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

Chapter 191: Be the bigger man



Back at the eastern academy, school 12, things had taken a dramatic turn. Over the days, Noah had tendered his apology to Micah for the mistreatment. The upperclassman seemingly bore no grudges against him. So life went on. By life, the second stage of the selection process.

Stage 2 came and passed, leaving in its wake new legends and shattered hopes.

Noah stood atop the Year 1 rankings with a perfect score—something virtually unheard of for a first-generation student with no combat background. Fellow students whispered theories in hallways and dormitory rooms, unable to reconcile the unassuming boy's dominance with his lack of pedigree.

"He's got to be hiding something," Derek Wolfe from 1C insisted to his classmates. "Nobody goes from civilian to perfect tournament scores in three months."

His classmate Erica Vasquez, who had secured fifth place, shook her head. "It's not what he's hiding—it's what we're missing. There's a pattern to his movements, a rhythm I couldn't break through. It's like fighting someone who already knows what you're going to do."

Noah paid little attention to the rumors. Each victory had been earned through careful application of his growing abilities, his System quietly guiding his progress while remaining his most closely guarded secret. Only Kelvin and a handful knew the truth, and Noah intended to keep it that way.

Adrian Albright had transformed since his father's appearance at the academy. The commander's cold expectations had stripped away whatever remained of the somewhat reserved classmate Noah had barely known.

In his place stood something harder, more determined—and undeniably dangerous. His final Stage 2 match against an unfortunate 1C student had showcased not just skill but a ruthlessness that sent his opponent to the medical wing with burns that would take days to heal.

"He didn't have to go that far," Jin Park had muttered to Noah after witnessing the match. "That wasn't a fight—it was a statement."

If it was a statement, the message was clear: Adrian Albright would not accept second place. Not while Noah Eclipse stood in his way.

Lila however secured her position with characteristic grace. Her fighting style mirrored her personality—calm and deceptively powerful. Where Adrian relied on overwhelming force and Noah on uncanny tricks, Lila won through technical mastery that made even third-years stop to watch. Her final opponent had barely recognized the danger before finding himself in a submission hold thanks to her telekinesis that left no option but to concede.

The moment that match ended, her eyes had sought Noah's across the arena. The look they exchanged was brief but loaded with unspoken meaning. Sophie, standing at Noah's side, had noticed—she always noticed—and her fingers had tightened almost imperceptibly around Noah's arm.

That evening, students from all three years packed the main hall as the final rankings appeared on the display board:

Year 1 Rankings:

1. Noah Eclipse - 25 pts ★★★★★

2. Adrian Albright - 23 pts

3. Akira Tetsuo - 23 pts

4. Lila Valentine - 21 pts

5. Erica Vasquez - 18 pts

---Challenge Line---

6. Marco Gonzalez - 17 pts

7. Jin Park - 16 pts

8. Eliza Chen - 15 pts

The crowd's reaction was immediate. First-years clustered around Noah and Adrian, congratulating them while simultaneously assessing the newfound rivalry. Several eyes drifted to the Challenge Line, where Marco, Jin, and Eliza stood with determined expressions. Tomorrow, they would have their chance to displace those above the line in single-match challenges.

The Year 2 rankings showed Kai Nakamura maintaining his dominance, his gravity manipulation proving nearly impossible to counter in close quarters. Vivian Lance had secured second place, her illusion-based combat style confounding opponents who couldn't tell her real attacks from her chi-conjured decoys.

Year 3's board confirmed what everyone expected: Lucas Grey at the top with another perfect score, his reputation as the school's premier fighter unchallenged. Oba Femi stood firmly in second. Bailey had claimed third.

"You did it," Sophie said, squeezing Noah's hand as they stood before the Year 1 board. Her smile was genuinely proud, though something else lurked beneath it. "Not that I had any doubts."

Noah glanced at her, still puzzled by her apparent lack of disappointment at her own elimination. "You're really not upset about not qualifying?"

"Why would I be?" Sophie's smile held secrets. "I get to watch my boyfriend represent our school while I cheer from the sidelines." She leaned closer, whispering, "Not everything worth having comes from standing in the spotlight, Noah. Sometimes the real power is in choosing which lights to control."

Before Noah could decipher her meaning, Akira Tetsuo from 1A approached them.

"Eclipse," he said with a short nod. "Congratulations." He glanced at the board. "You and Albright almost have the same score, interesting."

"Alphabetical, maybe?" Noah suggested with a grin knowing fully well where this was all going.

Akira's lips quirked. "Maybe. Or maybe they see something in you that worries them about him,"

Noah had noticed the change in Adrian too—the coldness that had replaced his reserved demeanor, the barely contained aggression beneath his controlled exterior. Commander Albright's presence had transformed his son, and not for the better.

Sophie intertwined her fingers with Noah's, drawing his attention back. "Lucas is throwing a party tonight at the Rave for everyone who qualified." She grinned. "And yes, I'm still invited."

"Of course you are," Noah said, knowing it was true. "No one would dare exclude Sophie Reign."

Her laugh was light "Exactly. Now let's get ready. Tonight's going to be interesting."

As they turned to leave, Noah caught Adrian watching them from across the hall, his father's hand heavy on his shoulder. The look in Adrian's eyes wasn't just cold, it was something darker, more personal.

This wasn't just about tournament rankings anymore. This was about proving something, and Noah had become the measuring stick.

"That boy has a target on his back," Sophie murmured, following Noah's gaze. "His father's going to break him if he doesn't win."

"It's not my fault his father's expectations are impossible. His father should focus on the war at hand and leave campus politics and drama to the students," Noah said quietly.

Sophie squeezed his hand. "No, but I know that look. I have seen it in circles where everyone is a big name. My dad's friends, their kids always try to show me up whenever they get the chance to. Why? Just to prove to their parents they aren't worthless after all,"

"So you think of Adrian the same," Noah asked.

"I think you're the obstacle between Adrian and his father's approval. That makes you dangerous to him." Her eyes met Noah's, suddenly serious. "Be careful, Noah. Family pressure makes people desperate, and desperate people make unpredictable choices."

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