Days as a Spiritual Mentor in American Comics

Chapter 4340 - 3435: The Skilful Divine Doctor (42)



Chapter 4340 - 3435: The Skilful Divine Doctor (42)

Chapter 4340 - 3435: The Skilful Divine Doctor (42)

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"What do you plan to do?" Arrogant asked, "If your ultimate goal is to investigate the truth behind the plague, you just need to figure out what exactly is happening in the Mining Area. Are you going to go there yourself?"

"Not a chance," Shiller flatly rejected the suggestion, saying, "It's obvious how dangerous that place is. I'm running a hospital here, why on earth would I need to go there?"

"So you're just planning to play a management simulation game here?"

"That will achieve the same purpose," Shiller said, "If this is a sacrificial ritual that won't stop until a certain number of deaths is reached, then as long as my hospital operates well and discharges many survivors, the ritual can never be completed. By that time, I won't be the one in a hurry. Maybe the truth will come knocking on my door."

After finishing, Shiller left Arrogant's office. He had almost figured out most of the settings and plot, and now it was time to compete in strategic determination.

Shiller first returned to the ward where Strange was staying. He communicated his plan to Manny, not caring whether she understood or not, as he was set on executing it anyway.

The plan was simple. Since the theme was a hospital, then focus on running the hospital, and run it on a grand scale, mobilizing all the resources available. Shiller was determined to see whether the plague could kill faster or he could save lives faster.

Greed's style has always been to avoid puzzles, dislike fighting, not good at parkour, and slow in pursuit. In different games, he always plays the same management simulation, preferring to overwhelm with momentum, believing a straight push is better than all else.

There are several problems with running a good hospital now: there's a shortage of doctors and nurses, the hospital isn't big enough, and the medical equipment and facilities are not professional enough.

But in reality, the first two problems could be boiled down to the last one. With advanced enough equipment, it's possible to save a lot on space and manpower.

So Shiller went to Batman and Stark first.

Returning to the operating room, it had changed beyond recognition. The operating table had been dismantled, and the workbench and desk were nowhere to be seen, all replaced with mechanical equipment.

It was clear that Batman and Stark had been tirelessly conducting re

Seeing the topic veering into dangerous territory, Shiller decided they could no longer afford the luxury of arguing. He threw Thor into the fray.

Ordinarily, with Thor's simple mind, he wouldn't distinguish right from wrong and would just drag them both out of there.

But this time there was Arrogance. Once Arrogance started to wheedle Thor, he became indecisive, supporting Batman one moment and Iron Man the next, while invariably losing to either side—much to Loki's forehead-slapping frustration outside.

Loki couldn't stand seeing Thor bullied, so he joined in. With Loki entering the fray, Thor became like a fueled rocket. Whoever insulted Loki was who Thor verbally attacked, fully harnessing his usually dormant brainpower, outshouting Batman for the time being.

As the argument descended into chaos, Shiller had no choice but to play his trump card—the Arkham Batman.

Arkham Batman wasn't just a force to reckon with; he also did not engage in verbal fights. His life philosophy was always actions over words, hands on rather than hands-off.

After he was thrown into the mix, the other side finally quieted down. Watching them come out of the passage one by one, Shiller finally heaved a sigh of relief. But he relaxed too soon.

After they stopped arguing, they all uniformly turned their grievances towards him. Stark took the lead:

"I told you before, one week is too short. I also have to work on the Mecha; there's no way I can handle that much. If you hadn't set such a tight deadline, why would we have started quarreling?"

Shiller didn't indulge him, countering, "Who claimed to be the world's most brilliant scientist, capable of breezing through all the equipment research? Now you're complaining about the short time. Oh, how could I forget, you must hear this kind of talk often? You've learned it pretty well."

"I think the deadline is reasonable, but I don't think we should work in the same room," Batman said. "It seriously distracts me."

"Don't play the good guy here. You agreed to the timeline, and instead of working, you spent all the time arguing and delayed my timeline. If you hadn't insisted on criticizing Tony, would this fight have happened? Next time, don't boast about Batman's efficiency..."

Natasha was about to say something, but Shiller raised his hand to stop her, then said, "You should refrain from stirring things up, too. I sent you in there to stop them, what did you do? Not everyone's interested in what you guys have in your pants. Can we all just focus on work now?"

Shiller, unfazed by the barrage of five, let everyone witness the level of a true master in arguing. Only when it came to Arrogance did Shiller choke.

Not without reason, because he couldn't outtalk Arrogance. His winning rate against Arrogance in verbal fights was basically zero.

Then, Arrogance coughed twice before saying, "Objectively speaking, he's not wrong. You should indeed focus on work and maintain unity..."

The others exchanged looks. Now they knew who the real instigator behind the heated quarrel was.

But in the end, they all dispersed, no one daring to make a peep.

Clearly, it wasn't just Greed who had a zero win rate.


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