Shattered Innocence: Transmigrated Into a Novel as an Extra
Chapter 721: ListChapter 721: List
The palace air was heavier this morning.
Not in weight, but in tension—sharp, subtle, threaded through the corridors like a scent only the politically aware could smell. Priscilla Lysandra stood by the arched window of her private chamber, the soft light of early afternoon glinting off her shoulder brooch, casting a long shadow across the scrolls laid before her.
Idena entered, as she always did—quiet, efficient, unbothered by the disrepair of the western wing where her mistress lived. But today, her steps were brisker. Intentional.
“They’ve made the announcement,” Idena said, coming to a calm stop beside the desk. “Today is the final deadline for sponsor applications.”
Priscilla’s gaze did not shift from the city skyline beyond the window. But the slight tension in her shoulder eased—not from comfort, but from recognition. She had expected this.
“All five candidates?” she asked.
“Yes,” Idena confirmed. “The academy has finalized the list. Sponsor applications are being collected now. The selection will be left entirely to the candidates. Each of them has until the bell of eight to make their decisions.”
Priscilla turned at last, one hand resting against the cool frame of the window. “And how many hours until that?”
“Two,” Idena said crisply. “Most of the top-tier houses have already submitted their offers—some even multiple ones, through different representatives.”
Priscilla’s lips curled faintly. “Desperate.”
“Calculated,” Idena corrected gently. “Especially for Lucavion.”
Priscilla’s eyes darkened at the name.
Lucavion.
Of course.
She could already imagine the halls of Zephyrstone teeming with young heirs, sponsors, agents with silver tongues and gilded contracts—each one of them waiting for the same storm-touched boy who had shaken the Trials with nothing more than precision and presence.
“And the academy?” she asked. “Do they interfere?”
“Not officially,” Idena said. “They’ve left it to the candidates entirely.”
Priscilla said nothing at first.
Her gaze lingered over the skyline of the Imperial Borough, where the gleam of the spires masked a thousand layers of politics, ambition, and veiled hunger. Somewhere beyond that, in the heart of Zephyrstone, five names were being weighed. Assessed. Claimed.
And hers?
Wasn’t among them.
Not yet.
She knew the reality. Her station was imperial—but her influence was hollow. She had no seat in the central councils, no faction behind her, no lineage to validate her rise. The other princesses would already have sent their envoys. The highborn sons of dukes and marquises would have written letters gilded in runes and polished praise.
And she?
She was still gathering the news.
Late.
As always.
“I could prepare the writ,” Idena offered gently, sensing the hesitation. “We have two hours still. Even a provisional letter would allow for a meeting request—especially if submitted through the lesser halls. They cannot refuse your name outright, even if they try.”
Priscilla didn’t move. But her eyes—those sharp, crimson eyes—lowered just slightly.
To want something… and be refused was one thing.
But to ask for it, to announce that want, and then be denied?
That was a wound her station could not afford to show.
She’d lived too long under the weight of silent rejection. Her bloodline questioned. Her position tolerated. The thought of presenting herself for selection—like a merchant hawking empty promises—curdled in her throat.
She hated it.
And yet—
Lucavion.
Her fingers curled slightly against the window frame.
There was something about him.
That strange, unshakable calm. The way he had spoken on the terrace—like he knew her. The way he had dismantled Reynald Vale—not for glory, not for audience, but with intent. Purpose. A blade used not to climb, but to carve.
It made no sense.
And yet, in her chest, where instinct often warred with reason, a quiet voice whispered:
If you asked… he would answer.
A foolish thought.
And yet not untrue.
“…If I were to submit a request,” she murmured at last, her voice soft, measured, “and no one accepts… the court will know. The nobles will whisper. It would be another public fracture.”
“Yes,” Idena said honestly. “But if you do not submit, the fracture remains—only quieter. And they still win.”
Priscilla didn’t answer.
She watched the clouds drift above the palace rooftops. Somewhere beneath them, Lucavion stood untouched by all of this. No crest. No house. No banner. Just the fire he wielded and the smile that unnerved the Empire.
A smile that, for some reason, had not once looked at her with contempt.
“…Only Lucavion,” she said finally.
Idena blinked. “Your Highness?”
“If I apply,” Priscilla said, turning at last from the window, “it will be only for him.”
Idena inclined her head. “Understood.”
“Prepare the letter,” Priscilla added. “Seal it in my name, but use the lesser envoy method. Let them think it’s unofficial. Uncertain.”
“You think he’ll accept?”
Priscilla’s gaze sharpened slightly.
“I think,” she said, voice low, “he’s already expecting me.”
Idena stood still for just a breath longer than usual.
Not from disobedience. Not from doubt.
But surprise.
She had served Priscilla for years—watched her navigate the empire’s thorns with silence and steel. Watched her wear indifference like a veil, and retreat behind poise when the court threw their veiled insults. She had seen anger from the princess. Coldness. Patience. Even quiet grief.
But this?
This glimmer of certainty in her voice—of expectation, not from arrogance, but instinct?
That was new.
And dangerous.
“You believe he anticipated this?” Idena asked, softly, not challenging. Just trying to understand.
understand.
Priscilla didn’t flinch.
“He moves like someone who sees more than he says,” she replied. “And speaks like someone who’s already read the final page of the story.”
She turned from the window fully now, walking back toward the table where her seal lay beside a folded map of Zephyrstone.
“Let’s not disappoint him.”
Idena gave the smallest bow, her voice steady. “I’ll prepare the writ at once. And deliver it through the Lesser Hall, as instructed.”
“Keep it quiet,” Priscilla said, eyes distant again. “Let them think I’m hesitating. That I submitted late. They’ll be watching for weakness.”
Idena turned, her cloak swaying lightly behind her.
But just before she exited, she glanced back once more. Just enough to see the faintest trace of something on Priscilla’s face.
Not vulnerability.
But resolve.
“Yes, Your Highness,” she said.
And then she was gone—already halfway down the long corridor toward the Ministry Couriers, carrying a name that had begun to coil itself around the empire like a slow-burn prophecy.
******
Around the ninth chime of the evening hour, the walls of Lucavion’s suite gave a subtle shimmer—a soft pulse of shifting mana, like the breath of some waiting presence announcing itself with restraint.
He didn’t turn right away.
The room, once more, had tailored itself to his mood. Low starlight filtered through the dome above, casting a dusky glow on the polished stone floor. His coat hung lazily over one arm of the couch, and he reclined in half-shadow, legs crossed, teacup in hand.
It was not the kind of tea one drank for comfort.
Dark. Bitter. Unyielding.
’Fitting.’
With a flick of his eyes—not even a full glance—the Resonance Conductor pulsed to life beside him, its translucent surface spinning open into a circular display, runes blooming outward like petals of glasslight.
INCOMING SPONSORSHIP DOSSIERS – FIRST WAVE
Status: Finalized
Count: Thirty-seven primary requests. Eight conditional invitations. Three imperial-tier interest notices.
Classification: PRIORITY
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