Shattered Innocence: Transmigrated Into a Novel as an Extra - Chapter 1050 Hello, but with a cracked voice
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Chapter 1050 Hello, but with a cracked voice
“Hello.”
The word was simple. Polite. Entirely unbothered.
And for Elara, it was the final piece.
If he were irritated, he would not greet Isolde like that.
If he disliked her presence, he would not soften his tone.
If he saw her as an enemy, he would not look at her with that measured ease.
‘They’re just acting.’
‘They’ve always acted well together.’
Isolde responded with that gentle, graceful gesture Elara remembered all too well—the slight tilt of the chin, the soft curve of fingers, the demure sweep of hair behind one shoulder. A movement crafted for effect.
“May I sit here, Mister Lucavion?”
Her tone was lilting, warm, even deferential in a way that made several students blink.
Elara almost scoffed aloud.
Isolde never deferred to anyone unless she wanted something.
Lucavion chuckled under his breath. “Feel free to do so, Miss…”
His voice trailed expectantly, though the question felt performative rather than genuine.
Isolde smiled—the frost beneath it invisible to everyone but Elara.
“Isolde.”
A heartbeat.
Lucavion’s smirk sharpened. “…Ah. Yes, Miss Isolde.”
It should have sounded smooth.
Lucavion was incapable of anything but smooth.
Except this time—
Elara heard it.
A crack.
Not loud.
Not obvious.
Barely a fracture in tone, the slightest disruption in his usually fluid cadence.
But it was there.
A thin hitch, a break so small anyone else would have dismissed it as nothing. Anyone except someone who had been watching him with clinical precision since the moment she laid eyes on him again. Someone who had dissected every smirk, every tilt of his head, every shift in his voice looking for contradiction.
Her brows twitched—not visibly, but in her mind, the reaction sparked like flint striking stone.
‘His voice… cracked.’
‘Why?’
‘Is that guilt? Recognition? Or… something else?’
It was the first time she had ever heard Lucavion falter.
And it was over her name.
Over Isolde.
A thousand analyses flickered through her head in an instant, but she crushed them down ruthlessly. She didn’t have the luxury of unraveling whatever that had been. Not now. Not with Isolde so close she could almost feel the cold brush of her mana. Not with that smile cutting the air like silk sharpened to a blade.
Isolde lowered herself gracefully into the seat beside Lucavion, skirts whispering like moonlit water. A picture of composure. A symbol of noble perfection. Her scent—faint, delicate, familiar—carried across the row, brushing against Elara’s senses like an unwelcome hand.
More heads turned.
More murmurs rose—careful this time, hushed out of deference to the examiners, but unmistakably present.
“…Did she really sit next to him?”
“…I suppose Lady Valoria truly doesn’t discriminate.”
“She’s too kind. Even to someone like—”
“No wonder she’s admired. She treats everyone equally.”
“Must be her light affinity. It makes her… gracious.”
Elara let the words filter in and out, distant and distorted, as though she were underwater.
Kind.
Gracious.
Gentle.
Equal to all.
Of course the students believed that.
Of course they saw light and imagined purity.
Of course they mistook Isolde’s serenity for warmth.
‘They have no idea.’
Her jaw tightened, the muscles along her neck going rigid before she forced them loose. She would not let the trembling return. She refused to let Isolde’s proximity drag her back into that dungeon.
Behind her, the fabric of Lucavion’s coat shifted—a small movement, perhaps him settling, perhaps adjusting his wrist, perhaps nothing at all—but Elara caught the subtle tension in the sound.
Was it discomfort?
Nervousness?
Or simply irritation?
She didn’t know.
She didn’t care.
Or so she told herself.
Isolde, meanwhile, gave him another soft smile—a smile the rest of the room saw as gentle, composed, refined.
Elara recognized it for what it was.
Calculated.
Chilly beneath the surface.
A blade sheathed in light.
And the students, oblivious to the venom beneath the veneer, continued whispering reverently:
“…Lady Valoria really doesn’t mind sitting with him.”
“She’s admirable.”
“She’s strong. She wouldn’t be afraid of someone with his reputation.”
Strong.
Gentle.
Gracious.
Elara’s fingers curled beneath the desk again, her pulse a steady, cold rhythm against her palm.
If only they knew.
If only they understood that strength wasn’t always benign, that gentleness could be a weapon, and that the girl they admired—the girl with the radiant affinity—once stood over her sister in a dungeon and smiled like a serpent poised above prey.
But they didn’t know.
They couldn’t know.
And Elara—hidden behind illusion, buried under a new name—could only watch as the two people she hated most in the world sat beside each other, exchanging polite words like actors on a stage woven from lies.
Lucavion’s earlier voice crack lingered in her mind despite her efforts to discard it.
‘Why did you falter when saying her name?’
‘What did you remember?’
‘Or what did you fear?’
But she pushed it away.
Whatever truth lay behind that slip—she did not care.
*****
She had not expected this.
Of all places, of all times, of all arrangements the Academy could have devised, she had not anticipated walking into the hall and seeing him sitting there—calmly, carelessly, like a man who belonged anywhere he chose to sit.
Lucavion.
Her steps did not falter. They never did. But something in her chest tightened with a pressure she hadn’t felt in years—not fear, no—but something adjacent. Something she refused to name.
‘How inconvenient.
How… interesting.’
She approached with practiced poise, the echo of her footsteps soft as falling silk.
His eyes found her first.
Not the glance of surprise, not the flinch of someone confronted with a ghost, not even the irritation she had half-expected from him now that he basked in the attention of half the Academy. No. What she met was something far more unsettling.
Stillness.
Dark, perfectly contained stillness.
Like the moment just before a blade leaves its sheath.
He didn’t blink. He didn’t startle. He simply watched her—the way predators sometimes paused not out of hesitation, but contemplation.
Closer now, she saw the differences clearly. The boy she once molded like pliable wax was gone, burned away into someone sharper, quieter, and infinitely harder to read.
‘What happened to you…?
And who taught you to look at me like that?’
Her lips curved. Soft. Gentle. Entirely controlled.
“May I sit here, Mister Lucavion?”
Her voice glided through the air with deliberate warmth, the kind nobles mistook for grace and commoners mistook for kindness.
A murmured wave rippled through the hall—admiration, disbelief, curiosity. She let it wash beneath her notice.
Lucavion chuckled under his breath. “Feel free to do so, Miss…”
His voice trailed off with theatrical expectancy. She recognized the tone—smooth, intentionally charming, an echo of the old habits she once exploited so easily.
She tilted her chin in that familiar, delicate gesture she had perfected over years.
“Isolde.”
A single word.
A revelation.
A test.
And for the briefest heartbeat, something cracked behind his smirk.
A fracture so fine only someone who had once known his heart’s cadence could detect it.
“…Ah. Yes, Miss Isolde.”
Not smooth.
Not perfect.
A deviation.
Her lashes lowered just enough to mask the flicker of interest sharpening behind them.
‘You are still the same.’
The thought unfurled in her mind like silk slipping off a blade.
That tiny fracture in his voice — that small, almost imperceptible stumble — was enough. It told her everything. For all the changes in him, for all the strength he’d cultivated, for all the stares he drew and the confidence he now wielded like armor…
At his core, Lucavion still broke when she touched the right strings.
Just as he always had.
She hid her satisfaction beneath a gentle smile, lowering herself into the seat beside him with quiet grace. Moonlit fabric whispered along the polished floor, her posture composed as a painting.
If he noticed her proximity — and she knew he did — he gave no outward sign besides the faint settling of his shoulders. That, too, was familiar.
‘Still pretending not to react.
Still thinking I won’t see it.’
She folded her hands neatly in her lap, turned her head just enough to catch his profile, and let her voice brush the space between them like a feathered edge.
“I have been wanting to meet you, Mister Lucavion.”


