SSS-Ranked Surgeon In Another World: The Healer Is Actually OP! - Chapter 392 392: Tearing Space and Achieving Teleportation!
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- SSS-Ranked Surgeon In Another World: The Healer Is Actually OP!
- Chapter 392 392: Tearing Space and Achieving Teleportation!

‘If the universe is alive, then his heal could affect the universe itself.’
The thought arrived without ceremony. No revelation, no thunderclap. Just the cold clinical click of something locking into place.
Bruce held very still inside his own mind.
If the universe was alive, if the realms were its cells, the planets its organs, the galaxies its systems, then everything he had ever learned about healing a body applied. Scaled differently. Operated at frequencies he hadn’t yet learned to touch. But the grammar was the same.
A wound was a wound. A vein was a vein. A system out of balance was a system out of balance.
And he was a healer.
He turned his attention outward.
The mana veins around him, the half-visible filaments threading through the foreign world he was still nominally watching, pulsed faintly with whatever had survived the universe’s last collapse. Bruce reached for them. Not the way an Awakened reached for mana to cast a spell. The way a surgeon reached for tissue. Carefully.
With the assumption that whatever he touched was already trying to do its job, and his task was to help it do that job better, not to override it.
He directed his heal into the nearest vein.
The response was immediate and slightly absurd.
The vein brightened. Not dramatically. Just enough that Bruce, who had spent years learning to read the difference between healthy and compromised tissue at a glance, registered the shift the way a doctor registers a fever breaking.
The thread had not been wounded. But it had been tired, carrying the same pulse for longer than Bruce had words for, and his heal had let it rest, briefly, against something that wasn’t asking it for more.
A second vein, adjacent to the first, brightened in sympathy.
A third.
Bruce watched a small lattice of mana threads, a tiny fragment of the luminous web, no larger than a city block by whatever measure applied here, pulse a fraction more strongly than it had a moment ago.
And he understood, with the same cold clarity that had been arriving in stages all through this trial, that what he had just done was trivial.
The cosmological equivalent of warming his hands against a single capillary in a body the size of everything that existed.
But it had worked.
The principle held.
His mind began to move very fast.
If the heal scaled to threads, then it scaled to whatever the threads connected. If a wound on a world could be addressed at the world’s surface, then a wound in the web could be addressed at the web.
From what he had seen during the cycles of big bang, he knew that they’re were invaders who don’t invade planets but directly targets the mana veins of the universe
But then he thought of something, He had spent his entire career restoring tissue that something else had damaged.
‘Why should this be different? It was similar and different at thesame time’
It was be different in scale. It was be different in timeframe. It requires techniques he had not yet developed and probably could not develop without dying a few times along the way.
But the grammar.
The grammar was the same.
He filed the thought, the way he filed everything important, in the place that did not forget.
And the moment he did, a soft pulse moved through the vision, not from the threads, not from the foreign world, but from somewhere deeper.
The hidden force, registering that something had clicked.
[Your understanding of the universe has risen by 10%]
‘10%,’ Bruce thought. ‘And I haven’t even started.’
He kept watching.
The Akashic, having shown him one cycle, now showed him many.
Bruce watched the new universe expand, cool, kindle stars, spawn worlds, birth life, raise civilizations. He watched the civilizations discover ascension. He watched a fraction of them choose restraint and a larger fraction choose appetite. He watched the appetite-choosers spread, and the threads dim, and the cycle close, and the point form again, and the next breath out begin.
And again.
And again.
Each cycle was different in detail and identical in shape. Different species, different cosmographies, different mythologies the ascended built around their own ascensions to make the appetite feel like destiny. Same arithmetic. Same hollowing. Same patient inhalation back to the point.
Bruce stopped trying to count the iterations. Counting was the wrong verb again.
He was not memorizing the cycles. He was learning their anatomy.
The way a medical student stops memorizing individual cadavers and starts seeing the body underneath them, the same vessels, the same nerves, the same patient organization beneath the surface variation.
He saw where the cycles were vulnerable.
He saw where the threads thinned first.
He saw which kinds of ascension drew most violently and which kinds drew gently enough that the web could keep up.
He filed that one too.
He saw a cycle in which an ascended civilization had attempted, very late, to repair the threads. They had failed. But the attempt had left traces, a particular kind of mana signature Bruce recognized after watching it form, that persisted into the next cycle, faintly, like a scar on the cosmos’s underlying anatomy.
Repair was possible.
The ones who had tried it had simply been too late, too few, too unprepared.
The pulse moved through the vision again.
[Your understanding of the universe has risen to 20%]
Bruce felt the number settle into him without satisfaction. He had been watching long enough to know it wasn’t going to climb past a certain ceiling. The Akashic could show him a thousand more cycles and he would learn from each of them, but the curve was flattening. Not because he was running out of things to learn.
Because watching was running out of things to teach.
The trial wasn’t testing what he knew.
It was testing whether he could act on it.
And this was the part that had been forming slowly, the way the suspicion about the Invaders had formed earlier, he didn’t think reaching 100% was the point.
Nobody who had ever lived had understood the universe at 100%. Vaelith too probably didn’t.
The hungry path’s terminal lords probably hadn’t, and they had eaten galaxies trying. The number was a marker of enough, not a target.
And he suspected, with the same clinical certainty that had been guiding him all through this, that the trial would end the moment he does something not had been suggesting him to do for a while now. He didn’t know if that’ll work but it’s the only way.
‘Time to do something useful.’
Bruce looked around the foreign world he was still nominally inhabiting. Looked at the mana veins he had brightened earlier, still humming a fraction more strongly than they had. Looked at the threads stretching out from this world toward the dark.
Looked at the half-visible tether, the thin filament he had noticed at the very start of this, the one connecting this world to whatever the universe’s core actually was.
He thought about Vaelith again. ‘Connected to the universe’s core. Infinite mana.’
He thought about the threads as veins. About the universe as a body. About what a healer did when he needed to leave one place and arrive at another inside the same patient.
Now that his understanding of the universe had risen He noticed he could now fly through everything, with that he moved through the circulatory system.
Bruce reached for the mana veins around him, not gently this time, not the careful capillary touch he had used to brighten them, and poured heal into them. All of it.
Every reservoir he had built up over years of practice, every drop of Vitality he had banked, every ounce of the restorative force he had spent his life learning to wield. He overloaded the local web. Saturated it past whatever it was rated to carry.
And then, with a precision that had nothing to do with force and everything to do with timing, he detonated.
[Restorative Detonation.]
Not on flesh. Not on a wound. But on the mana veins itself.
The local web couldn’t hold the pressure. Bruce hadn’t expected it to. The detonation tore through the saturated lattice the way an over-pressurized vessel tears through skin, except what tore here wasn’t tissue, it was the underlying geometry the threads had been laid into.
A spatial seam, opened by the simple expedient of healing a small region of the cosmos so violently that the cosmos couldn’t remain locally coherent.
‘A tear. A tear in space itself!’ Bruce was excited, this had always been something he thought was impossible dur to his class, but now that he’s able to tear space itself with his heal, Achieving teleportation is not far-fetched…
Bruce felt the suction the moment it formed, the pressure differential between here and somewhere else that wanted to equalize, the two opposing forces dragged at him and with Bruce durability he easily withstand it, but one of the suction prevailed and upon sensing something he didn’t resist it. He let the tear take him


