The announcent ca late.
Not at the start of the day. Not during training. Not even through the usual system notifications that everyone checked out of habit.
It showed up in the middle of lunch.
No sound. No alert tone. Just a quiet update sliding into every terminal at once.
Lucas saw it when the student across from him stopped mid-sentence and stared at their screen.
"...You seeing this?" soone nearby asked.
Chairs shifted. Conversations dropped.
Lucas pulled his own interface up, thumb hovering for a second before he opened it.
The ssage was short.
SUPPLENTAL EVALUATION ACTIVE
PARTICIPATION: PASSIVE
DURATION: INDEFINITE
No instructions.
No explanation.
Lucas blinked.
"That’s it?" he muttered.
Raisel leaned over slightly, reading the sa ssage.
"Yes."
Lucas frowned.
"Passive participation? What does that even an?"
Arden didn’t look surprised.
"It ans we’re already in it."
Lucas looked at her.
"We’ve been in it."
"Yes," she said. "Now they’re telling us it counts."
Lucas leaned back in his chair, staring at the screen.
"...That’s worse."
The shift didn’t feel imdiate.
That was what made it effective.
No alarms. No sudden changes to schedules. No visible increase in oversight presence.
The day continued like normal.
Training blocks ran.
Lectures started on ti.
Students moved through the academy the sa way they always had.
But now everyone knew sothing else was happening.
Lucas noticed it in the way people spoke.
Quieter.
More careful.
Not nervous. Just aware that anything could matter now.
He stepped into the afternoon training rotation with that thought sitting in the back of his mind.
"Don’t overthink it," he told himself.
It didn’t help.
The projection grid activated.
The first wave ca clean.
Lucas stepped into position, reacting the sa way he had the day before. No hesitation. No waiting for confirmation.
The formation held.
The second wave shifted mid-path.
Lucas adjusted.
Still clean.
But he felt it.
The awareness.
Not of the pattern.
Of being watched.
Not physically. Not like soone standing above the arena.
Sothing quieter.
Like the system itself was paying attention.
He ignored it.
The third wave ca fast.
He reacted.
The formation completed.
When the cycle ended, Lucas stepped back, rolling his shoulders once.
"That felt normal," he said.
Raisel nodded.
"Yes."
Arden tilted her head slightly.
"Too normal."
Lucas frowned.
"What does that an?"
"It ans we don’t know what they’re asuring yet."
Lucas let out a breath.
"Right."
The answer ca from sowhere else.
Not the system.
The students.
Lucas saw it during the next rotation.
A group near the far side of the hall finished their cycle cleanly. No mistakes. No hesitation. The kind of performance that would’ve stood out a week ago.
Now?
No one reacted.
No one even looked.
Lucas narrowed his eyes.
"That’s weird."
Raisel followed his gaze.
"They perford correctly."
"Yeah," Lucas said. "So why does it feel like it didn’t matter?"
Raisel didn’t answer.
Dreyden did.
"Because it didn’t."
Lucas looked at him.
"...Explain."
Dreyden’s attention stayed on the group.
"They solved the problem that was presented."
Lucas nodded slowly.
"Okay."
"They didn’t adapt beyond it."
Lucas blinked.
"...Oh."
He looked back at the group.
"They just... did what they were supposed to do."
"Yes."
Lucas exhaled.
"Yeah, that’s not going to cut it anymore."
The difference showed up in the next formation.
This one wasn’t clean.
Not even close.
The first wave clipped their positioning. The second forced a correction that looked borderline sloppy. By the third, they were reacting instead of controlling anything.
Lucas watched closely.
They didn’t break.
They adjusted.
ssy.
Uncertain.
But they held.
When the cycle ended, a few people nearby actually looked over.
Not impressed.
Interested.
Lucas nodded slowly.
"Okay."
He crossed his arms.
"So it’s not about being right."
"No," Dreyden said.
"It’s about what you do when you’re wrong."
Lucas smirked faintly.
"Great."
By the end of the session, the pattern was clear.
Clean execution didn’t stand out anymore.
Adaptation did.
The more sothing forced you to adjust, the more it mattered.
Lucas stepped out into the corridor with the others, running a hand through his hair.
"They flipped it."
Raisel nodded.
"Yes."
Lucas glanced at Dreyden.
"They’re not testing performance."
Dreyden t his gaze.
"They’re testing response."
Lucas let out a quiet laugh.
"Yeah, that tracks."
The real pressure didn’t hit until later.
It wasn’t during training.
It wasn’t in class.
It was in the in-between monts.
Lucas noticed it in the hallway between lectures.
Two students bumped into each other—not hard, just enough to disrupt their stride.
Normally, it would’ve been ignored.
This ti, both of them paused.
Just for a second.
Each waiting to see how the other reacted.
Lucas slowed slightly as he passed them.
One of them stepped aside first.
The other nodded.
They moved on.
Nothing happened.
Lucas frowned.
"That’s new."
Arden walked beside him.
"Everything is part of it now."
Lucas exhaled.
"Yeah."
He didn’t like that.
It got worse.
In the evening, the courtyard filled like usual. Groups gathered, reviewing drills, talking through mistakes, trying to stay ahead of whatever the system was doing.
But now there was another layer.
People weren’t just watching performance.
They were watching reactions.
Lucas leaned against the railing, scanning the crowd.
"You feel that?"
Raisel nodded.
"Yes."
Lucas gestured toward a group nearby.
"They’re not even training."
"No."
"They’re just... watching people talk."
"Yes."
Lucas let out a breath.
"That’s unsettling."
Dreyden stood a few steps away, observing quietly.
He wasn’t looking at individuals.
He was watching patterns.
Where people gathered.
Who spoke first.
Who hesitated.
Who adapted their behavior based on who was around them.
The system didn’t need to announce what it was asuring.
It revealed itself through what it rewarded.
And right now—
It was rewarding awareness.
Not just of combat.
Of everything.
Lucas pushed off the railing.
"So what now?"
He looked at Dreyden.
"Do we just act like everything matters?"
Dreyden’s answer ca without hesitation.
"It does."
Lucas let out a short laugh.
"Yeah, that’s exhausting."
Dreyden didn’t respond.
Lucas sighed.
"Alright."
He glanced back at the courtyard.
"Guess we don’t get to turn it off anymore."
The realization settled in slowly.
Not all at once.
But once it did, it didn’t go away.
There was no separation now.
No safe space where evaluation stopped.
Every action.
Every reaction.
Every hesitation.
It all counted.
Lucas rubbed the back of his neck.
"They didn’t make it harder."
Arden looked at him.
"No."
Lucas exhaled.
"They just removed the line."
Night fell.
The courtyard lights flickered on, casting long shadows across the ground. Students moved through them more carefully now, like the space itself had changed.
Lucas stood there for a mont, watching.
Then he shook his head.
"Alright."
He started walking.
"Let’s see how long people can keep this up."
Dreyden didn’t follow imdiately.
He stayed where he was, eyes scanning the courtyard one last ti.
Because this wasn’t the final layer.
Not even close.
This was just the mont where people realized they were always being asured.
And the ones who adapted to that—
Would survive what ca next.
The ones who didn’t—
Wouldn’t even understand why they were falling behind.
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