SSS-Ranked Surgeon In Another World: The Healer Is Actually OP!

Chapter 379: The Quiet...

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Chapter 379: The Quiet...

"Bruce," she said eventually.

"Mm."

A small pause, in which he could feel her choosing the words with the care she gave to things that mattered. "Today was..." She stopped. Started again, differently. "I didn’t expect today to feel the way it did."

Bruce kept his eyes on the road. "How did you expect it to feel?"

"Bigger," she said. "Heavier. My father, the planning, all of it." A quiet exhale. "I thought I’d spend the whole day managing it. And instead it just..." She made a small gesture with one hand, a movement that described something settling rather than something resolving. "It felt like an ordinary day. A good one."

Bruce was quiet for a moment. Then: "Is that bad?"

Sophie turned to look at him fully. The dashboard light caught the side of her face, the particular quality of her expression, which was something open and unhurried that she didn’t produce for most people and had stopped trying to conceal from him.

"No," she said. "That’s what made it good."

He glanced at her once. Just briefly.

Then his hand shifted from the interface, the Fenrari holding its line without being asked, because it knew its road, and found hers where it rested in her lap. She turned her palm up without hesitation, her fingers closing around his in the easy, practiced way of two people who had stopped treating this as something that required a decision.

The lights of Reignland appeared on the horizon ahead of them, the distant glow of it, warm and layered, rising against the night sky with the quiet authority of a place that had always known it would be there when they returned.

Bruce drove toward it steadily, her hand in his, the road ahead open and unhurried.

Neither of them rushed it.

The gates of Reignland received them the way they always did, the formations reading Sophie’s presence and parting without ceremony, the path opening ahead like something that had been waiting rather than guarding.

The guards at the outer post straightened as the Fenrari passed. The same bow, the same unified acknowledgment, the same careful attention settling briefly on Bruce before returning to its proper position. The gates sealed behind them.

Bruce brought the Fenrari through the inner pathways at a measured pace. It was getting dark. The platforms were lit from beneath now, their glow casting soft upward light across the undersides of the surrounding structures. The crystal walkways didn’t reflect the darkness so much as filter it, turning the ambient mana-light into something that moved through them like colour through water.

The gardens breathed in their slow, rhythmic way, pale blossoms luminescent against the dark.

It was quieter at this hour. Not empty, Reignland was never truly empty, its staff and security moving through their rotations with steady efficiency, but the weight of the day had settled. Everything that needed to keep running was running. Everything else was still.

Bruce brought the Fenrari to a stop at the approach to Sophie’s residence, set back from the main thoroughfare behind a grove of silver-barked trees that caught the mana-light in thin vertical lines. He let the engine settle into silence.

For a moment neither of them moved.

The grove filtered the ambient glow into something softer. Sophie was watching the residence ahead with a thoughtful look. Then she turned to him.

"Come in," she said.

Bruce looked at her.

"It’s late," she added, in the tone of someone offering a reason that wasn’t really the reason. "And..." A small pause. Something more honest moved across her expression. "It feels like a long time since we’ve properly had a moment. Just the two of us. Without somewhere to be or something that needed handling."

She wasn’t wrong. The days had been full, the kind of full that accumulates without being noticed until you look back at the week and realize everything had been directed outward, and the space between the two of them had been there but occupied rather than inhabited.

"It doesn’t have to be long," she said, softer. "I just... I’ve missed it. The quiet. With you."

Bruce looked at her for a moment in the way he looked at things he wasn’t going to argue with. Then he reached over and pulled the key from the interface.

Sophie’s expression settled into something warm. She pushed her door open without another word.

The residence was exactly what Sophie’s spaces always were, refined without effort, nothing placed without reason and nothing placed in a way that called attention to the reasoning.

She led him through without ceremony, past the front rooms with their high ceilings and deep quiet, toward the back where the proportions changed, smaller, more considered, less of the Reign family’s public-facing architecture and more of the private architecture of a person who knew what she needed around her when the day was finished.

Her room was large without being cavernous. Muted walls that absorbed the low light warmly, furnishings chosen for substance rather than display. The far window looked out over the interior garden, pale blossoms drifting, luminescent, unhurried.

The bed was wide and settled-looking, dressed in materials that told you immediately they’d been chosen by someone who took rest seriously.

Sophie moved to the near side, undoing the clothes she was wearing with the efficient, absent movements of someone returning to themselves. She came back from the wardrobe a few minutes later in something simple, a soft night gown, and found Bruce already at the window, jacket set aside, sleeves turned up at the cuff the way they always ended up by this hour.

She settled against the headboard, drew her knees up slightly, and looked at him.

"Bruce."

He turned.

She tilted her head toward the space beside her. Small gesture. Entirely unambiguous.

He came away from the window.

The bed received his weight with the solidity of good construction, and Sophie moved toward him with the naturalness of two people who have done this enough times that the arrangement finds itself, her back against his chest, his arm around her without discussion, her head settling into the space at his shoulder where it had apparently always been meant to go. His chin rested against her hair. Her hand found his and held it, loosely.

Neither of them spoke.

The night sounds of Reignland were reduced at this distance to a faint structural hum, less a sound and more a quality of the air. Inside, the low light held its warmth. The room was the right temperature. The quiet didn’t ask anything of them.

Sophie exhaled, long and full, filled with satisfaction.

"There," she said softly.

"Mm," Bruce said.

A comfortable silence. Sophie’s thumb moved slowly across the back of his hand the way it did when she was thinking without urgency.

"I forgot what this felt like," she said, after a while.

"It hasn’t been that long."

"It feels like it has." She tilted her head slightly, adjusting without pulling away. "When you’re busy, the days run together. Then you look up and realize it’s been two weeks since you’ve just..." The same small settling gesture from the car. "Been still."

Bruce didn’t answer immediately. His thumb moved against her hand, mirroring her. Then: "Two weeks and four days."

Sophie went quiet.

"Since the evening at the observatory," he said. "Last time we had a night without something attached to it."

She turned her head slightly to look up at him, though the angle didn’t quite reach his face. "You counted."

"I didn’t count. I just remembered."

She was quiet for another moment. Then she settled back against him more fully and said nothing, because there wasn’t anything that needed adding.

The garden drifted outside. Somewhere in the residence a clock marked the hour in a single muted tone that dissolved before it had fully arrived.

"My father is going to move quickly," Sophie said after a while, her voice relaxed, thinking out loud rather than reporting. "Once he decides something he doesn’t pause between the decision and the doing. By tomorrow morning the Aetherveil grounds will already have people measuring things."

"Good," Bruce said.

"It might feel fast."

"Does it feel too fast to you?"

A pause. "No. That surprised me a little. But no."

Bruce’s arm shifted, drawing her a fraction closer. "Then it’s the right speed."

Sophie smiled at the window. "You always do that."

"Do what?"

"Take whatever I’m actually saying and give it back to me clarified." A quiet exhale, almost a laugh. "Very useful. Occasionally annoying."

"I’ll try to be less clarifying."

"Don’t. I’d miss it within a week." She turned her hand under his, lacing her fingers through properly. "Lily asked if you were going to be busy a lot. Did you hear that?"

"I heard."

"What did you think?"

"I thought she asked the question she actually wanted answered instead of the one that was easier to ask." A brief pause. "She does that sometimes. Most people don’t notice."

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