Shattered Innocence: Transmigrated Into a Novel as an Extra

Chapter 880: Girl



Chapter 880: Girl

The courtyard fell silent—too silent.

Moonlight spilled across the stone tiles in fragmented reflections, catching faint glints along the edges of the Academy walls. Somewhere in the far distance, a bell tolled once—low, slow, a reminder of time continuing on even when it shouldn’t.

Lucavion didn’t move.

Didn’t need to.

The night stretched around him like an old cloak, familiar and weighted.

But he wasn’t cold.

Not in the way others might be.

He exhaled once, slow and silent. It wasn’t fatigue that gripped him—not yet. It was something older. Something… unresolved.

’So even now… they don’t leave.’

The memories.

He’d buried them well—stacked years on top like bricks, like mortar, like armor. He’d trained until his muscles forgot what rest was. He’d studied until his mind no longer wandered. He’d rewritten his name, his posture, his voice—every aspect of himself forged into something new.

Something controlled.

And yet—

Those eyes.

Adrian’s eyes.

They hadn’t changed.

Gray like iron, steady like judgment, untouched by the years that had scalded everyone else. When Lucavion met that gaze earlier across the banquet hall, it hadn’t just been recognition.

It had been reminder.

Not of the fall. Not of the betrayal.

But of the moment before it.

When he had still believed in certain things.

Still trusted.

’Foolish.’

He leaned back against the pillar again, this time letting his head tilt up to the starscape sky above. The constellations shimmered with gentle mana-light, arranged with such precision that it would almost be calming.

But not to him.

No. The beauty only sharpened the contrast. The quiet only made the noise in his head louder.

’You spent years becoming untouchable… and all it took was a single look to feel it again.’

The edge.

The weight.

The rage, yes—but more than that.

The betrayal that never learned how to die.

He didn’t regret the path. The sacrifice. The reshaping. But there were still nights like this—quiet, slow, too wide for thought to stay tucked away—where he could feel it pressing in.

Not weakness.

Not exactly.

Just…

Memory.

And memory, when sharpened right, could cut deeper than any blade.

[Lucavion.]

Her voice didn’t prod. Didn’t press.

It just was.

A gentle tether, pulling him back from the edge of old shadows.

He blinked once—slowly—and the stars above shifted in his focus. Not symbols now, not constellations burned into forgotten Chapters. Just lights. Harmless. Distant.

He exhaled, longer this time. Not to push something away—but to let it pass.

“…Tch,” he muttered, dragging a hand through his damp hair. “Hells. Thought I’d locked that part tighter.”

[You did.] Vitaliara’s voice was quieter now, not the usual dry twist of sarcasm. [But locks rust.]

He didn’t argue.

Instead, Lucavion pushed off from the pillar and walked a few slow steps toward the central courtyard again. The moonlight swayed across the tiles like breath on water, and his boots made no sound as they moved from stone to moss-lined edge.

It was peaceful, in that curated Academy way. The kind of calm that didn’t grow—it was designed. Sculpted. Taught to stay in place.

His gaze drifted toward the dormitory towers.

Some windows glowed faintly—study runes or night-ward enchantments still active. Others had gone dim, their occupants likely already curled beneath self-warming blankets, dreaming of merit rankings and dueling trials.

Students moved here and there along the walkways. Not many. Just enough to suggest that not everyone had the good sense to sleep early. A pair of mages laughed softly as they vanished into one of the smaller garden alcoves.

Lucavion’s boots tapped gently across the flagstones, pace slow, unhurried—neither hunting nor hunted. The air carried the muted scent of spell-bloom petals and old, rune-carved marble. Lanterns swayed lazily in their hover-tracks overhead, casting soft gold halos across polished walkways and vine-laced archways.

The Academy was, in many ways, behaving precisely as it was meant to.

And yet—

He looked again.

The students passing through the courtyard weren’t all the same. Yes, some wore noble sigils. Yes, a few were still trailed by their household attendants—most of whom looked thoroughly unimpressed by the spartan rooms they’d been assigned to. Luxury luggage shimmered with levitation glyphs. A highborn girl in moon-thread robes was arguing softly with a dorm steward about why her attendant wasn’t allowed to stay past curfew.

He could hear it in the distance, the phrase “Do you even know my name?” rising in pitch.

But that wasn’t what struck him.

What struck him… was that not all of them looked like they belonged to court.

There were others.

Rougher edges. Hushed voices. Not necessarily commoners—but not polished marble either. Boys with dueling gloves worn from use, not fashion. Girls with scholar bands more worn than their robes. A student with burn marks peeking past his sleeve and a pack clearly held together by mana-glue and raw will.

’So… it isn’t just nobles after all.’

He didn’t smile. But something in his chest loosened.

The banquet had been a performance, after all. A gilded affair where lineage introduced itself before names did. He’d braced for another political garden where mana and bloodline mattered more than talent.

But here?

This was different.

This was a crucible.

The Academy hadn’t been built for comfort. Not really. Its precision was not luxury—it was expectation. Control. Pressure. And pressure revealed what titles often obscured.

[You’re thinking again,] Vitaliara murmured, still settled across his shoulder like a small echo of warmth.

“I’m always thinking,” he whispered.

[More than usual.]

He didn’t get the chance to reply.

Because something shifted.

A breath in the air—sharp, sudden, but not hostile. Like being noticed by the wind.

Lucavion’s eyes slid to the side, unhurried.

And there she was.

Standing just across the courtyard, half-shadowed by a frost-touched alcove, her silhouette framed by the soft white sheen of the spellglass behind her.

A girl.

Young. Likely close to his age, maybe a year beneath.

Her hair was a dark chestnut, not styled but still falling in clean, natural waves around her shoulders. Her uniform was simple. Not threadbare—but not overly tailored either. And her posture?

Still.

Unmoving.

As if she didn’t need to fidget to belong.

Her eyes were what caught him.

Not for their shape. Not for their color—though the rich hazel, flecked with gold, shimmered oddly well beneath the moonlight.

No.

It was how they looked at him.

Not admiring. Not intimidated.

Not even curious, in the way nobles watched a rare animal.

Just…

Present.

Unflinching.

Direct.

As though she saw something—and wasn’t deciding what to do with it. Just accepting it. The silence. The space. Him.

Lucavion didn’t move.

But his mind did.

She was not specially beautiful or anything.

Not in the way banquet girls were. Not like the illusion-spun elegance paraded under star-tier lineage sigils.

No enchantments danced over her skin. No mana-laced perfume. No constructed aura of refinement.

But even so…

She was exceptional.

And he didn’t know why.

Not her figure—he barely registered it.

Not her clothes.

It wasn’t her voice. She hadn’t even spoken.

But that gaze—

That way of looking—

It was familiar.

And yet not.

As if a half-remembered rhythm had just begun again, playing a melody he should know, but couldn’t name.

It stirred something. Not in the heart—Lucavion had long since taught that part of himself how to sleep with one eye open—but deeper. Beneath the walls. Beneath the armor. Where instinct met something quieter. Something older.

Not recognition.

Not déjà vu.

Just… dissonance.

’Have I seen you before?’


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