Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner-Chapter 351: Day 3 in hell (A life for some lives)

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.

Chapter 351: Day 3 in hell (A life for some lives)

The silence stretched between them in the impossible space of Noah’s mind, heavy with the weight of unspoken horrors.

Bruce stood at attention, but his military bearing couldn’t hide the tremor in his hands or the way his eyes kept darting away from Noah’s face, as if eye contact might shatter what little composure he had left.

"Six...yes, six days ago," Bruce began, his voice barely above a whisper. He scratched his head, seemingly at odds with his own memory, "my team was sent to investigate missing mining crews. Standard reconnaissance. Should have been routine."

Noah watched the soldier’s face carefully, noting how Bruce’s jaw clenched with each word, how his breathing became shallow when he spoke. This wasn’t just a mission briefing—this was a confession.

"We touched down expecting to find equipment failures, maybe some kind of industrial accident. The mining facilities were intact, but empty. No signs of struggle, no distress beacons. Just... silence." Bruce’s hands flexed unconsciously, as if gripping weapons that weren’t there. "That should have been our first warning."

"What happened?" Noah asked, though part of him dreaded the answer.

Bruce’s military posture crumbled like a house of cards. His shoulders sagged, and when he looked up, his eyes held the kind of hollow desperation that Noah had seen in soldiers who’d lost everything that mattered.

"They were waiting for us," Bruce said, his voice cracking. "Not the Harbingers—they didn’t need to hide. Kruel was waiting. Like he knew exactly when we’d arrive, exactly what route we’d take. We walked right into his hands."

The space around them seemed to shift, becoming darker, more oppressive. Noah realized that Bruce’s emotional state was affecting the landscape of his mind, turning their meeting place into something that reflected the soldier’s inner torment.

"My team fought," Bruce continued, his voice gaining strength from remembered pride before immediately deflating again. "God, they fought hard. Morrison took three of those bastards down before they got him. Ken held the perimeter for almost ten minutes against impossible odds. But it wasn’t enough. It’s never enough against them."

Noah felt a chill that had nothing to do with temperature. "And Kruel?"

"Kruel didn’t even fight at first. He just watched. Studied us. Like we were specimens in some kind of experiment." Bruce’s hands were shaking now, and he seemed to notice, clasping them behind his back in a futile attempt to maintain discipline. "When my team was down, when it was just me left, that’s when he stepped in."

The way Bruce said it made Noah’s stomach clench. "What did he do?"

"He broke me." The words came out flat, emotionless, as if Bruce was describing the weather. "Not with mind control, not with some alien technology. Just pain. Pure, methodical, scientific application of pain."

Bruce began pacing in the cramped space, his movements jerky and agitated. "See, when they first captured me, I tried to fight back. I’m a telepath, right? So I reached out with everything I had, tried to turn their own minds against them."

"Did it work?" Noah asked, though he suspected he already knew the answer.

"It worked too well," Bruce said, and for the first time, something like bitter satisfaction crept into his voice. "I made them fight each other. Turned their own strength and rage against themselves. Dozens of them, tearing each other apart like animals. The pile of bodies you passed on your way here, though unconscious? That was me. That was my handiwork."

Noah tried to process this information. A human telepath had forced dozens of Harbingers to commit mutual suicide. The implications were staggering.

"Kruel saw what I did," Bruce continued, his voice dropping back to that hollow whisper, "and you know what he said? He said, ’If you can do that to them, imagine what you can do to your own species.’"

The pieces began clicking into place in Noah’s mind, forming a picture that made him feel sick.

"That’s when the real torture began," Bruce said, his pacing becoming more frantic. "But here’s the thing about Harbinger technology—it’s not just advanced, it’s... considerate. They have ways of keeping you healthy, keeping you conscious, keeping you aware through anything they want to do to you."

Bruce stopped pacing and looked directly at Noah, his eyes bright with unshed tears. "They broke every bone in my body and healed them wrong, just so they could break them again properly. They kept me awake while they... while they explored exactly how much pain a human nervous system could process without shutting down."

Noah felt his own hands clenching into fists. "How long did you resist?"

"Longer than I should have," Bruce said with bitter self-recrimination. "If I’d given in earlier, maybe Ken would still be alive. Maybe Morrison wouldn’t have... they made me watch, you know. Made me watch what they did to my team because I wouldn’t cooperate."

The mental landscape around them darkened further, walls seeming to close in as Bruce’s guilt and trauma pressed against the boundaries of consciousness.

"Eventually, I broke," Bruce continued, his voice barely audible now. "Not because of what they were doing to me, but because of what they threatened to do to others. They showed me feeds from Earth, from colonies, from everywhere humans lived. Said if I didn’t cooperate, they’d make sure every human death in this war would be my fault."

"So you became their weapon," Noah said, and there was no judgment in his voice, only understanding.

"I became their network," Bruce corrected. "They have this technology—amplifiers scattered across the planet. My mind gets stretched through all of them, touching every human mind in range. At first, it was just surveillance. Watching, listening, reporting back."

Bruce’s breathing became labored, as if the memory was physically exhausting him. "But then they wanted more. They wanted control. So I had to... I had to take over people’s minds. Make them do things. Make them hurt each other."

"Your teammates," Noah said quietly.

"I killed them all," Bruce said, the words coming out in a rush as if he’d been holding them back for too long. "Every single one. Made Thompson put his sidearm to his own head. Made Canelo attack the others with her bare hands. Made them all fight each other while I watched through their eyes, feeling every moment of their confusion and terror."

Tears were streaming down Bruce’s face now, but his voice remained steady with the discipline of a soldier making a report. "The backup team that came after us—I controlled them too. Made them not send back reports that everything was fine, that the situation was contained. Then I made them walk into Harbinger ambushes. Made them lower their weapons when they should have been fighting,"

Noah felt sick. The scale of betrayal, of forced complicity, was almost incomprehensible.

"Every civilian who turned on rescue teams, every person who attacked their own family members, every act of inexplicable violence—that was me," Bruce continued relentlessly. "I remember every face, every name, every moment of confusion in their eyes when I made them do things they would never normally do."

"Bruce," Noah started, but the soldier wasn’t finished.

"The worst part is that I’m not weakening. I can’t take any more load but at the same time, I can do this all day!!" Bruce said, his voice rising with desperate hysteria. "The technology keeps me functioning perfectly. My body is in perfect health, my mind is sharp and clear, and I could potentially do this forever. There’s no natural end to this, no moment when I’ll be too broken to continue being their puppet."

Bruce turned to face Noah fully, his expression wild with desperation. "That’s why you have to kill me. That’s why this is the only way out. As long as I’m alive, the network continues. As long as I’m breathing, I’m a weapon pointed at every human in this system."

"No," Noah said firmly.

The simple word hit Bruce like a physical blow. He staggered backward, his face crumpling with disbelief.

"You don’t understand," Bruce said, his voice breaking. "I can’t resist forever. Every day I don’t comply completely, they make me hurt more people. Every moment of defiance costs innocent lives. This is mercy, not murder."

"I won’t give you an easy way out," Noah said, his voice carrying the weight of absolute conviction. "If you feel guilty about what you’ve been forced to do, then live with it. Help me find another way to break their system and get you free." fɾēewebnσveℓ.com

Bruce collapsed to his knees, the carefully maintained military discipline finally cracking completely. "There is no other way," he sobbed. "Don’t you think I’ve tried? Don’t you think I’ve looked for every possible escape? This is it. This is the only choice that saves everyone."

Noah knelt down beside the broken soldier, placing a hand on his shoulder. "Then we make a new choice," he said quietly. "We find a way that doesn’t exist yet. We refuse to accept that the only solution is more death."

Bruce looked up at him with eyes full of desperate hope and crushing despair. "And if we can’t? If there really is no other way?"

Noah met his gaze steadily. "Then we’ll face that when we come to it. But I won’t kill you today just because it’s easier than fighting for a better solution."

In the distance, they could both feel the mental landscape beginning to shift as external forces pressed against Noah’s consciousness. Their time was running out.

"Help me wake up," Noah said. "Help me fight them. If you really want to make amends for what you’ve been forced to do, then help me find a way to free you and everyone else."

Bruce nodded slowly, wiping tears from his face as he struggled to regain some semblance of composure. "Alright," he whispered. "Alright. But Noah... if this doesn’t work, if we can’t find another way..."

"Wait," Noah said suddenly, his voice gaining urgency as a new thought struck him. "When I wake up—I have abilities. I can create dimensional portals, travel through my own pocket dimension. I could get us both out of here in seconds."

For a moment, hope flared in Bruce’s eyes like a spark catching kindling. Then, just as quickly, it died, replaced by something that looked almost like panic.

"No," Bruce said, his voice sharp with sudden terror. "No, you can’t do that. You absolutely cannot do that."

"Why not?" Noah demanded. "It’s perfect—we disappear before they know what’s happening, and—"

"Because you’ll kill everyone!" Bruce interrupted, scrambling to his feet. "Every single person connected to this network will die the instant you remove me from this facility."

Noah felt his stomach drop. "What do you mean?"

Bruce’s hands were shaking again, but now it was from fear rather than guilt. "My mind isn’t just connected to the amplifiers—I AM the connection. I’m the psychic load balancer for the entire network. Right now, I’m actively managing the mental load for nearly two hundred thousand people across three star systems."

"I don’t understand—"

"The amplifiers were never designed to work independently," Bruce explained, his words coming faster as panic set in. "They channel raw psychic energy—massive amounts of it. Without my consciousness actively filtering and managing that flow, it would dump directly into every connected human brain at full intensity."

Noah’s enhanced mind quickly grasped the implications. "Brain death."

"Instant and total," Bruce confirmed. "Every man, woman, and child currently under my influence would die within seconds of my disappearance. The psychic feedback would be like lightning striking their nervous systems directly."

"But surely there’s some kind of safety protocol—"

"There is," Bruce said grimly. "Me. I’m the safety protocol. The Harbingers built this system assuming they’d always have a psychic conduit to manage it. They never planned for the conduit to just... vanish."

Noah felt the weight of the trap settling around them like a closing fist. "So even if I could get you out..."

"It would be mass murder on a scale that would make the Harbinger invasion look merciful," Bruce finished. "Two hundred thousand innocent people, including children, would die because we wanted to escape."

The mental landscape around them seemed to grow heavier, oppressive, as if the very air was thickening with the weight of impossible choices.

"There’s more," Bruce continued, his voice dropping to a whisper. "The neural interfaces they’ve implanted in my brain—they’re not just connected to the amplifiers. They’re connected to my life support systems. My heart, my lungs, my major organs—they’re all regulated by Harbinger technology now."

"Meaning?"

"Meaning even if the feedback loop didn’t kill everyone else, removing me from this facility would kill me anyway. My body can’t function without the life support systems they’ve integrated into my nervous system."

Noah stared at him, feeling the last of his hope crumble. "So either way..."

"Either way, I die," Bruce said with grim finality. "The only question is whether I take two hundred thousand innocent people with me."

The two men stood in silence in the shifting landscape of Noah’s mind, both grappling with the horrific elegance of their captors’ trap. Every possible escape route led to mass casualties. Every act of defiance would be paid for in innocent blood.

"There has to be another way," Noah said finally, but his voice lacked the conviction it had held moments before.

"I’ve had six days to think about this," Bruce replied quietly. "Six days of exploring every possible angle, every potential loophole. This is it, Noah. This is the trap they’ve built, and it’s perfect."

In the distance, they could feel Noah’s consciousness being pulled back toward the waking world, their time together running out like sand through an hourglass.

"When you wake up," Bruce said urgently, "don’t try to save me. Don’t risk yourself for someone who’s already lost. Just find a way to stop Kruel before he can do this to anyone else."

"I’m not giving up on you," Noah said stubbornly.

"Then you’re condemning two hundred thousand people to death," Bruce replied, and there was no anger in his voice, only infinite sadness. "Sometimes, Noah, the only way to win is to accept that some battles can’t be won."

Noah stared at Bruce in the shifting mental landscape, pieces clicking together with horrible clarity. The contradiction hit him like a physical blow—Bruce had spent the last several minutes begging him for death, pleading for release from his torment, insisting it was the only merciful solution. But now, when presented with an actual escape route, Bruce was in a panic about the same catastrophic consequences that would occur if Noah simply killed him.

"Wait," Noah said slowly, his voice cutting through Bruce’s frantic explanations. "You’re asking me to kill you, knowing it would cause the same feedback loop. You’re asking me to murder two hundred thousand people either way."

Bruce’s words died in his throat, his eyes widening as if he’d been caught in a lie he’d been telling himself.

"You’ve been so focused on ending your own pain that you’ve been willing to sacrifice everyone else to do it," Noah continued, his voice gaining strength as understanding dawned. "This isn’t about mercy or saving lives—this is about you being so broken that you can’t think past your own suffering."

Bruce’s military posture crumbled completely. His hands went to his head, fingers digging into his scalp as if trying to physically hold his fractured thoughts together.

"I... I just want it to stop," Bruce whispered, his voice cracking like a child’s. "I can’t think straight anymore. Every day they make me hurt more people, and every night I see their faces, and I just... I just want it to end. I don’t care about the consequences anymore. I don’t care about anything except making it stop."

Noah felt a chill of recognition. This wasn’t the disciplined soldier who had introduced himself with rank and serial number. This was a man who had been systematically destroyed, his moral compass shattered by trauma and desperation. Bruce wasn’t thinking tactically or strategically—he was thinking like a torture victim who would do anything, sacrifice anyone, to end his own agony.

"They didn’t just break your body," Noah said quietly. "They broke your mind. They turned you into exactly what they wanted—someone so desperate that you’d be willing to let innocent people die just to escape your own pain."

Bruce looked up at him with hollow eyes that held no argument, no denial. Just the terrible recognition of what he’d become.

Visit freewe𝑏n(o)v𝒆l.𝑐𝘰𝑚 for the best novel reading experience