Nothing. Keep calm and write on.
The level of trope savviness and theory-crafting skill of contemporary readers (many of which are also amateur writers) is the highest in human history. We all got sucked into the TvTropes binge, we all participated in internet forums, we all saw fiction stories dissected to their most base elements.
We were also exposed to the highest amount of content in human history. I read somewhere that 90% of all books ever written by humanity were penned in the last decade.
It all gets aggravated because people comment, talk, and exchange information about the fiction, usually in the very comment section (if it's an online novel).
Unless you are gearing your fiction to contain some big brain switcheroo and meta diversions to keep people off the tracks, someone will figure it out and then comment the hell out of it.
Hells, even guesses can get it somewhat right.
So, put the blame on the plastic cubes that work as a horrible interface between your brain and the digital paper-substitute. Castigate them thoroughly and keep on writing.
You mention you are a new writer. The only way to stop being a new writer is to write more. And don't worry much about the quality of your works (to the point of anxiety and loss of sleep).
In the voice of teenage Emma Watson: "Or worse, HIATUS."
I have a maxim:
In creative writing and software coding skill, the only real measure of progress is to review your old works. If you ask yourself "what manner of imbecile wrote this?" and the answer is "me.", then you know your skills have improved. Be your worst critic.
-- Mindwin, circa 2025