Myriad Heavens: Rise of the Rune God

Chapter 171: Orbital Expansion

Myriad Heavens: Rise of the Rune God

Chapter 171: Orbital Expansion

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Chapter 171: Chapter 171: Orbital Expansion

BUSINESS STATUS UPDATE - SAME DAY

While Orion cultivated in isolation, the Starr Technologies empire continued expanding at rates that made economic analysts struggle to find adequate descriptive language.

MANUFACTURING CAPACITY:

The Mark III replicator count had reached 10,000 units operating continuously across multiple facilities, each one producing advanced components at speeds that seemed to violate thermodynamics, and the manufacturing capability this represented exceeded all of Earth’s previous industrial output combined.

Daily production included:

Gene enhancement serum: 10 million doses (50 billion credits value at cost) Fusion reactors: 500 units (various sizes for different applications) Photonic chips: 100 million units (consumer and industrial) Advanced materials: 10,000 tons (superconductors, programmable polymers, enhanced alloys) Spacecraft components: Complete vessels every 24 hours Infrastructure equipment: Water processors, atmospheric cleaners, construction systems Consumer products: VR headsets, vehicles, appliances, everything humanity needed

REVENUE STREAMS:

Monthly revenue had stabilized around 500 billion credits from multiple sources:

Virtual world subscriptions: 200 billion (3 billion users at average 66 credits monthly) Technology licensing: 150 billion (governments and corporations paying for fusion, photonics, materials) Gene enhancement serum: 50 billion (10 million doses monthly at 50 credits, prioritizing medical need) Space services: 50 billion (satellite deployment, debris cleanup, orbital manufacturing) Consumer products: 50 billion (various goods sold through traditional retail)

The numbers were staggering, but more important was what they represented: economic transformation happening in real-time as Starr Technologies became the dominant force in essentially every technological sector simultaneously.

SUBSIDIARY OPERATIONS:

Each specialized division was expanding globally:

Starr Medical: Operating 200 facilities worldwide, administering gene enhancement to terminal patients, coordinating human trials, preparing for mass rollout to general population.

Starr Energy: Deploying fusion reactors across 100+ countries, replacing fossil fuel infrastructure, providing clean unlimited power that was making energy scarcity obsolete.

Starr Space: Manufacturing spacecraft, launching satellites, coordinating orbital operations, preparing lunar base deployment.

Starr Education: Operating Starr Academy with 2.5 billion enrolled students, democratizing advanced education, transforming global learning.

Starr Infrastructure: Deploying atmospheric processors and water purification systems in developing nations, upgrading cities worldwide.

Starr Robotics: Manufacturing autonomous systems for industry, agriculture, construction, healthcare.

And all of it operated with minimal oversight from Orion, the company running itself through the competent leadership he’d recruited and the advanced AI coordination that Rene provided.

SPACE OPERATIONS - ORBITAL DEPLOYMENT - DAY 14-15

Commander Elena Volkov stood in the Starr Space control center watching multiple displays showing orbital operations that would have required years of preparation for traditional space agencies but were happening on accelerated timelines because Mark III manufacturing made the impossible routine.

"Quantum communication satellite deployment beginning," she announced to the operations team, "500 satellites ready for launch, deployment schedule is 250 satellites per day over two days using automated launch systems—all personnel to stations, monitoring active, let’s make history."

LAUNCH VEHICLE: MERCURY-CLASS AUTOMATED COURIER

The spacecraft designed for satellite deployment sat on the launch pad—sleek thirty-meter vessel with graviton anti-gravity system that would lift it vertically from the surface without rocket thrust, fusion drive for orbital maneuvering, and cargo bay configured to hold 25 satellites per flight.

"Mercury-1 through Mercury-10 fueled and ready," the launch coordinator reported, "graviton systems charged, fusion reactors at operational temperature, cargo loaded, automated flight programs verified—ready for launch on your command, Commander."

"Launch sequence initiated," Volkov confirmed, watching as the automated systems took over, "Mercury-1, you are cleared for vertical ascent."

The graviton anti-gravity generators activated with a low hum that vibrated through the ground, creating repulsion against Earth’s gravitational field, and the thirty-meter spacecraft simply lifted straight upward with no thrust plume, no explosive force, just smooth vertical ascent that looked like magic but was actually precisely controlled physics.

Mercury-1 rose at 100 meters per second, accelerating smoothly, the graviton system compensating for atmospheric resistance, and within four minutes it had cleared the atmosphere and entered orbital space where fusion drives activated for final positioning.

"Mercury-1 orbital insertion successful," the tracking officer reported, "satellite deployment beginning."

In orbit, the automated cargo bay opened and released 25 quantum communication satellites in a carefully choreographed sequence, each one equipped with its own graviton positioning system to reach its assigned orbital location, and within twenty minutes all 25 satellites were in position and activating their quantum entanglement systems.

"First deployment wave complete," Volkov announced with satisfaction, "Mercury-2 launching in ten minutes for second wave—maintaining 250 satellites per day schedule."

The launches continued throughout Day 14 and Day 15 with mechanical precision: Mercury-class vessels lifting vertically from the surface every 90 minutes, each one carrying 25 satellites to orbit, automated systems handling every aspect of the process without requiring human intervention beyond monitoring, and by the end of Day 15 all 500 quantum communication satellites were in position creating a global network of instantaneous communication that eliminated light-speed delays completely.

"Quantum network operational," Dr. Okafor confirmed from the communications center, "all 500 satellites reporting functional, entanglement pairs verified, latency measured at effectively zero across all tested connections—we now have faster-than-light communication anywhere on Earth and extending to Moon orbit."

SPACE DEBRIS CLEANUP - ONGOING PROGRESS

While satellite deployment proceeded, the autonomous debris collection systems continued their systematic work clearing Earth orbit of the 34,000 tracked objects that posed collision risks to spacecraft and satellites.

The cleanup satellites—each one equipped with graviton manipulation systems and material processing capability—had been operating continuously for two weeks, and progress was ahead of the original eighteen-month projection.

"Debris cleanup status," the tracking officer reported, "7,200 objects collected and processed, representing 21% of total tracked debris—current collection rate is 500 objects daily, projected completion in eleven months." 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖

The collected debris wasn’t wasted—each cleanup satellite included Mark III replicator capability that broke down the space junk into constituent elements and reformed them into useful materials like refined aluminum, titanium, and steel that were being stockpiled in orbit for future construction projects.

"We’re essentially mining orbit while cleaning it," Volkov noted with approval, "collecting thousands of tons of refined metals that would have cost millions to launch from Earth, getting them for free while solving the debris problem simultaneously—efficient and profitable."

TITAN-CLASS CARGO SHIP - TEST FLIGHT

The first completed Titan-class heavy cargo ship sat ready for its maiden flight—one hundred meters long, forty meters in diameter, designed to carry 5,000 tons of cargo using graviton anti-gravity lift that made conventional rockets obsolete.

"Titan-1 pre-flight check complete," the flight director reported, "graviton lift system verified, fusion drives operational, cargo bay loaded with 3,000 tons of lunar base equipment for initial testing—ready for test flight on your authorization, Commander."

"Authorized," Volkov confirmed, "Titan-1, you are cleared for vertical ascent to 400-kilometer orbit, maintain position for systems verification, then return to surface—let’s see what this ship can do."

The Titan-class vessel activated its graviton system and the effect was dramatic—5,000 tons of spacecraft plus 3,000 tons of cargo, 8,000 tons total, simply lifted off the ground with the same smooth vertical ascent as the smaller Mercury-class ships, the graviton generators creating enough repulsion to make the massive vessel effectively weightless.

"Ascent rate stable at 50 meters per second," the tracking officer reported, "graviton power consumption within projected parameters, structural integrity perfect, cargo secure—this is beautiful, Commander, absolutely beautiful."

The Titan-class reached orbit in eight minutes, its massive bulk settling into 400-kilometer altitude with precision that would have been impossible with conventional chemical rockets, and the test program continued with maneuvering tests, cargo deployment simulations, and system verification that confirmed the design worked exactly as specified.

"Test flight successful," Volkov announced after two hours of orbital operations, "Titan-1 performing beyond specifications, cargo capacity verified, graviton lift system perfect—we are cleared for operational missions, and lunar base deployment can proceed on schedule."

ANTIMATTER FACTORY - LAGRANGE POINT DEPLOYMENT

The final major space operation was deploying the modular antimatter factory to the stable L5 Lagrange point where it would orbit safely away from Earth while producing one hundred kilograms of antimatter daily.

Four factory modules had been manufactured—particle acceleration, magnetic containment, safety monitoring, and power generation—each one a hundred-ton unit that required Titan-class transport to reach orbit.

"Antimatter factory deployment beginning," Volkov announced, "Titan-2 departing with first module, estimated arrival at L5 point in six hours—subsequent modules will follow at 12-hour intervals until complete factory is assembled and operational."

The Titan-class vessel carrying the particle acceleration module lifted from the surface and began the journey to L5, its fusion drives providing thrust for the longer trip beyond low Earth orbit, and autonomous assembly robots prepared to connect the modules as they arrived.

"Factory operational timeline," Dr. Okafor reported, "four days to complete assembly assuming no delays, then three days of testing and calibration, then full operation producing one hundred kilograms antimatter daily starting Day 22—we’re right on schedule for antimatter-powered spacecraft deployment."

LUNAR BASE EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURING

In parallel with orbital operations, Mark III replicators were manufacturing components for the lunar base that would be humanity’s first permanent off-Earth settlement:

Habitat modules: 20 units providing living space for 200 people Life support systems: Atmospheric processors, water recyclers, food production Mining equipment: Automated excavators for ice and mineral extraction Manufacturing facilities: Lunar-based Mark IIIs using local resources Power generation: Fusion reactors providing unlimited energy Transportation: Vehicles for surface operations Construction robots: Automated systems for base expansion

"Lunar equipment 60% complete," the manufacturing coordinator reported, "estimated completion Day 20, transport missions begin Day 25 using Titan-class vessels, base operational Day 35—we’re ahead of the original sixty-day timeline by nearly two weeks."

Commander Volkov reviewed all the ongoing operations—satellite deployment proceeding perfectly, debris cleanup ahead of schedule, Titan-class ships operational, antimatter factory assembling in orbit, lunar base equipment manufacturing on track—and felt pride in what her team had accomplished in just two weeks of intensive space operations.

"Status summary," she dictated for the daily report to Cassia and Rene, "space program executing flawlessly across all initiatives—quantum network operational providing global instant communication, debris cleanup 21% complete, Titan-class cargo ships verified and ready for heavy lift operations, antimatter factory assembling at L5 and will be operational within one week, lunar base deployment on track for Day 35 first inhabitants—Earth is becoming a spacefaring civilization faster than anyone projected, and we’re just getting started."

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