Chapter 537: Crossroads
Noah woke to sunlight cutting through his windows and the distinct awareness that his body felt looser than it had in weeks. Months, maybe. The kind of physical contentment that came from finally releasing tension he hadn’t realized he’d been carrying.
Sophie was already gone, her side of the bed cool but with enough residual warmth to suggest she’d only left recently. He could hear the faction stirring outside—footsteps in corridors, voices discussing morning training schedules, the everyday machinery of two hundred people trying to coordinate breakfast without overwhelming the kitchen.
He stretched, feeling muscles respond with unusual ease. His regeneration had been working overtime while he slept, knitting together minor damage from yesterday’s activities. Both kinds of activities, actually. Combat training and... other physical exertion.
Noah showered, dressed, and headed toward the common area. The morning crowd was predictably chaotic—new recruits still learning the meal schedule, senior members grabbing food before their assigned training blocks, Rita somehow maintaining order with nothing but a clipboard and sheer force of will.
He’d made it halfway to the coffee dispenser when Kelvin appeared, grinning like he’d just won a bet.
"Well well well," Kelvin said, falling into step beside him. "Someone looks relaxed this morning. Almost like they had a very good night."
"Shut up."
"I’m not saying anything. Just making observations about your notably improved mood and the fact that Sophie was humming in the tactical planning room earlier. Humming, Noah. Sophie doesn’t hum."
Noah grabbed his coffee, deliberately not responding. Kelvin’s grin widened.
"Also, multiple recruits ed hearing sounds from the leadership wing last night. Nothing specific, just enough to confirm that some people were having significantly better evenings than others." Kelvin paused for dramatic effect. "One recruit asked if faction leaders get better soundproofing. I told him that’s above my pay grade."
"I’m going to kill you."
"You’re going to try. But I’m faster and I have KROME." Kelvin took a drink from his own cup. "In all seriousness though, good for you. Sophie deserves happiness and you deserve not walking around wound tight enough to snap. Everyone wins."
They found seats near the windows where morning light made the industrial district outside look almost pleasant. Noah let himself relax into the routine, watching Eclipse function with increasing efficiency. The growing pains from last week were smoothing out. People knew where they were supposed to be, what they were supposed to do.
"Training hall in twenty?" Kelvin asked after they’d finished eating.
"Seraleth wanted to run combat drills. Said she needed someone who could actually challenge her." Noah stood, disposing of his cup. "Might as well get that done before the day gets complicated."
The training hall was mostly empty this early, just a few dedicated people running through solo forms or working basic chi cultivation. Seraleth waited near the center mat, already warmed up, her expression carrying that particular focus she wore before sparring.
"Noah," she greeted him formally. "I appreciate you accommodating my request. Most of the new recruits cannot provide adequate resistance for meaningful training."
"Happy to help." Noah stepped onto the mat, rolling his shoulders. "What are we working on?"
"Speed and reaction time. Close quarters engagement against an opponent with superior physical strength." Seraleth settled into a ready stance. "Standard rules. No abilities that would end the match immediately. First to three solid hits wins."
They began slowly, testing each other’s rhythm. Seraleth moved with that impossible grace her species possessed, long limbs creating reach advantages most humans couldn’t match. Her first strike came high, a jab aimed at his shoulder. Noah slipped it, countered with a body shot she blocked casually.
They reset. Moved again. Seraleth increased her speed, strikes coming faster. Noah matched her, his enhanced physiology letting him keep pace. They exchanged blows for maybe thirty seconds before Seraleth landed a clean hit to his ribs—not full power, but enough to score.
"One," she said, backing off.
They reset. This time Noah pushed harder, his recent stat increases making themselves known. He was faster than last time they’d sparred. Noticeably faster. His counter came in a blur, catching Seraleth’s extended arm and redirecting her momentum into a throw she barely rolled out of.
Seraleth’s eyes widened slightly. "You’ve improved."
"Training for the Vanguard challenge," Noah replied, which wasn’t technically a lie.
They engaged again, and this time Noah stopped holding back quite as much. His strength had jumped significantly—the Widow’s death had pushed his attributes high enough that the difference was tangible. When Seraleth threw her next punch, Noah didn’t just block. He caught her fist mid-strike, his fingers closing around her hand with enough force to actually stop the momentum.
Seraleth tried to pull back. Noah’s grip held firm for exactly two seconds before he released her, backing away.
"How?" Seraleth stared at her hand like it had betrayed her. "Last week I could overpower you through raw strength alone. Now you’re matching me without enhanced techniques like chi or any noticeable gear,"
"Like I said, training." Noah settled back into his stance. "Again?"
They went three more rounds. Noah won two of them, landing clean strikes Seraleth couldn’t counter in time. Not because he was using fancy techniques or void abilities. Just pure speed and strength that outpaced what she remembered him being capable of.
When they finally stopped, Seraleth was breathing hard, her expression mixing respect with confusion. "If you fight this well in the Vanguard challenge, you will have no difficulties. Your improvement is remarkable."
"Just need to keep the momentum going." Noah grabbed water from the dispenser along the wall. "Thanks for the sparring. Helped me gauge where I’m at."
Seraleth nodded slowly, still processing. She headed toward the showers, occasionally glancing back at Noah like she was trying to solve a puzzle whose pieces didn’t quite fit.
Noah found Kelvin in his workshop an hour later, surrounded by holographic displays showing data Noah couldn’t immediately parse. His friend looked up when the door opened, expression shifting to something gleeful.
"Got something," Kelvin announced. "Remember how I hacked Vanguard’s systems? I’ve been digging through their tactical database all morning. Found their champion selection files."
"Who are they sending?"
"Guy named Drex Hithler." Kelvin pulled up a profile that was frustratingly sparse. "He’s Vanguard’s top representative. The one they field when they actually want to win instead of just making appearances."
Noah scanned the limited information. No ability details. No combat footage. Just a record of challenges accepted and factions absorbed. Six factions had faced Vanguard with Drex as their champion. All six had lost. All six had been absorbed into Vanguard’s organization afterward.
"There’s almost nothing here," Noah observed.
"That’s the scary part. Nobody has footage of his fights. The online faction community knows his name but not his capabilities. Some people claim he’s got some kind of ability that prevents recording. Others think he just moves too fast for cameras to track. But the consistent detail?" Kelvin tapped one section of the profile. "Nobody who’s fought him will talk about it afterward. Not even the ones who survived the matches. They just refuse to discuss what happened."
"That’s concerning."
"That’s terrifying." Kelvin leaned back in his chair. "Eclipse is supposed to be number seven on his absorption list. And we’ve got nothing to prepare with except knowing he’s never lost and everyone who’s faced him comes away traumatized enough to stay silent."
"We should tell the others," Noah said.
They assembled the core team in the conference room within the hour. Kelvin presented his findings while everyone processed the implications in their own way.
Diana’s expression was calculating. "If we can’t study his capabilities, we can’t develop counters. That puts whoever faces him at a significant disadvantage."
"Which is why maybe Noah shouldn’t be the one to fight," Sophie said carefully. "Not because we doubt you," she added quickly. "But if something goes wrong, if this Drex is actually as dangerous as the records suggest, we need you functional for Hollowstar. That’s the priority mission."
"I could face him," Seraleth offered. "I have combat experience against unknown opponents. And my capabilities are straightforward enough that adapting mid-fight is feasible."
"Or me," Diana added. "Momentum nullification works regardless of what abilities an opponent has. Can’t fight effectively if you can’t move."
Noah listened to them debate without interrupting. Their concerns were logical. Hollowstar mattered more than Vanguard politics. If he got injured or worse in the challenge, the rescue operation would suffer. Smart strategic thinking.
He also didn’t care.
"I’m fighting," Noah said, cutting through the discussion. "Drex comes after Eclipse specifically because we’re growing too fast and threatening established power structures. That makes this personal. And I’m not sending someone else to face unknown threats when I’m the one Vanguard actually wants to test."
"Noah—" Sophie started.
"I know the arguments. Strategic value, risk mitigation, all of it. But this is about more than just tactics." Noah looked around the table. "We built Eclipse because the established organizations were corrupt and ineffective. Vanguard represents everything we rejected. I’m not hiding from their champion. I’m going to beat him and prove Eclipse isn’t just talk."
Lila was grinning. "There’s the protagonist energy I’ve been waiting for."
The meeting dispersed eventually, though Sophie pulled Noah aside afterward. "Promise me you’ll be careful. No unnecessary risks. Just win and get out."
"I promise."
She kissed him quickly before heading off to coordinate training schedules, leaving Noah alone in the conference room.
_____
Two days passed very quickly.
Eclipse continued processing new recruits while preparing for two potential operations simultaneously. Training intensified. Equipment was checked and rechecked. Sam worked logistics angles Noah didn’t fully understand but trusted were necessary.
Seraleth had developed a new morning routine. Every day before breakfast, she’d find Noah somewhere in the headquarters and kiss him once. Just once, brief and quick, before hurrying away with her face flushed. It was adorable in a way that made the recruits who witnessed it grin and whisper.
Sophie ran everything between coordinating schedules and tactical preparations like she’d been born for organizational management. Which maybe she had been. Her ability to turn chaos into ordered systems was genuinely impressive.
Lila was a different kind of presence entirely. She’d catch Noah in corridors, pull him into empty rooms, kiss him until they were both breathing hard, then vanish before things could progress further. It was maddening and exciting and absolutely deliberate on her part.
Noah found Kelvin in the workshop on the second evening, tools scattered across his workbench while KROME sat partially disassembled.
"Question," Kelvin said without looking up from his calibrations. "The recruits have been gossiping. Apparently you and Lila keep getting interrupted in various locations around headquarters. Storage rooms, empty offices, that one time in the vehicle bay before someone came looking for equipment."
"Your point?"
"Have you two actually...?" Kelvin made a vague gesture that was somehow both crude and innocent.
"Not yet." Noah grabbed a spare stool, sitting backward on it. "Like the recruits apparently said, it always gets ruined. Someone needs something, or there’s an emergency, or people are walking by. Timing’s never right."
"That’s hilarious and frustrating." Kelvin grinned. "Though I gotta say, keeping up with Lila’s energy must be exhausting. She’s like a force of nature."
"You have no idea." Noah’s expression shifted to something more amused. "I kept up with the Widow better than I’m keeping up with Lila. At least the Widow was trying to kill me. Lila’s trying to do something completely different and somehow that’s more intense."
"That’s because you can hit the Widow with void energy. You can’t void blast your way out of sexual tension." Kelvin set down his tools. "But seriously, I hope you two get your moment eventually. You deserve it. She deserves it. And honestly the recruits are starting a betting pool on when it’ll finally happen, so there’s economic pressure now."
Noah was about to respond when Sam’s voice came through on comms, urgent in a way that made everyone’s attention snap to focus.
"Conference room. Now. Lucy’s intel just came through."
They assembled within minutes. Lucy’s holographic projection appeared before they’d even settled into seats, her expression carrying weight that made Noah’s stomach drop.
"I’ve got complete intelligence on Hollowstar," Lucy said without preamble. "Facility layouts. My scouts confirmed prisoner locations—the family heads are more likely to be here, including my father. This is our window."
"When?" Sophie asked.
"Thirty-six hours from now. Arthur’s presence is confirmed but his movements suggest he won’t be there longer than forty-eight hours. After that, the window closes. We go then or we don’t go at all."
Silence filled the conference room as everyone did the same math simultaneously.
Thirty-six hours from now was exactly when the Vanguard challenge was scheduled to begin.
"You’re sure about the timing?" Noah asked, though he already knew the answer.
"As sure as intelligence can be. My scouts have been tracking Arthur’s movements. He arrived on Hollowstar four days ago. His typical operational visits last one week maximum. We’re at the end of that window." Lucy’s expression was grim. "If we wait, we lose him. And probably our chance at rescuing the prisoners. He’ll move them or increase security or both."
Sam pulled up the dual schedules, displaying them side by side. Vanguard challenge: 10 AM, public venue, broadcasted to every faction in the eastern territories. Hollowstar assault window: begins at dawn, requires immediate deployment to make travel time, full military operation.
They couldn’t do both. Not even close.
Diana spoke first. "The challenge has forfeit rules. If Eclipse doesn’t show, we lose the faction entirely. Vanguard absorbs us. Everything we built becomes theirs."
"But Hollowstar is rescuing actual people from Arthur’s imprisonment," Lila countered. "Including Lucy’s family. That’s not political theater, that’s lives."
"Lives we can’t save if we don’t have a faction anymore," Sam pointed out. "Vanguard absorbs Eclipse, we lose our operational capacity. We couldn’t even mount a rescue operation after that."
"Could we negotiate with Vanguard?" Seraleth asked. "Explain the circumstances, request postponement?"
"They’d refuse and use our request as propaganda," Sophie said. "Make Eclipse look weak for trying to back out. And even if they agreed, it tips our hand about Hollowstar. Information would leak."
Kelvin had been quiet through all this, just running calculations on his tablet. "There’s no good answer here. We either lose the faction or lose the rescue window. Those are the options."
Noah looked around the conference room table. Sophie’s expression was carefully controlled, but he could see the tension in her shoulders. Lila looked ready to fight regardless of consequences. Diana was running tactical scenarios, trying to find angles that didn’t exist. Seraleth seemed confused by the impossible choice. Kelvin just looked tired.
They’d said two days ago that choosing between politics and saving lives was easy. That doing the right thing mattered more than reputation.
Now that the actual choice was here, staring them in the face with no clever solutions or tactical workarounds, that decision felt significantly harder than it had seemed in the abstract.
"We need to decide," Lucy said quietly. "My forces deploy in twelve hours if we’re going. I need Eclipse’s answer before then."
Noah opened his mouth to respond, then closed it. Because he genuinely didn’t know what to say. Both options felt wrong. Both options meant losing something that mattered.
The conference room fell silent except for the quiet hum of electronics and ventilation. Eight people sitting around a table, staring at each other, waiting for someone to find an answer that didn’t exist.
The silence stretched.
And stretched.
And nobody spoke.
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Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner-Chapter 537: Crossroads
Chapter 537
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