Then his interface blinked.
A new notification.
Not a ranked match.
Not a rit update.
A ssage.
No sender ID.
No location stamp.
Just text, short and brutal.
STOP USING THE TRAINING HALLS.
Dreyden stared at it.
The Triangle’s network didn’t allow anonymous student-to-student ssaging.
That was one of their "protections."
And yet—
The ssage existed.
Which ant it ca from either:
An administrator.
A system-level exploit.
Soone who wasn’t playing by Triangle rules at all.
Dreyden’s thumb hovered over the delete icon.
He didn’t delete it.
He archived it.
Then another line appeared, like whoever was sending it knew he’d hesitate.
THEY INSTALLED A CAPTURE LAYER. IT’S NOT FOR DUELS. IT’S FOR YOU.
Dreyden didn’t move.
Across the canteen, Lucas sat with Arlo and a few others.
Lucas’s gaze flicked briefly toward Dreyden, then away.
He’d felt the shift too.
Dreyden read the ssage again.
The phrasing wasn’t administrative.
It wasn’t polite.
It wasn’t written like soone protecting the Triangle.
It was written like soone protecting him from the Triangle.
He knew exactly who wrote like that now.
Maya.
Not Maya-the-broken-girl.
Not Maya-the-cultivator-simulation.
Maya-with-Wendy’s precision and Maya’s lived trauma.
A mind that had learned to stop shaking.
A mind that understood systems.
Dreyden’s chest tightened.
Not from affection.
From calculation.
If Maya was warning him, then she had seen sothing he hadn’t.
Or she had access to places he didn’t.
Or worse—
She was already inside the places he didn’t.
Dreyden finished his al, stood, and walked out.
Calm.
Steady.
No rush.
Rush looked like fear.
And fear was blood in the water.
He didn’t go to the training hall again.
Instead, he went sowhere students rarely used unless they were desperate.
The maintenance stairwells.
The places between the academy’s polished surfaces.
There were caras, but fewer.
There were patrol drones, but slower.
There were hidden doors and old access panels.
And Dreyden had spent enough ti being invisible in another life to understand how to move without becoming a story.
He walked down three flights, turned into a corridor that slled like dust and tal, and stopped in front of an access panel.
He didn’t "hack" it.
He simply used his rits.
Because rits weren’t just points.
They were permission.
And permission opened doors no one thought to guard.
The panel slid open.
Behind it, a narrow service passage ran like a vein beneath the academy.
He stepped in.
The air changed.
Colder.
Drier.
Less human.
He walked until the lights thinned and the hum of the academy above faded into a distant vibration.
Then he stopped.
He didn’t call out.
Calling out was for people who needed reassurance.
Dreyden didn’t.
He simply said, quietly:
"If you wanted to talk, you wouldn’t send ssages."
Silence.
Then, from sowhere deeper in the passage, a voice answered.
Not loud.
Not emotional.
Controlled.
"You’re learning."
Dreyden’s eyes narrowed.
The voice wasn’t coming from a person standing in front of him.
It was coming from a wall speaker.
A hidden relay.
Which ant Maya wasn’t here physically.
She was near enough to control the environnt.
He felt a pulse of irritation.
"You’re in the Triangle," he said.
"In it," Maya replied. "Not in your reach."
Dreyden didn’t like that.
It ant she had built distance on purpose.
"I’m not here to fight you," Maya continued.
"And I’m not here to rescue you."
Dreyden’s jaw tightened slightly. "Then why warn ?"
A pause.
Then: "Because they’re going to make you show them sothing. And if you show them the wrong thing, you won’t leave the Triangle as a student."
Dreyden’s mind stayed cold.
"What did they install?"
"Capture geotry," Maya said. "A lattice that can lock your energy expression. Not permanently. Temporarily. Enough to observe your core response when you’re forced to push."
Dreyden exhaled slowly.
"So the barriers weren’t upgraded. They were weaponized."
"Yes."
"And they’re testing it on ."
"Yes."
Dreyden’s voice stayed flat. "Why tell now?"
There was a fraction of sothing in her tone then—sothing human, buried under control.
"Because if you beco their property," she said, "you beco part of the ending."
Dreyden didn’t answer.
Because that line hit sothing he didn’t like acknowledging:
Maya’s fear wasn’t just fear for herself anymore.
It was fear for the shape of events.
Fear for the trajectory.
Fear that the story—this world—would correct itself by destroying anything that didn’t fit.
Maya’s voice softened slightly, but only slightly.
"I’m not coming back to the Triangle," she said.
Dreyden’s eyes sharpened. "You can’t just—"
"I can," she cut in. "Because I already stopped being only Maya."
Dreyden stared at the wall speaker like it might bleed truth.
"So what are you now?" he asked.
A pause.
Then: "A problem."
Dreyden almost laughed.
It wasn’t funny.
But it was accurate.
Maya continued before he could respond.
"They’re going to push you soon. Oversight doesn’t wait once it installs new toys. They’ll schedule a ’special evaluation match.’ They’ll fra it as honor."
Dreyden’s mind flashed through possibilities.
A forced match.
A higher-ranked opponent.
An instructor present.
A capture lattice active.
A room designed to asure what he was.
He nodded once, despite her not seeing it.
"I’ll avoid their halls," he said.
"You can’t avoid everything," Maya replied. "They’ll force you into one eventually."
"Then I’ll force the outco back."
Silence again.
Then Maya’s voice returned, quieter.
"Don’t chase ."
Dreyden’s eyes narrowed. "I wasn’t planning to."
"Good," she said, and there was a strange relief in it. "Because if you chase , you’ll beco predictable. And predictable gets killed."
Dreyden didn’t respond.
Because there were two anings to that sentence.
One tactical.
One personal.
And he didn’t like how much he understood both.
The speaker clicked once.
A final line appeared on his interface, synchronized with her voice:
IF THEY CORNER YOU, SHOW THEM A LIE THEY CAN’T PROVE IS A LIE.
Then the relay cut.
The corridor went quiet again.
Dreyden stood there for a mont, listening to the emptiness.
Then he turned and walked back up.
That evening, the invitation arrived.
Just like Maya said it would.
A special evaluation match.
Not labeled urgent.
Not labeled dangerous.
Labeled like a privilege.
SPECIAL COMBAT ASSESSNT — INVITATION
LOCATION: HALL SEVEN
OPPONENT: ASSIGNED
ATTENDANCE: MANDATORY
Mandatory.
That word didn’t belong next to "invitation."
Dreyden stared at it.
Then he smiled faintly.
A humorless curve.
"They’re going to learn sothing," he murmured, echoing his own earlier promise.
Just not what they wanted.
Hall Seven was different.
Bigger than standard arenas.
Cleaner.
Newer.
The barrier arrays glead.
Instructors stood along the edge like statues.
And above them, behind glass, the silhouettes of observers sat like shadows.
Not students.
Not cheering crowds.
People who didn’t clap.
People who evaluated.
Dreyden walked in alone.
Every step asured.
Lucas wasn’t here.
Raisel wasn’t here.
No allies.
No familiar faces.
Only eyes.
A judge stood at the center, expression neutral.
"Dreyden Stella," he announced. "This is a controlled assessnt. You will comply. Any refusal will be considered defiance of Triangle authority."
Dreyden nodded once.
"Understood."
The judge lifted a hand.
"Opponent will enter."
The opposite gate opened.
And the person who walked in made the room shift.
Not because of rank display.
Because of presence.
A tall woman with short black hair, clean posture, and calm eyes.
She wore a Triangle instructor’s coat.
But the aura around her wasn’t instructor-level.
It was sothing else.
Sothing older.
Sothing sharpened.
She stopped across from Dreyden and bowed politely.
"Candidate Stella," she said.
Candidate.
Not student.
Dreyden’s mind stayed steady.
"Instructor," he replied.
The judge raised his hand.
"Begin."
The barrier sealed.
The capture lattice beneath the floor brightened like a sleeping beast waking up.
Dreyden felt the weight settle again.
He didn’t activate Fire Fists.
He didn’t activate Eyes of Truth.
He didn’t call the Celestial Library.
Instead, he moved.
Fast.
Clean.
A simple strike.
A simple dodge.
A simple test of the opponent’s rhythm.
The instructor responded with minimum motion.
Too efficient.
Too practiced.
A palm strike aid not at his ribs, but at his core path—targeting the flow.
Dreyden leaned away, but the lattice pulsed.
The air thickened.
His movent slowed a fraction.
The instructor’s eyes sharpened.
She felt it too.
So that’s what this is, Dreyden thought.
Not a duel.
A demonstration.
A cage tightening until he shows what he is.
He rembered Maya’s ssage.
Show them a lie they can’t prove is a lie.
Dreyden exhaled slowly.
Then—deliberately—he activated Action and Reaction.
A "simple" reactive skill.
A plausible one.
A defensive one.
His movents sharpened.
His counters landed clean.
The instructor watched carefully, testing limits.
She pressured harder.
Dreyden stayed inside the lie.
No bursts. No strange abilities. No celestial library.
Just perfect reactions.
Just refined combat.
Just enough to appear gifted without appearing impossible.
The lattice pulsed again.
It tried to grab deeper.
Dreyden felt the edge of it scrape his core’s rhythm, like fingers testing a lock.
The instructor’s eyes narrowed.
She smiled faintly.
Not friendly.
Interested.
And Dreyden understood with absolute clarity:
This wasn’t about whether he won.
It was about whether he broke.
He kept the lie intact.
He fought like a weapon they could categorize.
He fought like a tool they could control.
And the scariest part?
He was good at it.
Because he had spent his whole life being what people needed to see.
When the match ended, it ended abruptly.
The judge raised his hand.
"Assessnt complete."
The barrier dropped.
The lattice dimd.
Dreyden stood still, breathing steady.
The instructor bowed again.
"Impressive control," she said.
Dreyden returned the bow.
Then she added, softly enough that only he could hear:
"Next ti, we’ll test what you’re hiding."
Dreyden’s smile didn’t move.
"I look forward to it," he lied.
And walked out of Hall Seven knowing one thing with certainty:
The Triangle had stopped wondering if he was an anomaly.
Now it was deciding what kind.
And sowhere beyond the academy’s polished walls, a red-haired girl watched a system react to two variables it couldn’t contain.
Fault lines.
Not breaking yet.
But widening.
And eventually—
The Triangle would find out what happened when the ground finally gave way.
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