Webnovel's Extra: Reincarnated With a Copy Ability-Chapter 51: Countermeasures[2]

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Chapter 51: Countermeasures[2]

That afternoon, Lucas found him.

Not directly.

Not with a confrontation.

With proximity.

Lucas sat two seats away from him in magical theory, pretending it was normal.

It wasn’t.

The whole room felt it.

Lucas rarely positioned himself near anyone unless there was intent behind it.

Dreyden didn’t look at him.

Lucas spoke quietly while the instructor scribbled equations on the board.

"I saw the observer in the cafeteria."

Dreyden’s pen didn’t stop moving.

"I know."

Lucas hesitated. "That simulation yesterday..."

"Wasn’t a simulation," Dreyden said.

Lucas’s jaw tightened.

He stared at the front, like he was trying to act normal for the room.

Then: "You had something happen after."

Dreyden’s pen paused.

Just for a second.

Lucas’s luck perception was sharp enough to catch micro-shifts.

"Your color changed," Lucas said quietly. "Not fully. But it... flickered."

Dreyden finally glanced at him.

Lucas didn’t look away.

"How do you know that?" Dreyden asked. 𝐟𝚛𝕖𝚎𝕨𝗲𝐛𝚗𝐨𝐯𝐞𝕝.𝐜𝗼𝗺

Lucas’s lips tightened. "Because I’ve never seen white... overlay something else."

Dreyden returned his gaze to the board.

He didn’t deny it.

Denying would feed Lucas a puzzle.

Instead, he gave him a boundary.

"Don’t try to solve me," Dreyden said.

Lucas let out a breath that almost sounded like a laugh.

"I’m not trying to solve you," he said. "I’m trying to figure out what the Triangle is doing to me through you."

That was smarter.

Dreyden’s mouth twitched faintly.

"Then you’re finally paying attention," he said.

Lucas’s eyes sharpened. "So you admit it."

"I admit nothing," Dreyden replied. "But you’re not blind."

Lucas leaned back in his seat.

"And her?" Lucas asked quietly.

Dreyden’s expression didn’t shift.

But the air around his focus did.

A microscopic tightening.

Lucas noticed.

"Don’t say her name," Dreyden said.

Lucas frowned. "You think they’re listening?"

Dreyden didn’t answer immediately.

Then: "I think something is."

Lucas swallowed, throat tight.

Zagan’s presence brushed against the edge of Lucas’s awareness like a cold hand.

Don’t, the demon murmured.

Lucas ignored him.

"If you’re compromised," Lucas said, "why are you still moving like everything is fine?"

Dreyden’s eyes slid toward him.

Calm.

Cold.

Honest.

"Because if I act compromised," he said, "the system changes shape."

Lucas stared.

"You’re letting them think they’ve already won," Lucas whispered.

Dreyden’s voice was low.

"I’m letting them commit," he corrected.

The instructor turned suddenly.

"Lucas Væresberg," he said. "Repeat the last principle."

Lucas’s face went blank.

He answered perfectly.

Of course he did.

But the moment passed like a blade.

Because the instructor hadn’t asked randomly.

He’d asked because Lucas had been talking.

Someone was listening.

That evening, Dreyden returned to his room and locked the door.

He didn’t sit down right away.

He didn’t open the file right away.

He checked the corners.

The vents.

The seams around the door.

Not because he expected a physical device.

Because control meant leaving nothing unchecked.

Then he sat.

Opened the English "Study Notes" file.

Scrolled to the embedded Mandarin line.

And waited.

Two minutes passed.

Nothing.

Five minutes.

Nothing.

Ten.

His pulse didn’t change.

Then—at the fifteen-minute mark—his cursor moved.

Not by him.

A slow, deliberate highlight passed over the Mandarin line.

Like someone underlining it with a finger.

Dreyden didn’t touch the keyboard.

He didn’t blink.

He watched.

A new line appeared beneath the embedded question.

In perfect Mandarin.

Yes. And you’re learning slowly.

Dreyden’s breath didn’t hitch.

But something inside him went very quiet.

They weren’t just reading.

They were interacting.

That meant the barrier between observation and influence had already been crossed.

He typed.

Carefully.

What are you?

The cursor didn’t move for a long time.

Then a reply appeared.

Not an answer.

A refusal disguised as instruction.

Don’t ask for names. Ask for boundaries.

Dreyden’s fingers hovered.

Then he typed again.

What boundaries do you have?

A pause.

Then:

More than you think. Less than you hope.

Dreyden’s eyes narrowed.

He felt the instinct to push—harder, sharper, to trap the responder in logic and extract identity through contradiction.

But he didn’t.

Because this wasn’t a person typing casually.

This was a presence using language as a scalpel.

He wrote:

Why warn me?

The reply came faster this time.

Because you’re building the wrong kind of shields.

Dreyden’s jaw tightened.

Explain.

The cursor hovered.

Then:

You’re hiding content. You should be hiding intent.

Dreyden stared at that sentence.

Because it was true.

Content could be copied.

Intent could be misread.

Intent could be guided.

Intent could be weaponized.

He typed slowly.

Then what do you want?

The response appeared one character at a time, almost like the system was deciding whether it was allowed to complete the sentence.

To see whether you become a tool... or a wound.

Dreyden’s fingers went still.

Tool.

Wound.

Two categories.

Two outcomes.

The kind of binary labels institutions loved.

But this wasn’t the Triangle speaking.

The Triangle wanted tools.

It didn’t want wounds.

Wounds were unpredictable.

Wounds infected systems.

Wounds spread.

Dreyden closed the file without replying.

He sat there for a long time, staring at the dark screen.

Then he stood.

Went to the window.

Looked out over the Triangle campus.

Lights flickering.

Students training.

Ranks climbing.

Factions plotting.

A machine pretending it was a school.

And somewhere beyond it—

An older presence had just confirmed it wasn’t watching him as a student.

It was watching him as a story problem.

A variable.

A test.

A future.

He whispered to the glass, low and steady.

"Fine."

Then he turned back into the room.

Picked up the notebook he’d left on the desk—the one with the false phrases.

And he began rewriting it.

Not with plans.

With a new category.

WATCHERS

He wrote:

Triangle Oversight

Factions (Rumor Network)

Underworld (Maximus)

External Node (Mandarin Intrusion)

Then he underlined the last one twice.

And wrote beneath it:

Unknown — interactive — prefers boundaries — implies permission model

He set the notebook down.

And for the first time since arriving in this world, he accepted something without resistance:

He wasn’t fighting the Triangle anymore.

The Triangle was just the visible layer.

He was fighting for ownership of his own narrative.

He exhaled slowly.

Then opened the Celestial Library.

Not to copy.

Not to gain power.

To catalog.

Because libraries weren’t just storage.

They were classification.

And classification was control.

His eyes sharpened.

"Countermeasures," he murmured.

Not as a Chapter title.

As a vow.

And somewhere, in a place he couldn’t map, the presence behind the screen read his silence—

and waited to see what kind of trap he would build next.

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