Webnovel's Extra: Reincarnated With a Copy Ability-Chapter 176: The First Slip

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Chapter 176: The First Slip

Lucas didn’t feel it right away.

That was what bothered him later.

The shift didn’t come with a mistake, or a hit, or anything obvious. It came in the quiet after the session, when his body had already settled and his breathing had evened out.

He walked back toward the dorms with the others, hands loose at his sides, mind replaying pieces of the last drill.

Not the whole thing.

Just fragments.

A step here. A turn there. The moment where he moved without thinking and it worked exactly the way it should have.

He exhaled.

"Feels like I’m getting used to it."

Raisel glanced at him.

"That’s the goal."

Lucas shook his head.

"Yeah. Doesn’t mean I like it."

They split at the corridor.

Raisel headed toward the auxiliary wing. Arden paused near the stairs, checking something on her tablet before moving off in the opposite direction.

Lucas slowed.

Dreyden kept walking.

Lucas frowned slightly.

"You’re not stopping?"

"No."

Lucas blinked.

"...For what?"

Dreyden didn’t look back.

"To review."

Lucas let out a quiet breath.

"Of course."

He watched him go for a second, then shook his head.

"Yeah, I’m not doing that right now."

His room was empty when he stepped inside.

Lucas dropped onto the bed without bothering to turn the lights on. The faint glow from the corridor slipped in through the half-open door, just enough to outline the edges of the room.

He stared at the ceiling.

Quiet.

No projections.

No movement.

No pressure.

For the first time all day, nothing was asking him to react.

Lucas let his eyes close.

Just for a second.

He didn’t notice when he drifted.

Didn’t realize how long he’d been lying there until a sharp knock on the door snapped him awake.

Lucas blinked, disoriented.

"...Yeah?"

The door pushed open before he could say anything else.

Arden stepped inside, expression tighter than usual.

"You missed it."

Lucas sat up, rubbing his face.

"Missed what?"

She didn’t answer right away.

That was enough.

Lucas’s stomach dropped slightly.

"What happened?"

The training hall was still active.

That was the first thing Lucas noticed when they got there.

It wasn’t a scheduled session. No full rotations. Just scattered groups and a single grid active at the center of the floor.

A crowd had formed around it.

Not loud.

Just... focused.

Lucas pushed through the edge of it, Arden close behind.

"What’s going on?" he asked.

Raisel stood near the front.

He didn’t turn when Lucas approached.

"Second layer," he said.

Lucas frowned.

"What do you mean?"

Raisel nodded toward the center.

Lucas followed his gaze.

And saw it.

The grid wasn’t the same.

It looked normal at first glance. Same projection lines. Same activation sequence.

But something was wrong.

Lucas felt it before he understood it.

"Why does it feel... slower?"

Arden stepped beside him.

"It’s not slower."

Lucas narrowed his eyes.

"Then what is it?"

Dreyden answered.

"It’s delayed."

Lucas looked at him.

"Delayed how?"

Dreyden’s gaze stayed on the grid.

"The input doesn’t match the output."

Lucas frowned.

"...Explain that in a way that makes sense."

A student stepped into the grid.

Lucas recognized him. Solid mid-tier. Reliable.

The projection activated.

The first wave came clean.

The student moved.

Correct timing.

Correct angle.

Perfect.

The wave shifted.

Late.

Not where it should have.

The student’s movement no longer aligned.

The arc clipped his positioning and snapped outward, forcing a reset.

Lucas’s eyes widened slightly.

"...That wasn’t his fault."

"No," Dreyden said.

Lucas watched the next cycle.

Same thing.

The student reacted correctly.

The system didn’t.

The delay twisted the timing just enough to break the flow.

Lucas let out a slow breath.

"That’s messed up."

Another student stepped in.

This one moved differently.

Less confident.

More reactive.

The first wave came.

They hesitated.

The delay hit.

They adjusted.

Late.

But—

It worked.

Lucas blinked.

"...Wait."

Raisel nodded.

"Now you see it."

Lucas leaned forward slightly.

"They’re punishing correct timing."

"No," Dreyden said.

"They’re punishing reliance on it."

The realization hit hard.

Lucas ran a hand through his hair.

"So if you move when you’re supposed to—"

"You’re wrong," Arden finished.

Lucas let out a quiet laugh.

"Of course."

He looked back at the grid.

"And if you hesitate?"

"You have a chance to correct."

Lucas shook his head slowly.

"That’s... actually worse."

The student in the grid failed again.

Clean movement.

Wrong result.

Frustration crept into his posture.

Lucas saw it.

Everyone did.

The next cycle started.

This time, the student hesitated.

Not intentionally.

Just enough.

The delay hit.

He overcorrected.

The formation broke.

Lucas winced slightly.

"Yeah, that’s going to mess people up."

Around them, the crowd stayed quiet.

No one offered advice.

No one stepped in.

They watched.

Because this wasn’t something you could explain.

It had to be felt.

Lucas stepped forward.

"I’m trying it."

Arden grabbed his arm lightly.

"Wait."

Lucas glanced at her.

"For what?"

She hesitated.

That was all the answer he needed.

Lucas stepped into the grid.

The projection activated.

He didn’t move.

Not immediately.

The first wave came.

He waited.

A fraction longer than felt comfortable.

The delay hit.

Now.

He stepped in.

The movement aligned.

Clean.

Lucas’s eyes sharpened.

"Okay."

The second wave came faster.

He reacted instinctively.

Too fast.

The delay twisted it.

The arc clipped his edge.

Lucas adjusted mid-step, forcing the pressure outward.

Not clean.

But it held.

He reset his stance.

"...That’s annoying."

The third wave came.

Lucas didn’t think.

Didn’t try to predict.

He moved when it felt right.

The delay hit.

He adjusted.

It worked.

The grid dimmed.

Lucas stepped back out.

Silence followed.

Not heavy.

Just... focused.

Lucas rolled his shoulders once, feeling the tension settle.

"Yeah," he said quietly.

"That’s bad."

Raisel stepped closer.

"You felt it."

Lucas nodded.

"Yeah."

He looked at Dreyden.

"You can’t trust your own timing anymore."

Dreyden met his gaze.

"No."

Lucas let out a slow breath.

"Great."

He glanced back at the grid.

"So what’s left?"

Dreyden didn’t answer immediately.

Lucas waited.

Then—

"Awareness of the delay."

Lucas frowned.

"That’s not something you can see."

"No."

"Then how are we supposed to—"

"You feel it," Dreyden said.

Lucas went still.

The idea sat there.

Uncomfortable.

But it made sense.

Lucas rubbed the back of his neck.

"So now it’s not just reacting."

"No."

"It’s reacting to something that isn’t consistent."

"Yes."

Lucas let out a quiet laugh.

"Of course it is."

He stepped back from the grid, joining the others again.

The crowd hadn’t moved.

They were still watching.

Still processing.

Lucas looked around.

"They’re going to struggle with this."

Arden nodded.

"Yes."

Lucas glanced at the student who had gone before him.

Still standing at the edge of the grid.

Still trying to figure out what went wrong.

Lucas exhaled.

"Yeah."

Dreyden turned away first.

The others followed.

The hall stayed active behind them.

More students stepping in.

More mistakes.

More adjustments.

Lucas walked beside him, quieter now.

"This one’s different."

"Yes."

Lucas looked ahead.

"They’re not just removing certainty anymore."

"No."

"They’re replacing it with something worse."

Dreyden didn’t correct him.

They reached the corridor.

Lucas leaned back against the wall for a second.

"...I didn’t feel it at first."

Dreyden glanced at him.

"The delay?"

Lucas shook his head.

"The shift."

Dreyden didn’t respond.

Lucas exhaled slowly.

"Guess that’s how it works."

He pushed off the wall.

"Alright."

He rolled his shoulders once.

"Let’s see how long it takes before people start breaking on this one."

Dreyden’s gaze stayed steady.

"It won’t take long."

Lucas smiled faintly.

"Yeah."

He already knew that.

Because this time—

It wasn’t about thinking faster.

Or reacting better.

It was about trusting something that didn’t line up.

And most people—

Wouldn’t.