The Surgeons’ Evolution – Understanding the ‘God’ Among Them

Time passed too quickly.

One moment, they were struggling to process the reality of Su Yan and Lin Kai's departure.

The next?

They were running at full speed to keep up.

Because the hospital had no choice but to evolve.

The Rapid Acceleration of the Surgical Department

Under normal circumstances, a hospital's rate of improvement was measured in years.

New techniques required months of study.

Surgeons needed time to refine skills.

Surgical teams adjusted slowly, with carefully planned training.

But now?

Now, the progression wasn't slow.

It was violent.

Because every day, they were thrown into the deep end—forced to match a surgical speed, precision, and complexity that didn't exist anywhere else.

Every case was high-risk.

Every technique pushed the boundaries of medicine.

Every mistake was corrected instantly, ruthlessly, without mercy.

And in this unforgiving pressure cooker, something strange happened.

They got better.

Much, much faster than anyone expected.

Dr. Wallace: "I Finally Get It."

It happened during a late-night aortic repair.

Dr. Wallace was leading, following one of Lin Kai's techniques.

He had seen Lin Kai do this a hundred times before.

Shorter incision paths.

Faster anastomosis.

Flawless handling of vascular tension.

But this time, Wallace wasn't just copying.

He understood.

He understood why Lin Kai's suturing was faster.

He understood why his pacing never wavered.

He understood why his decisions were more confident than anyone else's.

It wasn't just natural talent.

It wasn't just experience.

It was because Lin Kai spent every day watching the impossible happen right beside him.

Dr. Patel: "She's a Living Surgical Algorithm."

Dr. Patel had always prided himself on being a fast thinker.

But next to Su Yan, he had never felt slower.

It wasn't just her speed.

It was the way she processed information.

She adjusted techniques before a complication even appeared.

She predicted problems before they happened.

She adapted mid-surgery in ways that shouldn't have been possible.

One night, after yet another record-breaking procedure, Dr. Patel sat in the surgeons' lounge, exhausted, frustrated, and overwhelmed.

And then, suddenly, it hit him.

"She's not thinking like a normal surgeon."

He turned to Dr. Wallace, his voice a mixture of awe and disbelief.

"She's a living surgical algorithm."

Dr. Wallace frowned. "What?"

Dr. Patel gestured vaguely.

"She's running a simulation in her head. Constantly. She doesn't react—she predicts. She doesn't just fix problems—she removes the possibility of failure before it even happens."

Dr. Wallace sat back. "You're saying she's beyond human logic?"

Dr. Patel exhaled. "I'm saying she sees surgery the way a mathematician sees numbers. The way a composer sees music. It's not intuition—it's structured genius."

Silence.

Then—Dr. Evans muttered from the corner.

"…Or she's just not human."

Everyone turned.

Dr. Evans looked down at his coffee, speaking slowly.

"Think about it. Look at Lin. He's brilliant. He's insanely talented. But you see the progression in him. You see how he got there."

He set the coffee down.

"With Su? There's nothing. No visible limit. No gaps in knowledge. No weaknesses."

His hands tightened around the cup.

"I don't think she was ever 'taught' medicine. I think she just… knows."

Silence.

Then—Dr. Monroe laughed.

"You all sound like you're talking about a myth."

Dr. Wallace exhaled. "Aren't we?"

No one disagreed.

The Interns' Perspective – Watching the Unbelievable Become Normal

The new interns had no idea what was happening when they first arrived.

Their attendings were operating at speeds they had never seen before.

Techniques they had only read about in theory were being performed daily.

Their professors were debating whether one of the hospital's top surgeons was even human.

It was insane.

One intern, Jason, whispered to his friend, Sarah, during a particularly ridiculous surgery.

"Are we in a normal hospital, or is this some kind of elite military training facility?"

Sarah shook her head. "No, Jason. This is the Church of Su Yan."

Jason blinked. "What."

Sarah gestured to the operating room below, where Su Yan had just performed an unplanned vascular graft reconstruction in record time.

She leaned in.

"That's not a doctor. That's something else."

Jason swallowed. "God?"

Sarah shrugged. "Maybe."

Jason sighed.

"Then what does that make Lin?"

Sarah smirked. "Her chosen disciple."

Jason groaned. "Great. We're working in a cult."

Sarah sipped her coffee. "A really efficient cult, though."

Lin Kai's Perspective – The Man Who Saw the Truth First

Chapter 32: The Surgeons Who Chased the Impossible

Time Moved Faster Than Anyone Expected

Twenty-seven days.

Then twenty.

Then fifteen.

The hospital had spent months, years operating under the belief that Lin Kai and Su Yan were simply ahead of everyone else—faster, sharper, more skilled.

But now, as their departure loomed closer, something strange happened.

The surgeons, the ones who had once doubted, feared, and even resented them, began to change.

And they changed fast.

The Evolution of Those Left Behind

Before, they had accepted that Lin Kai was just a natural talent.

Before, they had assumed that Su Yan's role was mostly advisory.

Before, they had believed that catching up to them was impossible.

Now?

Now, they understood the truth.

Lin Kai wasn't just talented—he was trained by someone who was beyond logic.

His speed wasn't just natural ability—it was the byproduct of constant, relentless refinement.

His technique wasn't something that could be learned from books—it came from working beside someone who had redefined the very concept of surgery.

Because no matter how talented Lin Kai was, no matter how skilled he had become—

Su Yan was the one who turned him into this.

And now that they had seen her work, the rest of them were trying to catch up.

Dr. Wallace's Transformation

Dr. Wallace had always been a methodical surgeon, trained in precision and patience.

Before, he had been hesitant to deviate from protocols.

Before, he had followed standard procedure to the letter.

Before, he had believed that efficiency could never surpass safety.

But after watching Su Yan rewrite an entire operation in real-time, he started thinking differently.

Now, in the OR, he found himself anticipating complications before they happened.

Now, he wasn't just reacting to problems—he was solving them before they occurred.

Now, he wasn't just performing surgery—he was playing a game of probabilities, like she did.

And for the first time, he understood.

This wasn't about being fast.

This was about thinking beyond what was in front of you.

And that was why Lin Kai could keep up with her.

Because he had been trained to think in the same way.

Dr. Patel's Realization

Dr. Patel had always been sceptical.

Before, he had believed that surgery was about control.

Before, he had dismissed Su Yan's adjustments as reckless improvisation.

Before, he had thought Lin Kai was simply lucky to have her around.

Now?

Now, he understood that she wasn't improvising.

Every adjustment she made was calculated.

Every modification was backed by logic that no one else could follow.

Every decision was so fast, so precise, that it looked reckless—until you realized it wasn't.

And Lin Kai?

Lin Kai had simply learned how to see the world the way she did.

That was why he could operate with such fluidity.

That was why his hands never hesitated.

That was why he could finish a six-hour surgery in less than two.

Because to Lin Kai, this wasn't about following procedures anymore.

It was about understanding the game before the pieces even moved.

And that's why Su Yan had never needed to explain herself to him.

He already knew how she thought.

Dr. Evans – The Last to Accept Reality

Of all of them, Dr. Evans had struggled the most.

Before, he had been resentful of Lin Kai's success.

Before, he had dismissed Su Yan as "just an advisor."

Before, he had believed that anyone could be just as fast, just as skilled, if they worked hard enough.

But now?

Now, he had watched her walk into a room, take one look at a patient, and predict complications that hadn't even started yet.

Now, he had seen her rewrite an entire surgical protocol on instinct.

Now, he had witnessed her guide Lin Kai through a case that should have ended in failure—and turn it into a flawless success.

And it hit him, hard.

This wasn't about talent.

This wasn't about skill.

This wasn't even about experience.

Lin Kai was extraordinary. But Su Yan?

Su Yan was something else entirely.

A force that didn't belong in a hospital.

A mind that didn't belong in the world of ordinary medicine.

A goddess, trapped in human flesh, pretending to be one of them.

And for the first time, Evans stopped being jealous.

Because how could you envy something that didn't even exist on the same level?

The Conversations in the Shadows – What People Were Saying

By now, the hospital had stopped calling their work miracles.

Instead, the whispers had changed.

"They're leaving in less than two weeks."

"If we don't learn as much as we can now, we'll never reach that level."

"Lin Kai isn't just talented. He was trained by a monster."

"No, not a monster. A goddess."

"Then what does that make him?"

"The only person in the world who can match her."

Elsewhere – The Genius Herself (And the Man Who Understood Her)

Su Yan sat on the rooftop, staring at the city lights.

Lin Kai sat beside her, sipping his coffee.

She stretched lazily. "They're improving."

Lin Kai smirked. "You say that like it surprises you."

Su Yan rolled her eyes. "It doesn't. It's just funny."

Lin Kai raised an eyebrow. "What is?"

She smirked. "They spent years thinking you were the genius."

Lin Kai chuckled. "I mean, I am."

Su Yan nudged him. "Yeah, but you had an unfair advantage."

Lin Kai tilted his head. "Which is?"

She leaned back, looking at the stars. "You had me."

Lin Kai sighed dramatically. "And yet, you still love me."

Su Yan laughed. "Damn right I do."

And with that, they sat in companionable silence.

Because for them, nothing had changed.

For the hospital, this was a race to catch up.

For the surgeons, this was a fight to understand.

But for Lin Kai and Su Yan?

This was just life.

This was just what they had always been capable of.

And in ten more days, they would leave this place behind.

Because genius never stays in one place for long.