Shattered Innocence: Transmigrated Into a Novel as an Extra

Chapter 856: Telling the tale ?



Chapter 856: Telling the tale ?

There was a pause.

Not silence—just the breathless kind of stillness that followed something unexpected. Like dust suspended midair, waiting to fall.

Then came the next voice—older, female, Arcanis-born by the lilt in her vowels. Dressed in ivory silks and jeweled cuffs, her eyes flicked toward Valeria with a blend of curiosity and lightly veiled concern.

“You went alone?” she repeated, voice more incredulous than accusatory. “To Andelheim?”

Valeria nodded once. “Yes.”

“But surely you brought at least a guard—an escort?” another noblewoman asked, frowning, her expression tightening in quiet disbelief. “Even for someone of your standing, traveling that far alone… that’s hardly safe.”

“It’s the outer-east,” someone murmured. “Marquis Vendor governs, yes—but the borders aren’t without risk. Especially for a noblewoman.”

A ripple moved through the group. Several heads nodded, especially among the young noblewomen. Whispers of concern, subtle but pointed, floated like perfume through the circle.

They weren’t questioning her ability—not directly.

But they were pointing to the rules they themselves were forced to live by. The expectations. The limitations. The unspoken bindings around their wrists in the form of titles, etiquette, lineage.

Valeria’s eyes moved between them. Their worry wasn’t false. But it was distant.

They had never had to go alone.

“I didn’t think it was dangerous,” she said simply.

One of the younger girls—a diplomat’s daughter from House Aures, if Valeria remembered correctly—tilted her head, eyes narrowing. “But the roads aren’t patrolled as tightly out there. And what if something had happened?”

Valeria’s voice didn’t rise. It didn’t need to. “Then I would have handled it.”

“But still,” the girl persisted, her voice more puzzled than critical, “you’re the daughter of House Olarion. Surely your family wouldn’t have permitted something so reckless—”

“I didn’t ask,” Valeria said softly.

A pause.

No sharpness in her tone. No pride, even. Just truth, quiet and unsentimental.

The noblewoman who had spoken—soft-laced and wide-eyed—lowered her gaze slightly, unsure how to respond. Across the group, a few expressions stiffened. Others turned contemplative. And a few, notably, flicked briefly toward Jesse, as if wondering whether she too was the kind of girl who didn’t ask for permission.

The air shifted again. A slow breath of contrast between those who could never step outside their house without three names, two attendants, and the approval of their father’s steward…

And the girl who had gone to Andelheim alone.

Not as a lady.

As a swordswoman.

One of the older noblewomen, this one from a lesser branch of House Feron, spoke next—her voice tinged with a faint, polite edge.

One of the older noblewomen, this one from a lesser branch of House Feron, stepped forward slightly. Her voice, though polished and courteous, carried an unmistakable tightness.

“Lady Olarion,” she began, offering a shallow bow, “your… resolve is admirable.”

The pause before the word “resolve” was short—but sharp.

Another chimed in. This one younger, draped in sky-blue silk and pinned with at least four sigils of academic merit. “Truly. I can’t imagine making such a journey without a retinue. Even with training, there are matters to consider—weather, supplies, comfort.”

“And maintenance,” another added, with a forced chuckle. “Who packs your tents? Polishes your boots? Surely you didn’t ride across the hills and streams of the outer-east in a gown?”

Laughter fluttered at the edges of her voice, light and fragile.

Valeria didn’t answer. She didn’t need to.

They weren’t mocking her, not openly. Their tone was all wrong for that. Dainty, admiring, impressed—even deferential. But beneath the filigree, the envy curled sharp. Not because they thought her foolish.

But because they knew they couldn’t do what she had done.

And perhaps, more painfully, that they would never be allowed to try.

“I’ve had to change gloves twice just crossing from the Academy to the outer wards,” someone muttered with a rueful laugh. “Can’t imagine what condition your hands must’ve been in after that trip.”

“Gods,” another sighed. “I get saddle sores in controlled patrol drills. Doing it alone? Without rest stops? I’d have turned around by day two.”

“It’s not just the risk,” a quieter voice said, just behind a fan. “There’s a certain dignity we’re taught to preserve.”

The word dignity hit the air like a silver pin dropped on stone. Polished. Precise. And pointed.

Valeria’s expression didn’t shift. Her eyes were still, her chin slightly tilted, the faintest smile touching her lips—but not with amusement.

Control.

That was what she wore now.

She didn’t move to defend herself. Didn’t argue. Because there was nothing to defend. The facts had already been stated. The story already shaped.

But that only made it worse for them.

Because she had said it so plainly.

Because she didn’t need them to understand.

And because the life she described—stripped of embroidery, unguarded by titles, uninsulated from dirt, from decision, from danger—was one they’d only ever read about in war memoirs or watched from behind reinforced balconies.

Yet, in some dark, quiet corner of their hearts, they envied it.

The freedom of it.

The audacity.

The ownership.

“I wouldn’t last a day,” one girl finally confessed with a sigh, folding her arms. Her rings clinked softly against her sleeves. “Honestly. I rely on my steward to even repack my satchel.”

Soft laughter broke the tension—but it was laughter laced with resignation.

Another added, more cautiously, “My uncle wouldn’t let me leave the estate without three attendants and a formal petition. Even for Temple visits.”

“That’s true for most of us,” someone murmured. “Andelheim isn’t a battlefield, but it’s hardly central. I suppose… we just assumed our kind didn’t do that sort of thing.”

Valeria’s gaze narrowed.

Just slightly.

But it was enough.

That phrase—our kind doesn’t do that sort of thing—echoed longer than it should have, snagging like a burr in the folds of her mind. Her posture didn’t change, but there was a shift behind her eyes. A coolness. Not sharp. Not hostile. But measured. And tightening.

Because beneath the laughter, beneath the veiled awe and light envy, that line had drawn a boundary.

One she’d spent her entire life quietly dismantling.

Her mouth parted, as if to speak.

But before she could—

“Anyway,” said a girl in emerald cuffs, her voice bright and sudden, slicing through the tension with a practiced smile, “I’m sure House Olarion has its own traditions. Perhaps we just need more… variety in our experiences.”

Her words were smooth, but the glance she threw at the ivory-robed girl from earlier was pointed.

Another noblewoman followed suit. “Yes, absolutely. It’s good for the court to be reminded that nobility doesn’t have to mean detachment.”

“I’ve always admired the old knight-tales,” chimed in someone else, eyes on Valeria now. “The ones where heirs and heiresses took to the road themselves. Your story fits right in.”

The tone had shifted again—graceful, diplomatic, deflecting. Whatever bite had existed moments ago was now dulled by a tide of strategic compliments. They didn’t want to be on the wrong side of her attention. Not now.

Especially not when the subject hanging in the air was Lucavion.

“So, Lady Olarion,” said one of the Arcanis boys gently, a tactful step back from the stir, “forgive us if we’re pressing too hard, but… how did you meet him, then? Lucavion.”

The question wasn’t laced with gossip. It was too careful for that. Genuinely curious, perhaps, but trimmed with restraint.

Valeria’s shoulders eased.

Slightly.

She let her fingers rest over the stem of her glass, cool and still.

the voice that followed wasn’t framed in courtly polish or silken restraint.

It came with fire.

“Indeed, Lady Olarion?” Jesse said.

Smooth. Clear.

Too clear.

She stepped forward—not much, just enough that the shadows broke differently across her collarbone, the Lorian crest on her sleeve catching a flicker of light. Her eyes—burnished orange—settled directly on Valeria, unflinching.

“How did you meet him?” she asked again, tone light, but pointed. “After all, your relationship with Lucavion seems… quite deep, doesn’t it? Surely you can give us some details.”

That word.

Deep.

It wasn’t an accusation.

It wasn’t even a taunt.

It was a claim tossed to the center of the circle like a coin daring someone to call it false.

Around them, the group stilled—soft movements slowing, breaths quieting, fans lowering, glasses suspended mid-air. Everyone was listening now.

But Valeria?

She didn’t look away.

Not once.

Not from Jesse’s eyes. Not from the embers burning behind them.

Because now it was clear.

Whatever Jesse had been holding back in the quiet after the duel, whatever she had buried beneath silence and poise—

It was no longer content to sit quietly.

She wanted to know.

’This gaze…’

No, it was a little different from that…..

It wasn’t just that she wanted to know.

They way Jesse was looking at her was as if…

She needed to know.

And she had chosen to ask here, in front of the others. Not in private. Not in passing.

This was deliberate.

A challenge dressed as curiosity.

Valeria’s lips curved. Not in amusement. Not in victory.

In understanding.

“You’re right,” she said, voice low and poised. “Our connection runs deep.”


Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.