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Now reading: Chapter 704: A chance in hell from Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner, a Action novel by RetardedCulture.

BOOOOM!

An AI construct hit the deck for the third ti in four minutes and Shade was already gone before it finished falling.

That was the thing about him. You never saw him leave. One second he was there, dark scales and pale amber eyes and the kind of presence that made a room feel smaller, and then he simply wasn’t, the space he had occupied just empty air with nothing to show he had ever been standing in it.

Diana kept her shield up and turned in a slow circle.

The construct reassembled itself from the nano tech it was built from, the grey rhino skin reforming at the edges first, the bipedal fra pulling itself back into shape, the two horns last. It was a solid recreation. Kelvin had been thorough about that when he built the training program. Height, weight, movent pattern, the specific density of the skin that made conventional strikes spread across the surface instead of going through it. It moved like a two horn moved, with the particular confidence of sothing that had never needed to reconsider its own durability.

It looked around the training space.

It did not find Shade because Shade did not want to be found.

Then the ceiling ca down.

Not literally. Shade dropped from a point above the construct that should not have been possible given the room’s dinsions, the masking dropping for exactly the half second it took to hit, and the impact drove the construct into the floor hard enough that the training space’s reinforced panels cracked along their edges.

Diana’s shield was already moving.

She ca around with the Shoal Shield extended and drove it into the construct’s midsection before it could reassemble, the orbital fragnts breaking formation and striking from three angles simultaneously, and the combination of Shade’s hit from above and the shield’s rebound force shattered the construct’s cohesion completely.

It dissolved.

Diana lowered the shield and breathed.

"Again," she said.

"Diana," Kelvin said from the observation barrier.

"Again," she said.

The construct reassembled.

This ti it ca faster, the program adjusting, and Shade had repositioned sowhere in the room that Diana could not see and she did not try to see him. That was what they had been working on. Not coordinating consciously. Trusting that he was where he needed to be without having to confirm it first.

The construct charged.

Diana took the hit on the shield front and felt nothing, the Living Reef absorbing everything, and the Tidal Rebound sent it stumbling backward and Shade hit it from the left side in the sa mont with the corroding burst that was his specialty, the acid compound finding the joints between the grey plating and eating through before the construct could compensate.

Fifteen seconds later it was dissolved again.

Diana looked at the space where it had been.

Then she looked at where Shade was now visible, standing at the far edge of the training space with his tail doing a slow sweep across the floor, looking at the dissolved construct with the expression of sothing that had decided this was an acceptable outco.

"Okay," she said. "Good."

Kelvin ca through the barrier door. He had been watching through the viewport with all four hands doing nothing, which for Kelvin was the equivalent of anyone else’s jaw being on the floor.

"He masks everything," Kelvin said, looking at Shade. "I ran active scans the whole session. Energy signature, thermal, displacent, sound. Nothing. There was literally nothing there until he chose not to be nothing." He looked at Diana. "You understand how insane that is? I have equipnt on this ship that can detect a category five from the equivalent of continents far out and that dragon was standing in this room and I had zero readings."

"I know," Diana said.

"And the shield held against three horn equivalent output," Kelvin said. "Consistently. Every hit."

"I know," Diana said.

"I’m just saying," Kelvin said.

"I know, Kelvin."

He walked beside her as she moved toward the exit, Shade falling into step behind them with the quiet patience he had developed over the past weeks. Kelvin glanced back at the dragon once. Then at Diana.

She stopped walking.

"Hey," she said.

"Hey," he said.

"I was hard on you," she said. "After the training room thing with Noah." She looked at him directly. "I know why you do it. I know you’re not trying to make feel small. I know it cos from..." She paused. "I know where it cos from."

Kelvin looked at the floor briefly. "Diana—"

"I’m not finished," she said, but she was almost smiling. "You’re overprotective and you drive insane with it and I need you to work on it." She looked at him. "But I also know that the whole reason you fell for in the first place was because I could kick everyone’s ass on this station and then laugh about it."

Kelvin looked at her for a mont.

"That is," he said, "an extrely accurate summary of events."

"So trust that," she said. "That’s still ."

He reached over and took her hand. "I know," he said. "I’m working on it."

She leaned up and kissed him, quick and warm, and then kept walking.

Kelvin stood there for a second.

Shade looked at him almost disappointed at the gleeful expression on kelvin’s face. The dragon was judging the technopath, hard.

"Don’t," Kelvin said.

Shade looked away.

---

The lower deck training area had been split into three sections and all three were running simultaneously, which produced a layered sound of impacts that traveled through the floor and up through the walls and could probably be felt two levels up.

Lila had the left section. Twenty task force personnel, a mix of ranks and backgrounds, all of them working through repetitions with the focus of people who had accepted that this was going to take as long as it took and had made peace with that. She moved between them without saying much. Watched. Corrected when correction was needed and moved on without ceremony.

"Shoulder," she said to a woman on her third attempt.

The woman adjusted.

"Again."

The woman hit the post. The sound was different from her previous attempts. Closer.

"Better," Lila said, and was already moving to the next person.

Seraleth had the right section. Her approach was the opposite of Lila’s in almost every way. She stayed longer with each person, asked questions, let them try before she offered anything. Her group moved slower but when sothing clicked for one of them it stayed clicked, which was its own kind of efficiency.

"Think about what you are hitting," she said to a young Eclipse mber who had been close for two days but hadn’t gotten there. "Not the surface. What is behind it."

"That’s what I’m trying to do," he said.

"You are trying," Seraleth said. "Stop trying. Just hit what’s behind it."

He looked at her.

"I know," she said. "Hit the post."

He hit the post and the sound it made was the sound it was supposed to make and he stood there looking at his hand for a mont like it had done sothing without his permission.

"Yes," Seraleth said simply, and moved on.

Noah had the middle section with a group of twelve who were at different stages. He had been moving between them for forty minutes and was currently standing beside a task force sergeant nad Obi who had the technique almost perfectly and kept losing it on the follow through.

"You’re there on the first hit," Noah said. "Then you think about the second hit and it falls apart."

"I know," Obi said, frustrated.

"Stop planning the second hit," Noah said. "The second hit doesn’t exist yet. There’s only the hit you’re making right now."

Obi hit the post. Clean.

"And now there’s only this one," Noah said.

Obi hit it again. Clean again.

He turned to Noah with the expression of soone who had just understood sothing was actually working.

"Don’t look at ," Noah said. "Hit the post."

Obi hit the post.

Le’anna was standing at the edge of the middle section watching all three groups at once. She had been there for most of the session, still, tail moving at its slow rhythm, saying nothing.

When Noah called a rest break she walked over to him.

"This technique," she said. "How long does it take to learn."

"Depends on the person," Noah said. "Days for so. Weeks for others."

"And against a Harbinger," she said. "A one horn. Does it work."

"Against a one horn, yes, and pretty much any variant, I hope" Noah said. "Consistently. The Harbinger skin distributes force across its surface. This technique concentrates it to a single point the skin can’t distribute fast enough. If the strike is clean, the tough skin can’t compensate."

Le’anna looked at the training groups for a mont. "On my planet it took twelve of our soldiers to bring down a single one horn," she said. "Twelve. And we lost four of them doing it."

Noah said nothing to that imdiately because there was nothing imdiately useful to say to it. Four out of twelve to kill one. And her planet had been dealing with multiple ones simultaneously across six fronts.

"If my people had known this," she said.

"It would have changed things," Noah said. "Yeah."

She looked at him. "Your people are different though. Even without this technique. The ones on this ship are not the sa as regular humans."

"No," Noah said. "They’re not."

The truth of it was that humanity’s awakened weren’t one thing. They never had been. The system that produced people like Lucas and Jayden and the rest of them was layered in a way that most people outside of military circles didn’t fully understand and most people inside them only partially did.

First generation awakened were the baseline. People carrying the lowest concentrations of void energy in their bodies, the ones who had just crossed the threshold into ability territory. First gens could fight. Against a one horn Harbinger in a coordinated group of twenty, a well trained first gen unit could bring it down. They’d take losses doing it but they could do it. Against a two horn the math got ugly fast. Against a three horn it stopped being math and started being a body count.

Second generation carried more. More void energy processed, higher output, greater durability. A group of ten solid second gens was sothing Harbingers factored into their tactical calculations, which said everything. A military trained second gen unit could handle a two horn engagent and walk away from it. Not without cost. But walk away.

Third generation was where things started to get genuinely uncomfortable for anything below a four horn threshold. The void energy concentration at that level produced output and physical capability that made a single soldier dangerous in ways that changed how engagents were planned. A third gen didn’t need twenty people behind them to matter. They needed the right positioning and enough room to work.

And then there was the alpha class.

S rank. SS rank. SSS rank.

These weren’t generations anymore in the conventional sense. These were people whose void energy concentration had gone sowhere that the generational frawork stopped being a useful description. Lucas was S rank and had headbutted a three horn’s skull inward with a broken arm after pulling a bone out of his own body to use as a weapon. Jayden was S rank and ran plasma at temperatures that lted reinforced military grade plating. Their individual output changed the strategic calculation of an entire engagent on its own.

SS rank was rarer. The kind of concentration that showed up once in a long while. People the EDF built entire operational fraworks around because one of them in a theater was the difference between a war of attrition and sothing that ended.

SSS rank was Noah. And Noah was currently teaching VPT to people who would use it to fight a four horn Harbinger that had spent two years evolving on a planet with no resistance to push against it.

The original family heads sat outside the standard ranking system entirely. The EDF had never formally classified them because doing so would have required acknowledging what they were. Aurelius, run through the standard trics, landed sowhere in alpha class territory. So of the other family heads sat at similar levels. And Arthur, wherever Arthur currently was, sat sowhere past all of them in a way that nobody had found the right frawork to describe yet.

"The people on this ship," Noah said to Le’anna, "are so of the strongest humans alive. Not all of them. But enough of them." He looked at the training groups. "And we’re making everyone stronger before we get there."

Le’anna looked at the groups. At Lila moving through her section without wasting a word. At Seraleth staying with soone until they got it. At the sound of impacts that were getting cleaner every day.

"Show ," she said.

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