The shift didn’t happen all at once.
It crept in.
Lucas noticed it the next morning during drills, though at first he couldn’t quite place what felt off. The training hall looked the sa as it had the night before. Projection grids lit the floor, students moved through rotations, and the steady rhythm of practice filled the air.
But sothing underneath that rhythm had changed.
He saw it in the way people entered formations.
Before, teams stepped into position with a shared understanding. There was a mont—brief but clear—where everyone aligned before the first wave began.
That mont was missing now.
Lucas stood near the barrier rail, watching a group of B-tier students prepare for a cycle. One of them adjusted their stance twice before the projection system activated. Another glanced at their teammate like they expected disagreent.
The wave rose.
They handled it.
Clean.
But the movent felt... tighter.
Less natural.
Lucas frowned.
"You see it?"
Dreyden stood beside him.
"Yes."
Lucas crossed his arms.
"They’re hesitating."
"Yes."
Lucas watched the next cycle.
The formation worked again, but one of the anchors corrected their position mid-wave even though it wasn’t necessary.
Lucas exhaled.
"They’re overthinking."
"Yes."
Lucas glanced around the hall.
It wasn’t just one team.
The sa pattern showed up across multiple formations. Small adjustnts where none were needed. Tiny pauses before committing to a movent.
The kind of behavior that didn’t break a formation, but didn’t help it either.
Lucas rubbed the back of his neck.
"Yesterday made them careful."
Dreyden didn’t answer right away.
Lucas looked at him.
"Well?"
"It made them aware."
Lucas tilted his head.
"That’s not the sa thing?"
"No."
Lucas considered that.
"Alright. Explain."
Dreyden nodded toward the floor.
"Careful behavior slows reaction."
Lucas followed his gaze.
"Okay."
"Aware behavior improves it."
Lucas blinked.
"Oh."
He watched the next formation.
This one moved faster, more decisively. When the hazard arc shifted mid-cycle, they adjusted without hesitation.
Clean.
Lucas nodded slowly.
"I see it now."
He gestured toward the other teams.
"They’re thinking too much."
"Yes."
Lucas sighed.
"Great."
The problem beca clearer as the morning went on.
During the second rotation block, an A-tier formation collapsed in a way Lucas hadn’t seen in days.
It wasn’t a major failure.
No one got thrown into a barrier. No dramatic crash.
Just a small breakdown.
One of the anchors hesitated during a shift. The suppressor reacted late. The formation lost its timing and dissolved into scattered movent before resetting.
Lucas watched the whole thing.
"That shouldn’t have happened," he said.
Raisel stood on the other side of him.
"They’ve handled harder patterns."
Lucas nodded.
"Exactly."
Arden glanced toward the group.
"They’re second-guessing."
Lucas folded his arms.
"Because of yesterday."
"Yes."
Lucas exhaled slowly.
"So the exercise helped... and ssed things up."
Dreyden finally spoke.
"It revealed a weakness."
Lucas glanced at him.
"Which is?"
"Confidence."
Lucas made a face.
"That sounds like sothing an instructor would say."
Dreyden didn’t react.
Lucas shook his head.
"Still true though."
By midday the pattern had spread.
Not to everyone.
So teams moved the sa way they had before, adapting quickly and keeping their rhythm intact. But others struggled to maintain consistency.
Lucas noticed sothing else.
The students who had perford best during the field exercise were being watched more closely now.
Not by instructors.
By other students.
He caught it in small monts.
A group near the center paused their drill to watch another formation run through a complex pattern. Soone leaned closer to see exactly when they shifted their spacing. Another student tried to copy the movent in their next cycle.
Lucas leaned back against the rail.
"Now they’re copying each other."
Raisel nodded.
"That was inevitable."
Lucas scratched his jaw.
"Yeah, but it’s not clean."
"What do you an?"
Lucas gestured toward the floor.
"They’re copying the movent, not the timing."
Raisel watched the next formation attempt the sa adjustnt.
It didn’t work.
The arc slipped through the formation edge and forced a reset.
Raisel nodded once.
"They don’t understand why it works."
Lucas smirked.
"Exactly."
The tension peaked during the last rotation of the afternoon.
Lucas stepped into a grid with three unfamiliar students. None of them spoke at first, but he could feel the uncertainty in the way they positioned themselves.
He took a breath.
"Alright," he said. "Keep it simple."
One of the anchors nodded too quickly.
"Yeah."
The projection system activated.
The first wave rose.
Lucas stepped into it and redirected the pressure cleanly. The formation held.
So far, so good.
The second wave ca faster.
Lucas waited.
Too long.
He felt the hesitation the mont it happened.
He had seen the shift.
He just didn’t trust it.
"Now," he said, a fraction too late.
The formation collapsed awkwardly.
The arc clipped the edge and burst outward.
Lucas stepped back, catching himself before he lost balance.
"Reset," he said.
No one argued.
They repositioned.
Lucas rolled his shoulders once.
"Again."
The second attempt went smoother.
He trusted the shift this ti.
The formation held.
When the cycle ended, Lucas stepped out of the grid and exhaled slowly.
Raisel approached from the side.
"You hesitated."
Lucas nodded.
"Yeah."
Raisel raised an eyebrow.
"That’s new."
Lucas laughed quietly.
"Tell about it."
Dreyden joined them a mont later.
Lucas looked at him.
"Don’t say it."
Dreyden didn’t need to.
Lucas sighed.
"I know."
He glanced back at the grid.
"Yesterday got in my head."
The training hall quieted as the final rotations ended.
Students left in small groups, their conversations lower than usual.
Lucas walked toward the exit with the others, hands in his pockets.
"Well," he said, "that was a step backward."
Arden shook her head.
"Not necessarily."
Lucas looked at her.
"We ssed up a basic cycle."
"Yes."
Lucas frowned.
"So how is that not a step backward?"
Arden t his gaze.
"Because you noticed it."
Lucas paused.
"That doesn’t make it better."
"It does," she said.
Lucas didn’t respond.
Dreyden spoke quietly.
"Awareness creates friction."
Lucas glanced at him.
"And?"
"Friction slows movent."
Lucas nodded slowly.
"Okay."
"But it also prevents collapse."
Lucas thought about that.
The hesitation he felt earlier.
The way it forced him to stop and reconsider.
The way it almost broke the formation... but didn’t.
He exhaled.
"So this is part of it."
"Yes."
Lucas looked back at the training hall doors.
"Learning how to move again after you realize you don’t know everything."
Dreyden nodded.
"Yes."
Lucas laughed softly.
"Great."
He pushed the door open and stepped into the evening air.
"Just when things were starting to feel easy."
The courtyard was quieter than usual that night.
Students moved through it in smaller groups, conversations more focused than before. So looked frustrated. Others thoughtful.
No one looked comfortable.
Lucas slowed near the center of the path.
"You think this gets worse?"
Raisel answered first.
"Yes."
Lucas smiled faintly.
"Of course it does."
Dreyden looked toward the training halls.
"It has to."
Lucas glanced at him.
"Why?"
Dreyden’s voice stayed calm.
"Because this is where people decide whether they keep adapting..."
He paused.
"...or fall back into what feels safe."
Lucas nodded slowly.
"Yeah."
He understood that.
And for the first ti since the field exercise ended, he felt sothing settle in his chest.
Not confidence.
Not doubt.
Sothing in between.
Sothing sharper.
Lucas looked up at the academy walls.
"Alright," he said quietly.
"Let’s see which one it is."
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