The lecture ended, and I began packing up my notes, mind half on lunch.
I was just sliding the drawer shut when I noticed something off.
The air around me had gone still.
Too still.
When I looked up, Kael Ardyn was standing right in front of my desk â tall, broad, all righteousness and tension.
Princess Celestia stood slightly behind him, arms crossed, expression sharp. Bordon Eisenwald, ever the loyal puppy, flanked the other side.
Oh great. A morning intervention.
I leaned back in my chair, face unreadable. "Do you have something to say, or are you just forming a wall?"
Kaelâs expression didnât waver. "Lucien Ashborne. Do you know your mistake?"
"I make many," I replied casually. "Youâll have to be more specific."
His jaw tightened. "Yesterday. What you said to Mariella. If you have even a shred of dignity left, youâll apologize â properly â in front of everyone."
A few nearby cadets stopped pretending to pack up.
Fantastic. An audience.
I folded my arms, meeting his stare without blinking. "Apologize, huh? In front of everyone, no less. Do you people wake up rehearsing this nonsense, or does it come naturally?"
Celestia stepped forward, her voice clear and cutting. "Has the blood of Ashborne fallen so low that its heir can insult a lady and show no remorse?"
A few gasps came from behind.
She had no idea what sheâd just said.
I smirked. "Princess Celestia... are you calling the blood of Ashborne
rotten
?"
Her composure faltered. "Wâwhat? No, I didnât meanâ"
I stood, letting my chair scrape loudly against the floor. The sound made everyone flinch.
"Because if you are," I continued, tone icy, "youâre not insulting me â youâre insulting an entire noble house thatâs sworn loyalty to your Empire for three generations."
The silence that followed was delicious.
Celestiaâs lips parted, her cheeks flushed. "T-Thatâs not what I meant," she said quickly.
"Then think before you speak, Princess."
The temperature in the room seemed to drop.
Kael stepped in again, his voice harder. "Donât twist her words, Lucien. You know full well that wasnât her intention."
I met his glare. "And who are you to talk to me like that? Do you think weâre friends?"
He blinked â surprised, just for a second.
"Or maybe you think youâre above me now because youâre the academyâs golden boy," I continued, voice rising slightly. "Let me remind you, Kael Ardyn, that no matter how strong your sword arm is, youâre still a commoner. Know your place before you address me so casually."
A few cadets inhaled sharply.
Even I could feel the tension crackling.
Bordon moved forward, trying to defuse the situation. "Lucien, thatâs enough. You canât talk to him like that â heâs our friend."
I turned to him slowly. "Our friend? You think Iâm your friend?"
He hesitated. No answer.
"As I thought," I said coldly. "Then donât speak to me like one."
I took a slow step forward. "And just because I was exiled doesnât mean Iâve been disowned. You understand what that means, right?"
Bordon swallowed hard and stepped back.
Kaelâs hand twitched toward his sword hilt again â a nervous reflex. I smiled faintly. "Relax. You wouldnât want to lose
again
, would you?"
His eyes narrowed, but he didnât move.
I turned back to Celestia. "You too, Princess. Your words carry weight. Itâs best to remember that next time you decide to insult a noble lineage â even indirectly."
Her face was flushed crimson, her posture stiff. The so-called perfect princess looked like a scolded child.
Satisfied, I grabbed my lunch box from the desk.
As I passed Mariella and Elishaâs table, both of them visibly flinched.
I stopped right in front of Mariella, the cafeteria falling silent again.
"Iâll say it once," I said quietly. "I was wrong yesterday. I shouldnât have cursed at you. That was my fault."
Her eyes widened slightly. For a moment, she looked almost... confused.
Then I added, my tone cooling again, "But donât pretend youâre a victim. You came to me looking for trouble, and you found it. Next time, keep your self-righteous crusades to yourself."
Her lips trembled, and Elisha looked like she wanted to jump up and argue. I didnât give her the chance.
I turned toward the exit. "And for the record â stop pretending youâre heroes. If you want to save the world, start by minding your own business."
With that, I walked out.
The air outside was colder, but cleaner.
Behind me, whispers erupted, spreading like wildfire â shock, disbelief, amusement, outrage.
Let them talk.
If they wanted a villain, I could play the part better than anyone.
Inside the classroom was pin drop silence.
Not a whisper. Not a cough.
Just the thick, suffocating silence left in the wake of Lucienâs words.
No one dared to move.
The class had already ended minutes ago, but not a single person had left. Every cadet sat frozen, eyes darting between the protagonistâs group and the door Lucien had just walked out of.
This wasnât how it was supposed to go.
Theyâd seen Kaelâs group stand at the top of every hierarchy since the first day of enrollment â the princess, the noble heirs, the golden commoner. Together, they were untouchable.
But right now?
They looked cornered.
The air was heavy with something strange â not admiration, not fear exactly... but unease.
Everyone had heard the rumors of "Scum Lucien."
Everyone had mocked him.
But what they saw today didnât fit that image.
That wasnât the weak noble brat whoâd been beaten by a commoner.
That was someone else entirely.
Kael sat rigid in his seat, hands still clenched into fists. His jaw was tight, his expression unreadable â but the faint tremor in his arm said everything.
Heâd been humiliated, and the hero complex that fueled him wasnât taking it well.
Bordonâs confident grin was gone; he stared blankly at his desk, face pale.
Celestia...
The ever-perfect princess sat frozen, her fingers gripping the hem of her skirt, knuckles white. Her face was pale except for the flush of red spreading from her eyes downward.
No one had ever raised their voice to her before.
No one had ever
scolded
her â not her tutors, not her subordinates, not even her father the Emperor.
And now, in front of half the first-year class, sheâd been struck down by the one man everyone considered beneath dirt.
She didnât even have the strength to glare back.
Her head lowered, golden hair shadowing her face.
The silence that followed was deafening.
Every cadet could sense it â the perfect image of the "heroâs party" had just cracked.
But none dared to speak.
*****
A sharp noise shattered the stillness.
Scrrreeechâ!
The sound of a desk dragging against the floor.
Every head turned instantly.
"H-Hick..."
It was Ariana.
She froze mid-motion, her hands trembling on her desk.
Her eyes darted between the stares closing in on her.
Sheâd been waiting for everyone to leave so she could slip out quietly â but nobody had moved.
And now, every single person in Class A was staring right at her.
Her heart pounded in her chest.
The silence pressed down like a physical weight, making it hard to breathe.
âI-I just wanted to go to lunch...â
She swallowed hard and took a hesitant step back.
Her chair scraped again, drawing even more attention.
Celestiaâs gaze flickered briefly in her direction, dull and unfocused. Kael didnât even look. The others whispered under their breath, their curiosity now shifting targets. Their gazes bore down on her.
But between her crippling shyness and the gnawing hunger in her stomach... hunger won.
She lowered her head, and all but darted out of the room.
Her footsteps echoed faintly in the hallway.
*****
Outside the classroom, Ariana finally let out the breath sheâd been holding.
"Th-that was terrifying..." she muttered under her breath, pressing a hand to her chest.
The image of Lucien standing tall before Kaelâs group still lingered vividly in her mind.
His tone, his eyes â cold, calm, unyielding.
It was the kind of presence that couldnât be faked.
âHeâs really... different.â
Still clutching the hem of her uniform, she picked up her pace, heading straight for the cafeteria.
Because whatever chaos was happening in that classroom... she didnât care.
Right now, all she could think about was the promise Lucien had made yesterday â
and the mysterious food heâd said would be "even better than the last."