SSS-Ranked Surgeon In Another World: The Healer Is Actually OP! - Chapter 255: Everything In Motion
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- Chapter 255: Everything In Motion

Chapter 255: Everything In Motion
They moved on to the other part of the company.
Nearby, several mana stabilizers hummed faintly, older models, their glow uneven, output deliberately throttled. One of them bore a long crack along its casing, sealed cleanly with resin and reinforced bands.
Lucy didn’t slow.
“That one’s on rotation,” she said. “Back then I kept it below peak load. The fluctuation’s manageable as long as it’s not pushed.”
Bruce’s gaze lingered on it for a second longer than necessary.
“It buys time,” he said. “Not safety.”
“I know.” Her reply was immediate. “But time was what I needed, now with what I’ve got currently I won’t be needing those anymore.”
They moved past it.
Further in, the storage building opened into view. Inside, crates were stacked with visible intent rather than order, supplies interlocked with spare parts, harnesses hung beside repair tools, emergency rations sealed and accessible.
“Here, i collapsed three storage zones into one,” Lucy said. “Downsizing forced overlap. Retrieval efficiency dropped, but inventory loss stopped.”
Bruce scanned the space methodically. He didn’t judge after all he had little knowledge about those stuff…
“Survival layout,” he said after a moment. “You preserved function over flow.”
Lucy exhaled quietly. “Exactly.”
He stepped back outside, eyes lifting, tracking the compound as a whole, the pens, the walkways, the unused corners, the bottlenecks that only appeared once operations scaled again.
“We rebuild the shell,” Bruce said, tone light but certain. “Mana-reinforced frameworks. Modular sections. Not bigger, smarter. You future-proof the load without increasing upkeep.”
Lucy nodded. She’d already run those numbers before. Many times.
“And the Shadow Wolves,” she said, not asking, confirming.
“They don’t need containment,” Bruce replied. “They need anchors. Controlled shadow density. Predictable mana gradients.”
Her pace slowed slightly, not because it was new, but because the pieces were aligning cleanly.
“Which means I stop thinking in pens,” she said. “And start thinking in shadow geometry.”
She glanced around again, this time with intent sharpened rather than redirected.
“I’ve already been trimming excess light exposure,” she continued. “Rooflines, wall angle but I just hadn’t committed fully.”
Bruce gave a small nod.
“You didn’t have the margin to.”
She hummed in agreement.
“I don’t need large enclosures,” Lucy went on. “I need continuity. Overhangs that don’t break shadow flow. Corridors that stay dim regardless of weather. Mana-dampened surfaces that don’t reflect.”
He gestured lightly. “Less stables. More shade.”
Lucy stopped.
Not in surprise, but in confirmation.
“…Yes,” she said softly.
She turned slowly, eyes tracing the compound again. Not reimagining it, refining it. Tightening inefficiencies. Reassigning purpose. Seeing how movement could replace sprawl.
“I don’t need land for beasts,” she said. “I need land that moves.”
Bruce met her gaze.
“With Shadow Wolves, space stops being the constraint. Positioning becomes everything.”
A quiet laugh escaped her, low, controlled, edged with excitement.
“So the industry keeps expanding outward,” she murmured. “Fighting for acreage. Bleeding funds into maintenance.”
She shook her head once.
“And I’ve been preparing for problems that don’t apply anymore.”
Lucy straightened, resolve settling back into her posture, not newly formed, but reinforced.
“Alright,” she said. “Then the redesign stays lean. Shadow-centric. Minimal footprint. Maximum throughput.”
Bruce smiled faintly.
This place, once strained, compressed, surviving on careful compromises, was already changing.
Not in steel or stone yet.
But in intent.
And Lucy Ackerman was already mapping its future, step by calculated step.
By tomorrow, work on this place would begin.
Reinforcements. Redesigns. Shadow-oriented structures. A complete overhaul, not just of the compound itself, but of how the Ackerman Transport Company would operate going forward. For the first time in a long while, the path ahead felt clear.
Bruce was still beside her when his smart bracelet hummed.
He glanced down.
“…Bale.”
Lucy noticed the shift in his expression and waved him off lightly. “Go ahead.”
Bruce accepted the call.
“Bruce!” Bale’s familiar voice came through, upbeat as ever. “Good timing. I was just about to contact you.”
“About the reward?” Bruce asked.
“Exactly,” Bale replied. “After what you did back then, the guild finally finished discussing it. We’re planning to give you a spatial artifact.”
Bruce paused for a brief moment. Then nodded.
“That’s fine,” he said calmly. “I’ll take it directly from you the next time we meet.”
Bale chuckled. “Straight to the point, as always.”
Bruce didn’t smile. Instead, his tone shifted, subtle, but unmistakable.
“Bale,” he said, “I need a meeting with the leadership of the Valkrin Kingdom Branch of the Adventurer Guild.”
The change was immediate.
There was a short pause on the other end of the call.
“…All of them?” Bale asked carefully.
“Yes,” Bruce replied. “Can you set it up?”
Bale let out an awkward laugh. “Of course it can be set up. You’re not the Anomaly for nothing, after all.”
He was just about to continue when Bruce interrupted him.
“Tomorrow,” Bruce said. “I want the meeting tomorrow.”
This time, Bale didn’t laugh.
“…Tomorrow?” he repeated.
He could hear it now, the seriousness beneath Bruce’s voice. This wasn’t a casual request. This wasn’t a favor.
This was business.
“I’ll have to check their schedules,” Bale said slowly. “Clear some things. Get approvals.”
Bruce exhaled quietly.
“This is a very serious matter,” he said. “Please give me feedback once you’re done discussing it with them.”
There was another pause.
Then Bale answered, his tone noticeably more respectful.
“I understand. I’ll get back to you as soon as I can.”
“Good,” Bruce said.
He ended the call.
For a moment, he stood there, staring at the now-dark holographic screen.
Lucy looked at him from the side, studying his expression.
“Adventurer Guild?” she asked casually.
Bruce nodded once.
“Just stuff i need to set in order, in addition with the backing you need from them,” he said. “You focus on rebuilding this place.”
Lucy didn’t ask further.
She simply smiled, small, confident, assured.
Then she turned her gaze back to the compound, already envisioning what it would look like tomorrow.
And for the first time in a long while,
Everything was finally moving forward.
They spent the next stretch of time reviewing everything.
Lucy went over the compound plans one final time, what would be torn down first, what would be reinforced, what could be repurposed instead of rebuilt. She marked priority zones, sketched rough layouts in the air with her smart bracelet, and finalized a temporary operating plan that would keep the company running while construction began.
Bruce listened. Occasionally he added a comment, never overbearing, never commanding. Just precise suggestions. Shadow-compatible corridors. Mana-reinforced load paths. Where security should be layered rather than centralized.
By the time they were done, the future of the Ackerman Transport Company wasn’t just an idea anymore.
It was a schedule.
Lucy issued a few calm instructions to the staff, assigning cleanup, temporary relocations, and preparation work for the next morning. There was no panic in her voice, only direction. And the workers responded differently now. Straighter backs. Faster movements. Something like belief had returned to the place.
Eventually, Lucy glanced at the time.
“You should go,” she said to Bruce. “Lily will be finishing up soon.”
Bruce nodded.
Sophie was already waiting near the entrance, having finished keeping an eye on the compound. When Bruce told Lucy they’d be heading to the academy, she waved them off with a faint smile, one that held relief, pride, and a quiet sense of security she hadn’t felt in years.
Bruce and Sophie left together.
The city felt different now.
Not quieter, but steadier.
As they moved through the streets toward the academy, Bruce noticed it again, the way people glanced at him, then looked away. The subtle awareness. The unspoken recognition. Word traveled fast in Valkrin, especially after what had happened earlier.
Sophie walked beside him, hands folded loosely in front of her. The earlier embarrassment had faded, replaced by a calm closeness. Comfortable. Familiar.
“You handled everything well back there,” she said after a moment.
Bruce smiled faintly. “So did you.”
She glanced at him, then away. “Your mother is… impressive.”
“She had to be,” Bruce replied. “There wasn’t anyone else.”
They reached the academy not long after.
The moment Lily spotted them, her face lit up.
“Big brother!” she called out, practically skipping toward him. Ash followed closely, hopping excitedly, wings fluttering in short bursts.
Bruce crouched slightly as Lily ran into him, wrapping her arms around his neck without hesitation.
“Did you have fun today?” he asked.
She nodded enthusiastically. “Yes! Teacher said Ash is very well-behaved! And we learned about mana channels, and, and,”
Her words tumbled out all at once.
Bruce laughed softly, lifting her up with ease.
Sophie watched the scene quietly, warmth filling her chest. Moments like this, simple, mundane, unremarkable to the outside world, felt heavier than battles and power.
They walked home together, they didn’t ride Ash today as they quietly listened to Lily.
Lily chattered happily between them, Ash occasionally chiming in with excited movements. The day’s weight slowly peeled away, replaced by something gentler.
Behind them, the Ackerman Transport Company prepared to rise.
Ahead of them, home waited.
And for now,
That was enough.


