Webnovel's Extra: Reincarnated With a Copy Ability-Chapter 31: Identity Drift
The night after Elias Morven’s fall was quiet.
Too quiet.
Dreyden noticed it immediately.
The Triangle usually breathed at night—footsteps in distant corridors, mana signatures flaring briefly in training rooms, whispers carried through half-shut doors. Even silence here was rarely complete.
Tonight felt... contained.
He lay awake on his bed, eyes fixed on the ceiling, listening.
Nothing.
No alert notifications.
No sudden summons.
No anxious knock at his door.
Oversight had accepted the outcome.
That was the part that unsettled him.
The Triangle didn’t care about justice. It cared about stability. Elias had become unstable—unreliable data, fractured alliances, inefficient outcomes. Removing him from relevance wasn’t cruelty.
It was maintenance.
Dreyden turned slightly on the mattress, exhaling slowly.
He tried to feel something.
Satisfaction.
Relief.
Even discomfort.
There was nothing.
Just a clean, hollow calm.
That scared him more than guilt ever could have.
Morning arrived without incident.
Dreyden rose at his usual time, showered, dressed, and left his room. His reflection in the mirror gave him no answers—dark hair still damp, expression neutral, eyes level.
Dreyden Stella looked the same.
Jack did not.
The name surfaced uninvited as he walked the corridor.
Jack.
The boy who would’ve hesitated.
The boy who believed warnings mattered.
Who thought honesty could redirect a bad outcome.
Who would’ve told Elias to stop, to be careful, to choose better.
That boy wouldn’t survive the Triangle.
The realization felt old now.
Worn smooth by repetition.
Class passed uneventfully.
No one mentioned Elias aloud, but absence was louder than rumor. His seat remained empty. His faction no longer met in the open. Conversations shifted when Dreyden entered, not out of fear—but calculation.
People weren’t avoiding him.
They were accounting for him.
That was worse.
Lucas arrived late, scanning the room before taking his seat beside Dreyden. He looked tired—dark circles under his eyes, mana output slightly uneven.
Dreyden noticed.
Lucas noticed that Dreyden noticed.
Neither commented on it.
The lecture droned on, something about advanced mana harmonics and compatibility drift. Dreyden took notes without really needing to. His thoughts were elsewhere.
Identity drift.
The term resurfaced from an older lecture—how awakened individuals sometimes diverged from their pre-awakening psychological baseline as abilities reshaped priorities, perception, and stress responses.
Most instructors treated it as a footnote.
Dreyden knew better.
Power didn’t create monsters.
It removed obstacles.
The training hall that afternoon was more crowded than usual.
Not because of enthusiasm.
Because people wanted to be seen not avoiding him.
Dreyden selected a free practice circle and began warming up—slow strikes, basic footwork, minimal mana reinforcement. Around him, students trained harder than necessary, voices louder than usual.
Posturing.
He ignored it.
Halfway through a sequence, he sensed someone approach.
Raisel.
The archer stopped just outside the circle, bow unstrung, expression unreadable. He didn’t speak at first—just watched.
"You’re changing your tempo," Raisel said eventually.
Dreyden didn’t stop moving. "It’s more efficient."
"For what?" Raisel asked.
"That depends," Dreyden replied. "What are you measuring?"
Raisel’s eyes narrowed slightly, then relaxed. "Intent."
Dreyden paused.
Just for a fraction of a second.
"Then your measurement is flawed," he said. "I don’t act on intent anymore."
Raisel studied him carefully, then nodded once. "That explains why Oversight didn’t intervene."
And with that, he left.
No threat.
No warning.
Just confirmation.
Later, alone in a smaller auxiliary hall, Dreyden finally opened the Celestial Library.
The familiar pressure bloomed behind his eyes—not painful, but intimate. Knowledge brushed against his thoughts, categories arranging themselves automatically.
Skills.
Observations.
Recorded encounters.
The Library reflected who he was becoming.
Efficient.
Curated.
Controlled.
He selected a memory—not from this world.
From before.
Jack, sitting alone at a desk long past midnight, studying people instead of textbooks. Learning how pauses worked. How tone shifted meaning. How influence flowed around resistance instead of through it.
Jack didn’t want power.
He wanted not to disappear.
Dreyden closed the Library.
The names overlapped uncomfortably now.
Not Jack pretending to be Dreyden.
Not Dreyden haunted by Jack.
Something else.
A convergence.
That night, an unexpected notification appeared.
Not a summons.
A request.
PRIVATE MATCH — NON-RANKED
REQUESTER: UNDISCLOSED
Dreyden considered declining.
Requests like this were probes—tests of reaction, temperament, boundaries.
Then he noticed the routing.
This didn’t come from a student terminal.
It came from inside the Triangle’s internal network.
He accepted.
The arena was empty when he arrived.
No spectators.
No instructor.
Just a single observer seated high above the barrier—face obscured, silhouette still.
The match parameters loaded.
Opponent materialized across the arena.
Rank hidden.
Ability masked.
Interesting.
"Begin," a synthetic voice announced.
The opponent moved first—fast, aggressive, testing range. Dreyden responded minimally, parrying without escalation. The fight unfolded like a conversation neither side wanted recorded.
Feints.
Corrections.
Pressure points tested, withdrawn.
After three minutes, the opponent disengaged.
The barrier dropped.
"You didn’t push," the observer said from above.
Dreyden looked up. "There was no need."
A pause.
"Do you consider that mercy?" the voice asked.
"No," Dreyden replied. "I consider it data management."
Another pause—longer this time.
"...That’s not an answer most students give."
"I’m not most students."
Silence settled, thick but not hostile.
"Your profile has shifted," the observer said finally. "Less emotional variance. Fewer hesitation markers. More predictive behavior."
Dreyden waited.
"Tell me," the voice continued. "Do you still know why you started climbing?"
Images flickered in his mind.
A sister blasting music too loud.
A quiet house that never noticed him.
A world where being unseen was fatal.
"Yes," he said.
"Then who are you now?" the observer asked.
Dreyden didn’t answer immediately.
When he did, his voice was steady. 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖
"I’m what happens when survival stops being reactive."
The observer said nothing more.
The arena lights dimmed.
The session ended.
Back in his room, Dreyden sat at his desk long after midnight.
He didn’t open any interfaces.
Didn’t train.
Didn’t plan.
For the first time in days, he let himself think.
Jack would’ve called what he did to Elias wrong.
Dreyden called it necessary.
Neither was fully incorrect.
That was the problem.
He pressed two fingers against his temple, grounding himself.
"I don’t know which one of us would hesitate anymore," he murmured.
The thought lingered.
Uncomfortable.
Permanent.
Somewhere deep inside, something shifted—not dramatically, not violently.
Just... aligned.
Jack wasn’t gone.
Dreyden wasn’t pretending.
They were overlapping.
And overlap meant loss.
But it also meant clarity.
Across the city, far from the Triangle’s walls, Maya stared at a sequence of updated reports.
Dreyden Stella’s profile glowed steadily on the screen.
Cleaner.
Sharper.
Colder.
She exhaled slowly.
"He crossed it," she said quietly.
Not accusing.
Not relieved.
Acknowledging.
Some lines, once crossed, couldn’t be stepped back over—only forward through consequences.
She closed the file.
Somewhere, paths were bending.
And neither of them could pretend they didn’t know it.
Back in the Triangle, Dreyden lay down at last.
Sleep came quickly.
Dreams did not.
When he woke, one truth settled without resistance:
He wasn’t drifting anymore.
He was choosing.
And whatever he became next—
It would not be an accident.







