Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner-Chapter 612: Anomaly
KOOOOM!!!
The sound wasn’t just loud. It was felt. A physical shockwave that rippled through the training yard, kicked up dust in a expanding circle, made recruits stumble back with hands over their ears. The wooden frame holding the dragon scale board trembled violently, supports creaking under stress they weren’t designed to handle.
Noah’s rear foot had driven down through the cracked ground, sinking maybe three inches into packed earth that should have been solid. His whole body had coiled and released like a spring, immense amount of strength channeled through his arm, through his fist, into a single point of impact.
When the dust settled and the ringing faded from everyone’s ears, the training yard went absolutely silent.
The dragon scales had cracked.
Not shattered. Not broken completely. But a spiderweb of fracture lines spread from the impact point, white stress marks visible against the dark surface. The scales had held, barely, but the damage was undeniable. Real. The kind of damage that said whoever hit this could maybe, possibly, actually hurt a dragon.
The water container behind remained intact, but only because the scales, even cracked, had managed to hold together enough to prevent full penetration.
"Holy shit," someone breathed.
Valen approached slowly, his scarred face showing something between approval and concern. He ran his fingers over the cracked scales, testing the fracture lines, checking the structural integrity of what remained.
"Well," he said finally, looking at Noah with an expression that was hard to read, "that’s the first time anyone’s damaged this board in three years of using it."
Murmurs erupted through the assembled recruits. Two hundred voices overlapping, some impressed, others suspicious, a few openly hostile.
"How is that possible?"
"Nobody’s that strong naturally."
"He’s got to be using some kind of enhancement magic we don’t know about."
"Three years and nobody’s even scratched it, and this kid cracks it on his second try?"
Noah stepped back from the board, his hand stinging slightly from the impact. Not injured, just the feedback from hitting something that refused to yield completely. He flexed his fingers, making sure everything still worked properly.
Valen turned to address the crowd, his voice cutting through the speculation.
"This is what’s possible when you have the right foundation. Strength, speed, durability, all working together. But even this..." he gestured at the cracked scales, "even this isn’t enough. Burt damaged the scales, yes. Impressive. Exceptional, even. But he didn’t penetrate them. Didn’t reach the target behind. Against an actual dragon, this level of force would hurt it, maybe crack some scales, but it wouldn’t be a killing blow."
He let that sink in.
"Which is why we developed the Vital Point Technique. Because raw power alone, no matter how exceptional, isn’t sufficient. You need precision. You need understanding. You need to know not just how to hit hard, but where to hit and how to make every strike count."
Valen gestured to his assistant, who brought forward a new set of diagrams. These showed dragon anatomy in detail, the overlapping scale patterns, the underlying muscle structure, the energy distribution throughout the body.
"Dragons," Valen began, moving to stand beside the diagrams, "have power distributed throughout their entire body. Not concentrated in a single core like beasts, but flowing through them constantly. This energy moves in patterns, pathways that connect different parts of their body."
He traced lines on the diagram with his finger.
"The scales aren’t just armor. They’re part of the energy distribution system. Each scale is connected to the ones around it, creating a network. When you hit a dragon, the force of your attack gets distributed across this entire network. That’s why even powerful strikes seem to barely affect them. The impact spreads out, dissipates, becomes manageable."
Noah watched intently, his mind already working through the implications.
"But," Valen continued, "there are weak points in this system. Places where the energy has to transfer between scales, where the network has junction points. These junctions are located at the seams where scales overlap."
He pointed to specific areas on the diagram where scales met.
"This is where you strike. Not because the armor is weaker there, though it is slightly. But because hitting these junction points disrupts the energy distribution in that entire region. It creates a cascade effect, a localized failure in the dragon’s defensive system."
’It’s like nodes of Ranvier,’ Noah thought, the biological comparison clicking into place immediately. ’In myelinated neurons, the myelin sheath has gaps, nodes where the electrical signal has to jump from one section to the next. These nodes are critical for signal transmission. Damage a node and you disrupt the entire pathway. The scale seams are serving the same function for the dragon’s energy distribution. They’re not just structural weak points, they’re energy transfer points. Hit them and you interrupt the flow.’
The concept was simpler than it sounded when you broke it down. Think of a bucket brigade fighting a fire. Each person in the line was stable, solid, could handle being jostled or bumped. But the moment between hands, when the bucket was actually transferring from one person to the next? That moment was vulnerable. The dragon’s scales were the people, the energy flowing through the dragon was the water in the buckets. Hit the transfer point at the exact moment of exchange, and the whole system in that area broke down. The water spilled, the chain faltered, and suddenly that section of the dragon’s defense was compromised.
"But," Valen said, his voice taking on a harder edge, "knowing where to hit is only the first step. The Vital Point Technique has three components, and you need to master all of them."
He held up one finger.
"First, identification. You need to learn dragon scale anatomy. Different species have different patterns. A red death’s scales overlap differently than a frost dragon’s. An ancient dragon has different junction points than a young one. You need to study these patterns until you can identify vulnerable points instantly, even in the chaos of combat."
A second finger.
"Second, precision. The junction points are small targets. Maybe the size of a coin, sometimes smaller. You need to hit exactly that spot, not the scale beside it, not close enough. Exactly that point. This requires perfect accuracy under pressure, while the dragon is moving, while you’re moving, while everything is trying to kill you."
A third finger.
"Third, and this is the hardest part, force concentration. You need to channel all of your attack, all of your power, into a single point at the moment of impact. Not spread across your fist or your weapon. Not dispersed. Everything focused into an area smaller than your fingertip, released in the exact instant you make contact."
He lowered his hand.
"Most people fail at the third step. They can learn the anatomy. They can develop the accuracy. But concentrating force goes against every instinct your body has. When you punch, you want to hit with your whole fist. When you swing a sword, you want to use the whole blade. The Vital Point Technique requires you to override that instinct, to compress all your power into the smallest possible point."
Valen moved to the damaged scale board, pointing at the cracks Noah had created.
"Burt hit hard. Hit with tremendous force. But that force was dispersed across the entire surface area of his knuckles. If he’d concentrated that same amount of power into a single point, into one of these junction points specifically, he would have penetrated completely. The water container would be burst, and against a real dragon, that would be a serious wound."
Noah stared at the cracks, understanding washing over him. ’I hit with everything I had, but I hit like I normally do. Fist making contact, force distributed across the striking surface. That’s why it cracked but didn’t penetrate. If I’d focused everything into a single point, like driving a nail instead of swinging a hammer...’
"For the rest of today," Valen announced, "you will practice force concentration. Not on the dragon scales, we only have the one board and it’s damaged now. You’ll practice on these."
His assistant brought out training posts, thick wooden pillars maybe a foot in diameter, their surfaces showing countless impact marks from previous training sessions.
"Your goal is to strike the post and leave a mark no bigger than your fingertip. Just one finger’s width of damage. You can hit as hard as you want, use whatever magic you have, but the mark must be concentrated. Spread damage doesn’t count. Precision is everything."
He stepped back.
"Begin."
The training yard erupted into activity. Recruits spread out among the posts, some approaching confidently, others with obvious uncertainty. Noah found an unoccupied post near the edge of the yard and studied it.
The surface was scarred from years of use, pockmarked with dents and gouges of various sizes. Most of the marks were fist-sized or larger, evidence of recruits hitting hard but failing to concentrate their force.
Noah pulled his fist back and struck, not putting his full strength behind it, just testing the concept. His knuckles connected with the wood, leaving a mark maybe three inches across. Respectable impact, but nowhere near the fingertip precision Valen had described.
He tried again, this time consciously trying to focus the energy. The mark was smaller, maybe two inches, but still too dispersed.
’This is harder than it sounds,’ Noah thought, examining his third attempt. ’I know what I’m supposed to do. Channel everything into a single point. But actually doing it, actually overriding the natural tendency to hit with a broad surface, that’s a completely different challenge.’
Around him, other recruits were having similar struggles. Nami was working with her knife throwing, trying to make the blade penetrate in a smaller point rather than the broad slash it naturally created. The results were mixed, her knife sometimes leaving nice concentrated punctures, other times skidding off the wood and creating long scratches.
Tomas, the big farm boy who’d tried the dragon scales first, was hitting his post with enough force to make it shudder in its mounting, but every strike left fist-sized dents. Power without precision.
The fire user who’d tried earlier was channeling flames around her hand, attempting to create a concentrated point of heat rather than a broad wash of flame. The wood scorched in irregular patterns, showing her difficulty maintaining the focus.
Hours passed. The sun climbed higher, beating down on the training yard without mercy. Recruits rotated through the posts, taking breaks when their hands got too sore or their magic reserves ran low. Nobody was getting it consistently. A few managed one or two good strikes that left fingertip-sized marks, but couldn’t replicate the success.
Noah lost count of how many attempts he’d made. His knuckles were raw, not injured thanks to his enhanced durability, but definitely feeling the accumulated impacts. His best attempt had left a mark maybe half an inch across, closer to the goal but still not quite there.
’The knowledge is one thing,’ he thought, studying the wood grain of his post. ’But the execution, the actual moment of impact where you have to compress everything down to a single point while maintaining enough force to matter, that’s something else entirely. It’s like trying to thread a needle while running. You know what you need to do, but doing it under pressure, with everything moving, that’s where it becomes actually difficult.’
A bell rang, signaling lunch break. Recruits broke off from their practice, heading toward the dining hall with varying levels of frustration visible on their faces.
Noah walked with Nami, neither of them speaking much. They collected their food, the same basic fare as breakfast, and found seats at one of the long tables.
"This is impossible," Nami said after a few bites, breaking the silence. "I’ve thrown knives for years. Years. I know how to control my strikes. But this concentration thing, it’s like everything I learned before is working against me now."
"Same," Noah agreed. "Knowing what to do doesn’t translate to actually doing it."
A voice interrupted them from the side. "Mind if I sit?"
Noah looked up to find a recruit he vaguely recognized from the morning assembly. Shorter than average, maybe five foot six, thin in a way that suggested he’d never had quite enough food growing up. His clothes were patched in multiple places, and his hands showed calluses from manual labor. His hair was a mess of brown curls that looked like they’d never seen a proper comb, and his eyes were sharp, intelligent, constantly moving like he was assessing everything around him.
"Sure," Noah said, gesturing to the empty bench.
The recruit sat, setting down his tray with care like he was worried about spilling anything. Up close, Noah could see he wore a yellow armband.
"Name’s Pip," he said, offering his hand across the table. "Pip Renner. From the southern marshlands originally, though I haven’t been back there in... four years? Five? Somewhere around there."
His speech pattern was quick, words tumbling over each other slightly like he was always in a hurry to get to the next thought.
Noah shook his hand. "Burt. This is Nami."
"Oh, I know who you are," Pip said, grinning. "Everyone knows who you are after this morning. The guy who cracked the dragon scales? That’s going to be the story people tell for weeks. Maybe months. Possibly years, depending on how long we’re all here."
"It wasn’t that impressive," Noah said, uncomfortable with the attention.
"Wasn’t that impressive, he says. Wasn’t that impressive." Pip laughed, shaking his head. "Brother, I hit that same board with everything I had, which admittedly isn’t much since I’m primarily a precision shooter, not a powerhouse, but still. I hit it with my best shot and didn’t even leave a mark. Not a scratch. Nothing. You cracked it like someone dropped a boulder on glass."
He took a bite of his food, still grinning.
"Anyway, I wanted to ask if maybe you’d mind if I hung around you two? I know you’ve got the roommate partnership thing going, and I’ve technically got a partner assigned too, but he’s..." Pip paused, searching for diplomatic words. "Let’s say he’s not particularly interested in actually training. More interested in coasting through this, doing the minimum, hoping to wash out respectably and go back to whatever cushy life he came from."
"You can join us," Nami said before Noah could respond. "More the merrier. But why us specifically?"
"Because you’re both actually good," Pip said simply. "Burt’s obviously exceptional, everyone saw that. And Nami, I watched you throwing knives earlier. Your accuracy is ridiculous. You’re hitting within an inch of your target point consistently, which is better than most of the yellows are managing. I figure if I’m going to learn anything useful here, it’ll be by watching people who actually know what they’re doing."
"We don’t know what we’re doing with this vital point thing," Noah pointed out. "We’re struggling just like everyone else."
"Sure, right now. But you’ll figure it out. I can tell." Pip leaned forward conspiratorially. "Besides, I’m useful to have around. I’ve got good eyes, notice details other people miss. Been told I’m decent at explaining things in ways that make sense. And I’m scrappy when I need to be, which counts for something even if I’m not winning any strength competitions."
There was something earnest about him, underneath the quick speech and self-deprecating humor. Something genuine that made Noah like him despite having just met.
"Alright," Noah said. "You can train with us. But what about your assigned partner? Is that even allowed?"
Pip waved a hand dismissively. "As long as you’re rooming with your assigned partner, which I am unfortunately, the instructors don’t really care who you train with during the day. Partnerships are more about making sure everyone has someone to spar against and watch their back during exercises. Nothing stopping you from forming bigger groups."
They finished lunch discussing the morning’s training, sharing frustrations about force concentration, speculating about what other techniques they might learn.
The afternoon session brought more of the same. Back to the posts, back to trying and failing to achieve the fingertip precision Valen had demonstrated. The instructor walked among the recruits, offering corrections, adjusting stances, explaining the theory again and again.
Noah worked until his hands were numb, until his muscles ached from the repetitive motion, until the sun started lowering toward the horizon and Valen finally called an end to practice.
"Tomorrow we’ll continue," Valen announced to the exhausted recruits. "Don’t expect to master this quickly. Some of you will get it in weeks. Others might take months. A few might never achieve true precision, and they’ll wash out. That’s the reality of dragon knight training. Not everyone makes it."
The recruits dispersed slowly, heading toward the barracks, toward dinner, toward whatever rest they could find before tomorrow brought more of the same.
Noah, Nami, and Pip walked together, the three of them covered in sweat and wood dust.
"My hands are going to fall off," Pip complained, flexing his fingers. "I can’t feel my fingertips anymore. Is that normal? That seems like it shouldn’t be normal."
"Everything hurts," Nami agreed. "I threw knives until my shoulder felt like it was on fire, and I still can’t get consistent penetration."
"That’s what she said," Pip muttered, then immediately looked apologetic when Nami glared at him. "Sorry, sorry, inappropriate. Ignore me. My brain stops filtering when I’m tired."
They reached the barracks and split up, Nami and Noah heading to their room while Pip continued down the hall toward his.
Inside, Noah collapsed on his bed without bothering to change clothes. His mind was still working through the problem, analyzing the technique, trying to understand the exact mechanism that would allow force concentration.
"You’re thinking about it," Nami observed from her own bed. "I can see it on your face. You’re going to obsess over this until you figure it out, aren’t you?"
"Probably," Noah admitted.
She laughed quietly. "Me too. Can’t help it. It’s like an itch in my brain. I know there’s a solution, I know it’s possible because Valen demonstrated it, but I can’t quite grasp how to make my body do what my mind understands."
They lay in silence for a while, exhaustion pulling at them.
But Noah couldn’t quite settle. His mind kept returning to the problem, kept analyzing the strikes he’d made, the feedback he’d felt, trying to identify what was missing.
Eventually, he sat up.
"I’m going back out," he said quietly.
Nami raised her head. "To practice?"
"Can’t sleep anyway. Might as well do something productive."
"You’re insane." She paused. "Wait five minutes for me to change, I’m coming with you."
They slipped out of the barracks into the evening air, which had cooled considerably from the afternoon heat. The training yard was supposedly closed for the night, but nobody stopped them as they made their way back to the posts.
They weren’t alone. Other recruits had the same idea, scattered throughout the yard, working by moonlight and the occasional torch. The sound of impacts echoed across the space, wood meeting wood, meeting flesh, meeting magic.
Noah found his post from earlier and resumed practice. Strike, examine the mark, adjust, strike again. Over and over, chasing that perfect concentration.
Somewhere across the yard, he could hear Pip’s voice explaining something to another recruit, his quick speech pattern easily identifiable even at a distance.
Hours passed. The moon climbed higher. Some recruits gave up and returned to their barracks. Others, like Noah, kept working.
***
In a building on the far side of camp, Instructor Valen sat at a table with three other instructors, reviewing the day’s observations. Papers spread across the surface, notes on recruit performance, assessments of potential.
"The overall level is decent," one instructor said, a woman named Instructor Sareth who’d been monitoring the yellow group. "Better than last year’s batch. More diversity in magical abilities, more recruits with actual combat experience before arriving."
"Agreed," another instructor added. "Though the usual pattern holds. Maybe thirty percent will wash out in the first month. Another twenty percent in the second. By the time we reach actual dragon encounter training, we’ll be down to maybe a hundred from the original two hundred."
Valen nodded, making notes on his own paper. "The vital point technique is sorting them already. You can see who’s got the discipline to keep working versus who gives up when something’s hard."
"Speaking of which," Sareth said, pulling out a specific report, "let’s talk about the one everyone’s talking about. Burt, son of Aldric."
The mood in the room shifted slightly.
"He cracked the board," Valen said simply. "First time in three years anyone’s managed it."
"And he held back," Sareth added. "Both times. We all saw it."
Valen was quiet for a moment, then nodded. "Yes. The first strike was maybe thirty percent of his capability. The second was closer to sixty, maybe sixty-five. But even then, he wasn’t going all out."
"How can you tell?" the third instructor asked, a grizzled veteran named Instructor Thane who specialized in combat assessment.
"Body language," Valen replied. "The way he set his stance, the tension in his muscles before the strike. When someone’s truly giving everything, you can see it in how they prepare. Every muscle engaged, every ounce of strength coiled and ready. Burt was controlled. Measured. He hit hard enough to make a point, but he was holding reserve capacity."
"Which means his actual maximum is significantly higher than what we witnessed," Thane said slowly.
"Significantly."
Sareth shuffled through her papers. "His test scores were exceptional across all three categories. Elite strength, elite speed, exceptional durability. The full trifecta. We haven’t seen that combination in..."
"Five years," Valen supplied. "Since Egor’s final trainee class."
"Do you think he’s Black Knight material?" Thane asked.
Valen considered the question carefully. "Potentially. The raw attributes are there. The discipline seems present based on his performance today. But Black Knight status requires more than just physical capability. It requires judgment under pressure, tactical thinking, the ability to face dragons alone and make decisions that keep you alive. We won’t know if he has those qualities until we push him into actual combat scenarios."
The door opened and Constable Ironside entered, his massive frame filling the doorway. The other instructors straightened slightly, respect for the senior instructor automatic.
"Discussing the anomaly, I presume?" Ironside’s voice rumbled.
"Burt, yes sir," Valen confirmed.
Ironside moved to the table, studying the reports spread across it. "I watched his strikes. Analyzed them. The boy held back both times, that’s obvious to anyone with eyes. What’s more interesting is the control he demonstrated. Most recruits with that level of power would struggle to modulate it. They’d either hit soft or hit maximum, no middle ground. But he showed graduated force application. First strike moderate, second strike harder, both precisely controlled."
"What does that suggest?" Sareth asked.
"That he’s trained extensively with his abilities. Knows his own strength intimately. Has practiced enough to know exactly how much force to apply for a desired result." Ironside looked up from the reports. "He’s not some farm boy who spontaneously developed exceptional attributes and doesn’t know what to do with them. He’s experienced."
Thane frowned. "His background check came back clean. Tavern worker from a small town. Father died in a dragon encounter, labeled a coward. Mother works at the local castle doing laundry. Sister, age eight. Nothing in his history suggests military training or combat experience."
"Then either his background check is incomplete," Ironside said calmly, "or he’s hiding something significant about his past."
Silence settled over the room.
"Do we confront him?" Valen asked.
"No," Ironside replied. "We watch. We assess. We push him and see how he responds. If he’s hiding abilities, combat training will eventually reveal it. You can’t fake experience when dragons are trying to kill you."
He straightened, preparing to leave.
"One more thing," Ironside added, pausing at the door. "The dragon scale board he damaged. That board has been tested by veteran dragon knights. Active duty knights with years of combat experience, multiple dragon kills to their names. Most of them couldn’t crack it."
He let that statement hang in the air.
"Whatever Burt’s actual maximum capability is, it exceeds what bonafide dragon knights can achieve. Keep that in mind during his training. We might be looking at something truly exceptional, or we might be looking at something dangerous. Time will tell which."
Ironside left, the door closing behind him with quiet finality.
The remaining instructors sat in silence, processing that information.
"Well," Thane said finally, "this year’s class just got a lot more interesting."







