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

Author: RetardedCulture

Chapter 576: The long goodbye (part 1)

There was an old saying among prisoners: you don’t start appreciating nature until you’ve been locked away from it. The sky, the trees, the simple act of feeling wind against your skin—all of it becomes precious when bars stand between you and freedom.
But that analogy didn’t correlate with the current situation as Noah, Sophie, and Lila broke through Earth’s atmosphere in a Grey family ship. Because what they were seeing wasn’t the freedom they’d been desperate to return to.
It was a graveyard.
Noah’s forehead pressed against the viewport window, his breath fogging the reinforced glass. His eyes couldn’t stay fixed on any one thing for more than a second. The devastation sprawled beneath them like a wound that had been carved into the planet itself.
High-rises that once reached toward the heavens with arrogant confidence now bowed in sheer shame. Some were snapped in half, their upper sections collapsed into the streets below. Others leaned at impossible angles, their structural integrity compromised by forces that shouldn’t exist on Earth. Glass and steel and concrete—materials designed to withstand earthquakes and storms—had been twisted into abstract sculptures of destruction.
In the last couple of hours, a lot had occurred. Noah and Angel had literally gone to shake the hornet’s nest, fighting through a grueling assault on a Harbinger mothership on an undiscovered world. By the time backup arrived in the form of Grey ships, all that remained were Harbinger corpses scattered across alien soil, testament to their collective effort.
The reinforcements had arrived at what should have been the perfect time—just in time to evacuate everyone, get medical attention for the wounded, complete their mission to Raiju Prime.
Sadly, not today.
The team had noticed Lyra’s disappearance immediately. Angel had done her best to find the woman, searching the crashed Peregrine from bow to stern, but Lyra had vanished as thoroughly as if she’d never existed. The team said nothing about their knowledge of her betrayal, about the dark chi that had been threaded through Governor Sebastian’s brain stem.
Lila had discreetly removed it while Angel was coordinating the evacuation. The governor had snapped out of his vegetative state within minutes, confused and shaken but alive. Angel had attributed his earlier condition to stress and trauma from the crash.
She’d probably never know the truth.
The trip to Raiju Prime had continued as planned. The governor would make his diplomatic meetings. The mission would be logged as a success despite the complications.
But for Noah, Sophie, and Lila, their mission was concluded. They were headed back home.
And they were hoping against hope that it wasn’t true. That the psychotic ramblings of an unstable young woman were nothing more than a display of madness meant to rattle them.
Boy, were they wrong.
---
"Noah." Sophie’s voice came out barely above a whisper. "What... what happened here?"
The ship descended through clouds that seemed darker than they should be, heavy with smoke and particulate matter that made the afternoon sun look diseased. As they dropped below the cloud cover, the full scope of the destruction became visible.
Craters. Dozens of them. Some were small—maybe ten feet across, the kind that could have been made by artillery shells. Others were massive, easily a hundred feet in diameter, their edges still smoking despite however many hours had passed since their creation. The largest ones had standing water at the bottom, groundwater wells that had been breached by the sheer force of whatever had created them.
Military vehicles occupied every major intersection. Not the casual patrols that usually monitored high-traffic areas, but full deployments. Armored transports. Mobile command centers. Personnel carriers with .50 caliber turrets mounted on top, the gunners scanning rooftops with the kind of alertness that came from expecting another attack at any moment.
The sky should have been filled with flying cars. The eastern quadrant’s traffic was legendary—thousands of vehicles creating streams of light that flowed between buildings like luminous rivers. During rush hour, the aerial highways could get so congested that travel times doubled.
Now, there was nothing. Just the occasional military patrol craft, their lights flashing red and blue against buildings that no longer had the power to light their own windows. The silence of it was oppressive even from inside the ship.
Lila pressed her hand against her viewport, her pale blue eyes tracking across the devastation. "This can’t all be from one Harbinger. Even a four-horn couldn’t do this much damage in... how long were we gone? Three days?"
"Less than that," Sophie replied, her mind was already running calculations. "We departed seventy-two hours ago. Factor in time zones, relativistic effects from the jump to that uncharted system..." She pulled up data on her tablet. "We’ve been gone approximately fifty-six hours from Earth’s perspective."
"Fifty-six hours," Noah repeated, his voice hollow. "And they turned it into this."
The ship cruised past the Nexus Arena, and Noah felt his chest tighten. The massive structure had hosted their first interschool tournament between the twelve military academies in the eastern quadrant. He could still remember the roar of the crowd, the sensation of standing in that arena for the first time, the moment when everything had changed.
One entire side of the arena was gone. Not collapsed—gone. Like something had reached down and scooped out a quarter of the building with a giant hand. The exposed interior showed crushed seating sections, twisted support beams, and what looked like scorch marks across surfaces that shouldn’t burn.
They passed over Academy 12’s grounds next. The military base sat behind reinforced walls that had been upgraded after the Purge attacks months ago. Noah half-expected to see the same devastation, but the academy looked... untouched. The walls stood intact. The buildings showed no visible damage. Personnel moved through the grounds in organized patterns.
"They protected the academy," Sophie observed, her finger tracing across her tablet screen. "Diverted resources to keep it secure. That’s... actually smart. Preserve the training facilities, keep future soldier pipelines intact."
"But they couldn’t protect everything else," Lila said, her voice tight.
The residential sectors were a nightmare. Entire blocks had been leveled. Apartment complexes that had housed thousands now existed as rubble fields with emergency crews still digging through the debris. Makeshift triage centers occupied parking lots and parks, their white medical tents standing in stark contrast to the destruction around them.
Bodies. Noah could see them from the air. Not scattered randomly, but arranged in rows, covered with sheets or tarps or whatever material the recovery teams could find. Some rows were short—maybe a dozen corpses. Others stretched for a hundred feet or more.
"Sophie." Lila’s voice cracked slightly. "Look."
She was pointing at one of the massive billboards that dominated the commercial district. The kind that usually showed advertisements for luxury vehicles or the latest entertainment feeds. Instead, it displayed a single message in stark white text against a black background:
CONFIRMED CASUALTIES: 2,147,856
MISSING: 847,203
UPDATED: 14 MINUTES AGO
As they watched, the casualty number ticked up by three.
2,147,859.
Sophie’s hand went to her mouth. Lila made a sound that wasn’t quite a word. Noah just stared, his mind struggling to process a number that large. Two million people. Dead. In less than three days.
"Did Kruel really do all this?" Sophie asked, though she already knew the answer. "One Harbinger couldn’t possibly—"
"He brought friends," Noah interrupted, his voice dead. "Had to. Even a four-horn has limits. But if he coordinated with other Harbingers..." He gestured at the devastation below. "Then yeah. This makes sense."
The ship began its final approach to Eclipse headquarters. Noah felt his hands starting to shake. The faction building sat in what used to be an industrial district, surrounded by warehouses and manufacturing facilities that had provided good cover and privacy for their operations.
The entire street leading to their headquarters was in ruins. Buildings that had stood for decades were now skeletal remains, their walls collapsed, their roofs caved in. Craters pockmarked the road surface, some of them deep enough that Noah could see underground infrastructure—pipes and cables and the foundations of structures that no longer existed.
But as the ship descended toward their landing pad, Noah’s breath caught in his throat.
Eclipse headquarters stood perfectly untouched.
Not a single window broken. Not a scratch on the walls. The eclipse symbol that adorned the building’s facade gleamed in the hazy afternoon light, its purple and black colors as vibrant as the day they’d installed it.
Everything around them had been destroyed. But their building looked like it existed in a protective bubble, a small island of normalcy in an ocean of devastation.
The ship touched down with barely a vibration. The boarding ramp extended with a pneumatic hiss that sounded too loud in the unnatural silence. Noah was moving before the others, his boots hitting the landing pad, his eyes scanning the exterior of their headquarters for any sign of damage he might have missed from the air.
Nothing. It was perfect.
Which made everything so much worse.
Sophie and Lila followed him down the ramp, their movements careful, cautious. Like they were approaching a bomb that might detonate if they stepped wrong.
"Why isn’t it damaged?" Lila asked quietly. "Everything else is destroyed, but our building is fine?"
"Maybe they defended it," Sophie replied, but her voice lacked conviction. "Focused their efforts on keeping the headquarters intact."
"Or maybe Kruel didn’t bother attacking it," Noah said, his jaw tight. "Because there was nothing here worth his attention."
They walked toward the main entrance slowly. Part of Noah was terrified to move too fast, scared to rush toward something he’d regret seeing forever. Each step felt heavier than the last, like gravity was increasing with every meter they crossed.
The front doors slid open automatically, their sensors detecting their approach. The interior lights were on, running off backup power or the building’s independent generators. But the usual sounds of a faction headquarters were absent. No conversation from the common areas. No equipment humming around. No footsteps echoing through corridors.
Just silence that pressed against Noah’s ears like physical weight.
They’d only made it a few steps inside when Noah saw him.
Lucas sat in the main hallway, maybe twenty feet from the entrance. His back was against the wall, knees drawn up, head bowed forward so his face was hidden. His Eclipse tactical gear hung on him in pieces—the right sleeve was completely gone, the left was shredded, the chest plate was cracked down the middle. The faction insignia on his shoulder was scorched black, barely recognizable.
Blood covered him. Dried blood, mostly, dark russet stains that covered his arms and torso and face. Some of it was probably his own. Most of it probably wasn’t.
"Lucas!" Noah’s voice cracked as he broke into a run. "Lucas!"
Sophie and Lila sprinted after him, their footsteps echoing in the empty hallway. They reached Lucas together, Noah dropping to his knees in front of his friend, Sophie and Lila flanking him on either side.
"Lucas," Noah said again, softer this time, reaching out to touch his shoulder. "Lucas, we’re here. We’re back."
For several seconds, nothing happened. Lucas remained perfectly still, his head bowed, his breathing slow and even. Like he was asleep sitting up. Or maybe like he’d disconnected from reality entirely.
Then his head lifted slowly.
Lucas’s eyes were red-rimmed and hollow. Blood had dried across his left cheek in a pattern that suggested it had run from his nose and mouth. His lip was split, scabbed over. A bruise covered the right side of his jaw, purple and yellow and angry.
"Hmmm?" The sound came out rough, like he hadn’t spoken in hours. His eyes focused on Noah’s face with obvious effort. "Guys..."
Then he broke.
The first sob came out like something tearing. Lucas’s entire body shook as years of military discipline and emotional control shattered completely. Tears streamed down his face, cutting tracks through the dried blood, and he couldn’t seem to stop them.
Sophie and Lila moved immediately, wrapping their arms around him from either side. Sophie’s hand found the back of his head, cradling it gently. Lila pressed her forehead against his shoulder, her own tears starting to fall.
Noah stood slowly, his eyes scanning the empty hallway. The headquarters looked fine from the outside, but now that he was inside, he could see the small details. Scorch marks on the floor near the entrance. Blood droplets leading from the main doors to where Lucas sat. A crack in one of the wall panels that looked like it had been caused by impact from the inside.
People had been here when it happened. Had fought here, or fled here, or tried to defend this place.
And now it was silent.
Noah turned back to Lucas, his hands starting to shake despite his attempts to control himself. He crouched down again, placing one hand on Lucas’s shoulder with careful gentleness.
"Buddy," Noah’s voice came out barely above a whisper. "Where are the others?"
Lucas shook his head violently, the movement jerky and uncontrolled. "I failed them," he gasped between sobs. "I failed them, Noah. I couldn’t—I tried, but I couldn’t—"
Sophie pulled back slightly, her eyes going wide with something that looked like panic or maybe disbelief. "Lucas. Lucas, look at me. Where are the others? Where’s Kelvin? Where’s Diana?"
"I failed them," Lucas repeated, his voice breaking on every syllable. "I was supposed to protect them. I was supposed to be strong enough. But I wasn’t. I wasn’t strong enough."
Lila’s hands were shaking as she gripped Lucas’s arm. "That can’t be true. Lucas, that can’t—are they dead? What happened? Just tell us what happened!"
"I failed them!" Lucas’s shout echoed through the empty hallway, raw and agonized. "I failed everyone! All those months in the shadow dimension, all that training, getting stronger, and it didn’t matter! None of it mattered because when Kruel came, I couldn’t even—I couldn’t—"
"No." Noah’s voice cut through Lucas’s breakdown like a blade. He stood abruptly, his eyes scanning the hallway, the empty rooms visible through open doorways, the complete absence of any other person in their headquarters.
There was nobody. Really, nobody at all.
Noah’s hand went to his chest, fingers splaying over where his heart beat too fast. His void energy responded immediately, purple-black light flickering around his hand.
[Domain Link activated]
---
A familiar space materialized around Noah in an instant of disorienting transition. His boots hit the floor, his eyes adjusting to the dim lighting, and immediately he understood why the faction building’s exterior had been untouched.
Because everything that mattered had been destroyed from the inside.
The workshop was a disaster. Not the organized chaos that usually characterized Kelvin’s workspace, but genuine destruction. Equipment lay scattered across every surface—broken scanners, smashed tablets, tools that had been thrown or dropped and never picked up. Holographic displays flickered with error messages, their projections unstable.
In the center of it all, surrounded by wreckage that used to be KROME, Kelvin worked.
The combat mech that had fought three-horn Harbingers was unrecognizable. The frame had been disassembled into its component parts, but not with the careful precision Kelvin usually employed. These pieces looked like they’d been torn apart, ripped free with desperate strength rather than technical expertise. The fusion reactor core sat on one workbench, its housing cracked. The arm assemblies were scattered across the floor. The chest plating had been crushed flat, like something massive had stepped on it.
Kelvin stood at his primary workstation, a hammer gripped in both hands, bringing it down against a piece of alloy with mechanical regularity. The furnace behind him roared at temperatures that made the air shimmer, multiple beast cores burning inside it to generate the material needed for metalworking.
CLANG.
The hammer came down. Kelvin’s hands were blistered, Noah noticed. Raw and red and weeping, the skin broken in multiple places where the hammer’s grip had rubbed away protective calluses.
CLANG.
Again. Kelvin’s breathing was ragged, labored, each exhale carrying a sound that was almost a sob.
CLANG.
"Kelvin." Noah’s voice came out hoarse.
The hammer paused mid-swing. Kelvin’s shoulders tensed, his entire body going rigid like he’d been shocked.
"Leave me alone," Kelvin said, his voice sounded dead and mechanical. "Just leave me alone, Noah."
Noah crossed the workshop in quick strides, his hand closing around the hammer’s handle before Kelvin could bring it down again.
"I said leave me!" Kelvin’s shout cracked halfway through. He tried to pull the hammer free, his blistered hands straining, but Noah’s grip was stronger. "You’re delaying me! I have to finish the new suit! I have to go back!"
"Kelvin—"
"I HAVE TO GO BACK!" Kelvin was screaming now, tears streaming down his face, his entire body shaking with effort as he tried to wrench the hammer away. "She’s waiting! I promised her I’d come back! I promised I’d fix this! So let go! LET GO!"
Noah didn’t let go. Instead, he stepped closer, wrapping his arms around Kelvin from behind, pinning his friend’s arms against his sides. The hammer clattered to the floor, forgotten.
Kelvin struggled for exactly three seconds before the fight went out of him. His legs gave out, and only Noah’s grip kept him upright. Sobs wracked his body, violent and uncontrolled, and Noah felt tears starting to run down his own face.
"I have to go back," Kelvin whispered between sobs, the words barely intelligible. "I have to save her. I have to make this right. It’s my fault. My plan. My calculations. If I just go back, if I’m just strong enough this time—"
Noah held him tighter, his own voice breaking. "Where are the others, Kelvin? Where’s the rest of the team?"
The question hung in the air for several seconds. Kelvin’s breathing gradually slowed, his sobs becoming quieter. When he finally spoke, his voice was barely audible.
"Gone."
The word hit Noah like a physical blow. His grip on Kelvin loosened slightly.
"That can’t be true." Lila’s voice came from the workshop entrance. Noah turned to see her standing in the doorway, Sophie right behind her. "Right? Kelvin, that can’t be true. Where are they? Where’s Seraleth? Where’s Diana?"
Noah didn’t answer. He couldn’t. His throat had closed up completely, words dying before they could form.
He gently released Kelvin, taking a step back
"Domain Link."
Reality folded.

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