Shattered Innocence: Transmigrated Into a Novel as an Extra
Chapter 701: ElayneThe morning air was clean in a way that felt almost unnatural.
Lucavion stepped onto the open balcony just as the dome above began its slow dissolution, the night illusion peeling back like silk drawn from glass. Pale streaks of dawn bled into the horizon, painting the upper eaves of the city in soft rose-gold.
No crowds yet. No echoing steps from the others. Just stillness—and the quiet hum of the capital beginning to stir.
He leaned against the smooth marble railing, eyes narrowing slightly as he took in the sight below.
Arcania City—the Arcania City—spread out beneath him in grand layers of arcane ingenuity and impossibly planned symmetry. From this height, he could see it all: the spiraling towers of the High Mage Quarter to the east, the glimmering waterways of the Artisan’s Loop cutting through the city like silver veins, and the soft trails of magical lifts rising between platforms as the city awakened with purpose.
And just beyond it all, across the lower terraces and past the gold-inlaid bridges—the outer edges of the Imperial Borough. Private. Elevated. Gated by design and mana alike.
He’d spent a month in this city before. Hidden corners, back alleyway food stalls, antique weapon shops tucked between shadowed plazas. But up here, he could see the truth of the divide laid bare.
Same city. Different reality.
Still barefoot, he padded silently across the suite’s polished floor, grabbed his coat from the chair, and shrugged it on loosely over his tunic.
No summons yet. No nobles waiting to whisper plans behind velvet fans.
Which meant one thing.
Time to move.
Lucavion exited the suite through a side arch—one that didn’t lead toward the opulent central halls but instead down a curving path along the edge of the outer balcony. The tiles beneath his feet shifted with his steps, subtly adjusting for comfort and silence, the enchantments woven into the very ground responding to his presence.
He found the training space easily—it wasn’t marked, but it didn’t need to be. A wide, open ring of smooth whitestone nestled within the hanging gardens, bordered on three sides by floating hedges and open air on the fourth, giving a clear view of the entire lower city.
Aether shimmered faintly in the space.
So even their sparring circles are bathed in stabilized mana. Tch.
Lucavion stepped into the ring, and the array flared once in recognition—welcoming him. Mana pooled softly beneath the surface like mist caught under glass.
He drew his estoc in one smooth motion.
No spectators.
No rival eyes.
Only wind. Morning. And the blade.
He began slow.
Stretches first—then flow.
His footwork traced the old sequences, not flashy, but drilled deep into muscle memory. Each slash painted purpose into the air. Each pivot broke the stillness like a signature—sharp, precise, his own.
The estoc carved arcs of silver through the soft light, and his breathing synced with the tempo of his movements. Gradually, his mana began to stir, pulled from his core and threaded into his limbs—not for spellwork, but for refinement.
Lucavion turned into a tight downward parry, his blade sliding clean through the air, before pulling into a low, controlled stance—his breathing sharp but calm, precise. The training ring echoed with the rhythm of his footwork and the faint pulse of mana cycling through the ground beneath him.
Then—
He felt it.
A pause in the wind.
The slightest pull in the mana field.
Subtle. Like shadow over breath. Most wouldn’t have noticed.
But Lucavion wasn’t most.
He straightened without finishing the final form, blade pointed low, and turned his head just slightly—eyes narrowing toward the edge of the hedges that ringed the arena.
She stood there.
Still. Quiet. Half-blended with the wall of soft green behind her like the shade itself had decided to take a form.
Elayne Cors.
She didn’t announce herself. She never did.
No rustling of cloth. No flare of magic. Not even the pulse of hostility.
Just… presence.
Her cloak still clung to her like a veil of fog, hood lowered, silver-gray eyes watching without demand. The thread of her name no longer floated above her head—those glyphs were gone—but Lucavion didn’t need help recognizing her.
He tilted his head slightly, lips curving.
“Well,” he said, voice casual, breath still steady from the routine. “Didn’t think I’d get stalked before breakfast.”
Elayne didn’t reply.
Not immediately.
She stepped forward once, slow and without any hint of aggression. The training ring didn’t flare in warning—it recognized her mana, quiet as it was. Allowed her entrance.
Lucavion watched her move like the wind wasn’t quite sure it wanted to disturb her.
“Here to train?” he asked. “Or just enjoying the view?”
Elayne’s eyes didn’t waver.
They held his gaze with a stillness that wasn’t cold—but unrelenting. Like a thread pulled tight across a blade’s edge, stretched not to cut, but to test its strength.
Then, finally—
“Who are you?” she asked.
Lucavion blinked once. The question didn’t sting—it didn’t even surprise him. But it did amuse.
He tilted his head, wiping the back of his wrist along his jaw as though brushing away the words.
“I’m called Lucavion,” he said lightly, lips quirking. “If that’s what you’re asking?”
Elayne didn’t move.
Didn’t nod.
She just looked at him—longer this time. Not past him. Not around him.
Through.
“I know that’s what you’re called,” she said at last.
Then she stepped forward again—slow, deliberate—closing a bit more of the space between them. Not threatening. Not invasive. Just… closer.
The wind tugged at the edge of her cloak, and for a moment it looked like she was made of dusk and breath.
“But,” she continued, voice quieter now, “why do you have such an energy?”
Lucavion let the question hang in the air for a moment, like morning mist refusing to burn away.
Then—he smiled.
That familiar, half-lidded smirk that always seemed a touch too casual for the weight beneath it.
“What do you mean by that?” he asked, voice light, almost amused. “I do wear very good cologne.”
Elayne didn’t blink.
Didn’t move.
“You…” she said quietly, eyes sharpening. “That flame.”
Her words were slow now—cutting. Not because they were meant to wound, but because she was peeling something back with each one.
Lucavion tilted his head just slightly, but didn’t interrupt.
Elayne’s gaze narrowed further. “What is it?”
She took another step forward. Close now. Not within striking distance—but within feeling distance. Where the pressure that coiled around him like quiet thunder could be sensed.
“It’s a bit special, isn’t it?” she murmured.
Lucavion’s smile didn’t change.
But his fingers flexed once.
And Elayne said it:
“It reeks of death.”
The words didn’t echo. They didn’t need to.
Because the moment she spoke them, the mana in the ring reacted—just slightly. The air dipped in temperature. Not cold. Not frost. But a hollowing.
Like something somewhere had noticed its name.
Lucavion exhaled, slow and even.
Then shrugged.
“Well. I wouldn’t call it perfume.”
Vitaliara stirred in the back of his mind—silent, but present.
And Lucavion—still smiling—met Elayne’s steady gaze.
“No one ever told you?” he said, voice low.
“Some fires burn hotter…”
He stepped forward, just enough for the light to catch the edge of his shadow.
“…when they come from the other side.”
“…Other side,” Elayne murmured under her breath, the words barely audible, like the thought had escaped before she’d meant to give it form.
Lucavion caught it, of course.
But he didn’t chase it.
Instead, he smiled—wider this time. Not sharp. Not mocking. Just… playful.
And, as always, deflecting.
“In for a spar?” he asked, casually stepping back into the center of the ring.
Elayne blinked, the abrupt shift in tone catching her—but not fully derailing her. “Spar?”
Lucavion gave a small roll of his shoulders, the estoc swinging lightly in his hand.
“Yeah. Isn’t it better to clash weapons instead of wasting time speaking cryptically like this?” he said, glancing over his shoulder with the faintest grin. “You’re clearly dying to hit me. Might as well give you the chance.”
Elayne’s expression didn’t change.
Not a twitch.
But after a breath, she gave the smallest nod.
And stepped into the ring.
No flash of mana. No dramatic unsheathing.
Just stillness.
Poised. Centered.
Ready.
Lucavion twirled the estoc once and brought it to rest behind his back, one hand sliding up the flat of the blade as if greeting an old friend.
“Try not to disappear halfway through this time,” he murmured.
Elayne drew a single knife from beneath her cloak—short, crescent-edged, matte-steel.
She said nothing.
But her eyes gleamed.
Lucavion smiled.
Perfect.
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