Shattered Innocence: Transmigrated Into a Novel as an Extra

Chapter 828: Resonance



Chapter 828: Resonance

Their swords collided again—but this time, Rowen didn’t yield.

The force rebounded, and then—

WHUUUMMMMM—

A deep, resonant hum rippled out from the clash.

Lucavion’s brows twitched—only slightly. He felt it more than heard it.

A vibration. Not of metal—but of will.

Rowen’s blade shone faintly—not with mana, but something far older.

The dueling ground hushed.

Not in fear.

But reverence.

From the terrace above, whispers broke loose again—this time shaken, unsure.

“…That sound…”

“That’s not mana—what is that?”

“No… it can’t be—”

And then it was spoken.

“This is…”

“…the Drayke Family’s…”

“…Sword Resonance.

The words struck the air like a bell tolling war.

A phenomenon so rare even among elite swordsmen that it bordered on myth. Not magic. Not technique. It was something deeper—alignment. When blade, breath, and intent moved as one. When the sword didn’t just obey the wielder—it answered them.

Lucavion’s fingers adjusted slightly on the hilt of his estoc, a familiar looseness in his stance despite the shift in air. The hum of the resonance still echoed faintly between them, like the war-drum of something ancient.

He tilted his head.

“Finally,” he said, voice low. Calm. Too calm. “You’re showing it.”

His eyes flicked to Rowen’s sword again, then back up—studying, not impressed, but… appreciative.

“And here I thought I’d have to keep dragging it out of you.”

That ease—that expression—the slight curl of his mouth, the glint of sharp amusement buried in his black eyes—

It burned.

Rowen’s jaw clenched, his fingers tightening on the hilt until the leather creaked beneath the pressure.

Lucavion wasn’t posturing.

He meant it.

Even now, even after he had activated Sword Resonance, Lucavion didn’t look threatened.

He looked engaged.

And that…

That infuriated him.

Because Rowen knew exactly what Sword Resonance cost. What it demanded. Years—decades for most. Even for him, hailed as a genius of the Drayke bloodline, it had taken everything. Countless nights with callused hands and bloodied wrists, every motion drilled until his body moved before thought. The moment he awakened Resonance had been a revelation, a sanctification. A mark of someone chosen.

And yet now—

Lucavion smirked in the face of it.

As if it were merely… expected.

Rowen exhaled sharply, nostrils flaring. His blade dipped, just slightly, preparing again—his muscles now more coiled than before, his stance sharpened to a perfect Drayke form. His eyes never left Lucavion’s.

“You’re stronger than I thought,” Rowen said coldly. “You weren’t all talk.”

A grudging admission. But even that tasted sour.

He stepped forward, the resonance echoing louder now with his movement—like the blade itself was singing.

“But this is where it ends.”

Because even if Lucavion’s sword was fast. Unorthodox. Merciless.

It wasn’t Resonance.

It wasn’t forged from honor. From lineage. From the will of a House built over centuries.

CLANG!

The moment Rowen moved, the tone shifted. It wasn’t just pressure now—it was intention. Not brute force. Not technique alone. But something deeper.

The sword sang.

Lucavion’s estoc met Rowen’s blade again, and this time the clash wasn’t just steel—it was voice. The hum of Sword Resonance thrummed along Lucavion’s bones like a low chant beneath the skin.

And then Rowen struck.

SWISH—SWOOSH—CLANG!

His blade arced with fluid precision, each motion tighter, more refined. Not a single ounce of energy wasted.

“Drayke Form IX: Crescent Walk.”

A half-lunge to the right, foot sliding in perfect tempo, blade swinging in a graceful curve aimed for Lucavion’s flank—designed not only to cut, but to reshape his opponent’s positioning.

Lucavion stepped back just in time—

—but Rowen followed, already sliding across the marble—

“Form VI: Horizon Severance.”

A low sweep—impossibly quick. Meant to catch retreating legs and force a dodge upward.

Lucavion jumped—flipping once mid-air—

But even as his coat fluttered, Rowen was already moving.

Sword flashing up with the same hum.

“Form III: Twin Bloom.”

Two thrusts—one high, one low. Feints and real strikes folded into a rhythm only those trained in Resonance could maintain.

Lucavion twisted, his estoc parrying both in one fluid motion—barely.

He landed hard, skidding across the court, boot scraping sharp across the stone.

For the first time since the match had started—

He didn’t counter.

’He’s reading me now…’

Lucavion’s eyes narrowed.

Rowen advanced—not rushed, but exact. His movements had changed. The stiffness from earlier, the hesitation—it was gone. His blade now moved like an extension of thought, striking in patterns that bent around openings like water through cracks.

Lucavion dashed in—

CLANG!

But his blow was redirected, not blocked.

A slight pivot of Rowen’s wrist turned the estoc’s power into nothing.

And then—

“Form XIII: Falling Bell.”

A descending arc. Vertical. Meant to collapse pressure onto the opponent’s core.

Lucavion barely ducked under it, the edge of the blade slicing through air inches above his head.

He clicked his tongue.

“Now that’s a sword,” he muttered.

But Rowen didn’t smirk.

He was past emotion now. Resonance drowned all but the rhythm.

The duel continued.

CLANG! CLASH! SHNK!

Lucavion’s footwork remained erratic—elusive, wild. But Rowen was adapting. Every unpredictable lunge met a quiet counter. Every sharp reversal faced smooth flow.

Lucavion attempted to break tempo—

But Rowen stepped into it.

“Form X: Sky Weaving Coil.”

A spiral strike, built from diagonal slashes that wrapped around Lucavion’s guard like vines.

Lucavion grunted, forced into a backward roll.

The court gasped.

The tide had shifted.

The monster that overwhelmed Rowen before—was now on the defensive.

From the sidelines, nobles leaned forward, murmuring in awe.

“So this is… the Sword of the Draykes…”

“His stance is seamless.”

“He’s controlling the entire fight.”

Yet to Rowen….

Yet to Rowen…

Even with the tide shifting, even as the crowd whispered of his brilliance, even as his blade carved circles around Lucavion’s unpredictable rhythm—

Something felt… off.

His breathing was controlled. His stance? Perfect. Resonance pulsed steady along his blade, singing to every motion like a duet long-practiced.

And still…

It didn’t feel right.

In his past duels—when Sword Resonance awakened—none could stand before him. They cracked. They flinched. They broke.

Not because they were weak. But because they felt it. The weight of legacy. The pressure of technique so precise it left no room for error. In those battles, the outcome was certain.

Measured.

Absolute.

They were dismantled before they even realized it.

But Lucavion…?

Lucavion was still here.

Pushed back, yes. Forced to roll, to slide, to shift—yes.

But not breaking.

Not unraveling like the others.

Rowen felt it in his gut—that annoying whisper of instinct, the one that dug its nails into reason and said something’s wrong.

Why doesn’t he look cornered?

Why does he move like that?

Why—

“Interesting…”

Rowen’s eyes widened.

The word hadn’t come from the terrace.

It came from right in front of him.

Lucavion’s voice.

Quiet. Curious. Almost pleased.

As if the last three minutes of being shoved backward by technique worthy of an imperial heir—

—was just… a study.

And then Rowen saw it.

The glint.

That maddening glint in Lucavion’s eye.


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