Shattered Innocence: Transmigrated Into a Novel as an Extra
Chapter 789: A tale as old as timeChapter 789: A tale as old as time
The room was back where it belonged—beneath him.
Beneath the weight of lineage, of precision, of absolute poise. And the nobility, those eternal vultures draped in etiquette, had remembered once more who taught the sky how to burn.
Lucien allowed himself a breath.
Controlled.
Delighted.
Until—
Their eyes met.
Lucavion hadn’t stood. Hadn’t moved.
But he was smiling.
Lucien’s breath stilled.
’…!’
Not a smirk. Not a trembling mask of defiance. But something far worse.
Calm.
Almost amused.
As if the rope Lucien had so elegantly braided was, to him, a ribbon. As if mercy wasn’t feared. As if—
—it hadn’t touched him at all.
Lucien’s gaze narrowed, almost imperceptibly.
’You…’
The boy’s posture hadn’t changed. His expression hadn’t faltered. But those pitch-black eyes—
They didn’t reflect Lucien.
They consumed him.
’Why?’
The question coiled like a serpent in Lucien’s chest. ’Does he not understand what just happened? Is he mad? Is he so low-born, so feral, that the nature of power escapes him?’
He had expected anger.
He had expected the sting of injustice. Frustration. A flicker of that peasant indignation Lucien had always found so exquisitely predictable.
But this?
This was something else.
’Did I give him too much credit?’
He studied Lucavion now—not as an opponent, but as an anomaly. ’Was he ever worth my attention to begin with? Or is he just another insect basking in the sun before the boot?’
But the fire in those eyes—
It was real.
Controlled.
Not wild.
Not flailing.
But burning.
It made Lucien’s fingers curl against the velvet of his sleeve.
Not in anger.
In calculation.
Because suddenly, the boy wasn’t just standing outside the system.
He was looking through it.
And Lucien—
Lucien felt the first edge of something he had not expected.
Not fear.
Never fear.
But curiosity.
’Strange.’
It was the only word Lucien could summon.
Not out of confusion.
But because everything else—every calculation, every instinct—hung suspended around it. Like a note played into a hall with no echo.
’Why does he still look like that?’
The performance had ended. Lucien had curated the scene, closed the Chapter, dictated the next line of history.
The boy should be bowed. Broken. Furious at worst, silent at best.
But he wasn’t.
He was smiling.
And then—
Lucien saw it.
A shift.
Subtle.
Lucavion’s mouth curled up, just slightly, to one side. Not dramatic. Not exaggerated.
But intentional.
And his gaze—
It didn’t falter.
It didn’t challenge.
It invited.
’What is—’
CLAP.
Lucien blinked.
Once.
Sharp. Quiet.
The sound rang out again.
CLAP.
And again.
CLAP.
The room froze.
Lucavion was applauding.
Slowly.
Calmly.
Smiling as if he were praising an artist for their final bow after a particularly clever farce.
Gasps stirred. Whispers. A few nobles looked toward the instructors, the guards. Uncertain whether to move, to speak, to pretend they hadn’t heard what they were hearing.
’What is he doing?’
’Is he mad?’
’Is this… clownery?’
Lucien stood utterly still.
His gaze locked on Lucavion.
He hadn’t moved. He hadn’t breathed.
And then—
Lucavion spoke.
His voice was light. Carefree.
Like a boy praising a stage play he’d enjoyed, but would forget by morning.
“What a masterpiece.”
The next clap was almost theatrical in its precision.
“Our prince is truly talented.”
Another.
And another.
“If you ever tire of the Empire, I’m sure the traveling troupes would welcome you.”
A pause.
And then, softly, with the kind of edge only a common-born child could wield without effort—
“You’d make a fine actor.”
The room shattered.
Not with sound.
But with stillness.
No one dared speak.
No one dared breathe.
Because what had just occurred was not rebellion.
It was heresy by humor.
Lucien didn’t move.
Not yet.
But the corner of his eye twitched once.
Lucien’s body didn’t move.
But something behind his eyes did.
A crack—silent, clean, invisible to anyone except those who’d been watching his gaze just a moment too long.
The twitch in his jaw was microscopic.
But it was there.
’You dare.’
Not challenge.
Insult.
To compare him—the Heir of Lysandra, the future of the Empire, the living emblem of divine hierarchy—to a circus performer?
To mock the very role ordained by blood and rite?
The breath that filled Lucien’s chest was colder than the winter fogs of the White Hold.
But he did not explode.
He did not retaliate.
He simply stared.
And the temperature of the room changed again.
Not because Lucien acted.
But because the others did.
First in murmurs.
Then in indignation.
“What did he say—?”
“Did he just—?”
“Insulting the Crown—”
“Does he know where he stands?”
And then louder—
“You dare mock the Prince?”
“Show some gods-damned respect!”
“Someone remove this creature!”
The cries didn’t come from one place.
They came from everywhere.
From the barons near the back.
From the daughters of merchant-lords trying to prove their fealty.
From the instructors whose futures depended on Lucien’s good graces.
From young nobles trying too hard to be noticed.
Like flies around a fresh cut, they swarmed in outrage—not because they were brave, but because they were afraid not to be.
But Lucavion?
Lucavion didn’t blink.
He didn’t falter.
He merely lifted a single hand.
Gracefully.
Calmly.
Mockingly.
The nobles stilled, stunned into silence by the audacity.
Lucavion’s smile widened, not cruel—but utterly unbothered.
“My, my,” he said, in a tone almost regretful. “So many voices. So eager to speak.”
He scanned the hall—his eyes not accusing, but entertained.
“Truly befitting of a charade.”
A few gasps.
Lucien’s fingers curled, slow and quiet, against the edge of the banquet table.
Lucavion’s voice didn’t rise.
It flowed.
“Actors playing nobles. Nobles playing gods. And all of them so very offended when someone forgets their lines.”
He tilted his head slightly, as if pondering something amusing.
“You should really get your makeup redone. All that anger is starting to smudge.”
Then—softly, almost kindly:
“All we need now is an audience.”
And with that—
He looked back at Lucien.
Only him.
He held Lucien’s gaze.
Didn’t break it.
Didn’t blink.
The air in the hall had shifted again, but not in Lucien’s favor. It was thick, electric, stretching between them like the pause before a thunderclap. And then—Lucavion tilted his head, still so composed it became its own kind of aggression.
“Oh,” he said, voice still honeyed, “our Crown Prince is so very talented.”
He gestured loosely toward the crowd, as if inviting them all to nod.
“To think—he was personally overseeing the entire city during the Festival of the First Flame. Arcania itself.”
He raised his brows, mock awe seeping into every syllable.
“And he can testify for the House Crane’s integrity? So deeply involved, so intimately aware, so certain in his judgment that he’d overlook even the memory of his own sister?”
Lucien’s hands were no longer at rest.
They were still.
Too still.
Lucavion’s smile thinned. Not with cruelty—but with something far more dangerous: clarity.
“Wow,” he said. “It seems your sister must have a screw loose, then. Or what was it you said? Her memory was… compromised?”
He let that question hang.
And then—he raised his hand.
And pointed.
Directly at him.
“Dear Lucien.”
The silence that followed cracked through the chamber like glass under weight.
Lucien didn’t flinch. Didn’t breathe.
But the pressure in the room pulsed, heavy, sharp-edged.
No one called him that.
Not even dukes.
Not even the old bloodlines who still whispered of shared ancestors dared speak his name without title, without ritual.
The use of it now—by him—a commoner—
It wasn’t just irreverent.
It was heresy in flesh.
And Lucien’s breath—when it came—was jagged and silent, sliding through clenched teeth like ice breaking beneath calm water.
Lucavion didn’t stop.
“Let me ask you clearly.”
His hand didn’t lower. His voice didn’t rise.
But the words struck like arrows.
“Do you testify, here and now, before these guests, that the Daughter of the Crown—Priscilla Lysandra—is lying?”
A pause.
Unyielding.
“And that the heir of House Crane, Reynard Crane, did not commit the act of harassing a lower-ranked noble?”
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