SSS-Ranked Surgeon In Another World: The Healer Is Actually OP! - Chapter 316: Winter Within
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- Chapter 316: Winter Within

Chapter 316: Winter Within
As Bruce looked around, he exhaled.
The distortion that had dragged at his limbs like hardened resin no longer existed. The air was still cold. This was the Everwhite Abyss, after all. But it was no longer as oppressive as before.
Bruce turned slowly, boots crunching against fractured ice.
What he saw made his brows lift, just slightly.
Two of the humanoid Aegishell turtles stood several dozen meters away, completely frozen.
Not restrained. Not slowed. Not encased in a superficial glaze of frost. Frozen.
They were statues of war arrested mid-motion. One stood with its warhammer half-raised, the weapon suspended inches from descending, crimson eyes still glowing faintly beneath a translucent sheath of crystalline ice. The other leaned forward, shield angled defensively, as if it had intended to intercept an incoming strike. The edges of its shell were locked in thick, glass-like frost, veins of pale blue running through the seams of its armor like luminous fractures in marble.
Bruce’s gaze sharpened as he extended his perception.
There was no circulation. No pulse of vitality.
No internal movement at all. They were not resisting. They could not. It was definitely strange considering they could easily resist this before.
Isolde stepped up behind him, the faint crunch of frost beneath her boots the only sound in the stillness. The air around her carried a subtle shimmer, as though winter itself had decided to take form and walk beside him.
“There are limits to brute resistance,” she said softly.
Bruce glanced sideways at her. A faint smile curved her lips, not arrogance, not pride, but certainty born from understanding.
“Once I gained access to their blood vessels through an injury I created, it was over,” she continued. “Their armor is thick. Their shells are reinforced. Their Domain amplifies defense. But they still rely on circulation. Once frost entered their bloodstream…”
She lifted her hand slightly, and a thin thread of pale blue light flickered into existence between her fingers before dissipating.
“I sent winter through them. Their blood. Their organs. Even the moisture in their marrow. I didn’t freeze the surface. I froze the inside.”
Bruce looked back at the frozen turtles. Beneath the crystalline glaze, their red eyes flickered weakly, like embers buried beneath snow.
“They cannot move,” Isolde finished calmly. “They cannot generate internal force to break free. Because this time, the ice is not something pressing on them.”
She paused. “It is something they are made of.”
Bruce let out a slow breath. “…That’s terrifying.”
Her smile deepened by the smallest fraction. “It’s efficient. But those, those golems are different, my ice can’t restrict them at all, they break through it easily, thankfully I was able to buy time for Duke to do his thing…”
As she spoke Bruce’s attention shifted again, drawn by the faint refracted glimmer of something far more angular. Several dozen meters beyond the frozen turtles stood the Diamond golems, massive crystalline constructs whose faceted bodies reflected the pale light of the Abyss in fractured rainbows.
They, too, were motionless. But not in ice.
They stood mid-stride, mid-guard, as if the world had simply decided to pause them. No frost encased their limbs. No visible restraint bound them.
They were suspended.
Duke stood beside them casually, one hand resting in his coat pocket, the other hanging loosely at his side. There was no strain on his face now. No beads of sweat. No trembling tension in his shoulders.
Bruce narrowed his eyes. Earlier, those same golems had strained against Duke’s Spatial Lock with such overwhelming force that the air itself had screamed under pressure. They had nearly torn through it by sheer density of existence.
Now they looked like decorative statues arranged for display.
Bruce took a few steps forward. That was when he noticed it.
At the center of the battlefield, embedded within a carefully carved circular formation in the ice, lay a core.
It resembled a red dungeon core, crystalline, dense, pulsing faintly with inner light. Around it stretched an intricate array etched deep into the frozen ground, interconnected lines forming a geometric web that extended outward like veins across the battlefield. Mana flowed visibly along the grooves, pale currents spiraling inward and feeding back into the core at the center. The glow was steady.
Cold. Structured. Bruce felt something emanating from it.
“What’s that?” he asked quietly, eyes fixed on the formation.
Duke followed his gaze without moving his head. “An array.”
Bruce blinked once.
Duke arched a faint brow. “By understanding mana flow, you can anchor external sources to sustain class effects. I redirected environmental mana into the array and used it to reinforce Spatial Lock continuously.”
He gestured lazily toward the suspended golems.
“They’re not struggling against me anymore. They’re struggling against the environment itself. The Abyss is holding them in place.”
Bruce stared at the glowing network, watching mana stream from the Everwhite Abyss into the carved lines, feeding the suppression with relentless stability. It was elegant. Efficient. Ruthless.
“Didn’t you learn this at your academy?” Duke added, tone light but probing.
Bruce coughed. “Cough. Cough.”
He turned slightly away, scratching the back of his neck.
How was he supposed to explain that he has no memories of the past of this body? That certain foundational teachings were blurred, like pages torn from a book he couldn’t quite remember finishing?
“…We focused more on practical survival,” he muttered.
Duke’s gaze lingered on him for a second longer than necessary. Then a faint smirk tugged at his lips. “Clearly.”
Bruce chose not to respond.
Instead, he looked toward Isolde and gave her a subtle nod.
She understood immediately.
Her posture shifted, not dramatically, but with quiet intent. The battlefield grew quieter still, as if the Everwhite Abyss itself were listening.
Ahead of them, the Labyrinth Core pulsed weakly. Its protective layers were fractured. Its guardians frozen or suspended. The array hummed steadily beneath Duke’s control. The Core pulsed once.
Then Twice.
It felt aware now. Not in the way a creature was aware, but in the way territory resists invasion. In the way instinct recoils from encroachment.
Isolde stepped forward.


