SSS-Ranked Surgeon In Another World: The Healer Is Actually OP! - Chapter 295: When The Leash Snaps
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- Chapter 295: When The Leash Snaps

Chapter 295: When The Leash Snaps
“The people will adapt faster than the nobles,” she said. “They always do. Give a merchant instant communication with her suppliers, and she’ll never willingly return to courier birds. Give an awakened access to smart bracelets, and he’ll defend that technology against anyone who tries to take it away.”
She turned to face them both.
“You don’t impose modernization. You make it indispensable. And then you let the population defend it for you.”
Duke’s smile deepened by a fraction. He had underestimated her. He wouldn’t make that mistake again.
Bruce exhaled softly through his nose, the sound barely audible beneath the ambient hum of settling mana.
In the span of a single afternoon, the world had shifted.
A tyrant had fallen. Not a foreign invader, not a marching army, but a parasite so deeply embedded in the kingdom’s nervous system that removing it had required surgical precision on a national scale. A covert alliance had formed between a healer who defied classification, a guild leader who thought in decades, and a queen who had spent years memorizing the architecture of her own captivity and was now dismantling it with methodical, frozen fury.
A purge had been planned. A Labyrinth siege declared against a dungeon that had consumed its neighbors, grown beyond containment, and now threatened to rupture in ways that would reshape the region permanently.
And technological evolution had been approved.
All of it. In hours.
Duke glanced at Bruce, one eyebrow raised in that particular expression of his, half amusement, half genuine curiosity. “You sure you don’t want to ask for something?”
Bruce shook his head. Unhurried.
“I’ll collect what I need.”
The words were quiet. Unremarkable. But Duke heard what sat beneath them and said nothing.
Isolde studied Bruce again, her gaze lingering longer than protocol demanded. Her eyes searched his face the way one might study a text written in a language they almost, but not quite, understood. The meaning was there. She could feel it. A man who could have asked for anything, and had instead asked for nothing.
In doing so, he’d claimed something far more valuable than territory or gold or political concession.
He’d claimed uncertainty.
Her uncertainty. About him. About what he wanted. About what he might one day require. And uncertainty, in the hands of someone patient enough to wield it, was the most dangerous currency of all.
“You are unusual,” she said softly.
Bruce didn’t answer. He didn’t need to.
The silence said enough.
Outside the palace walls, the city of Eiskar carried on as it always had, unaware, unbroken, unchanged.
Snow drifted across rooftops, catching the fading light and scattering it into brief constellations that dissolved before they landed. Merchants haggled in the market square over prices that hadn’t shifted in months. Guards rotated shifts at the city gates with mechanical precision, stamping frost from their boots and trading complaints about the cold the way soldiers everywhere traded complaints about everything.
Children threw snowballs. An old woman swept her doorstep and muttered about the weather.
Life carried on, mundane and oblivious, ignorant of the fault lines shifting beneath it.
Ignorant that their queen was their queen again.
Ignorant that the voice which had spoken through the throne for years, issuing edicts, shaping policy, strangling progress, had been silenced at last.
They would learn, in time. Not through proclamation. Not through spectacle. But through change so gradual it would feel, to most of them, like it had always been coming.
Far beyond the city walls, past the snowfields and frozen rivers and the black-pine forests that marked Eiskar’s southern border, the Labyrinth portal pulsed.
Isolde moved away from the windows and signaled for them to follow.
The frost beneath her feet retracted smoothly, clearing a path toward the far end of the hall where towering doors carved with ancient sigils stood sealed shut.
“The Labyrinth portal is not within the public districts,” she said as she walked. “It was relocated after its expansion became noticeable.”
Duke fell into step beside her. “Hidden?”
“Contained,” she corrected.
Bruce followed in silence.
The massive doors parted before them with a deep, echoing rumble that traveled through the stone floor. Guards stationed on the far side stiffened instinctively, then bowed at once when they recognized the Empress.
Her aura alone was different now. Sharper. Clearer. The tyrannical edge had been replaced by something colder and infinitely more focused.
“Prepare the northern containment corridor,” Isolde instructed calmly. “All units are to maintain perimeter distance. No one enters the Labyrinth without my direct command.”
The head guard bowed deeply. “Yes, Your Majesty.”
Bruce noticed the subtle confusion in their eyes. They could feel the urgency. But they didn’t know why. And for now, they didn’t need to.
The three of them stepped into the corridor beyond, and the architecture shifted. Stone thickened. Mana inscriptions ran along the walls in layered sequences, containment arrays designed to hold back catastrophic leakage. The regal ornamentation of the palace fell away, replaced by something purely functional. Something built not to impress, but to survive.
Bruce felt it first.
A raw mana fluctuation, unstable, violent, pressing against his senses like a thumb against a bruise.
Duke glanced sideways. “They’re already agitated.”
Isolde’s expression didn’t change. “The Core feels the severed link, the beasts of the labyrinth are then affected indirectly.”
Another tremor rolled through the corridor. Stronger this time. The walls hummed with it, a low, tectonic vibration that settled into the teeth and stayed there.
At the base of the descent, the corridor opened into an enormous chamber.
And in its center,
A vortex of distorted space churned violently.
The Labyrinth portal.
It no longer resembled the standard oval gateways of lesser dungeons. This one was massive, irregular, edged with fractured mana streams that sparked and snapped like lightning caught in ice. The surface rippled constantly, bulging outward in places as though something enormous pressed against it from the other side.
Beyond it, darkness. Movement. Sound.
A distant roar echoed through the chamber, and the containment sigils flared in response.
Bruce exhaled slowly. “So that’s what years of feeding looks like.”


