Re-Awakening: I Ascend with a Legendary class

Chapter 622: Weeks of Subtle Escalations



Chapter 622: Weeks of Subtle Escalations



To create chaos without anyone noticing them or doubting them, it was necessary to take their time, prepare properly, and earn the trust of these five kings. Aside from trust, it was also necessary to show them that they were the most powerful tools of their kingdoms.


...


The borders of the five kingdoms were never meant to be beautiful, and they weren’t. What they were was functional — a sprawling lattice of relay towers, ore corridors, supply depots, and Pulse-linked communication masts that kept the whole arrangement humming along without anyone needing to think too hard about it. Mining routes cut through the ridgelines of Drevos’s eastern range, feeding raw magnetite and crushed coalite into the interior. Trade convoys moved in synchronized windows through Orsel’s northern passes. Processing facilities in Mourne’s lowlands ran continuous cycles. Outposts along Bart’s southern stretch and Edran’s interior supply chains ticked away quietly, unglamorous, unremarkable.


Which was exactly what made them perfect.


Almond went first. Of course he did.


He’d spent two weeks mapping the relay network in Drevos’s eastern mining sector before touching a single thing, specifically the stretch of towers running from the Greyveil ridge down into the Kossam basin, where the ore roads branched north toward the capital. He didn’t need all of them. Just one. Tower Seven, third cluster, sat on a natural elevation that made it the load-bearing node for the entire eastern comm link. If Seven went, the downstream towers would hold for maybe six minutes before synchronization lag cascaded and took the whole segment with it.


He did it on a cold Tuesday, two hours before the morning shift change.


No explosion. No forced entry. He walked through the access panel with a key he’d had cut weeks earlier, spent eleven minutes inside, and left. He rerouted the Pulse load from the primary channel into a secondary junction that wasn’t rated for it, introduced a micro-oscillation in the stabilizer coil, just enough to build pressure without triggering the failsafe, and sealed it back up clean. The tower ran normally for another four hours.


Then the coil hit threshold, and the whole internal system folded.


Not with a bang. It just stopped. Every channel in Tower Seven went dead simultaneously, and the downstream effect hit the Kossam basin within eight minutes. Caravans on the ore road lost their routing beacons mid-haul. Three convoys stalled at junction markers that were suddenly outputting nothing. A comm relay in the Greyveil garrison tried to reroute through Tower Eight, couldn’t establish a handshake, and logged the failure as "node overload, suspected surge."


Surge. That was fine.


By then, Almond was already back in the capital, in uniform, getting ready for his morning shift.


Natalia’s approach was messier, and that was entirely on purpose.


Orsel’s northern trade corridor cut through the Aldfen flatlands, wide and exposed terrain that made it fast to travel and easy to monitor, which meant the convoys moving through it were complacent. The seventh convoy of the month, a sixteen-wagon chain carrying processed textile dyes and precision tool components out of the Aldfen depot, moved on schedule at the standard pace.


She hit them forty kilometers north of the depot, in a dead window between two monitoring masts.


She didn’t kill anyone. Not out of squeamishness, but because bodies created a specific kind of investigation she didn’t want. The guards went down fast, and the convoy sat in the flatlands in a state that was genuinely difficult to make sense of. The cargo wasn’t stolen, it was scattered, crates broken open, goods spread across a two-hundred-meter stretch of road in no logical pattern. The wagon markings had been partially altered: Orsel’s routing stamps scraped off and replaced with something that looked, at a glance, like Edran’s eastern depot codes. Not convincingly, if you looked closely. But at a glance.


The guards would wake up with headaches and no clear account of what had hit them. The investigators would spend two days determining it wasn’t actually Edran’s doing, and during those two days, Orsel’s internal threat assessment would quietly log it as "contested."


That was the word she wanted.


Ainen didn’t bother being subtle because subtlety wasn’t his signature, and everyone knew it.


The processing facility he chose sat on the southern edge of Mourne’s Pelvan lowlands, a mid-sized magnetite refinery running two shifts daily. He chose it because the facility director had a known habit of cutting corners on containment protocols, which gave him a natural cover story he didn’t even need to build.


The fire he set didn’t behave like fire. That was the point.


He ran it hot in the outer processing chambers, the kind of heat that melted steel frames, but the inner containment core burned cold. Thirteen degrees colder than ambient, a blue-tinged residue coating the interior walls that the Pelvan district’s hazard team spent three days trying to categorize before flagging it as "anomalous energy discharge, origin unclear."


The origin was not unclear to anyone with sufficient experience. It had a recognizable character, not a signature exactly, but a feel that people who dealt with high-tier abilities knew. External. Deliberate. Someone had come into Mourne’s territory and done something to a facility Mourne was supposed to be protecting.


Ainen was back in the capital before the smoke cleared.


Saffa broke an outpost.


Not metaphorically.


The fortified post at Bart’s southern boundary near the Rendek pass was solid construction, reinforced concrete and Pulse-dampening panels, built to handle serious threats. The garrison had forty-two guards and an emergency escalation protocol that could have a response team on-site within twenty minutes.


Saffa gave herself twelve.


She went through the structural supports first, because those were the bones. The four corner pylons shattered in sequence, not blown out but shattered, the kind of fracture that makes engineers immediately ask what force profile could possibly produce that result. Then the defense systems were disabled methodically rather than destroyed, because a disabled system has a recovery log and a recovery log tells a story.


She was gone in nine minutes. The response team arrived to find forty-two scared, intact guards and a fortified post that looked like something had decided to make a point.


Bart’s investigators used the word "demonstration."


Good.


Clovelle and Gopu didn’t have a single dramatic incident to show for their work in Edran’s territory. What they had was twelve days and a list.


Edran’s interior supply chain was the most systematically organized of the five kingdoms, which made it the most vulnerable to systematic disruption. A pressure regulator in the Vasseld depot malfunctioning and triggering a two-day hold on outgoing ore shipments. A routing miscalculation, small, almost definitely clerical, that sent three convoys to the wrong distribution points and cost four days of correction time. A calibration error in one of the Pulse relay hubs knocked two border monitoring stations offline for six hours each.


None of it was catastrophic.


Clovelle built the pattern analysis herself. She had a genuinely methodical mind and a tendency to see systems the way some people see faces, immediately and completely. By the time she’d logged the twelfth incident, she had a clean throughline: timing, geographic clustering, the specific nature of each failure.


"Individually, these are manageable," she told Edran. "Together, they suggest intent."


He leaned forward. He already suspected. She’d made sure he would.


Kayla and Fraisea worked the aftermath across all five territories, the less visible but arguably more critical half of the operation.


Their job was to make everything look wrong in the right way.


A geological instability near Tower Seven’s site suggested terrain might have contributed to the surge. Erosion evidence in Orsel’s flatlands that could, with enough charitable interpretation, explain why the convoy had drifted off its standard route. An ambient Pulse anomaly logged in Mourne’s lowlands that preceded the Pelvan fire by seventy-two hours.


None of it exonerated anyone. That wasn’t the point. The point was to make each incident questionable instead of obvious, to introduce enough ambiguity that "definitely sabotage" became "probably sabotage, possibly." You couldn’t mobilize against it, probably. You could only investigate. The investigation was slow.


For now, slow was what they needed.


Lily tied it together the way she always did, quietly, completely, and with a precision that made it look effortless.


Her Dreadlings moved through all five territories in overlapping waves. A partial comm log in a Drevos garrison archive that corroborated the relay failure timeline in a way that raised questions. A trace of Edran’s routing code was found near Orsel’s flatland incident site. A recovered piece of equipment near Bart’s outpost with manufacturing marks that belonged to no specific kingdom but suggested sophisticated resources.


She removed things, too. A security log in Mourne that would have pointed investigators toward an internal maintenance error. A witness account in Edran that was too detailed, too accurate, and would have unraveled Clovelle’s timeline.


By the time the first reports reached the five capitals, they looked like five separate problems. But the feeling they left behind was one.


The first wave of reactions was controlled and professional. Investigations were opened. Internal reviews commissioned. Quiet inquiries went out through diplomatic channels, phrased carefully enough that nobody was directly accusing anyone of anything.


The second wave was irritation. The third was suspicion.


And that was when Almond and the others stepped back into frame. Back in the palace. Back in uniform. Back in exactly the positions they’d always occupied.


The reports came in at different times across different courts. Drevos in the morning over his daily brief. Orsel during a private council session. Bart during a training review. Mourne in his personal study. Edran was faster than any of them, because Edran was constitutionally incapable of sitting on information that concerned him.


Every time, without exception, one of them was there.


Almond stood behind Drevos as the king worked through the relay failure report, watching the slight tightening around his eyes when he hit the section on the Kossam basin cascade.


"Unusual," Drevos said, which wasn’t a question.


"Not isolated," Almond said, which was the only answer necessary.


Natalia kept her tone almost bored when she mentioned the convoy incident to Orsel. "Looks like someone’s testing your routes." He didn’t respond immediately, which meant he was already turning it over.


Ainen went more direct with Mourne. "Fire doesn’t behave like that without deliberate manipulation." Not conjecture. Statement of fact. Mourne nodded once, slowly.


Saffa said nothing at all while Bart worked through the outpost report. Let him sit with the reality of forty-two guards overwhelmed in twelve minutes by something none of them could describe properly. Then, when he finished, "Someone strong enough to do that doesn’t test once." Bart’s jaw tightened.


Clovelle gave Edran the compiled pattern, clean and logical, each data point supporting the next. He was leaning forward before she finished the second page.


The second wave looked entirely different from the outside.


The authorization came through proper channels, framed as an investigative response. Investigate, suppress, resolve. Which was everything they needed.


A border escalation near Drevos’s eastern relay zone that Almond responded to with witnesses present. Always witness this time. The attackers were neutralized cleanly, but before they went down, they left things behind. Energy signatures. Marks on the terrain. Patterns that pointed sideways, toward neighboring territory.


Natalia saved a convoy near Orsel’s trade corridor, genuinely saved it, because that part had to be real for the rest to land. Made sure one attacker survived long enough to be identified. Wrong insignia. Wrong geographic markers. The kind of wrong that was too specific to be a mistake.


Ainen ran an approved retaliatory strike in Mourne’s territory, just slightly off. Not illegal, but aggressive enough in character that it would require a response from the other side to maintain face.


Each action justified. Defensive. Authorized. Each result incrementally worse.


The language in the reports changed over six weeks. Incident became a pattern. Pattern became a threat. The threat became a coordinated campaign.


The five kings started meeting more often, in private sessions with small councils and specific agendas. The meeting that mattered happened late, past the second bell, in a room with no windows and three guard rotations on the door. All five present, same shape of reports in front of each of them.


The arguments were firm rather than loud, which made them harder to step back from.


"They’re pushing."


"We can’t confirm origin."


"You don’t need origin confirmation to recognize weeks of this."


"Acting without proof puts us in a worse position."


"Not acting reads as weakness and invites escalation."


Silence.


Then Edran measured: "You’ve all seen the reports. And you’ve all seen them."


No need to specify who. They were talking about Almond and others. After weeks, these Tier-10 had shown such immense progress and power that they were undefeated in their kingdoms now.


Bart, leaning forward: "If we move, we do it properly. Authorized and scoped."


Orsel: "Agreed."


Mourne said nothing, which with Mourne meant agreement.


Drevos glanced at Almond for a fraction of a second. Then back at the table.


"We prepare."


Not war. The word wasn’t used. But preparation had its own momentum, and once that machinery started turning, it didn’t turn back easily.


...


Later, standing on a high balcony over the city, Almond watched the lights below and said nothing for a while.


Lily stepped up beside him.


"They’re moving," she said.


"Yeah."


The city looked exactly the same as always. That was the strange part. People still moved through the market district. The Pulse towers were still lit. The whole apparatus of daily life was still turning.


Below them, if you knew what to look for, you could already see it. Troop movements that didn’t match the standard patrol rotation. Supply caches being repositioned. The subtle choreography of a machine that had decided it might need to be used.


The stillness was done. What came next wouldn’t stop halfway.



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