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

Chapter 559: Red balloon


Eclipse headquarters felt different now. Not physically—the building was still the same structure they'd occupied for months, same training halls and common areas and corridors—but the atmosphere had shifted. Two days had passed since the Synthesis Collective's network had been dismantled, and the faction was finally gathering to understand what had actually happened.

The main assembly hall was packed. Every Eclipse member who wasn't on deployment had crammed inside, maybe a hundred and fifty people total filling seats and standing along the walls. The core team sat at a table facing the crowd—Sophie, Noah, Diana, Kelvin, Lila, Seraleth, and Lucas. Sam stood near a display screen, ready to present information.

Sophie spoke first, her voice carrying clearly across the hall. "Two days ago, Eclipse was used as unwitting courier service for an organization conducting illegal forced awakening experiments. They infiltrated our network, studied our patterns for eight days, and used that information to manipulate us into transporting materials, extracting test subjects, and securing distribution channels."

The crowd was silent, absorbing information most of them hadn't known until now. Sophie continued.

"We discovered the manipulation during contract execution. At that point, we had two options: abort and face legal consequences that would destroy Eclipse, or continue operations while gathering evidence and seeking outside help." She paused. "We chose the latter. All five teams maintained their contracts while documenting everything they encountered. Medical samples, facility records, patient testimonies, research data."

Sam activated the display, showing a network map of the forty-three sites that had been raided. "The organization called themselves the Synthesis Collective. They'd been operating for eighteen months across the eastern cardinal, building infrastructure for mass awakening trials. We gathered enough evidence to prove their operations and contacted appropriate authorities."

"Military forces raided all forty-three sites simultaneously," Sophie said. "The operation was coordinated through secure channels the Collective couldn't monitor. Leadership was arrested, facilities were shut down, and Eclipse's evidence was used to prosecute everyone involved. The charges include illegal human experimentation, trafficking, fraud, and about twenty other violations."

Diana spoke next, her voice carrying the professional tone she used for operational briefings. "For those wondering about Eclipse's legal status—we're clear. The contracts we accepted were filed through legitimate channels. We had no way of knowing the true purpose behind them. When we discovered illegal activity, we immediately reported it and cooperated with investigating authorities. Eclipse is being credited with helping expose and dismantle a black market awakening network."

"Which means our reputation is intact," Lucas added. "Better than intact, actually. Public perception is that Eclipse did exactly what a faction should do when encountering criminal activity—gather evidence and work with authorities to stop it."

Kelvin leaned back in his chair, his prosthetic fingers drumming against the table. "Except for one problem. The Collective was in our network for eight days. They accessed systems, planted backdoors, monitored communications. Everything we did during that time was potentially compromised."

The crowd shifted uncomfortably. Several people glanced at their personal devices.

"So here's what's going to happen," Kelvin continued. "I need every single device that's connected to Eclipse infrastructure. Tablets, comms, personal terminals, everything. I'm going to flush the entire network, rebuild security protocols from scratch, and make absolutely sure these assholes didn't leave any surprises behind."

He stood up, and his expression was still carrying the anger that had been present for two days straight. "Fair warning—when I say I need your devices, I mean I'm going to access everything on them. So if you've got content you wouldn't want a technopath to see, maybe delete it first. I'm talking to you, Marcus."

Several people laughed. Marcus, sitting in the third row, looked genuinely concerned.

"I'm serious," Kelvin said. "Delete your weird stuff. I don't want to see it. I don't want to know about it. Just make it gone before you hand over your devices."

He walked off the stage without waiting for questions, heading toward the technical bay where he'd been working for the past forty-eight hours straight. Noah and Sophie exchanged glances, both of them trying not to smile.

"He's still furious," Noah said quietly.

"They hacked into systems he built personally," Sophie replied. "He's taking it as an insult. Give him another week and he'll calm down."

"Maybe."

Lila stood up, moving to the center of the table. Her pale blue eyes scanned the crowd before she spoke. "I know the past two days have been stressful. We completed contracts not knowing we were being used. Some of you saw things during those operations that were disturbing. Medical crises, test subjects, families in impossible situations. That weighs on people."

She paused, letting that acknowledgment settle. "But I want everyone to understand something. We survived this because of the decisions made by one person. When the Collective revealed themselves and threatened to destroy Eclipse, when every option looked like it ended with us losing everything, Sophie Reign stayed calm and found a way through."

Lila looked directly at Sophie. "She gathered evidence under the enemy's nose. She coordinated with outside authorities. She put together an operation that dismantled an entire criminal network while keeping Eclipse clean. We're here because she made the right calls at the right times."

The crowd began clapping. It started with a few people, then spread, becoming applause that filled the assembly hall. Sophie's expression remained neutral but Noah saw the way her shoulders relaxed slightly, tension she'd been carrying for days finally releasing.

"So give it up for Sophie," Lila said, her voice carrying over the applause. "The woman who kept Eclipse alive when anyone else would have folded."

The applause intensified. Several people stood. Sophie acknowledged it with a small nod but didn't stand or make a speech. Just sat there, accepting recognition she'd earned through calculated risk and strategic planning that had somehow worked.

The meeting dispersed gradually. People filed out, heading back to their duties or their quarters, conversations filling the corridors about what they'd just learned. The core team remained at the table, processing everything in the relative quiet.

"I'm going to check on Kelvin," Diana said. "Make sure he's not about to commit violence against our server infrastructure."

"Good idea," Sophie replied. "He's been running on caffeine and rage for forty-eight hours. Someone should probably make sure he sleeps eventually."

Noah pulled up his personal tablet, checking the faction's public channels. Their streams had been offline during the crisis, but they'd posted an explanation two hours ago. Brief statement about discovering illegal activity mid-contract, cooperating with investigating authorities, and Eclipse's role in helping dismantle the operation.

The response was immediate and overwhelming. Comments scrolled past faster than Noah could read them properly, but the sentiment was clear.

**W Eclipse. Actual heroes.**

**They could have just walked away but they gathered evidence instead. Respect.**

**This is what factions should be. Not just fighting for contracts but actually doing the right thing when it matters.**

**Eclipse stock going UP. These guys are the real deal.**

**Noah Eclipse has dragons AND a moral compass. Best faction in the eastern cardinal, no contest.**

The viewer numbers were climbing too. Their subscriber count had jumped by twenty thousand in two hours. People were sharing the statement, discussing it across multiple platforms, analyzing every detail of how Eclipse had handled the situation.

"We're trending," Noah said, showing Sophie the tablet. "Apparently helping dismantle a criminal network is good for public relations."

"Who would have thought," Sophie replied dryly. "Doing the right thing makes people like you."

"Revolutionary concept."

They sat there for another few minutes, watching comments scroll past, before Noah stood and stretched. His body was still recovering from two days of using chi suppression continuously. The patients at Settlement Gamma-Nine had stabilized once military forces arrived with proper medical support, but keeping forty people alive through chi manipulation had taxed his reserves significantly.

"I'm going to my quarters," Noah said. "Sleep for maybe twelve hours straight."

"You've earned it," Sophie replied. "We all have."

Noah walked through headquarters corridors that felt familiar again now that the crisis had passed. People he passed nodded or waved, some of them still discussing the meeting. The faction felt united in a way it hadn't before, pulled together by surviving something that should have destroyed them.

His quarters were on the third floor.

He entered, closed the door, and was considering whether to shower first or just collapse directly into bed when someone knocked.

Noah opened the door to find Seraleth standing in the corridor.

She looked exactly as she always did—seven feet tall, luminous eyes, white hair pulled back, wearing casual clothes rather than tactical gear. But there was something in her expression that suggested she'd been working up courage to knock.

"Sera," Noah said. "Everything okay?"

"Yes. May I come in?"

"Of course."

She entered and Noah closed the door behind her. He walked over to his bed and sat down, watching as Seraleth stood near the center of the room like she was uncertain what to do next.

"I wanted to talk to you about something," Seraleth said. Her voice carried that formal quality she used when she was nervous about a situation. "But I was not sure if it was appropriate timing given recent events."

"The crisis is over," Noah replied. "Whatever you want to talk about, now's fine."

Seraleth's fingers clasped together in front of her, then separated, then clasped again. Body language that Noah had learned meant she was genuinely uncertain about something. "I was thinking we could play truth or dare again."

Noah blinked. Of all the things he'd expected her to say, that wasn't on the list. "Truth or dare? Really?"

"Yes." Seraleth's expression was earnest, completely serious. "I enjoyed the game when we played it previously. It was... educational."

The last time they'd played truth or dare had ended with them kissing. It had been Seraleth's first kiss, actually, and she'd approached the entire experience with the kind of careful attention she gave to learning combat techniques. Analyzing, processing, trying to understand something humans took for granted.

"Why do you want to play truth or dare?" Noah asked.

Seraleth's cheeks darkened slightly, the Lilivilian equivalent of blushing. "Because during the game, I could choose dare and you would kiss me again. I thought that was an efficient method of creating opportunities for physical affection without having to initiate it directly."

Noah felt a smile tugging at his lips despite his exhaustion. Seraleth was many things—brilliant tactician, skilled fighter, loyal friend—but her approach to relationships was endearingly straightforward. She analyzed human social dynamics like they were combat scenarios, looking for optimal strategies.

"Sera," Noah said gently. "You don't need to use a game. If you want me to kiss you, you can just ask."

"I can?"

"Yes. We're dating. Physical affection is part of that. You don't need to create elaborate justifications or use games as cover."

Seraleth processed this information, her luminous eyes tracking across Noah's face like she was looking for confirmation he was serious. "That seems very direct."

"It is direct. But that's okay." Noah stood, crossed the distance between them, and kissed her.

Not gentle or tentative. A real kiss, the kind that involved actual passion, his hand coming up to cup her face, his tongue tracing her lower lip before deepening the contact. Seraleth made a small sound of surprise that quickly became something else, her hands coming up to rest on his shoulders as she kissed him back.

When they finally separated, Seraleth's eyes were slightly wider. "I liked that very much."

"Good." Noah smiled. "That's kind of the point."

"I see." Seraleth's expression was thoughtful, processing the experience. "So physical affection can occur spontaneously without structured social games creating opportunities for it."

"That's how it usually works, yeah."

"That is useful information."

Noah laughed, and some of the exhaustion he'd been carrying lifted. Seraleth had that effect sometimes—her earnest approach to learning human customs was simultaneously adorable and refreshing. No games, no hidden agendas, just genuine attempts to understand how relationships functioned.

"Since you're here," Noah said, gesturing toward the sitting area, "we could chill together. Do something that isn't truth or dare."

"What would you suggest?"

"We could watch a movie." Noah walked over to his entertainment system, activating the display. "I've got a collection of pre-war films. Horror, mostly. Classic stuff from before the Harbinger invasion."

Seraleth followed him, settling onto the couch with the careful posture she always maintained. "I am not familiar with horror films. What is their purpose?"

"Entertainment through ... basically fear," Noah replied, scrolling through his collection. "People watch them to experience scary situations without actual danger. It's a psychological thing—your brain knows you're safe but the story triggers fear responses anyway."

"That seems counterproductive. Why would humans seek experiences that cause fear?"

"Because once the fear ends, there's a relief response that feels good. Also, some people just enjoy being scared in safe contexts." Noah selected a film from his collection. "This one's called 'It.' Classic horror from the late twentieth century. About a shape-shifting entity that preys on children's fears."

He activated the film. The opening credits began playing, showing a small town setting and ominous music. Seraleth watched with focused attention, her eyes tracking every detail on screen.

"I do not think this will frighten me," Seraleth said after the first few minutes. "My threat assessment capabilities are too developed. I can distinguish between fictional danger and actual threats."

"That's fair," Noah replied. "Then we can watch it for a different reason."

"What reason?"

Noah's smile shifted, becoming something more playful. "Throughout the movie, whenever we see a red balloon on screen..."

He paused there, letting the implication hang.

Seraleth looked at him, clearly waiting for him to finish the sentence. "Yes? What happens when we see a red balloon?"

Noah just smiled, saying nothing, watching as understanding slowly dawned across Seraleth's features. Her cheeks darkened again, that Lilivilian blush becoming more pronounced.

"Oh," she said quietly. "That kind of game."

"That kind of game," Noah confirmed.

On screen, a red balloon drifted into view, floating down a residential street. Seraleth's gaze flicked from the screen to Noah, then back to the screen.

"I think I understand the appeal of horror films now," Seraleth said, her voice carrying just the slightest tremor of anticipation.

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