Myriad Heavens: Rise of the Rune God

Chapter 162: Mastery in a Day

Myriad Heavens: Rise of the Rune God

Chapter 162: Mastery in a Day

Translate to
Chapter 162: Chapter 162: Mastery in a Day

ORION’S BEDROOM - 7:00 AM – Same day as Vr World launch.

Orion’s eyes opened precisely at seven in the morning, his internal clock perfect despite the chaos of the previous day, and the first thing he noticed was that he felt good—genuinely, deeply, completely good in a way that was hard to articulate but impossible to ignore.

The overwhelming sensory chaos from last night had... settled, somehow, like muddy water left to sit until the sediment drifted to the bottom and clarity emerged, and while he could still hear Cassia’s heartbeat two floors above and smell the breakfast Rene was preparing in the kitchen and feel Earth’s rotation beneath him, the information wasn’t overwhelming anymore, was just... there, present but manageable, notable but not demanding.

He sat up carefully, moving with deliberate control, and for the first time since completing the second ring halo his movement felt natural—not perfectly controlled yet, still faster than intended and stronger than necessary, but noticeably better than the flailing disaster of last night when every action had been a catastrophe waiting to happen.

His enhanced brain had been working overtime during sleep, he realized, neural pathways adapting at accelerated rates that normal humans couldn’t achieve, synaptic connections reorganizing themselves to account for his enhanced body, motor control centers recalibrating to map intent to eight-times-enhanced execution, and the result was that his neurons and synapses had mostly caught up with his physical capabilities in just seven hours of rest.

Mostly being the operative word—he still crushed the alarm clock when he reached to turn it off, the device crumpling under his grip with a pathetic crunch that made him wince, but at least he’d only destroyed the alarm clock instead of the entire nightstand like he probably would have last night.

"Progress," he muttered to himself, examining the ruined clock with a mixture of pride and embarrassment, "tiny incremental progress, but still progress."

He stood up from the bed and walked to the bathroom, and this time his steps were measured properly, covering the intended distance at approximately the intended speed, his enhanced body responding to his enhanced brain’s commands with something approaching precision instead of the wild overcorrection of yesterday.

The shower was an adventure—he accidentally ripped the shower handle off the wall trying to adjust water temperature, then had to very carefully use the exposed valve mechanism to get warm water, then discovered that his enhanced sense of touch made the water pressure feel like being attacked by a firehose even though the setting was normal, but he managed to complete the shower without destroying the entire bathroom which he counted as a victory.

Drying off required extraordinary care because apparently towels were fragile when gripped by someone eight times stronger than baseline human, and he went through three towels before managing to dry himself without tearing the fabric into ribbons, but by the third towel his control had improved noticeably and he managed gentle pats instead of aggressive rubbing.

Dressing was easier because Rene had provided him with clothing made from the same nano-synthetic material as his cultivation outfit, fabric that could survive his enhanced strength without tearing, and he pulled on black pants and a long-sleeved shirt without incident before heading downstairs for breakfast.

KITCHEN - 7:20 AM

Cassia and Nyla were already at the breakfast table, Cassia reviewing notes on her tablet for the virtual world announcement happening in forty minutes, Nyla eating cereal while watching the news on her phone, and both of them looked up when Orion entered with expressions that suggested they’d been warned about his control issues.

"Good morning," Orion said carefully, modulating his volume to something approaching normal speaking voice instead of the shout that had emerged last night, and succeeding mostly—his voice was slightly loud but not painfully so.

"Good morning," Cassia replied with visible relief in her expression, "you sound better—more controlled than last night when Rene told me you were having some ... minor adjustment difficulties."

"Correction, Massive adjustment difficulties," Orion corrected with a rueful smile, walking carefully to the table and sitting down with exaggerated gentleness, and the chair survived his weight without cracking which felt like a major achievement, "last night I couldn’t walk across a room without destroying walls or sit down without shattering floor tiles, but seven hours of sleep let my brain catch up significantly—I’m not controlled yet, but I’m functional enough to exist around other people without being an active danger."

Nyla was staring at him with undisguised curiosity. "Rene said you’re eight times stronger than normal people now," she said with the blunt directness of youth, "can you really lift twenty-five tons?"

"Yes," Orion confirmed, accepting the plate of food that Rene’s original robot body placed in front of him with a grateful nod, "tested it last night with calibrated weights—twenty-five tons is my comfortable maximum, might be able to lift more with strain, and that’s just physical strength without using energy enhancement or telekinesis."

"Telekinesis?" Nyla’s eyes went wide with excitement that made her look even younger than sixteen, "like you can move things with your mind?"

"Yeah, I can move fifty-ton objects at supersonic speeds," Orion said, picking up his fork with exaggerated care and managing not to crush it, "tested that last night too—it’s probably my most dangerous ability because it’s invisible and devastating and requires no physical contact, which means I could theoretically destroy things from kilometers away without anyone seeing the attack coming."

"That’s terrifying," Cassia said quietly, her CEO-mind clearly running through implications, "and also exactly why you need to master control before doing anything else—if you lost control of telekinesis in a populated area..."

"I know," Orion interrupted gently, "which is why I’m spending today in the gravity chamber doing systematic training until I can modulate every ability precisely, and I’m not leaving the underground complex until I’m confident I won’t accidentally kill someone by shaking their hand too hard."

He ate breakfast carefully, each movement of fork to mouth requiring conscious attention to avoid stabbing himself in the face or crushing the food into paste, but by the end of the meal his control had improved noticeably and the final bites were executed with something approaching normal human coordination.

"The virtual world announcement is at 8 AM," Cassia said, checking her tablet, "I’m heading to headquarters now—Rene will handle all the technical presentation, Dr. Patel will cover educational aspects, I’ll do the business and pricing announcement, and you..." she looked at Orion with an expression that mixed concern and understanding, "you focus on training and don’t worry about anything else."

"Everything is delegated," Orion confirmed, "the company runs itself now, you and Rene handle all decisions, I focus purely on advancement and mastery, and we all trust each other to do our jobs."

Cassia stood up and walked around the table to hug him, and Orion very carefully hugged her back, consciously limiting his strength to avoid crushing her ribs, applying what he estimated was gentle pressure that wouldn’t harm her.

"I’m proud of you," she whispered, "and I know your parents would be proud too—you’re doing impossible things and changing the world, just try not to lose yourself in the power."

"I won’t," Orion promised, releasing the hug gently, "you and Nyla keep me grounded, remind me why I’m doing this, and I’ll never forget that."

Cassia left for headquarters, Nyla kissed him on the lips before she headed upstairs to get ready for classes, and Orion sat alone but smiling at the breakfast table finishing his meal while Rene’s robot body cleared dishes around him.

"Training schedule is prepared," Rene said efficiently, "gravity chamber is calibrated and ready, exercise progression is optimized for your learning rate, and I’ve prepared scenarios that will test every aspect of your control systematically—estimated timeline to complete basic mastery is three to five days based on normal learning curves."

"I’m going to do it in one day," Orion said with quiet confidence that came from knowing exactly what his enhanced brain was capable of, "my intelligence is eight times baseline, my processing speed is eight times faster, my ability to learn and adapt is enhanced beyond normal human limits, which means training that would take normal people weeks will take me hours."

"Ambitious," Rene observed, "but possibly achievable given your capabilities—shall we begin?"

"Let’s begin," Orion confirmed, standing up from the table without breaking it, "time to transform from powerful-but-dangerous to actually-capable."

UNDERGROUND LABORATORY - GRAVITY CHAMBER - 7:30 AM

The gravity chamber stood pristine and ready, twenty meters by twenty meters by ten meters high, reinforced dense walls that could survive impacts from someone a hundred times stronger than Orion currently was, graviton field generators embedded throughout creating variable gravity from 0.1G to 100G, and holographic projectors capable of simulating any environment or scenario he might need.

Orion stepped through the entrance and the door sealed behind him with a heavy thunk that resonated through the reinforced structure, leaving him alone in the chamber with nothing but open space and unlimited potential for training.

"Beginning with fine motor control exercises," Rene’s voice came through speakers embedded in the walls, "gravity set to 1G baseline, no environmental distractions, focus purely on precise movement—first test: pick up eggs without breaking them."

A table materialized in the center of the chamber—holographic but with haptic feedback that made it feel solid—and on the table sat a dozen eggs in a carton, innocent and fragile and perfect for testing whether he could modulate his strength appropriately.

Orion approached the table carefully and reached for the first egg, extending his hand slowly, fingers closing around the smooth shell with what felt like the gentlest possible grip—

CRACK-SQUISH

The egg exploded immediately, shell fragmenting and yolk spraying across his hand, and Orion sighed because apparently "gentlest possible grip" was still far too much force for something as fragile as an egg.

"Attempt one: failure," Rene announced clinically, "force applied approximately two hundred percent higher than necessary—try again with significantly reduced grip strength."

Orion reached for the second egg, this time barely touching it, applying pressure so light he could hardly feel the shell—

CRACK

Still crushed, though at least this time the egg stayed mostly intact instead of exploding completely.

"Attempt two: failure," Rene said, "force still one hundred and fifty percent excessive—your minimum conscious grip strength is still too high, you need to recalibrate your sense of ’gentle’ to account for enhanced capabilities."

Third egg. Fourth egg. Fifth egg. Each one crushed despite his best efforts to be gentle, each failure teaching him something about force modulation, about the gap between intent and execution, about how his enhanced strength meant that even his lightest touch was devastating to fragile objects.

Sixth egg—he picked it up and it survived for three seconds before his grip unconsciously tightened and crack, shell breaking and contents leaking between his fingers.

"Progress," Rene noted, "you maintained appropriate force for three seconds before unconscious adjustment caused failure—the challenge is maintaining conscious control continuously rather than allowing muscle memory to take over."

Seventh egg. Orion focused with his full enhanced intelligence on the task, treating it like a meditation exercise, consciously monitoring every micro-adjustment of his fingers, feeling the feedback from the shell, modulating pressure in real-time to stay in the narrow band between "too light to grip" and "too hard not to crush."

The egg survived. Five seconds. Ten seconds. Twenty seconds.

"Hold it for one full minute," Rene instructed, "prove you can maintain control continuously."

Thirty seconds. Forty seconds. Fifty seconds. His hand wanted to tighten unconsciously, muscle memory trying to apply normal gripping force, but he consciously overrode the instinct, kept the pressure feather-light, maintained perfect control through sheer focus.

Sixty seconds.

"Success," Rene announced, and Orion felt a surge of triumph that was probably disproportionate to the achievement but felt earned nonetheless, "you can now hold fragile objects without destroying them—next challenge: do it without thinking about it, make gentle grip the default rather than something requiring active concentration."

Eighth egg. Ninth egg. Tenth egg. Each one picked up and held for a minute, and with each repetition the conscious effort required decreased slightly, his brain learning the new calibration, motor control adapting to enhanced strength, until by the twelfth egg he could pick it up with only moderate concentration instead of absolute focus.

"Fine motor control foundation established," Rene said with satisfaction in her tone, "now we escalate—write your name with pen and paper without tearing through."

The table transformed, eggs disappearing and being replaced by paper and a pen, and Orion picked up the pen carefully, positioned it over the paper, and tried to write his name—

The pen punched through the paper like a spear, the tip embedding itself a centimeter deep into the holographic table surface, and Orion pulled it back sheepishly.

"Too much pressure," Rene observed unnecessarily, "try again."

He wrote his name ten times before managing to complete it without tearing the paper, each attempt teaching him how much pressure was needed to make ink flow versus how much pressure destroyed the medium, and by the twentieth attempt he could write smoothly and naturally without conscious thought about force modulation.

More Exercise.

Thread needle.

Manipulate coins.

Pick up grains of rice.

Each exercise progressively more difficult, each one requiring finer control, and Orion worked through them systematically with his enhanced brain processing feedback at superhuman speeds, learning from each failure, adapting rapidly, improving at rates that would be impossible for baseline humans.

By 9:00 AM—ninety minutes into training—he had mastered fine motor control completely, could pick up eggs or tissue paper or grains of rice without conscious effort, could write or draw or manipulate small objects with precision that matched his pre-enhancement capability.

"You’re learning approximately one hundred times faster than projected," Rene said with something approaching awe in her synthesized voice, "exercises designed to take days are being completed in minutes—your enhanced intelligence is proving more valuable than anticipated."

"Then let’s not waste the advantage," Orion said with fierce determination, "what’s next?"

SENSORY FILTERING - 9:00 AM TO 10:30 AM

"Sensory control," Rene announced, and the chamber transformed around Orion, holographic environment shifting to simulate a busy city street with hundreds of people talking simultaneously, cars honking, music playing from multiple sources, a cacophony of overlapping noise designed to be overwhelming.

"Filter the noise," Rene instructed, "focus on my voice only, ignore everything else."

Orion closed his eyes and tried to focus, but the sensory overload was immediate and devastating—hundreds of conversations bleeding together, car engines creating constant rumble, music mixing into incomprehensible clash of genres, and underneath it all his own heartbeat and breathing and blood flow demanding attention.

"I can hear everything," he said with frustration evident, "but I can’t focus on just your voice, it all demands attention equally."

"Then practice selective attention," Rene suggested, "humans do this naturally—the ’cocktail party effect’ where you can focus on one conversation in a crowded room despite dozens of others happening simultaneously—your enhancement amplified your hearing but the filtering mechanism still exists, you just need to consciously engage it."

Orion tried again, this time visualizing his hearing as a spotlight that could be directed, narrowed, focused on specific targets while allowing other sounds to fade into background noise.

It took effort—significant conscious effort—but gradually he managed to isolate Rene’s voice from the chaos, hearing her clearly while the other sounds became muted, present but not demanding, noticeable but not overwhelming.

"Better," Rene confirmed, "now switch focus—listen to the conversation between the two holographic people on your left, ignore everything else including my voice."

The exercise continued for an hour, switching focus repeatedly, training his enhanced brain to consciously direct his superhuman hearing instead of being passively overwhelmed by it, and by 10:00 AM he could pick out individual conversations from hundreds of simultaneous sources, could focus his hearing like a laser on specific targets while filtering everything else to acceptable background levels.

Vision control came next—the ability to focus on specific objects while blurring background, to zoom vision in or out consciously, to see through walls deliberately instead of constantly, and again his enhanced brain learned rapidly, processing visual information with incredible speed and developing conscious control over capabilities that had been random and chaotic the night before.

Smell, touch, psychic sense—each one trained systematically, each one brought under conscious control through repetition and enhanced learning capability, and by 10:30 AM Orion had achieved something approaching mastery: he could focus any sense deliberately, filter unwanted input, process information selectively rather than being overwhelmed by the flood of superhuman perception.

"Sensory control achieved," Rene announced, "you can now exist in normal environments without being overwhelmed—next phase: movement control."

MOVEMENT CONTROL - 10:30 AM TO 12:00 PM

"Walk at normal human pace," Rene instructed, and Orion started walking across the chamber floor, consciously limiting his speed, measuring each step, and managed to maintain approximately 5 kph—normal human walking speed—for the full twenty-meter distance without breaking into an unintended sprint.

"Success on first attempt," Rene noted with approval, "your motor control adaptation is proceeding faster than any baseline human could achieve—now run at exactly 100 kph, maintain that speed precisely without deviation."

Orion accelerated smoothly, his enhanced body responding to enhanced neural control, hitting 100 kph and maintaining it steady as he circled the chamber, and the speed that would have felt impossibly fast yesterday now felt natural, manageable, completely under his control.

"150 kph. 200 kph. 400 kph. Full speed," Rene called out progressively higher targets, and Orion hit each one precisely, accelerating and decelerating with perfect control, his enhanced brain processing movement and balance at speeds that would leave normal humans as red smears on the walls i.e. blood-paste.

By 11:00 AM he could run at any chosen speed from walking pace to supersonic, could stop on a precise spot without overshooting, could turn corners at high velocity without momentum carrying him into walls, could move with the kind of precision and control that would make professional athletes weep with envy.

Climbing stairs. Opening doors. Shaking hands (with holographic training partners). Gentle handling of fragile objects while moving at high speed. Each scenario testing different aspects of movement control, and Orion mastered them all with the systematic efficiency of someone whose brain was processing learning at eight times normal speed.

"Movement control complete," Rene announced at noon, "you can now move through normal environments without destroying them—lunch break recommended, then we proceed to combat training and advanced capabilities."

[Author’s Note:

Have you ever wondered what happened to the legends of old?

Where did the ancient gods, the immortals, and the peerless martial artists go? Names like Sun Wukong and Nezha, or Odin, Thor, and Zeus were once whispered with awe. From the wisdom of the Buddha to the war cries of Athena, these figures shaped the world—and then they vanished.

Did they die out, why was earth drained of exotic energy or are they simply elsewhere, watching and waiting? The truth behind where they went and if they are coming back is a secret that will change everything for Orion and earth.

Stay tuned—the return of the ancients is closer than you think! ]

Its a new plot I am cooking up stay tuned.

How did this chapter make you feel?

One tap helps us surface trending chapters and recommend titles you'll actually enjoy — your vote shapes You may also like.