Chapter 391: Information Overload - SSS-Class Profession: The Path to Mastery - NovelsTime

SSS-Class Profession: The Path to Mastery

Chapter 391: Information Overload

Author: Bob\_Rossette
updatedAt: 2025-09-19

Despite the huge upgrade I had just received, there was a problem. The first sign that something was fundamentally wrong came when I tried to walk back toward the command center. Every step generated a cascade of deductive analysis that I couldn't shut off. The slight unevenness in the pavement told me exactly which construction company had laid it, when, and what corners they had cut to save money. The wear patterns on nearby vehicles revealed the driving habits, stress levels, and probable socioeconomic status of their owners. A discarded coffee cup provided a complete psychological profile of whoever had dropped it – their caffeine dependency, their disregard for environmental responsibility, their likely morning routine.

This wasn't the controlled, purposeful observation I had experienced as an S-Rank Detective. This was an involuntary flood of information that my enhanced mind was processing whether I wanted it to or not.

I stopped walking, pressing my palms against my temples as the realization hit me. I had made a catastrophic miscalculation.

When I had first achieved S-Rank with Detective, the adjustment period had been challenging. The enhanced observational capabilities and deductive reasoning had initially felt overwhelming, causing me to notice and analyze far more than I could consciously process. During my Mars missions, that adjustment period had been particularly difficult – the isolation and stress of space travel combined with the sudden crash landing and my detective skills had caused what I could only describe as mild psychosis.

But I had adapted. The human brain, even enhanced by the System, eventually learned to regulate new capabilities. Background processing systems developed to handle routine analytical tasks without conscious effort. Mental filters emerged to prevent information overload. Even some meditation did me some good.

SS-Rank, however, was apparently something entirely different.

I was the first human being in history to achieve this rank in any job. There was no research data, no case studies, no established protocols for managing capabilities that transcended normal human limitations. I was essentially conducting an uncontrolled experiment on my own consciousness, and the early results suggested that I might have made a serious error in judgment.

The federal agents working around me weren't just stressed about their various responsibilities – I could predict with startling accuracy which ones would request transfers after this assignment, which ones were having marital problems, which ones had developed substance abuse issues as coping mechanisms. The ambient sounds of the crime scene weren't just background noise – they were telling me stories about the psychological dynamics between different agency personnel, the jurisdictional tensions that weren't being openly discussed, the private concerns that various officials were keeping to themselves.

Most disturbingly, I was analyzing and cataloging information about people and situations that had no relevance to any current investigation or decision I needed to make. My enhanced detective capabilities were operating at full capacity on everything simultaneously, without any apparent ability to focus or prioritize.

I needed to get out of here before anyone noticed that something was wrong.

I made my way toward the parking lot where Maurice would be waiting with the limousine, trying to keep my expression neutral despite the sensory assault that every step brought. A security camera mounted on a nearby building told me about the surveillance contractor's installation schedule, their quality control issues, and the probable blind spots in their monitoring coverage. Tire tracks in the parking lot revealed the movement patterns of every vehicle that had been here in the past week.

Maurice was indeed waiting, leaning against the black limousine with his characteristic professional patience. But my enhanced analytical capabilities were already deconstructing everything about him in ways that felt invasive and unwanted. His posture indicated that he had been worried about my safety during the mission. His breathing pattern suggested he had been smoking and his look of guilt suggests that it's going against his doctor's recommendations. The slight wear on his uniform revealed his exact morning routine and how he maintained his equipment.

"Home, sir?" Maurice asked as he opened the rear door, but I was already analyzing the micro-expressions that accompanied his question. He had noticed something was different about my demeanor and was concerned about my well-being, though his professional training prevented him from asking directly.

"Yes," I managed, sliding into the back seat and immediately closing my eyes in an attempt to reduce the sensory input. "Take me to the penthouse."

But closing my eyes didn't help. My enhanced detective capabilities weren't dependent on visual observation alone. I could still hear the subtle variations in the limousine's engine that told me about Maurice's driving patterns, his emotional state, and the mechanical condition of the vehicle. The leather seats were providing tactile information about temperature, humidity, and the chemical composition of the cleaning products used to maintain them.

Even my own body was generating unwanted analytical insights. My heart rate, breathing pattern, muscle tension, and neurological responses were all being monitored and interpreted by my skills, creating a recursive loop of self-analysis that was both fascinating and deeply unsettling.

I pressed deeper into the seat and tried to focus on controlled breathing, but my detective abilities were automatically correlating my breathing patterns with stress indicators and probable psychological coping mechanisms. There was no escaping the analysis – it had become as involuntary as circulation or digestion.

The thirty-minute drive to the penthouse felt like an eternity. Every traffic light we encountered generated predictions about traffic flow optimization. Every pedestrian we passed became the subject of comprehensive behavioral analysis. Every building we drove by was automatically evaluated for architectural significance, security vulnerabilities, and probable socioeconomic indicators about its occupants.

By the time Maurice pulled into the underground parking garage of my residential building, I was experiencing something approaching sensory panic. The volume of information my mind was processing had reached levels that seemed unsustainable. I felt like someone who had suddenly developed superhuman hearing and was being forced to listen to every conversation within a five-mile radius simultaneously.

"Sir?" Maurice's voice carried genuine concern now, though I was automatically analyzing the specific vocal patterns that revealed his worry about my condition, his professional uncertainty about whether to intervene, and his personal loyalty that made my well-being a priority for him.

"I'm fine," I lied, stepping out of the limousine and heading toward the elevator. But I knew that Maurice could probably detect the falsehood in my voice, just as I could detect his skepticism about my response and his decision to remain on standby in case I needed assistance.

The elevator ride to the penthouse provided no relief. The mechanical sounds of the lifting mechanism told me stories about maintenance schedules and engineering specifications. The digital display was revealing information about the building's electrical systems and probable upgrade requirements. Even the subtle air pressure changes as we ascended were being analyzed for implications about building construction and atmospheric conditions.

When the elevator doors opened into my penthouse, I headed straight for Alexis's office without stopping to acknowledge the familiar luxury of my living space. Every piece of furniture, every decorative element, every architectural detail was generating unwanted insights that I couldn't process or ignore.

Alexis looked up from her desk with a smile that immediately became the subject of comprehensive psychological analysis. Her facial expression revealed that she had been expecting my return and was pleased to see me. Her posture suggested she had been working on research projects while waiting. The specific papers on her desk indicated she had been reviewing medical literature related to the System.

"Perfect timing," she said, standing and moving toward the treatment area. "Ready to continue your resistance training?"

But I was already drowning in analytical insights about her question. Her tone suggested genuine enthusiasm about continuing our work, but there were subtle indicators that she was concerned about my psychological state. Her body language revealed that she can see my mental and physical state with her skills.

"I need help," I said, sitting down in the chair she indicated and trying to focus on her face instead of automatically cataloging the medical equipment around us, the lighting conditions in the room, the temperature and humidity levels, and the probable pharmaceutical supplies in her cabinets.

"Help with what?" she asked, but I could already see the shift in her expression as her clinical instincts engaged. She was moving into diagnostic mode, her skills beginning to assess my condition based on my vocal patterns, body language, and physiological indicators.

"I achieved SS-Rank," I said, and watched her reaction with capabilities that were far too detailed and invasive. Her initial surprise was immediately followed by fascination – this was exactly the kind of anomaly that obsessed her. Her medical mind was already formulating hypotheses about enhanced System integration and its potential psychological effects.

"SS-Rank Detective," I continued, unable to stop myself from analyzing her micro-expressions as she processed this information. "And I can't control it. I'm analyzing everything, constantly, involuntarily. It's like having pattern recognition that never turns off."

Her expression shifted to professional concern, though I could see that part of her was thrilled by the opportunity to study the first human being to achieve transcendent System capabilities. She was already planning diagnostic procedures and potential treatment protocols.

"Sit down and look at the cabinet to your right," she said in the calm, authoritative tone she used when dealing with medical emergencies.

I followed her instruction, but I already knew exactly what she was planning. The slight movement toward her medical supplies, the specific cabinet she had directed my attention to, and her clinical demeanor all indicated that she intended to sedate me. She was going to use a fast-acting anesthetic to force my nervous system into a temporary shutdown, giving her the opportunity to monitor my condition while my brain had a chance to rest.

I should have been concerned about being sedated without explicit consent, but my enhanced detective abilities were telling me that her intentions were entirely therapeutic. She was genuinely worried about the psychological strain I was experiencing and believed that forced rest was the safest immediate intervention.

More importantly, Instinct wasn't triggering any warning responses about her planned action. Whatever she intended to do, my subconscious analytical systems had determined it was safe and potentially beneficial.

I felt the slight pinch of a needle entering my arm, though I had been expecting it based on her movement patterns and the medical supplies she had been preparing. The injection site began to feel warm, then numb, as whatever compound she had administered began to take effect.

"Trust me," Alexis said softly, though I was already analyzing the specific pharmaceutical she had chosen based on the onset characteristics I was experiencing. It was something designed to suppress neurological hyperactivity without causing permanent damage.

My enhanced detective capabilities were still operating at full capacity as the sedative took hold, automatically cataloging the progressive effects of the medication on my nervous system, my consciousness, and my analytical functions. Even as my awareness began to fade, I was deducing the probable duration of unconsciousness, the likely side effects, and the therapeutic rationale behind her treatment decision.

The last thing I remember thinking, as consciousness finally slipped away, was that even unconsciousness was being analyzed and understood by capabilities that apparently transcended normal limitations of human awareness.

Then everything went dark...

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