SSS-Ranked Surgeon In Another World: The Healer Is Actually OP! - Chapter 368: Before The Meeting...
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- Chapter 368: Before The Meeting...

Chapter 368: Before The Meeting…
The Fenrari didn’t slow. Soon they reached Reignland, Sophie’s place…
As the vast expanse of Reignland stretched into view beyond the glass, the world itself seemed to reorganize around their arrival. The air changed, not oppressively, not in the way a dungeon’s threshold pressed against the chest, but in something more like the weight of a held breath. Refined. Layered.
The invisible architecture of formations wove itself across the horizon in overlapping nets of authority, each one distinct, each one precise, all of them ancient in the way only inherited power could be. Bruce registered them the moment the Fenrari crossed into range, the scanning arrays embedded at intervals along the treeline, the subtle fluctuations in ambient mana that swept across the vehicle’s exterior like curious fingers. Probing. Cataloguing. This was a place that knew everything that entered it, and decided, in the span of a breath, what it thought of what it found.
What it found, apparently, was acceptable.
The formations parted, not visibly, no grand shift in the landscape, no gate swinging wide, but the pressure eased. The path ahead opened itself without ceremony, and the Fenrari glided forward as though it had always belonged here. Beside him, Sophie said nothing. She sat with her hands resting quietly in her lap, her gaze moving across the familiar scenery with an expression Bruce couldn’t quite name. Not pride. Not nostalgia. Something more careful than either.
This was her home. And it responded to her the way living things respond to what they recognize, not with display, but with deference.
The outer gate materialized through the curved windshield well before they reached it. The guards stationed on either side had already straightened, their adjustments subtle but complete, the kind of unconscious preparation that lived in the body after years of training. They didn’t scramble. They didn’t signal.
They simply knew she was coming, and they were ready when she arrived. By the time Bruce brought the vehicle to a smooth glide between them, both men had lowered their heads in a bow that carried no performance in it, just the clean, practiced architecture of genuine respect.
“Welcome back, Lady Sophie.”
Their voices came together, firm and unhurried. Their gazes didn’t linger on her. And when they rose, when their eyes moved past Sophie to settle on the figure in the driver’s seat, there was a beat of silence, careful, measuring, before something in their posture settled. No hostility.
No suspicion coiling behind their professionalism. Just a quiet recalibration, the kind that happens when something unexpected turns out to align with everything expected. They treated him the same way they treated her. Not because they’d been told to. Because the way he sat beside her, the way her aura wove so naturally around his presence without resistance or boundary, told them something no introduction could have communicated more clearly. So they didn’t question it.
The gates sealed behind them without a sound.
Reignland unfolded as they moved deeper into it, layer after layer of quiet grandeur that never announced itself. Platforms drifted at measured heights between structures that rose with architectural confidence rather than architectural arrogance. Crystal lined walkways caught the ambient light and scattered it in directions that didn’t quite follow physics. The gardens moved in ways that had nothing to do with wind, each one breathing with a slow, rhythmic pulse of mana that suggested something tended and alive. Everything here had been built to last without being built to impress, and the result was a kind of beauty that felt uninterested in being observed. It simply existed. Perfectly. With the quiet certainty of something that had never needed to prove itself to anyone.
Bruce adjusted the Fenrari’s pace to match the inner pathways, his hand steady on the interface. He let the silence sit between them for a moment, cataloguing the formations that continued to ghost across his senses as they moved, noting the architecture, the spacing of the security arrays, the way the ambient mana shifted in density the closer they moved toward the estate’s core. He wasn’t mapping it deliberately. Then, without turning his head, he spoke.
“Where should I go, Sophie?”
The question was calm, framed plainly. But Sophie heard the layer beneath it, because she always did. He wasn’t asking for directions to her residence. They both knew he already had them. He was asking something else, where this was meant to go, and what shape it was supposed to take.
She turned toward him. For a moment she didn’t answer, her gaze resting on the clean line of his profile, the slight forward tilt of his attention, the way he moved through the world without needing it to accommodate him. Then she raised her hand and pressed two fingers lightly against the navigation interface.
A location appeared. The Fenrari mapped the route without hesitation, projecting it in a soft arc across the control panel.
Bruce looked at it.
A small frown crossed his face, barely there.
“A restaurant?”
Sophie nodded. “Yes.”
He glanced at the route again, then at her. “Your father chose a restaurant?”
There was no edge in the question. Just the faintest note of mild recalibration, the same tone he used when a diagnosis came back slightly different from what the symptoms suggested.
“He didn’t choose it.” Sophie settled back slightly in her seat, watching his expression. “I did.”
Bruce looked at her then, and this time the look lasted longer. “Why?”
The answer didn’t come immediately. Sophie let her gaze drift forward, watching the structures move past them beyond the glass, the floating gardens and quiet walkways blurring gently at speed. Her fingers brushed along the edge of the seat. When she spoke, her voice was lower, not secretive, but considered.
“Because if we meet him there, it’s better that way.”
The words were simple. But the implication beneath them was not. A restaurant meant neutral ground. Managed distance. A setting that imposed its own structure on a conversation, kept it from going certain places, kept certain things from being said directly. Sophie had chosen it deliberately, and the fact that she had told him more about what she expected from this meeting than any explanation could have.
Bruce understood immediately. He didn’t press for more.
“Is he there already?”
“No.” A small smile touched her lips, quiet and private. “He’ll come after.”
“So we’re early.”
Sophie turned toward him again, and this time there was something lighter in her eyes, not quite teasing, but adjacent to it.
“Yes.” A brief pause, and then, simply: “I wanted some time with you first.”
The words were uncomplicated. She said them the way she said most things, without performance, without hedging. But they landed differently anyway. Something in the directness of it, maybe. The lack of pretense.
Bruce’s grip on the interface didn’t shift, his posture didn’t change, but something behind his eyes did, a small, almost imperceptible flicker that came and went in less than a second.
Sophie noticed. She always noticed. It was, at this point, one of the things she had stopped being surprised by, how much of him existed in the spaces he didn’t fill with words.
She leaned a little closer, not enough to disrupt his attention on the road, but enough that her presence sharpened at his side. The warmth of her shoulder was almost at his, her voice lower now, genuine rather than soft. “You don’t mind, do you?”
Bruce exhaled, quiet, controlled, the smallest release of something he hadn’t acknowledged was there.
“No,” he said. And then, after a beat, “I don’t.”
It was the same tone as everything else. Measured. Unhurried. But the warmth beneath it was real, and Sophie heard it clearly, and the smile that settled on her face wasn’t bright or teasing or triumphant. It was simply content. The particular kind of contentment that comes from being known accurately, from having offered something genuine and had it received without ceremony.
Her fingers moved without entirely thinking about it, drifting to brush lightly across the back of his hand where it rested on the interface. She didn’t pull back. And neither did he. His grip shifted by degrees, not tightening, nothing urgent, just a small, grounding adjustment that acknowledged her presence without comment.
The Fenrari curved onto a quieter pathway, one that pulled them away from the more visible arteries of the estate toward a section of Reignland that felt different in character. The architecture was less sweeping here, more intimate in its scale, though no less precise. The kind of place that didn’t exist to be seen. That existed for moments that happened at a remove from the weight of everything else.
For a while, neither of them said anything. The hum of the vehicle filled the quiet, low, steady, almost meditative. Then Sophie spoke again, her thumb tracing faintly against his hand, the motion absentminded and unhurried.
“You know,” she murmured, “most people would be nervous right now.”
Bruce kept his eyes on the path ahead. “Because of your father?”


