Shattered Innocence: Transmigrated Into a Novel as an Extra

Chapter 839: Girl that is now found



Chapter 839: Girl that is now found

Her orange eyes were still glowing—bright, sharp, fierce—but not cruel.

Not yet.

They shimmered with heat, yes. With frustration. With the raw, lingering sting of abandonment. But beneath all of that, something gentler remained. Something far more human than the warrior’s edge she now wore like armor.

She still just wants to be heard.

Even after all this—after the silence he left in his wake, after the years of solitude etched into her blade, after the blood she spilled that he never saw—she looked at him not like a ghost, but like a man who could still answer her.

And that broke something in him deeper than guilt.

Lucavion inhaled, slow and sharp. The breath burned slightly, like it didn’t want to settle.

The past won’t change.

No matter what he says now, no matter what thoughts churn through his mind—what he did, what he didn’t do—it’s already carved into both of them.

He left.

And she survived it.

That truth doesn’t vanish just because he’s only now learning to look at it.

And in this chamber, where words are drowned beneath the memory of clashing blades, there is no apology he can speak that wouldn’t feel hollow.

Only swords are heard here.

And so, he steps forward—not toward Jesse, but toward that unspoken truth.

She is not the cadet he taught to breathe through her parries.

Not the girl who tripped over her stance and gritted her teeth through another night of failed drills.

She is a survivor.

A blade in her own right.

A soldier who came from the battlefield without a hand to hold and still stood tall enough to meet him in open challenge.

And so…

He bowed.

Not deep.

Not ceremonial.

Just low enough.

Low enough to honor what she became.

Low enough to say, I see you.

Low enough that for the first time since she drew her blade against him—he didn’t look down at her.

Lucavion straightened slowly, his eyes steady now, the faintest glint of something rare stirring in them.

Not pity.

Not regret.

Respect.

She had earned it the hard way.

And right now, he knew—this was all he could offer.

No excuses.

No explanations.

Just the quiet recognition that Jesse Burns, the girl he once taught to listen to her blade, had forged a song of her own—

—and it was louder than anything he’d ever taught her.

*****

The blades sang before either of them moved.

A single inhale between them—then—

CLANG!

Lucavion’s estoc met Jesse’s reverse grip with a sudden, sharp twist of metal and muscle, the impact ringing like a struck bell through the chamber. Sparks skated off the meeting point, dancing between them as momentum spun apart, only to converge again.

SHHHINK!

CLAAAANG!

She came at him low—shoulder tucked, footwork tight, sweeping in a crescent that carved a line across the floor. He read it too late. Her momentum snapped upward.

He twisted, blade barely catching hers.

The lock clicked between them.

A pause.

Blades gritting against each other—then pulling apart like breath torn from lungs.

I didn’t know.

You should have.

Jesse’s blade darted forward with the precision of a razor through cloth—her Reaping Form spiraling with perfect economy, no wasted movement, no hesitation.

Lucavion caught her thrust on the flat of his estoc and pivoted sideways—using her weight, letting her pass him like a gust through broken walls.

His blade flicked once. A mark. A line. Not deep—but real.

Her eyes flared.

She spun with the cut—not away from it, with it—and retaliated.

CLANG!—SHHHK!—SWOOSH!

Her foot came up, heel lashing toward his ribs, and he ducked under it—his coat fluttering with the breeze of her motion. Their rhythm was quickening. His shoulders moved without thinking. Her instincts were sharper.

It’s my fault.

You left me.

He stepped back.

Jesse pressed forward.

The dance resumed, and now it was faster—less show, more truth.

Their blades spoke in broken, honest tones.

Lucavion’s steps grew tighter—less theatrical, more sincere.

A twist. A parry. A lunge.

Her counters were merciless—sweeps designed to disarm, not kill. She was making him feel every inch of ground she’d earned in his absence.

I thought you’d have someone guiding you.

I didn’t.

CLAAANG!

His estoc locked hers at the base, steel grating as both their arms trembled from the pressure.

But you’ve grown strong.

She shoved forward.

I was forced to.

Her voice echoed in every strike. She didn’t need to say it. Her blade did.

That is life.

Lucavion’s stance shifted—subtle. A nod. An answer.

He stopped resisting her momentum—and used it.

Her blade slipped past his shoulder, overextending—but he didn’t strike.

Instead, he turned with her, his estoc following but never cutting. A motion of reflection. Of listening.

She blinked.

Their swords lowered.

Just slightly.

Breath fogged between them.

Clink.

The blades touched again. No clash. No sparks.

Just the faintest note.

I see it now.

Too late.

Maybe.

They stood there, blades crossed gently between them, breath steadying.

In that chamber, the crowd had long since faded. The politics, the reputation, the court watching from the balconies above—it all vanished beneath the weight of this silent conversation.

A moment passed.

Their blades still touched, not in violence, but as if to keep the silence between them from shattering too quickly.

Jesse stepped back—just a breath. The kind of movement that didn’t belong to dueling form, but to something older. Personal. Vulnerable.

“I’ve been looking for you,” she said softly, words catching in her throat like they weren’t meant to be heard by anyone but him. “All this time. A trace. A name. A rumor in some broken outpost. I chased ghosts.”

Lucavion didn’t flinch. He only looked at her, voice quiet, but unwavering.

“I’m here.”

That was all.

He didn’t explain why it took this long. Didn’t make excuses for why his shadow had vanished when she needed it most. Because she already knew. Because saying it now would ruin what their blades had already said for them.

His fingers adjusted on the hilt of his estoc, steady once more.

“And now that you’ve become this strong…”

He tilted his head slightly. “I won’t hold back. I won’t treat you differently.”

Jesse’s eyes narrowed—but not in offense. In agreement.

“I don’t want you to.”

Lucavion smirked faintly. “Good to know.”

Then he moved.

SHHHHHK!

A blur of cloth and silver as his estoc cut upward in a tight spiral, the blade a whisper of starlight. It was his own form—subtle, minimalistic, precise. The style born not from academies or bloodlines, but from survival and speed.

Jesse blocked—barely. Her blade shivered under the angle. He twisted again, ducking low and pivoting behind her.

CLANK!

Steel met steel in a flawless parry—but it was his tempo now. His rhythm.

One step.

Two.

She tried to counter.

But he was already in motion.

His blade curved low, drawing her attention downward—

—and then it stopped.

A flick. A glide.

SHINK.

The flat of his estoc tapped gently against the crook of her neck.

No blood.

No wound.

Just an end.

Silence followed.

Lucavion held still for a heartbeat longer… then pulled back.

“Winner, Lucavion.”

——–A/N——–

This whole arc is important to show that Lucavion also makes mistakes, and his decisions are not always correct.

And most importantly, he can feel guilt.

Hope you liked the recent Chapters, every character is pretty much covered now.


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