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Now reading: Chapter 320: Coalition of planetary defense from Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner, a Action novel by RetardedCulture.

Chapter 320: Coalition of planetary defense

The forty-five minutes passed in a blur of equipnt checks and hurried preparations. Team Seven gathered their gear with the efficiency born of intensive training, but Noah could feel the nervous energy crackling between them. This wasn’t simulation anymore.

Bay 7 humd with activity as they arrived, their combat suits sealed and weapons charged. Other teams moved with similar urgency, but Team Seven had been singled out for a private briefing room adjacent to the main bay.

Lieutenant Beaumont stood at the head of a tactical display table, her expression more serious than they’d ever seen it. Behind her, holographic displays showed star charts and planetary data.

“Sit down,” she said without preamble. “What I’m about to tell you is classified Yellow clearance, which ans it doesn’t leave this room.”

The team took their seats, the weight of real military operations settling over them like a heavy cloak.

“First, so context you need to understand,” Beaumont began, manipulating the display to show organizational charts. “Humanity’s military structure has evolved since the Harbinger conflicts began. The Earth Defense Force operates under Supre General command from the Ark, but we’re not the only players.”

She highlighted different sections of the display. “The Consortium—major corporations including Pithon Industries, provides our tech and resources. Each corporation have their own agendas, but they need us alive to maintain their profits. The Assembly represents civilian governnt oversight, though their actual power decreases daily as military necessity trumps political process.”

Noah noticed Kelvin’s slight wince at the ntion of his family’s company being part of the power structure they now served.

“Beyond Earth’s internal politics,” Beaumont continued, “our expansion into space has brought us into contact with various species. So hostile, so neutral, so actively allied with us against the Harbinger threat. Today’s mission involves one of our allied coalitions.”

The display shifted to show a planet marked as Nebular. “Seventy-two hours ago, Earth’s diplomatic representatives attended a multi-species conference on this world. Standard security protocol called for regular communication checks every six hours.”

Her expression darkened. “Eighteen hours ago, those communications stopped.”

Sophie leaned forward. “Equipnt failure?”

“That was our first assumption. We dispatched a standard EDF unit to investigate and provide security for the diplomatic mission’s return. They arrived on-planet eight hours ago and were supposed to report every two hours.”

The implication hung heavy in the air before Lucas voiced it. “They’ve gone silent too.”

“Correct. Which brings us to your mission.” Beaumont’s fingers danced across the display, showing their flight path. “Pathfinder Team Seven will conduct reconnaissance of the situation on Nebular. Primary objective: establish contact with our forces and determine their status. Secondary objective: if the situation has deteriorated, extract Earth’s diplomatic personnel and any surviving military assets.”

Diana’s voice carried its usual flat tone. “Why send just us? If there’s potential hostile action—”

“Several reasons,” Beaumont interrupted. “First, our main forces are stretched thin defending mining operations in the outer systems. Harbinger activity has increased significantly, and we can’t pull units from active combat zones without risking catastrophic losses.”

She manipulated the display to show defensive positions throughout human space. “Second, arriving with a full military response would signal distress to our allies. If this is simply communication interference—which does happen on Nebular due to atmospheric conditions—showing up with battle fleets could damage diplomatic relationships we can’t afford to lose.”

Noah understood the logic, but it felt thin. “And if it’s not just interference?”

“Then you have one hour to assess, adapt, and survive until backup arrives. Flight ti to Nebular is three hours. Reinforcents will arrive four hours after your initial insertion.”

Kelvin’s technical mind was already working the problem. “One hour window. What’s the extraction protocol if things go badly?”

“You improvise, you adapt, and you keep our people alive until help arrives.” Beaumont’s bluntness was sohow reassuring in its honesty. “Questions?”

Lucas straightened in his chair. “Rules of engagent?”

“Defend yourselves and protect Earth personnel. Beyond that, use your judgnt. The diplomatic implications of this mission are significant, but not if everyone’s dead.”

A transport ship tagged ridian 560 carried them through the void toward Nebular, its cramped interior filled with the quiet tension of soldiers preparing for unknown combat. Noah spent the three-hour flight checking and rechecking his equipnt, trying to quiet the voice in his head that whispered about Harbingers.

“Approaching planetary orbit,” the pilot announced. “Nebular Control is responding normally. Requesting landing clearance for diplomatic district.”

Through the viewports, Nebular appeared as a world of gentle curves and soft colors—blue-green continents dotted with silver cities that seed to grow from the landscape rather than being imposed upon it. Nothing about it suggested the kind of conflict that would silence two Earth units.

“Landing clearance granted,” ca the response in accented but clear English. “Welco to Nebular, Earth delegation.”

The landing pad sat adjacent to what could only be described as an architectural marvel—buildings that flowed like water frozen in ti, their surfaces shifting with subtle patterns that hurt to look at directly. But it wasn’t the architecture that caught Team Seven’s attention as they disembarked.

It was the beings moving around the landing area.

Noah had expected aliens, but the reality was both more alien and more familiar than he’d imagined. Near the main building, a group of beings that resembled living crystal formations conversed in harmonic tones that rang like distant music. Their faceted bodies caught and refracted the afternoon light, creating rainbow patterns on the ground around them.

Closer to their landing pad, representatives of what appeared to be an aquatic species moved in environnt suits filled with liquid. Their movents were graceful and flowing, and Noah could see gill slits along their elongated necks pulsing rhythmically.

But it was the third group that made him stop and stare. They were unmistakably humanoid, but refined in a way that made them seem almost impossibly elegant. Tall and slender, with features that were sharp but harmonious, their skin held a subtle luminescence that shifted between pale gold and silver. Their hair moved as if underwater, despite the lack of any breeze, and their eyes were larger than human normal, filled with swirling colors that reminded Noah of nebulae.

“Kelvin,” Lyra whispered, “are those…?”

“The Valthara,” Kelvin breathed, his technical knowledge extending to xenobiology. “I’ve seen images, but they’re nothing compared to…” He trailed off, apparently struck speechless.

One of the Valthara noticed their staring and approached with movents that seed to flow rather than walk. When she spoke, her voice carried harmonics that made Noah’s chest resonate.

“Welco, Earth warriors. The conference has concluded successfully. Your diplomatic corps has perford admirably.”

Lucas stepped forward, automatically taking point. “Thank you. We’re looking for our military personnel—they should have arrived earlier today.”

“Ah yes, your protectors. They established periter security near the main pavilion. Their leader expressed frustration with communication difficulties, but this is common on Nebular. Our atmospheric composition interferes with many forms of electronic communication.”

As if summoned by their conversation, a group of EDF soldiers approached from the direction of the main buildings. Noah recognized the standard military bearing, but these were veteran soldiers—older, more weathered, with the kind of confidence that ca from surviving real combat.

The lead soldier, a sergeant by his rank insignia, saluted Lucas with professional courtesy tinged by barely concealed amusent. “Sir. Sergeant Mills, 3rd Infantry. You must be the Pathfinder unit we were told to expect if things don’t go well which by your presence it obviously has.”

Lucas returned the salute, and Noah could see him processing the dynamics. As Pathfinders, they were technically an elite unit, but they were also untested rookies compared to these veteran soldiers.

“Sergeant Mills. We ca to investigate your communication blackout.”

Mills grimaced. “Atmospheric interference, sir. Been trying to raise Command every two hours like protocol demands, but the interference here plays hell with our equipnt. We were about to try a ssage burst from higher altitude when your ship arrived.”

Relief was visible on Lucas’s face, though he tried to hide it. “And our diplomatic personnel?”

“Safe and sound. Conference went well, actually. They’re preparing for departure now—so of the alien delegations are providing escort ships back to their respective territories, and we’ll be accompanying Earth’s representatives ho.”

Kelvin stepped forward, his technical expertise taking over. “I might be able to help with the communication issue. Pithon Industries developed so adaptive frequency modulators that might cut through the interference.”

Mills’s expression shifted to genuine interest. “That would be appreciated, son. Anything that keeps Command from worrying about us is worth trying.”

The tension that had carried them through the flight began to dissipate. This was exactly what they’d hoped for—a simple communication failure rather than hostile action. Around them, the various alien species continued their post-conference activities, the air filled with the harmonious sounds of diplomatic success.

Noah found himself relaxing for the first ti since receiving the mission alert. He watched a group of the crystal beings creating what appeared to be geotric art in the air using controlled light refraction, while several aquatic species negotiated trade agreents through rapid hand gestures their suits translated into audible speech.

It was beautiful, in a way. This was what they were fighting for—not just Earth, but the possibility of peaceful coexistence among species, the chance for diplomacy to succeed where violence had failed.

Lyra was openly staring at the Valthara delegation, her earlier enthusiasm for adventure replaced by wonder at the reality of interspecies cooperation. Sophie had pulled out her scanner and was discretely recording atmospheric data, while Diana maintained her characteristic watchfulness despite the apparently peaceful situation.

“So what’s the tiline for departure?” Lucas asked Mills.

“Within the hour. Most delegations are already loading their ships. We’ll escort the Earth diplomatic corps to their transport, then form up for the return journey to—”

The sky above them suddenly darkened.

Noah looked up to see sothing falling from the upper atmosphere—a dark shape tumbling toward the planet’s surface with the characteristic irregular spin of an uncontrolled descent. But as it drew closer, the shape beca unmistakable.

It was a pod. A Harbinger pod.

The harmonious sounds of the landing area died instantly as every being present recognized the threat. The crystal entities’ light shifted to warning frequencies, the aquatic species began rapid evacuation protocols, and the Valthara moved with sudden, deadly grace toward defensive positions.

Sergeant Mills was already shouting orders to his n, their relaxed posture snapping into combat readiness with the speed of professional soldiers. “All units, defensive positions! Protect the diplomatic personnel!”

But Noah wasn’t listening to the orders or watching the chaos of evacuation beginning around them. His eyes were fixed on the descending pod, his analytical mind already calculating trajectory, impact ti, and tactical implications.

‘Sixty seconds until impact. Maybe ninety if atmospheric drag is higher than standard. Once that thing hits ground and opens, we’re dealing with hostile deploynt in a crowded civilian area with multiple species evacuation protocols that will create bottlenecks and chaos.’

His strategic assessnt was cold and clear. The pod represented a tactical problem with a simple solution—eliminate the threat before it could establish a foothold. Every second it remained in the air was a second they had advantage.

‘Air superiority wins engagents. Take the fight to them before they can dictate terms.’

Noah stepped forward, his hand moving instinctively to his weapon, but his mind was already reaching toward a more decisive solution. There were skills in his arsenal to twart this right now. Tools, yes he had tools, like any other weapon in his arsenal. And as much as he hated to classify him as one, unfortunately, that was exactly what the red death dragon was. A tool that could be an instrunt of force at any range and altitude.

The mathematical precision of it appealed to his tactical mind. Intercept trajectory, eliminate threat, minimize collateral damage to civilian populations. Clean, efficient, effective.

“Nyx,” he said clearly, his voice carrying across the landing pad with calm authority. “Ascend.”

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