Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 471
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- Chapter 471 - Chapter 471: The Ark
Chapter 471: The Ark
Morning on Vanguard Station came with the artificial lighting systems brightening to simulate sunrise, but Noah had been awake for hours. Sleep was something that happened to other people, apparently. He’d spent most of the night staring at his ceiling, running through scenarios that all ended badly.
The knock on his door came at exactly 0600 hours.
“Eclipse, time to move,” one of the guards called through the metal. “Transport leaves in thirty minutes.”
Noah pulled on his formal military uniform—the kind reserved for ceremonies and official functions. The fabric felt stiff and uncomfortable, nothing like his usual combat gear. He checked himself in the mirror and barely recognized the person staring back. Clean-cut, pressed uniform, looking every bit the model soldier.
Except for the eyes. Those looked like someone who hadn’t slept in days.
The corridor outside was already filling with other Vanguard recruits heading to morning training sessions. The moment Noah stepped out, flanked by two guards, conversations died mid-sentence.
“Is that Eclipse?”
“Where are they taking him?”
“Probably another classified mission. Lucky bastard.”
Noah kept his eyes forward as they escorted him through the station. More recruits gathered to watch, their whispers following him like a wake.
“I heard Commander Brooks is leading them somewhere.”
“Must be serious if they need Team 7 again.”
“Think it’s a code black situation?”
“Has to be. They don’t pull the best team for anything less.”
One voice rose above the others—Jackson from Team 3. “Whatever it is, kick ass out there, Eclipse!”
Noah almost smiled at that. If only they knew.
The rest of Team 7 was already assembled at the docking bay when Noah arrived. Sophie looked composed as always, though Noah could see the tension in her shoulders. Kelvin was tapping his fingers against his leg in that nervous pattern he did when trying not to show he was nervous. Diana stood apart from the group, her expression unreadable.
Commander Brooks waited near the transport vessel, reviewing something on her tablet. When she spotted Noah, she gave a slight nod.
“That’s everyone,” she said to the guards. “Let’s move.”
The transport was a mid-sized military vessel designed for personnel movement rather than combat. Clean lines, efficient layout, no wasted space. The interior was all polished metal and regulation seating, about as welcoming as a dentist’s office.
As they settled into their seats and the ship’s engines began their startup sequence, more recruits gathered at the docking bay windows to watch them depart.
“Look at them,” Kelvin said, peering out a viewport. “They think we’re heading off to fight some nightmare mission.”
“We kind of are,” Sophie replied quietly. “Just not the kind they’re imagining.”
The transport detached from Vanguard Station with barely a tremor, skilled piloting making the departure smooth as silk. Through the viewports, Noah watched the station recede, getting smaller against the backdrop of deep space.
For several minutes, nobody spoke. The hum of the engines filled the silence, a white noise that should have been soothing but just gave Noah’s thoughts more room to spiral.
“You know,” Kelvin said finally, unable to stand the quiet any longer, “this feels like old times. The four of us heading somewhere dangerous, no idea if we’re coming back.”
He paused, glancing at Diana. “Except back then, Diana was in Academy 8 trying to kill Noah because they were rivals. And Sophie was leaving school to take Noah to her penthouse that her daddy got her to—”
He caught Brooks’ look and coughed. “To study. For exams. Very educational.”
Diana’s lip twitched in what might have been amusement. Sophie just rolled her eyes.
Kelvin leaned back in his seat, his expression growing more thoughtful. “But seriously, let me tell you how this team actually started. Me and Noah, best friends from day one at the academy. The universe clearly made us for each other.”
“Kelvin—” Noah started.
“Let me have this, man. I need to talk or I’m going to lose it.” Kelvin’s usual humor had an edge of genuine need beneath it. “So there I was, the golden child of Webb Pithon, billionaire tech tycoon. Except I was never up to my father’s level, you know? Always the disappointment son who’d rather build gadgets than run an empire.”
He gestured at Noah. “And then there was this guy. Underwhelming first-generation talent. Nobody expected much from him. Hell, after our first real expedition where that Category 3 beast nearly killed us, the whole school started calling him ‘zombie boy’ because he looked like death warmed over for a week.”
“I remember that mission,” Noah said quietly. “Cora was there. And Lila.”
“The blonde psychopath!” Kelvin’s eyes lit up. “God, I miss that crazy chick. She was terrifying. In love with Noah but secretly working for the Purge the whole time. Still scares me thinking about it.”
Sophie’s gaze sharpened. “Your ‘preferred choice’ better be me.”
“Of course!” Kelvin laughed nervously. “You’re absolutely my preferred choice for Noah. No competition. Lila was just… memorable. In a ‘might murder everyone’ kind of way.”
“Speaking of betrayal,” Kelvin continued, warming to his topic, “isn’t it ironic that the people who betrayed this team—besides Uncle Dom—all have names starting with L? Lila, except she was a victim of her upbringing. And Lyra, who was just a bitch.”
Diana nodded firmly. “Facts.”
If there was anyone on the team who hated Lyra more than the others, it was Diana. The betrayal had cut deeper for her, somehow.
“But before all that drama,” Kelvin went on, “we had our first off-world experience. That’s where Noah found Storm, the Blizzard Monarch Wyvern. One of his companions living in his Domain right now.” He leaned forward conspiratorially. “Fun fact: my scanners detected Storm’s eggs first. I can’t wait to find more baby ice dragons soon.”
Sophie raised an eyebrow. “You never mentioned that.”
“Been a bit busy with the whole ‘facing one tribulation or the other’ thing.”
Brooks, who’d been quietly reviewing her tablet, looked up briefly but didn’t comment.
“Anyway,” Kelvin continued, “after that came Cannadah. Our first Harbinger encounter. We almost all died, and that’s where we officially met Lucas Grey, star boy of Academy 12. Fought alongside Noah and Nyx against a nightmare that should have killed us all.”
He was on a roll now, the nervous energy finding an outlet. “Then came the interschool competition. That’s where we properly met Diana Frost and Jayden Smoak, though Noah and Lucas had already encountered Jayden during some school rivalry thing. Academy 12 versus Academy 8.” He grinned at Diana. “No disrespect, but Noah whooped the Ice Queen’s ass.”
Diana smirked slightly. Now that she knew Noah—really knew what he was capable of—she understood she’d never want to fight him seriously again. That school encounter had been child’s play compared to what she’d seen him do since.
“The Purge attacked during the competition,” Kelvin’s tone sobered. “The Nexus Arena, all twelve schools from the Eastern Quadrant in attendance. We had to fight terrorists that day, not just other students. After that, we got called up to space. The Vanguard Initiative, created specifically for exceptional young soldiers like us.”
He looked around at his teammates. “So what’s the lesson here?”
“That we got in trouble way too much,” Diana said dryly. “I’m glad I wasn’t in your circle back then.”
Sophie nodded. “Besides the Purge attack at the tournament, I managed to avoid most of those near-death experiences. Being a senior had its advantages.”
“You’re all so negative!” Kelvin protested. “The important thing is that we’re the chosen ones. Like characters from the comics I used to read. Heroes face adversity because that’s what makes them heroes. We’ve got this whole narrative arc going—the underestimated team that rises to face impossible odds. It’s classic storytelling. We’re like—”
“Attention,” the pilot’s voice cut through the cabin speakers. “Prepare for final approach. We’ll be docking at the Ark in approximately two minutes.”
The casual atmosphere evaporated instantly. Everyone turned to look out the viewports.
What Noah saw made his brain struggle to process the scale.
The Ark hung in space like a monument to human ambition made manifest. It wasn’t just big—big didn’t begin to cover it.
The mobile command station stretched for kilometers in every direction, a city built in the void. Towers rose from the main superstructure like the fingers of a giant hand reaching for the stars. Docking bays dotted the exterior like windows in a building, except each one was large enough to house multiple capital ships.
Their transport, a vessel that had seemed reasonably sized at Vanguard Station, looked like a speck of dust approaching a mountain.
“Holy shit,” Kelvin whispered.
The Ark rotated slowly in its orbital path around Earth, maintaining position over the planet but far enough out that people on the surface couldn’t see it with naked eyes. Solar panels the size of city blocks covered sections of the hull, drinking in energy from the sun. Weapon emplacements bristled from strategic points—not for show, but genuine defenses capable of protecting humanity’s command center from any threat.
Thousands of ships moved around the Ark like insects around a hive. Transport vessels, military cruisers, supply freighters, even what looked like civilian contractors. Each one following precise flight paths coordinated by the station’s traffic control systems.
“Population estimate is now around three hundred thousand,” Brooks said quietly, noticing their reactions. “Military personnel, support staff, civilian specialists, families. It’s not just a command station anymore—it’s a self-contained civilization.”
Their transport approached one of the smaller docking bays, though ‘smaller’ was relative. The bay itself was large enough to hold fifty ships their size. Inside, Noah could see personnel moving with practiced efficiency, directing traffic, managing cargo, conducting maintenance on various vessels.
The docking process was smooth despite the complexity. Automated systems guided them in while human controllers verified everything was proceeding correctly. Through the viewports, Noah watched other ships arriving and departing—some heading toward Earth for planetary deployment, others departing for deep space missions, some returning from combat against Harbinger forces.
Speakers throughout the bay carried constant announcements:
“—Supply Vessel Delta-Seven, you are cleared for departure, proceed to exit vector alpha-three—”
“—Combat Team returning from Harbinger engagement in Sector 12, proceed directly to medical bay for mandatory screening—”
“—All personnel scheduled for deployment to the Northern Front, report to Assembly Bay Four by 1400 hours—”
The scale of operations was staggering. This wasn’t just military organization—this was humanity’s entire war effort coordinated from a single point. Every decision that affected human space came from here. Every strategy against the Harbinger threat was planned within these walls.
Their transport settled onto its assigned landing pad with barely a bump. The engines wound down, and the cabin pressure equalized with the station’s atmosphere.
Brooks stood up, straightening her uniform. “The other commanders are already here. They’ll be at the hearing.” She paused, looking at each of them. “I might not have been paying that much attention to Kelvin’s rambling, but he was right about one thing. You’re excellent soldiers. Regardless of what the outcome is, you’re the finest soldiers I’ve seen.”
She brought her hand up in a crisp salute.
Team 7 stood and returned the salute with equal precision, backs straight, movements synchronized. For that moment, they looked exactly like what they were supposed to be—elite military personnel.
“Let’s go,” Brooks said, lowering her hand.
The transport’s ramp extended with a pneumatic hiss. Beyond it, the Ark’s docking bay opened up like a cathedral to human achievement.
The ceiling soared overhead, easily fifty feet high, crisscrossed with support structures and lighting systems. Personnel in various uniforms moved with purpose, some running, others walking in formation, all of them part of the massive machine that kept humanity’s command center functioning.
Noah stepped off the ramp onto the deck plating, feeling the solid surface beneath his boots. Around them, ships were arriving and departing, their engines creating a constant background roar. The smell of fuel and metal and recycled air hit him—the scent of military operations on a scale he’d never experienced.
They moved through the bay in formation, Brooks leading while the team followed. Other personnel gave them curious looks but didn’t interfere. Around them, the organized chaos continued—cargo being loaded, fighters being prepped, soldiers moving to their assignments.
As they walked, Sophie moved closer to Noah at the back of the group. “You’ve been quiet. More quiet than usual.”
Noah didn’t respond immediately. Instead, he reached into his void storage, focusing on a specific item he’d carried since the academy.
[Void Storage – Access Granted]
[Item Selection: Token]
[Remove Item? Y/N]
He selected yes.
In his hand, a coin materialized. Pale silver, smooth and cool against his palm. On its surface, an image had been etched—a moon crossing over a sun, creating an eclipse.
Sophie saw it and understood immediately. Her hand found his, squeezing gently.
Somewhere on this massive station, probably walking these same corridors or sitting in some office or laboratory, were the people who’d given him this coin. The parents who’d left him twelve years ago. The people who’d chosen this place over their son.
Noah Eclipse had finally reached the Ark.
Just not the way he’d always imagined.