SSS-Ranked Surgeon In Another World: The Healer Is Actually OP!
Chapter 377: Not Quite Yet...
Sophie looked at her for a moment, at the earnestness of it, the complete refusal to let the question die, and then looked down at her plate, and then back at Lily with something genuine in her expression.
"Honestly," Sophie said, "I’ve eaten at a great many places, Lily. Very fine ones. Places that take themselves extremely seriously." A brief pause. "But I’ve been thinking about this meal since I smelled it at the door. So I think that tells you something."
Lily sat back with the satisfied expression of someone who had gotten the answer they wanted and intended to remember it.
"I knew it," she said, to no one in particular.
Ash looked up from his portion briefly, apparently agreeing, and then returned to the more pressing matter of the remaining rib.
Lucy refilled the tea without being asked, moving around the table in the quiet, efficient way she had, topping each cup before it was empty, adding another dish of the herb oil when the first ran low, repositioning the vegetable plate so it was closer to the center of the table where everyone could reach it. She did all of this without interrupting the conversation, without drawing attention to it, the way she managed most things, through presence and care so consistent it became invisible.
"Auntie," Sophie said, when Lucy had settled back into her seat. "You should let me help."
"You are not around," Lucy said.
"I mean in general. When I visit."
Lucy looked at her with the particular warmth she reserved for the moments when someone said something that pleased her more than she intended to show.
"Next time," she said, which in Lucy’s language meant yes, and also meant you’re expected back.
Sophie smiled at her plate.
The meal moved forward in the unhurried way of a table where everyone was comfortable enough not to rush it. Second servings came and went, Lily’s without any pretense of restraint, Bruce’s with the quiet efficiency of someone refuelling, Sophie’s with more deliberation than the first, working through the vegetables with the herb oil in a combination she had apparently decided was the correct way to eat them. The tea was refilled twice more. Ash, having concluded his portion, relocated to the windowsill to observe the table from a height, tail wound neatly around his feet, wings folded, golden eyes moving between each speaker with the focused interest of a creature who understood more of the conversation than he was generally given credit for.
"Big brother," Lily said, at some point in the middle of the second serving, fork in hand, tone slightly more considered than usual. "Are you going to be busy a lot now?"
Bruce looked at her. "What do you mean?"
"You were late today," she said. Not accusatory, just observational, in the way she was when she was working something out. "And you went somewhere with Aunty Sophie. And before that you were out for a long time." She moved a piece of vegetable around her bowl. "I’m not complaining. I was just wondering."
The table was quiet for a moment.
Bruce set his fork down and looked at Lily properly, the way he looked at things when he was giving them his full attention rather than his peripheral awareness. "There are some things I’ve been sorting out," he said. "They needed time. But they’re mostly settled now."
Lily looked up. "Mostly?"
"The important parts."
She held his gaze with the seriousness she occasionally produced when she decided a conversation deserved it, the quality that appeared sometimes and reminded everyone present that underneath the negotiating with Ash and the three servings and the persistent questioning, there was something genuinely perceptive looking out. "Okay," she said finally. "As long as you’re not going somewhere far."
"I’m not going anywhere," Bruce said.
She nodded. Picked up her fork. "Good." And then, without transition, in the same breath, "Lucy can I have more of the crust piece, the one with the extra herbs on it."
The table exhaled.
Lucy was already reaching for the dish. "That piece specifically?"
"The one on the left. The darker one."
"Lily," Bruce said.
"I’m just specifying what I want."
"You’re directing mom’s serving technique."
"I’m being precise," Lily said. "You always say precision is important."
"Principles apply broadly," Lily said, with the confidence of someone deploying a borrowed argument and committing to it fully.
Sophie had her tea cup raised to her lips, which was fortunate, because it gave her somewhere to put her face.
Lucy set the specific piece, the darker one, on the left, into Lily’s bowl with the serenity of a woman who had long since made her peace with this household and everything it contained. "There," she said.
"Thank you," Lily said, with complete sincerity. She looked at Bruce. He looked at her. She smiled. He shook his head and returned to his own plate.
The meal wound down gradually from there, the dishes working their way to the comfortable emptiness of things that had been genuinely enjoyed rather than simply consumed, the vegetable plate reduced to its glaze, the rice bowl down to its last serving, the herb oil dish clean. Lily had grown quieter in the last stretch, not unhappily but in the soft, gradual way of someone well fed and warm and running at a lower energy than the hour had started with. Ash had migrated from the windowsill back to the chair beside her, and she had her hand resting on his back without thinking about it, his small chest rising and falling under her palm.
Lucy gathered the empty dishes with the calm of someone who had done this ten thousand times and found it, each time, quietly satisfying. Sophie stood and reached for the nearest stack without asking, and Lucy accepted this, not graciously, not making a moment of it, just naturally, the two of them moving around the kitchen in the easy way of people who had found their rhythm in a shared space.
Bruce watched this from the table. Lily, beside him now, she had migrated at some point during dessert, which had been a small bowl of something cold and sweet that Lucy had produced from somewhere without announcement, was leaning slightly against his arm, not asleep, but somewhere adjacent to it. 𝓯𝓻𝒆𝙚𝒘𝓮𝙗𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝒍.𝙘𝓸𝙢
"Big brother," she said, very quietly.
"Mm."
"Today was a good day."
He looked at her, at the particular contentment in her face, eyes half closed, Ash warm in her lap, the sounds of Lucy and Sophie moving comfortably through the kitchen behind them.
"Yeah," he said. "It was."
Lily smiled without opening her eyes further. "Good," she said, and was quiet after that.
The kitchen light was warm. The last of the tea steamed gently in the cups. Outside, the night had settled into itself fully, patient and unhurried, and Reignland waited in the distance, but not urgently, and not yet.
Not quite yet.
The kitchen settled into the particular quiet that follows a good meal, not empty, but full in the way that only happens when everyone at the table has eaten well and said what needed saying and is now simply existing in the same space without requiring anything from it.
Lucy moved through the last of the clearing with the unhurried efficiency of long habit, stacking, rinsing, returning things to their places with the quiet certainty of a woman who knew where everything belonged. Sophie had stayed beside her through most of it, passing dishes, wiping the counter without being asked, falling into the rhythm of the kitchen the way she fell into most things, without announcement, without making it a gesture. Just doing it.
Bruce remained at the table with Lily.
She hadn’t moved from her position against his arm. Ash had fully committed to her lap now, curled into a shape that was smaller than it had any right to be given what he actually was, his tail wrapped around his own feet, breathing in the slow even rhythm of something deeply comfortable. Lily’s hand rested on his back, and she was watching the kitchen with the soft, unfocused gaze of someone whose body had eaten enough and whose mind was winding down on its own schedule.
"Aunty Sophie is good at helping," she said, after a while.
Bruce looked at the kitchen. Sophie had said something quiet to Lucy that he hadn’t caught, and Lucy had laughed, genuinely, the fuller version of it she kept for things that actually earned it, and was responding with her hands still in the dish water. "She is," he agreed.
Lily turned her head slightly to look up at him. "Mom likes her."
"I know."
Lily considered this with the gravity of someone filing it into the correct drawer. Then she settled back against his arm and said nothing further on the subject, which meant she had concluded whatever she was working out and was satisfied with the result.
The kitchen sounds thinned. Lucy dried the last of the dishes with the cloth over her shoulder, set them in their place, and turned to survey the counter with the brief, comprehensive look of someone confirming that everything was as it should be. It was.