Myriad Heavens: Rise of the Rune God

Chapter 188: THE WEIGHT OF TWO THOUSAND



Chapter 188: THE WEIGHT OF TWO THOUSAND

**MARS OBSERVATION DECK – NYCTON RECOVERY WING**

Commander Nyctor stood by the reinforced glass window, watching the blue-green curve of Mars. His body still felt heavy from the long jump, but the air on this world was doing wonders. Every breath pulled exotic energy into his cells. His old injuries knit faster. His meridians, dormant for years, woke up and hummed.

Then the pressure dropped.

Not in the room. In his spirit.

Nyctor dropped his datapad. His Planetary-level senses snapped open. He did not need a screen. He did not need a scanner. He felt it through his own cultivation, straight through his meridians and into his spiritual core.

Thousands of signatures flared at the exact same time.

"Lieutenant," Nyctor said, his voice tight. "Tell me I am not imagining this."

Kyce stood beside him, eyes wide, his own spiritual sense trembling. "You are not, Commander. Two thousand. Over two thousand beings just crossed the Planetary threshold. All at once."

Nyctor’s breath caught. He reached out with his sense, counting the layers of energy around each signature. His hands shook.

"They are not weak," he whispered. "Four concepts. Five. Some are holding six. Seven."

He turned to Kyce, his red eyes dark with disbelief. "In our academies, a normal soldier manages two or three concepts after centuries of training. A recognized genius might reach five. To hold seven requires rare bloodlines, master teachers, and decades of quiet meditation. Yet here, on a rim world that only reached space a year ago, they are producing them by the thousand. Overnight."

He pressed his forehead against the cool glass. The Progenitor legend was real. But it was not just about old blood. It was about method. The humans had found a way to remove every limit. They did not climb the mountain. They cleared the path and walked straight to the peak.

"If these are their new soldiers," Kyce murmured, "what does that make their Emperor?"

Nyctor did not answer. He just felt the heavy, steady rhythm of Earth’s spiritual field. For the first time since the Kreth’mar hunt began, he felt something other than fear. He felt certainty.

---

**EARTH – EXIT PLATFORM**

Orion stood on the edge of the cultivation grounds. He felt the wave of breakthroughs settle into a steady hum across the continent. He did not smile. He nodded.

The army was ready. But he was not.

Star Level power was not just about rings or energy. It was about control. Laws were heavy. They did not bend like concepts. They demanded exact alignment. One wrong move in battle, and the spiritual backlash could tear his own meridians apart. He needed space. He needed silence. And he needed to test his limits without risking the planets or the fleet.

He tapped his comms. "Rene. I’m leaving the system. Four light-years out. Hold fleet readiness at standby. I’ll be back in six hours."

"Understood," Rene replied. "Scanning a dead zone in the Oort Cloud’s outer edge. Clear of traffic. Safe for high-output testing. I will monitor your vitals from here."

Orion stepped off the platform. He did not call a ship. He raised his hand, pulled on the Law of Space, and folded reality. The air cracked. He vanished.

---

**FOUR LIGHT-YEARS OUT – DEAD SECTOR 7**

Space here was empty. No planets. No stations. Just a scattered field of dark asteroids and cold dust. Perfect.

Orion floated in the void. His replacement armor locked into place. His five brain rings spun slowly. He closed his eyes and let his divine sense spread out. It covered light-years in a single breath. He felt the quiet hum of his own solar system far behind him. He felt nothing else. No enemy signatures. No traps. Just open space.

He started with movement.

He pulled the Law of Space and the Law of Void together. Space opened paths. Void erased the resistance between them. He stepped forward. The distance did not just shorten. It collapsed. He appeared ten thousand kilometers away, leaving no ripple, no energy trail. Just a clean fold. He repeated it. Zigzag. Stop. Turn. Accelerate. Within twenty drills, his movement left no trace. He could step through erased gaps in reality and appear at impossible angles without warning.

Next, defense.

He stood still and layered the Law of Space around his body. Not a shield. A maze. Multiple spatial folds stacked inside each other. Anything that struck him would pass through empty distance, slide off folded angles, or sink into a harmless void pocket. He tested it by throwing a concentrated kinetic pulse at his own chest. The energy bent, twisted, and vanished into the folds. Clean. No recoil.

Then, offense.

He pulled the Law of Gravity and the Law of Space. He compressed dust and stray rock into a tight sphere, then folded space around it until the gravity crushed inward. A mini black hole formed in his palm. He stabilized it with Order, then pushed it forward. He released the spatial hold. The singularity expanded, tearing through nearby asteroids. Space cracked. A shockwave erupted, stretching across three light-months of empty vacuum before fading. The area was left with a permanent spatial scar.

He exhaled. "Too wide. I need control."

He adjusted. He pulled the Law of Fire and the Law of Lightning. He gathered stellar white flames into a dense core, ran lightning through it to stabilize the charge, then used Gravity to compress the energy into a thin beam. Before firing, he used Space to fold the beam’s path, making it teleport mid-flight to strike from an impossible angle.

He released it.

The ray did not just burn. It pierced. It hit a distant rock cluster, detonated, and shattered local spacetime. The fracture spread outward in a slow, silent wave. The shockwave measured across five light-months. The vacuum itself groaned as reality tried to stitch itself back together.

Orion watched the fracture heal. He cycled through the rest of his Laws. Wind for precision routing. Water for energy fluidity. Earth for structural anchoring. Light for focus. Darkness for concealment. Life for rapid meridian repair after recoil. Death for clean severance of enemy energy links. Resonance for fleet sync. Order for formation discipline. Probability for reading combat flow.

He chained them. One after another. Space + Gravity + Fire + Lightning. Void + Space + Wind + Light. He did not just practice attacks. He practiced rhythm. He learned how to fold space to dodge, anchor with Order, ignite with Fire, erase with Void, and read the battlefield with Probability. All in one breath.

At first, his spiritual flow stuttered. The Laws resisted each other. His mind tried to hold too many frequencies at once. Sweat formed inside his helmet. His meridians burned. But he did not stop. He adjusted. He smoothed the transitions. He stopped forcing the Laws and started guiding them.

By the two-hundredth drill, the stutter was gone. Every strike cracked spacetime. Every shockwave spanned light-months. But his control held. The raw Star Level power stopped feeling like a flood and started feeling like a precise tool.

He stopped floating. He stood on a quiet asteroid. His breathing was steady. His five brain rings hummed in perfect sync.

"Initiate comprehension is just the first step," he said quietly. "But with eighteen Laws working together, the output matches an Advanced-tier fighter. The gap is not in power. It is in timing. And timing comes from practice."

He checked his divine sense one last time. Still clear. Still quiet. He folded space again. The dead sector vanished behind him.

---

**SOLAR SYSTEM EDGE – RETURN**

Orion stepped out of the fold near Neptune’s orbit. The stars of home came back into view. He felt the familiar pull of the Dyson Swarm. He felt the steady hum of ten million cultivators on Earth. He felt the Ghost Fleet holding position at the Oort Cloud line.

Rene’s voice came through his comms. "Vitals stable. Spiritual output normalized. You were gone for five hours, forty-two minutes. Fleet readiness is at ninety-four percent. Nycton data integration complete. Simulation crews report full tactical sync."

"Patch me through to Cassia," Orion said.

A moment later, her face appeared in his vision. She stood in the Imperial Council room, datapads stacked beside her. Her eyes were tired but sharp.

"I’m back," Orion said. "Control is tighter. I can chain Laws now without spiritual drag. But we can’t fight them near Earth or Mars."

Cassia frowned. "Explain."

"The shockwaves from Law clashes span light-months. Even a restrained strike will tear through interstellar distances. If we trade blows inside the system, the colonies, the shipyards, the civilian grids will be wiped out. We won’t risk it."

He paused, choosing his words carefully. "We push the engagement line out. Far past the heliopause. I want the fleet staged in the outer void. We meet them there. If they send scouts, we let them see our formation. If they send the main force, we draw them away from home. I’ll handle the Star Level beings outside the system. The fleet keeps the vanguard busy. We protect the core worlds first. Everything else comes after."

Cassia nodded slowly. "I’ll adjust the defense grid. We’ll hold fire unless they cross the three-billion-kilometer mark. The Ghost Fleet will run silent until then. I’ll move the civilian transports to the underground Lunar bunkers and the Martian domes. Shields will be set to maximum absorption."

"Good," Orion said. "Keep the Type 3 refits in reserve. Let the simulation crews take the first watch. They’ve trained for this. It’s time they see if the drills hold up in real space."

He cut the link. He stood on the edge of Neptune’s orbit, looking inward. The solar system glowed like a jewel. Blue Earth. Green Mars. Gold Luna. Silver Jovian yards. All of it humming with power. All of it ready.

He folded space one last time, stepping back onto the Lunar surface. The dust was still flat from his earlier presence. The sky was dark. The countdown had not changed.

Three days left.

Orion walked toward the command lift. He did not look back. The training was over. The waiting was almost done. He would draw the enemy far from home. He would break their vanguard in the deep void. And he would make sure the shockwaves never touched the people he swore to protect.


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