Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner Chapter 760: An Eclipse
Previously on Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner...
The last of the lizards went down with a crack that echoed off the impossibly high ceiling, and Noah stood there for a second, breathing hard, looking at the bodies scattered across the bedrock.
He felt bad about it. He hadn’t expected to, given everything else this planet had thrown at him, but standing in the wreckage of an army that had once answered to someone real, someone who’d cared enough to mark this whole place with her presence, the killing sat differently than the bats or the frost giants had.
’You didn’t ask for this,’ he thought, looking at the nearest one, its claws still extended even in death. ’Whoever set you to guard this place, she’s gone. You were just doing the only thing you knew how to do anymore.’
There wasn’t another option, though. His hands were tied the moment they’d come pouring out of the walls. He let the thought settle and moved on, because lingering on it wouldn’t change anything and Storm still wasn’t anywhere he could feel.
He looked up properly for the first time since the fight started, past the golden diffuse light he’d mistaken for sky, and understood with a slow sinking certainty exactly where the underground network had actually led them.
This wasn’t a chamber. It was the inside of a mountain.
The walls curved upward and inward in a way that no constructed room would ever curve, following the natural geology of something massive, hollowed out from within rather than built from scratch, the golden light filtering down from somewhere far above through gaps in rock that must have been catching actual sunlight from the surface and bending it down through some natural prism effect Noah didn’t fully understand and didn’t have time to.
"We’re inside a mountain," he said out loud, mostly for his own benefit. "An entire mountain, hollowed out."
Ivy had already moved past him, drawn toward the chamber’s far wall where more of the carved reliefs ran in long bands across the stone, the same style as the shrine, the woman depicted again and again, surrounded each time by different configurations of the winged creatures and the lizards they’d just fought through.
Noah followed her over.
The carvings here told more of a story than the shrine had bothered with, panel after panel showing the woman directing her creatures in what looked like construction work, the lizards hauling massive stone blocks, the winged creatures carrying smaller loads through the air, all of it building toward something Noah couldn’t make out in the worn relief but assumed, given everything else, was this very chamber.
"This is old," Noah said. "Older than the ice city. Nothing’s lived here in a long time."
Ivy wasn’t listening. She’d found something more interesting.
She pressed her snout against the base of one of the carvings and inhaled, slow and deliberate, then ran her tongue across the stone surface in a long deliberate lick, and Noah watched with growing fascination as she followed it by scratching a single claw mark beneath the carving, low to the ground, the same kind of mark a territorial animal left when it wanted something to know it had been there.
"What are you doing," Noah said, more curious than alarmed.
She didn’t answer, obviously, but kept at it, moving to the next carving along the wall and repeating the whole sequence, sniff, lick, scratch, the motions so deliberate and unconscious at once that Noah found himself genuinely transfixed.
’I’ve never seen her do that,’ he thought, watching her work her way down the wall. ’Not once. Not in the domain, not in two years of fights and training sessions and quiet mornings in the grassland.’
It struck him, watching her, that this was the most purely dragon thing he’d ever witnessed any of his bonded companions do. Back home they played, fought mock battles with each other, slept curled together in piles that defied their individual sizes, even bickered over beast cores like siblings squabbling over the last good seat. But all of that had always read, somewhere underneath the affection, as performance shaped by the domain itself, by Noah’s presence, by the fact that they existed in a space built around him rather than around whatever instincts actually ran underneath their biology.
This was different. This was unfiltered. Like watching a dog chase its own tail, pure reflex with no audience in mind.
Of course they’d bonded and played and made the domain their home. He’d never doubted that. But watching Ivy mark a wall in a dead civilization’s burial ground for her own ancestors, or whatever these carvings actually represented to her, made something in his chest ache in a way he hadn’t expected.
’My domain isn’t suited for this,’ he thought. ’Not really. It’s a good space. It’s safe, it’s theirs, but it’s not their ecosystem. It’s like putting a fish in a pond instead of a river. The water’s the same chemically. The fish survives fine. But it’s not what the fish was built for.’
He couldn’t change that, though. Not easily. He had over thirty dragons now between the original five and Gail’s hatchlings, and he knew better than almost anyone alive how difficult Hollow Blizzard Monarchs were to manage in open conditions. Storm was the perfect example. Loyal, playful, an absolute good boy ninety percent of the time, and also the single bonded companion with the strongest instinct to slip his leash and do exactly what he wanted regardless of what Noah wanted.
Storm had terrible recall. That was simply a fact Noah had accepted a long time ago.
He was grateful, at least, that Nyx and Ares ran calmer. Imagining a Red Death Dragon with Storm’s exact temperament, going AWOL the way Storm constantly did, was not a thought he wanted to spend more time with. He pushed it away deliberately.
Storm’s motivations, at least, were simple. Hunger and instinct, nothing layered or complicated underneath either, and that simplicity made him easier to predict even when it didn’t make him easier to catch. The problem had never been understanding Storm. The problem was that Storm was ridiculously fast and treated every attempt to retrieve him as the best game ever invented.
"How do you deal with Storm all day, Ivy," Noah asked.
She didn’t answer. She kept sniffing.
He almost laughed.
He was grateful, too, that he hadn’t brought Nyx down here. Whatever this place was doing to dragon instincts clearly ran strong, and having a Red Death this deep in unfamiliar territory while hunting something this dangerous felt like a risk better left untaken. The warnings hadn’t even fired yet, the system flagging nothing about unrest, which struck him as genuinely strange the longer he thought about it.
Two years ago, all the way back on Earth, his dragons had felt the alpha’s call from inside the domain across an impossible dimensional distance. Now he was standing on the actual planet, somewhere in its underground network, presumably closer to the source than he’d ever been, and the only restless dragons anywhere were Ivy and Storm, both of whom were physically outside the domain entirely. Nyx, Ares, Gail, the hatchlings, all of them sitting calm back home as far as he could tell.
’That’s worth figuring out eventually,’ he thought. ’Why being physically close doesn’t trigger the same response that happened from a dimension away.’
He filed it next to everything else he didn’t have an answer for. The list kept growing.
He knew this much now: the shrine, the ice giants, and this mountain were all connected, three pieces of the same buried history. And the woman in every carving was tied to his Ruler Bloodline somehow, the system’s own flag confirming a connection it refused to elaborate on.
None of it added up cleanly. Not yet.
"Alright," Noah said, turning away from the wall, watching Ivy finish her circuit of the carvings with one last scratch near the floor. "We should head out. Storm’s not here. Neither is the alpha. We’re chasing ghosts at this point."
He turned to go.
And stopped.
One of the carved panels near the chamber’s exit caught his eye properly for the first time, the woman depicted standing at the center of it the same way she always was, arms raised, creatures circling, and something around her neck that Noah’s eyes must have passed over a dozen times across the dozen times he’d seen her image without ever actually registering it.
A pendant.
Carved in fine relief against her collarbone, small compared to everything else in the panel, easy to miss if you weren’t looking directly at it, shaped like a coin.
He stepped closer.
The coin had an image pressed into its surface, worn slightly by whatever centuries had passed since someone carved it, but unmistakable once he was close enough to actually look.
An eclipse.
"Holyyyyy shit," Noah said.