. A fleeting moment of warmth, gone as quickly as it came.

She wasn’t the only one waiting for him.

Lucas was waiting. He intercepted Noah just outside, settling into a chair as if he’d been waiting for hours.

“We need to talk,” Lucas said, settling into a chair nearby.

Noah nodded but didn’t speak, clearly waiting for his friend to continue.

“Since the academy,” Lucas began, “since that day when year one and year three students went on their first off-world expedition to Cannadah, when we faced our first Harbinger and you and I were the only ones left to defend defenseless students while we waited for cavalry—since then, I’ve trusted you with everything.”

He paused, gathering his thoughts. “When that Harbinger tore through our escort ships and left us stranded on that planet with terrified cadets, you didn’t hesitate. You stepped up, organized defenses, kept everyone alive until rescue arrived. You were just a year one student, but you acted like you’d been fighting these battles your whole life.”

Noah remembered that day clearly. The screaming, the chaos, the way Lucas had looked at him when he’d started giving orders that somehow made sense and faced off against an impossible foe without fear.

“Since then, I’ve followed your lead without question,” Lucas continued. “Through academy competitions, terrorist attacks, EDF missions, everything we’ve faced together. But Noah, this time you may have put the team in real danger.”

The rebuke was gentle but unmistakable. Lucas wasn’t just speaking as a friend—he was speaking as their official leader, the person responsible for everyone’s safety.

“As team leader, I didn’t appreciate being left out of your planning with Kelvin. As your friend, I’ll keep supporting you. But as someone who cares about this team…” Lucas gestured toward where Diana had been training alone, her movements sharp with suppressed anger. “It’s not me you need to convince. It’s her.”

Noah followed his gaze to where Diana was practicing combat forms in the ship’s training bay, her momentum abilities making her movements appear to defy physics as she struck at imaginary opponents.

“She’s the one you really hurt with this secret,” Lucas said. “And she’s the one who might not forgive you if this goes wrong.”

Noah let the words hang between them, heavier than any accusation. Lucas wasn’t angry, not really — just disappointed. That was worse.

“You’re saying I should go to her,” Noah said quietly.

Lucas leaned back in the chair, arms crossed. “I’m saying you owe her that much.”

For a moment neither of them spoke, the silence filled only by the distant rhythm of training strikes echoing through the bulkheads. Finally, Noah stood, running a hand through his hair.

“All right,” he muttered. “I’ll talk to her.”

He left Lucas behind and followed the sound of those strikes, until he reached the training bay.

Noah found Diana in the training bay, but she walked away the moment he entered. He followed her through the ship’s corridors, maintaining distance until she finally stopped at a dead-end junction and turned to face him.

“What do you want, Noah?”

“To talk.”

“About what? Your secret plans? Your mysterious confidence that everything will work out fine? Your complete disregard for the people who’ve been fighting beside you for months?”

Noah leaned against the wall, recognizing that this conversation would require patience and honesty in equal measure.

“Do you remember the first time we met?” he asked.

Diana’s expression didn’t soften, but she didn’t walk away either. “Academy raids. Your school’s retaliation for our siege.”

“You put me in what you called your dead zone,” Noah continued. “Momentum nullification so complete I couldn’t even move air through my lungs properly.”

“And you summoned something I’d never seen before,” Diana replied, her tone still cold but carrying traces of old curiosity. “Red mist and roaring that made the whole building shake.”

“Nyx,” Noah said simply. “My first dragon. Though you didn’t understand what he was back then.”

“If I’d known half the things I know about you now, I wouldn’t have dared fight you,” Diana admitted. “You were just supposed to be another year one hotshot looking to make a name for himself.”

Noah smiled slightly. “You were school eight’s number two student. I was impressed you held your own as long as you did.”

“Number two to Jayden Smoak, Lucas’s arch rival,” Diana said. “God, the drama we created with those stupid school competitions.”

They stood in silence for a moment, both remembering the intensity of academy politics that had seemed so important at the time.

“The tournament,” Noah continued. “When everything went to hell with the terrorist attack.”

“The Purge,” Diana said, her voice growing quiet. “I still have nightmares about that day. Cadets dying, the whole arena collapsing, not knowing who we could trust.”

“And then the EDF called us up,” Noah said. “The newly formed Vanguard Force, Earth’s last defense.”

“Meeting Lyra at the orientation,” Diana’s jaw tightened. “God, she played us all perfectly, didn’t she? The eager recruit, the shapeshifter who wanted to prove herself, the teammate who always had our backs.”

“Sirius Prime,” Noah continued. “Our first real mission. The female Harbinger who nearly killed us both.”

Diana’s expression grew distant. “I remember being so scared I couldn’t think straight. You and I, back to back in that corridor, fighting something that shouldn’t have been possible to kill.”

“You saved my life that day.”

“And you saved mine.” Diana’s anger seemed to deflate slightly. “Which is what makes this so much harder.”

Noah waited, recognizing that she was approaching the heart of whatever was driving her fury.

“You’re a fine soldier, Noah,” Diana said finally. “A good person at heart. But you’re a terrible teammate.”

The accusation hit harder than her earlier physical attacks.

“You have main character syndrome,” she continued. “Everything has to revolve around your plans, your secrets, your mysterious understanding of situations the rest of us can’t grasp. You make decisions that affect all of us without consulting anyone.”

“Diana—”

“I’m not finished.” Her voice carried pain alongside anger. “You want to know what really pisses me off? It’s not that you and Kelvin suspected a mole. It’s that you decided you couldn’t trust the rest of us with that information.”

She stepped closer, her eyes blazing. “Lucas has been your best friend since the academy. Sophie is your girlfriend. Everyone else seems to be family. And I’ve fought beside you through hell itself. But none of us were trustworthy enough to be included in your planning.”

Noah felt the weight of her accusations because they contained truth he’d been avoiding.

“All I want,” Diana said, her voice breaking slightly, “is for Kelvin to be safe. He’s… he means something to me, Noah. More than I’ve admitted to anyone, including myself. And now he’s in enemy hands because of a plan I wasn’t allowed to know about.”

Understanding dawned on Noah as pieces fell into place. “Your confession to him on Raiju Prime.”

“My confession that he never responded to,” Diana said bitterly. “My confession that got lost in all this family drama and rescue missions and secret planning sessions.”

They stood facing each other in the empty corridor, years of shared history and current pain creating a tension that neither knew how to resolve.

“Diana,” Noah said quietly, “I know we’re not the best of friends. We’ve never been particularly close. But we share similar values—protecting the people we care about, doing what’s necessary even when it’s hard.”

“Then trust me,” she said simply. “Stop treating me like a liability and trust me the way I’ve been trusting you.”

Noah looked down at the device in his pocket, its screen still dark and silent.

“I need you to wait,” he said. “Just a little longer. Please.”

Diana stared at him for a long moment, then nodded once and walked away.

Noah remained in the corridor, alone with his doubts and the weight of promises he wasn’t sure he could keep.

—

[LOCATION: Unknown Facility – Detention Level]

[LOCAL TIME: Unknown]

[AMBIENT TEMPERATURE: 20°C | Lighting: Artificial]

Kelvin sat in a white room wearing white joggers and a sweatshirt, his cybernetic arms having been replaced with simple prosthetics that provided basic functionality without any of his usual capabilities. His eyes were back to their normal color, and his expression showed clear thought rather than the empty darkness they’d displayed during his capture.

“Well,” he said to the empty room, “this is the second time I’ve been kidnapped. First by the Purge during the tournament—that whole mess with Noah’s love affair with Lila and her parents turning out to be supervillains.”

He stretched his arms, testing the range of motion in his temporary prosthetics. “At least this time I’m not chained to a chair in some terrorist bunker.”

Kelvin looked directly at what appeared to be an observation mirror, knowing someone was likely watching.

“The funny thing is,” he continued conversationally, “we know who the mole is now. And somehow, the mole doesn’t know that we know yet.”

He smiled, a expression that carried secrets and confidence despite his circumstances.

“That’s going to make things interesting.”

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