Shattered Innocence: Transmigrated Into a Novel as an Extra

Chapter 943: Congratulations.....



Chapter 943: Congratulations…..

“You said training helps clear your head. So I’m clearing mine.”

He blinked once.

Just once.

A pause. A tick of breath caught between two people who didn’t know how to speak to each other without bleeding.

And then—

Lucavion tilted his head to the side, just slightly.

A breath escaped him—not a scoff, not a smirk.

A laugh.

Quiet. Dry. No cruelty behind it.

His eyes slipped shut for the barest second as he shook his head, almost to himself.

“I guess,” he murmured, “that works like that.”

She didn’t look away. Not even when his mouth quirked in that unreadable way again, not amused exactly—but something faintly acknowledging. Maybe regret. Maybe not.

He lifted his chin, black hair sweeping across his brow with the wind.

“Yes,” Elara said flatly. “That works like that.”

Lucavion’s faint amusement didn’t faze her. If anything, it only fanned the fire under her ice. She stepped forward, a half pace, deliberate.

“And since it does,” she added, voice low and even, “I’ll use you to clear my head.”

His brows lifted, slowly.

“Is that so?”

“Yeah.”

A chill swept over her limbs like the return of an old instinct. She didn’t need to channel it consciously—the magic responded to her temper as if waiting all night for the cue.

Frost coiled from her fingers again. Thin threads of crystalline blue laced the air around her hand as mana surged to her will.

The world narrowed.

But in the quiet half-second before she launched the spell, a thought slid into her mind like a crack in glass.

Lucavion.

Luca.

He’d seen her fight.

He’d fought with her.

In Stormhaven—against the sea-wrought beasts that poured from the breach like shadow-flesh and foam. Back then, she hadn’t hidden her spells. Hadn’t hidden anything.

Because back then… she was Elara.

And she had rained ice from the sky like arrows of winter justice. Called storms into spears. Frozen tidal waves.

He’d watched her freeze entire monsters solid.

’He knows.’

The realization hit like a pit forming in her stomach.

He knows my magic.

If she cast anything too distinct—anything sharp, refined, anything she’d used then—he’d recognize her. He would. She could see it happening. Could already imagine that slight widening of his eyes. That stillness he got when he was connecting dots behind that stupid smirk.

Elara’s grip slackened around the forming magic.

The frost on her fingertips cracked, a thin hiss of cold escaping into the air before dimming again—pulled back, clenched into stillness.

’If he finds out who I am—’

Her thoughts slowed, sharp, heavy as iron.

’If he realizes who I am… he’ll go straight to her.’

Isolde.

That name alone chilled her more than the spell ever could.

Her mask would shatter.

Quietly, elegantly, the way they always did. A whisper behind the court curtains. A glance between shadows. And that would be it.

Her exile—no longer a ghost story in the backrooms of the Empire—but dragged into the light. And every carefully laid piece of her new life would crumble with it.

’Damn it.’

How did she not see this?

She had recognized him the moment she walked through those gates. Lucavion—Luca. She’d known who he was.

Why hadn’t she planned for this?

’How did I miss this?’

It wasn’t just a small detail. It was a blade pressed to her throat, and she’d walked straight into it.

Because now she was Elowyn.

The name was hers—borrowed but worn well. Her new mask, her new skin.

And Elowyn wasn’t supposed to command blizzards with a flick of her hand. Wasn’t supposed to level monsters with frozen fangs. Elowyn was sharp, yes. Clever, yes. But she wasn’t her

.

She wasn’t Elara.

’This… this ruins everything.’

She swallowed hard, her gaze flicking toward Lucavion—still standing there, the ghost of that unreadable expression fading into caution.

He hadn’t recognized her. Not yet.

But he would.

She’d wanted to wait for the right time. The perfect moment.

To reveal the truth.

To turn the story on its head.

Let them all gasp and kneel and shatter beneath the weight of what they thought they’d discarded.

’But now…’

Could she even risk it?

Could she let her magic speak when he might be listening?

’This complicates everything.’

The very thing she planned to use to prove herself… had become her greatest liability.

Her stomach twisted in on itself.

’So what now? Do I hide it? Hide all of it? Play small? Stay forgettable?’

She could feel the answer clawing in her gut.

If she hid too long, she’d fall behind.

This Academy—these students—they’d tear her down if she didn’t fight.

And not just fight.

Win.

’But to win, I have to use it. I have to be me.’

She clenched her fists tighter.

So what now?

What did she choose?

Let him see? Let him remember?

Or stay hidden… and lose her edge?

It was infuriating.

All of it.

And the worst part?

’I should’ve thought of this. The moment I saw him here. I should’ve known.’

Elara’s breath stalled in her throat.

The pressure in her chest—raw, confused, fraying—coiled tighter as she stood frozen. Mana still pulsed faintly beneath her skin, restrained only by the weight of her spiraling thoughts.

’What am I doing?’

That question lodged deep now, colder than her own ice. She had cornered herself—flung herself into this mess with no plan and too many emotions. Her mind raced in every direction: hide, reveal, fight, flee, lie, confess, wait, wait—

“…Elowyn?”

The voice broke in—low and cutting through the chaos.

She blinked.

A chill touched her cheek. But it wasn’t hers.

Before her—just a few paces ahead—a flick of shadow-fire sparked into being. Black flame, unstable, jittering with threads of mana like a nerve struck raw. Not elegant. Not calm.

Lucavion’s flame.

He immediately snuffed it out with a harsh flick of his fingers, as if the act itself disgusted him. His face, when it met hers again, was darker than before—his annoyance no longer veiled.

“What are you doing?” he asked, each word clipped.

She parted her lips—unsure whether to answer with logic or fury.

He didn’t wait.

“First, you attack me out of nowhere,” he snapped, stepping closer now, his shadow sharp in the breaking dawn. “Then you claim you want to clear your head with a spar, like it’s some noble rite—fine. I gave you that.”

His eyes narrowed, black and burning, no trace of warmth left in them now.

“But now you just stand there? Staring through me like I’m fog on a window? Not speaking. Not moving. Ignoring me.

The last word hit harder than she expected. It wasn’t the insult. It was the tension beneath it.

“Are you trying to mock me?” he asked, low and taut. “Is that it? Is this your clever way of disrespecting me, after that talk?”

Elara flinched. Just slightly.

Lucavion saw it.

His mouth twisted, not in a smile—something smaller. More bitter.

“If this is your petty revenge,” he said, “then congratulations.”

He turned his back on her again.

“You’ve gotten what you wanted.”

The finality in his voice struck harder than the words. He didn’t slam his foot down or storm off. He didn’t yell. He just left, quiet and disappointed, as though he’d already given her the last of what he was willing to.

“You really have annoyed me quite a lot,” he added, the words over his shoulder.

And for a beat, the air felt thinner.

Lucavion didn’t stop walking.

But his voice carried—cool, controlled, and laced with a final thread of something sharper than annoyance. Disappointment, maybe. Or exhaustion.

“If that’s how you’re going to act…”

His steps slowed just long enough for the words to land.

“…then I’ll leave.”


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