Shattered Innocence: Transmigrated Into a Novel as an Extra - Chapter 1052 When the Magister Enters, the Room Holds Its Breath
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Chapter 1052 When the Magister Enters, the Room Holds Its Breath
Lucavion did not answer right away. For a few heartbeats, he simply let the space between them stretch, the faint hum of the hall fading beneath a silence that felt far more deliberate than anything he had shown earlier.
The young man who had smirked so casually moments ago, who had thrown teasing lines with practiced ease, seemed to withdraw into a quieter calculation. Isolde observed him without hurry, letting her posture remain as composed as a statue beneath lanternlight.
His hesitation pleased her in a way she hadn’t expected; it wasn’t victory, but it was acknowledgment—an involuntary one, delicate and telling. She had touched upon something he hadn’t fully armored.
She let that small satisfaction settle beneath her ribs. It was almost nostalgic. Lucavion had always reacted this way when pushed in just the right direction—going silent before he attempted to rebuild the facade he wanted others to see.
That habit had survived whatever transformation he had undergone since the last time she saw him. And as far as she was concerned, that alone revealed how little distance he had truly managed to put between himself and the boy he used to be.
At last, Lucavion drew a breath, quiet but steady, and the stillness softened around him. “Indeed,” he murmured, his voice smooth yet edged with something darker beneath the surface.
He adjusted his posture, rising from his languid lean with a fluidity she suspected he practiced, a movement meant to reclaim whatever ground she had just taken.
“It seems it was my misconception after all.” His tone carried a polite veneer, but the undercurrent told a different story; it threaded between them with a faint, mocking warmth that refused to commit to sincerity.
He didn’t stop there. “Applying what I observed outside the Academy to someone such as… Milady.”
The title landed lightly, yet not lightly at all, brushing the air like a glove turned inside out. It was courteous on the surface, almost deferential, but it dripped with implication she could taste as clearly as cold iron. He was teasing, yes, but he was also retaliating. And he knew she would hear the other meaning—because he intended her to.
She felt her eyes narrow, so subtly that even the closest observer would see only grace. He was referencing the past without naming it, offering a veiled reminder of what she once was to him. She recognized the tone immediately.
It was the same one he had used years ago when suppressing irritation behind civility, when trying to pretend a deeper emotion did not affect him. For all his changes—his strength, his composure, the sharpness behind his gaze—that pattern had not vanished either. Lucavion let the silence breathe before continuing, his fingers drumming once against the underside of the desk in a rhythm that sounded thoughtful to anyone else but looked like a calculated warning to her.
“It appears my views on women might have been… skewed. A little bit.” His voice softened on the last words, laced with a faint sarcasm, the kind that smiled while it cut. She knew the technique well; she had used it on countless nobles.
Lucavion’s fingers stilled, leaving a quiet tension in the space between them. His gaze sharpened just slightly, as though he were measuring how far he could push this without shattering the pleasant facade they both maintained.
“Considering,” he said slowly, “that a certain person had a rather… influential role in shaping those views, I suppose I cannot be blamed entirely.”
The words drifted out soft and elegant, yet there was nothing gentle in them.
A jab disguised as reflection.
A needle wrapped in silk.
Isolde did not blink. The comment slid across her mind like a cool draft, notable but not wounding. She had expected him to strike back; in fact, she found it almost charming that he still relied on implication to do it.
‘You want me to flinch. How adorable.’
Her smile warmed by a degree, though the warmth did not reach her eyes. “I can understand that,” she replied. “Influence often leaves… impressions.” Her voice was smooth, even sympathetic on the surface, but beneath it lay a very different current.
She let her gaze drift briefly to his hand—steady now, no tremor to be found—and then back to his eyes. When she spoke again, her tone cooled, not enough to break decorum but enough that the temperature seemed to shift.
“Though to be fair,” she continued, “I am also similar to you in that regard. I wasn’t working with much. Someone in the past was…” She paused, letting the silence cut the shape of her meaning for her. “Rather lacking.”
There was no need to specify who.
No need to define when.
No need to carve the outline further.
The implication landed with surgical precision.
Lucavion’s jaw tightened by a hair, a tension visible only because she knew exactly what to look for. His eyes darkened—not with anger, but with a kind of quiet, deliberate restraint that suggested her words had found their mark more effectively than he wished to show.
‘There it is,’ she thought. ‘Still soft in the same places.’
He exhaled through his nose, a faint, controlled breath, and leaned back as if granting himself space to recalibrate. His posture maintained a relaxed veneer, but she saw the shift beneath it.
This was familiar territory to her.
She had once shaped it.
He had once lived in it.
And despite the years between them, she could still navigate him effortlessly.
Isolde let her fingers rest lightly against the desk, posture pristine, expression composed. The hall around them remained filled with students pretending not to eavesdrop, yet no one truly understood what was unfolding—two polite voices trading history without ever naming it, two smiles concealing blades honed years apart.
Her next breath was steady, controlled.
‘You wanted to revisit the past?’
‘Let’s see how much of it you can handle.’
Lucavion recovered with a little more speed than she expected. He let the silence settle, let it cool between them like condensation on glass, and when he finally answered, his voice held a steadiness that felt deliberately placed—too calm to be natural, too smooth to be harmless.
“Rather lacking…” he echoed, tasting the phrase as though examining its shape. “That is a bit vague, wouldn’t you say?”
He angled his head in her direction, a polite gesture masking a sharper intent. His eyes stayed fixed on hers, unblinking, almost clinical in their focus.
“After all,” he continued, “not everyone starts on equal ground. One could argue that my fi-… certain someone was also quite lacking—if we’re talking about performance.”
The final word slid into the space between them with unmistakable edge, soft in volume but heavy with implication. A quiet blow aimed not at her reputation, nor her intellect, but at the one pocket of her past she despised being reminded of: her former frailty, her once-weak body, her carefully weaponized fragility.
For a moment, Isolde did not breathe.
Her eyes did not widen. Her posture did not shift. Her smile did not falter. But the air around her seemed to cool by a fraction, as though the light affinity in her veins dimmed under a passing cloud. Only someone who knew her would notice the change—and unfortunately for him, Lucavion had once known her very well.
‘You shouldn’t have touched that.’
‘Not unless you’re prepared for what comes next.’
Isolde lowered her lashes, not out of shame, but calculation. Her hand remained still atop her skirt, yet the faintest pulse of mana flickered at the edge of her palm—silent, restrained, a quiet reminder of the power she now possessed. There were dozens of ways she could reply. Dozens of lines she could use to break him in half without raising her voice.
She lifted her gaze again.
Her eyes were no longer warm.
‘You forget yourself, Lucavion Thorne.’
The beginnings of her retort rose smoothly in her throat, already sharpened, already iced over, something that would have left him with absolutely no doubt who currently held the advantage in this interaction. She opened her lips—
—but the sound that came next was not her voice.
CREAK! The side door of the hall swung open with a soft but authoritative click, and an immediate hush washed through the rows of students. Even Lucavion’s expression, mid-battlefield, snapped back into composure.
Isolde turned her head just enough to see the figure entering: tall, composed, wrapped in obsidian-accented robes that moved like quiet shadow. Silver embroidery traced along the sleeves in sharp geometric lines, and her boots struck the floor with restrained grace.
Magister Selenne.
It was the time of examination.


