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Myriad Heavens: Rise of the Rune God-Chapter 91: Awakening in Another World
NEW EDEN SECTOR - ARCADIA GENERAL HOSPITAL
The nurses were preparing the body when it sat up.
Sarah Martinez had been a trauma nurse for twelve years. She’d seen unexpected recoveries before—people declared dead who came back, hearts that restarted after minutes of nothing. Medical science didn’t know everything. Sometimes bodies surprised you.
But she’d never seen someone wake up after forty minutes of confirmed brain death from severe cranial trauma.
The young man—Orion Starr, twenty-one years old, construction accident victim, pronounced dead forty minutes ago—bolted upright on the gurney. His eyes snapped open, wide and disoriented.
"Where—" He grabbed his head, feeling for damage. Found nothing. No pain, no wounds, just intact skull where a steel beam had crushed it an hour ago.
Sarah approached cautiously. "Mr. Starr? Can you hear me?"
"I can hear you." His voice was steady despite the confusion in his eyes. "What happened?"
"You were in an accident. Construction site. A beam fell and struck your head. The paramedics said the damage was severe."
Memories flooded in. Not his memories. Someone else’s memories.
Orion Starr. Born in New Eden Sector, Arcadia District. Adopted at age two by Cassia Starr. Grew up with step-sister Nyla. Student at Arcadia Institute of Technology, majoring in Computer Engineering and Physics. 4.0 GPA. Scholarship recipient. Normal life. Good life.
Walking home from campus. Reading a cultivation novel on his phone. Not paying attention to the construction zone. The crane malfunction. Steel beam swinging free. The impact to his head. Skull fracturing. Brain damage. Dying instantly.
Dead. Orion Starr died.
But Runar’s consciousness had just settled into his body. 𝐟𝕣𝕖𝐞𝐰𝕖𝚋𝐧𝗼𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝗰𝐨𝐦
Runar. That was his name. He knew that much. But everything else about himself was locked away, sealed behind barriers he couldn’t access. He could feel the memories there—vast knowledge, abilities, experiences—but couldn’t reach any of it.
The only memories available were Orion’s. And now they were his memories. He’d absorbed everything. The entire life, every moment, every experience.
He was Runar. But he was also Orion Starr.
Sarah ran a handheld medical scanner over him. "This is remarkable. Your vitals are stable. Brain activity normal. No signs of trauma."
The other nurse—Marcus, younger, less experienced—stared at the scanner readings. "He was pronounced dead. The doctors confirmed massive brain damage. How is he just... fine?"
"It happens," Sarah said calmly. "Rare, but documented. Misdiagnosis under trauma conditions, bodies rallying after apparent death. Medicine doesn’t have all the answers." She looked at Orion. "How do you feel?"
"Confused. Alive." He sat up slowly. "My family—do they know I’m here?"
"They haven’t been contacted yet. We were still processing your admission when you woke up." She pulled out a communication device. "I’ll call them now. But first, let me get Dr. Reeves to check you over."
Dr. Reeves arrived five minutes later—older woman, gray hair, calm professional demeanor. She’d seen enough medical anomalies in her career to not be shocked by unexpected recoveries.
"Mr. Starr. I’m told you were pronounced dead at the scene."
"Apparently I got better."
She ran another diagnostic scan, more thorough this time. "Vital signs are excellent. Brain function optimal. No evidence of cranial trauma." She lowered the scanner. "Field diagnostics aren’t always accurate under emergency conditions. The paramedics likely misread the initial trauma severity."
"So I wasn’t actually dead?"
"You may have been in severe shock that mimicked death. Or your injuries were less severe than initially assessed." She made notes on her tablet. "Either way, you’re stable now. I want to keep you for observation overnight, run some additional tests to make sure there are no hidden complications."
Marcus looked like he wanted to argue about the brain death assessment, but Sarah gave him a look that said "let it go."
Orion—Runar—tried to organize his thoughts. The sealed memories were frustrating. He knew there were answers locked away. Knew there were abilities and knowledge he should have access to. But couldn’t reach any of it.
All he had were Orion’s memories. And those memories said he should be dead.
A screen appeared. Only he could see it.
Floating in his peripheral vision. Blue text on a transparent interface.
YOU HAVE BEEN CHOSEN AS THE PIONEER OF YOUR CIVILIZATION
Runar kept his expression neutral. The doctors couldn’t see it.
YOU HAVE BEEN GRANTED THE TECH TREE LIBRARY SYSTEM BY THE MULTI TRANS-DIMENSIONAL GODS ALSO KNOWN AS THE AUTHOR
More text populated:
MAIN MISSION: ADVANCE HUMAN CIVILIZATION TO TYPE V ON THE KARDASHEV SCALE
CURRENT CIVILIZATION LEVEL: TYPE 0.73
FIRST MILESTONE: ACHIEVE TYPE I CIVILIZATION STATUS
IMMEDIATE OBJECTIVE: DEVELOP CONTROLLED NUCLEAR FUSION CAPABILITY IN 3 YEARS
FAILURE CONSEQUENCES:
Nuclear Fusion Objective: System transfers to new host
Main Mission: Civilization remains stagnant, eventual extinction
SUCCESS REWARDS:
Nuclear Fusion: Access to Type II Technology Tree
Type I Achievement: Method to synthesize "Unknown Gas" (Qi/Mana/Aether/Primordial Energy) Type II Achievement: [LOCKED]
Type III Achievement: [LOCKED]
Type IV Achievement: [LOCKED]
Type V Achievement: [LOCKED]
BEGINNER’S REWARD PACK AVAILABLE:
Brain Enhancement: +200% Physical Enhancement: +100% Breathing Technique: Foundation Circulation Method
Accept Enhancement Now? YES / NO
Runar read through the mission parameters carefully. His enhanced cognition—even without the additional boost—processed everything quickly.
Type V Kardashev Scale. That was absurdly ambitious. Type I meant harnessing all available planetary energy. Type II meant stellar energy. Type III meant galactic. Type IV meant universal. Type V meant... multiversal? Reality manipulation? He didn’t even know if scientific theory had defined Type V yet.
Nuclear fusion in three years was the immediate stepping stone. Achievable if difficult.
But not in a hospital room where people would panic at visible transformation.
He mentally selected NO.
ENHANCEMENT DELAYED. YOU MAY ACTIVATE AT ANY TIME THROUGH MENTAL COMMAND.
The screen faded.
Dr. Reeves was saying something about blood work and neural scans. Orion nodded appropriately while thinking about the mission.
"Can I see my family?" he asked. "Once you call them?"
"Of course. After we run the initial tests."
They moved him to a private room. Drew blood, ran scans, checked reflexes. Everything came back perfectly normal. Dr. Reeves seemed satisfied if somewhat puzzled by the lack of any injury.
"We’ll keep you overnight for observation. If everything stays stable, you can go home tomorrow."
She left. Orion sat alone in the hospital room.
He had a mission. Advance human civilization from Type 0.73 to Type V on the Kardashev Scale. Starting with nuclear fusion in three years.
His memories were sealed, but he still had Orion’s knowledge. Computer engineering, physics, mathematics. A 4.0 GPA from a top technical institute. That was a foundation to work with.
And he had access to a technology library that apparently contained everything up to Type II civilization level.
The door opened. A woman rushed in—late forties, dark hair with gray streaks, face tight with worry. Cassia Starr. Orion’s adoptive mother.
"Orion!" She crossed the room quickly and hugged him carefully, like he might break. "The hospital called. They said you were in an accident but you’re okay. What happened?"
"Construction site. Beam fell. Hit my head." He returned the hug. Orion’s memories supplied deep affection for this woman who’d raised him. "I’m fine. Doctors say I was lucky."
"Lucky?" She pulled back to look at him. "They said it was serious. That you might have—" Her voice caught.
"I’m okay, Mom. I promise."
The door opened again. A young woman entered—twenty-three, long dark hair, sharp intelligent eyes currently filled with relief and residual fear.
Nyla Starr. Step-sister. Bioengineering student. The person Orion’s memories were most complicated about.
"You scared us," she said. Her voice was steady but her hands shook slightly. "Hospital calls about construction accidents are never good news."
"Sorry. Didn’t mean to worry you."
She approached the bed, studying him with the analytical eye of someone trained in biological sciences. "You look fine. No visible trauma. The doctors said you’re stable?"
"Clean bill of health. They want to keep me overnight for observation."
"Good." She sat in the chair next to the bed. Cassia took the other chair.
They talked for an hour. Cassia wanted details about the accident. Nyla asked medical questions the doctors had already answered. Both of them were clearly relieved he was alive and unhurt.
Runar observed through Orion’s memories and current awareness. These relationships were real. The care was genuine. Even with his memories sealed, he could feel the emotional connections.
Eventually visiting hours ended. Cassia and Nyla left reluctantly, promising to pick him up tomorrow.
Alone again, Orion pulled up the system interface with a mental command.
TECH TREE LIBRARY SYSTEM
Would you like to enter the Library Space?
He selected YES.
The world shifted.
Suddenly he was standing in a library that defied physics. No walls, no ceiling, no floor. Just infinite shelves stretching in impossible directions, filled with books that glowed with soft light.
WELCOME TO THE SYSTEM LIBRARY SPACE
ALL TECHNOLOGIES BELOW TYPE II CIVILIZATION ARE AVAILABLE FOR STUDY
TO ACCESS KNOWLEDGE: MENTALLY REQUEST THE SUBJECT
SELECTED BOOKS WILL BE UPLOADED DIRECTLY TO YOUR MEMORY
NOTE: THIS LIBRARY PROVIDES FUNDAMENTAL KNOWLEDGE, THEORIES, COMPONENT DESIGNS, AND SCIENTIFIC PRINCIPLES. YOU MUST SYNTHESIZE THIS KNOWLEDGE INTO WORKING SYSTEMS.
Orion—Runar—looked at the impossible library surrounding him. His sealed memories remained locked, but his current mind was sharp enough to understand what this meant.
This was his mission. This was how he’d advance an entire civilization.
And somewhere, locked behind barriers in his mind, were memories of who he really was and where he’d come from.
But for now, he was Orion Starr. Student. Adopted son. Step-brother.
And apparently, humanity’s best hope for reaching the stars.
He mentally requested his first subject: Nuclear Fusion - Fundamental Principles.
Books flew from the shelves toward him.
The mission had begun.







