Webnovel's Extra: Reincarnated With a Copy Ability-Chapter 36: Pressure Has Teeth

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 36: Pressure Has Teeth

Pressure never announced itself.

That was the first lesson Dreyden Stella had learned in this place—long before his name mattered, before his rank climbed too quickly for comfort, before Oversight learned to say his name without checking a screen.

Pressure whispered first.

It nudged. It crowded. It altered the space around you until standing still felt like a decision.

Dreyden felt it when he woke.

Not from instinct. Not from magic.

From routine.

His interface greeted him a fraction of a second late.

Not enough for most people to notice. Enough for him.

He lay still in bed, eyes open, staring at the ceiling while the system finished rendering. The delay was barely measurable, but it was there—and it hadn’t been yesterday.

Someone had touched the flow.

Not broken it. Not interrupted it.

Adjusted it.

He sat up slowly, letting his breathing settle before moving. If the Triangle was watching to see how he reacted to discomfort, he wouldn’t give them satisfaction.

The day unfolded cleanly.

Too cleanly.

Students moved with exaggerated normalcy. Classes ran on time. No alerts, no disruptions, no visible disturbances.

And yet—

The instructors watched more closely.

The corridors felt narrower.

And invitations continued to arrive.

PRIVATE THEORY SESSION – OPTIONAL

CROSS-CLASS TACTICAL EXERCISE

ARCHIVE ACCESS: CONDITIONAL RELEASE

Each one polite.

Each one framed as opportunity.

None of them urgent.

That was the tell.

Urgency was a weapon. Opportunity was a leash.

He ignored them all and went to training.

The practice hall hummed with familiar noise—mana activation, weapon calibration, low conversation. Dreyden chose an empty circle and began warming up without activating a single skill.

Movement first.

Breath second.

Everything else came later.

He didn’t notice Lucas at first.

Lucas noticed him immediately.

White.

Not a flare. Not a spike.

A steady, persistent glow.

Lucas slowed his steps as he crossed the floor, eyes narrowing in a way they rarely did. His perception had always been unreliable around Dreyden—but today it felt... cluttered.

Like someone had spilled probability and hadn’t bothered to clean it up.

"You feel that?" Lucas asked quietly as he approached.

Dreyden kept stretching. "Feel what?"

Lucas hesitated. "That’s... not reassuring."

Dreyden glanced at him then. Lucas looked off-balance—not physically, but internally. The way people did when their instincts were disagreeing with their thoughts.

"You’ve been on edge since yesterday," Dreyden said. "Why?"

Lucas exhaled. "Luck’s noisy."

That made Dreyden pause.

"It’s not supposed to do that," Lucas continued. "Colors overlap, flicker. Like something keeps interrupting."

"Something or someone?"

Lucas met his eyes. "That’s the problem. I can’t tell anymore."

For a moment, neither of them spoke. Around them, students trained, laughed, sparred—oblivious to the subtle recalibrations happening above their heads.

Lucas lowered his voice. "Oversight talked to my instructor."

Dreyden didn’t look surprised.

"They didn’t ask about your skills," Lucas added. "They asked about you."

"And?"

"They wanted to know what you wanted."

That was more dangerous than it sounded.

"What did you tell them?" Dreyden asked.

Lucas shrugged. "That I didn’t know."

Dreyden straightened, rolling his shoulders once. "That was the correct answer."

Lucas frowned. "You say that like there was only one."

"There usually is."

The meeting came that afternoon.

Not a summons—those had weight.

This was an invitation delivered with professional courtesy.

Dreyden arrived exactly on time.

The room was spare and deliberately dull. No emblems. No art. No symbols of authority—just smooth surfaces and soft lighting designed to remove emotional response from the equation.

The man waiting inside was unfamiliar.

Middle-aged. Calm. Ordinary enough to be forgettable.

Which meant he wasn’t.

"Dreyden Stella," the man said, standing. "Thank you for agreeing to speak with us."

"With you," Dreyden corrected lightly. "Singular."

A small smile. "Perceptive."

They sat across from each other.

No barrier.

No recording light.

Which meant everything was being recorded somewhere else.

"We’ve observed your progress with interest," the man said. "Not because of speed—but because of shape."

"Shape?" Dreyden echoed.

"You don’t grow upward," the man explained. "You grow sideways. You adapt without destabilizing local systems. That’s rare."

"Is it illegal?"

"No," the man said. "But it is disruptive."

There it was.

Dreyden leaned back slightly. "You invited me here to tell me that?"

The man folded his hands. "We invited you because we’re deciding what role you play."

"In what?"

"In the Triangle’s future."

Dreyden considered his response carefully.

"Roles are assigned to people who accept them," he said at last. "I haven’t."

The man studied him openly now—less evaluation, more curiosity.

"You could," he said. "You have the temperament."

Dreyden smiled faintly. "That’s usually the warning sign."

Silence stretched between them—not hostile, but sharp.

Finally, the man spoke again.

"Pressure reveals intent," he said. "We’re simply applying enough to see what moves."

"And if I don’t?" Dreyden asked.

The man shrugged. "Then we learn something else."

The meeting ended without conclusion.

That bothered them more than it bothered him.

Maya watched the probability threads tighten around Dreyden’s position like fingers curling.

They weren’t trying to kill him.

They weren’t even trying to control him yet.

They were trying to classify him.

And that was worse.

Classification came before containment.

She made her decision quickly.

Not emotionally.

Strategically.

If Oversight wanted to define the board, she’d change the board.

She targeted a resource node—mid-level, overconfident, structurally important but not irreplaceable. One nudge. One redirection.

No explosions.

No alerts.

Just absence.

When a Tier-2 relic shipment vanished without residue or disturbance, it sent a message clearer than sabotage ever could.

Someone was acting without friction.

Someone understood the system well enough to remove mass without generating force.

Oversight panicked quietly.

Factions froze.

Maximus Sagaza laughed.

Dreyden learned about it that evening.

He read the report twice.

Then he closed the interface and sat still.

"She’s escalating," he murmured.

Not recklessly.

Elegantly.

And that meant something had changed.

He adjusted immediately.

Training routes randomized.

Information spending halted.

Contacts compartmentalized.

If Maya was removing reference points—

Then he’d stop being one.

Lucas noticed the change within hours.

"You’re pulling back," he said in the hallway. "Why?"

Dreyden met his eyes. "Because something just crossed a line."

Lucas swallowed. "Good something or bad something?"

Dreyden considered it.

"...Necessary," he said.

That night, alone, he stood in the training hall long after curfew, fists resting at his sides.

Pressure had teeth now.

Not just his.

Hers.

Two independent variables moving freely in a closed system.

The Triangle didn’t know how to handle that.

And Dreyden Stella—

For the first time—

Wasn’t reacting.

He was choosing.

RECENTLY UPDATES