Chapter 1: Chapter 1: Truck-kun’s First Mission
The fluorescent lights of DataFlow Solutions hummed their usual monotonous tune as Runar Cross leaned back in his ergonomic chair, fingers drumming against his mechanical keyboard. The open-plan office buzzed with the familiar symphony of typing, muted conversations, and the occasional frustrated sigh.
“This is a terrible idea, Marcus.”
Across the desk, his manager—a portly man with thinning hair and an expensive suit that didn’t quite fit—frowned at his tablet. Marcus Chen had the look of someone who’d spent too many years climbing corporate ladders and not enough time understanding the products he managed.
“The client specifically requested it,” Marcus said without looking up. “They want a social media integration feature. It’s trendy.”
“It’s bloat.” Runar pulled up the codebase on his monitor, highlighting the relevant sections with practiced efficiency. “Look, we’ve built a lean, efficient project management tool. Our selling point is simplicity and speed. Adding social media feeds will slow down load times, introduce security vulnerabilities, and frankly, nobody asked for it except one client who probably won’t even use it after launch.”
Marcus finally met his eyes, and Runar recognized that particular expression—the look of a manager who’d already made up his mind and was simply going through the motions of appearing to listen.
“I understand your concerns, but—”
“Do you?” Runar cut him off, leaning forward. “Because I sold my last software company for twelve million dollars specifically because I got tired of feature creep killing good products. I came here because DataFlow seemed different. Focused. Now you want me to compromise that?”
The office had gone quiet. Runar noticed Sarah from accounting pretending very hard to focus on her spreadsheet while obviously listening. Great. Office drama. Exactly what he’d been trying to avoid.
Marcus’s face reddened. “That’s quite enough, Runar. You’re a talented developer, but you’re not the CEO here. The decision has been made. I expect the feature implemented by end of month.”
Runar stood, grabbing his jacket from the back of his chair. “Then you can implement it yourself. I’m going home.”
“It’s only three in the afternoon!”
“And I’m a contractor, not a slave.” Runar shouldered his backpack, ignoring the mixture of shocked and impressed looks from his coworkers. “I’ll think about whether I want to keep working here over the weekend. You think about whether you want to keep destroying a good product with bad decisions.”
He walked out before Marcus could sputter a response.
The evening air was crisp as Runar made his way through the city streets, hands stuffed in his jacket pockets. He probably shouldn’t have been so blunt, but honestly? He didn’t need this job. The twelve million from his last company was invested well enough that he could live comfortably without working another day in his life.
He’d taken the position at DataFlow because sitting idle drove him crazy. His brain needed problems to solve, puzzles to untangle. But not like this. Not watching good software get ruined by people who didn’t understand it.
Maybe he’d finally start that personal project he’d been thinking about. Something with—
A horn blared.
Runar’s head snapped up. A massive truck was barreling down the street directly toward him, no driver visible in the cab. His mind processed the impossibility of the situation even as his body reacted on instinct.
Years of parkour training kicked in. He sprinted forward, planted his foot on a fire hydrant, used the momentum to run up the brick wall of a nearby building, and executed a perfect backflip over the truck as it roared past beneath him.
He landed in a crouch on the pavement behind the vehicle, breathing hard, adrenaline singing through his veins.
“What the fuck?”
The truck screeched to a halt twenty feet away. Runar straightened slowly, every muscle tensed. The cab was definitely empty—he could see straight through the windows. An autonomous vehicle malfunction? But those had safety protocols, multiple redundancies…
He pulled out his phone with shaking hands, thumb hovering over the emergency call button.
Then the truck spoke.
“Okay, that was actually really impressive. Like, genuinely. The academy never covered what to do if the target has parkour skills.”
Runar’s phone slipped from his fingers, clattering on the asphalt. The voice was coming from the truck itself—young, nervous, definitely male, and entirely impossible.
“I’m sorry,” the truck continued, and now Runar could see it… changing. Metal panels shifting, wheels retracting, the entire vehicle reconfiguring itself like something out of a Transformers movie. Within seconds, a twenty-foot-tall robot stood in the middle of the street, looking down at him with glowing blue optics.
“I just graduated from Truck Reincarnation Academy,” the robot said, wringing its massive hands together in a surprisingly human gesture of anxiety. “This is my first mission. I can’t fail, or I’ll become a laughing stock among my fellow trucks. So… sorry, buddy. You have to die and reincarnate.”
Runar’s brain, which had been frantically trying to process the transformation, latched onto the words instead.
“Truck. Reincarnation. Academy.”
“Yeah!” The robot brightened slightly. “It’s a very prestigious institution. Three years of intensive training. We learn optimal impact angles, target acquisition, dimensional barrier penetration protocols—it’s really quite comprehensive.”
“This isn’t real.” Runar backed away slowly. “I’m having a stroke. Or I hit my head during that flip.”
“You’re not having a stroke. You’re perfectly healthy. Well, for another minute or so, anyway.” The robot’s optics dimmed apologetically. “Look, normally if someone dodges a reincarnation truck, we’re not allowed to continue the attempt. Interfering with fate and all that. But I’m the genius of my class! I passed every simulation with perfect scores. I can’t have a failed first mission on my record.”
Runar turned and ran.
The street blurred around him as he sprinted with everything he had, parkour training lending him speed and efficiency. He vaulted a parked car, slid under a shop awning, cut through an alley—
A massive metal hand plucked him out of the air like a child grabbing a toy.
“Really impressive evasion skills,” the truck-robot said, holding Runar up to its face. The blue optics studied him with what might have been genuine admiration. “You’d probably make a great protagonist in whatever world you end up in. Speaking of which—”
“Wait!” Runar struggled uselessly against the unyielding grip. “You can’t just kill people because you’re worried about your performance review!”
“I know, I know, it’s not ideal.” The robot sighed, a sound like pressurized air releasing. “Tell you what—because you’re being so cool about this, and because that backflip was genuinely sick, I’ll give you a gift. Something to help you on your new journey.”
“I don’t want a gift, I want to not die!”
“Too late for that, I’m afraid. But trust me, where you’re going? You’ll thank me eventually.” The robot’s other hand came up, and a strange symbol began glowing between its palm and Runar’s forehead. “I’m giving you the Heaven-Defying Comprehension Mantra. It’s kind of a big deal. Usually costs, like, a thousand merit points at the academy store, but I’ve been saving up.”
Warmth flooded through Runar’s skull, and suddenly there were words in his mind—no, not words exactly. Concepts. A rhythm. A pattern that felt simultaneously alien and intimately familiar, like remembering a song from a dream.
“There we go.” The robot sounded satisfied. “Now, this is going to hurt for a second, but then you won’t feel anything, and then you’ll wake up in your new life. Try to be less argumentative with your bosses in the next one, yeah?”
“Wait, what are you—”
The world twisted.
Pain beyond description exploded through every nerve. Runar tried to scream, but he had no lungs, no throat, no body. He was being unmade, every atom of his existence torn apart and scattered across—
Nothing.
Silence.
Darkness.
Peace.
Consciousness returned like a light switch flipping on.
The first thing Runar noticed was that he couldn’t see properly. Everything was blurry, colors washed out and indistinct. The second thing he noticed was that he couldn’t move. Well, he could move, but his limbs felt wrong—weak, uncoordinated, tiny.
The third thing he noticed was the voice.
“—beautiful boy,” someone was saying, and the words sounded distant, muffled. “Kaelen, look at his eyes. He’s so alert.”
Another voice, deeper: “Takes after his mother. Hello, little one. Welcome to the world.”
Oh no.
Runar tried to turn his head toward the voices, managed only to roll it slightly to the side. Blurry shapes resolved into faces—a woman with kind features and auburn hair, exhausted but smiling, and a man with gentle amber eyes leaning over her shoulder.
His parents. These were his parents. He’d been reborn as a baby.
That ridiculous truck actually did it.
“Should we name him?” The woman—his mother—asked softly.
“We discussed this,” the man said, and Runar could hear the smile in his voice. “Runar. After your grandfather.”
Well, at least I get to keep my name. That’s something.
Runar tried to speak, to tell them he was actually a twenty-eight-year-old software developer from Earth who’d just been killed by a sentient truck with performance anxiety. What came out was a gurgling noise that might have been charitably interpreted as a burp.
His mother laughed, the sound warm and musical. “He’s perfect.”
As his new parents cooed over him, Runar became aware of something else—a presence in the back of his mind. Not the mantra the truck had given him (though he could feel that too, a steady rhythm humming beneath his thoughts), but something more substantial. More systematic.
Words materialized in his vision, glowing softly:
[REINCARNATION SYSTEM INITIALIZED]
[HOST: RUNAR CROSS]
[STATUS: NEWBORN]
[AVAILABLE FUNCTIONS:]
Infinite Qi Realm (LOCKED – Insufficient Essence)
Comprehension Space Realm (UNLOCKED)
World-Hopping Transfer Gate (LOCKED – Insufficient Space Energy)
[SPECIAL ABILITY DETECTED: Heaven-Defying Comprehension Mantra]
[WELCOME TO TELSTRA]
Despite everything—the absurdity of his death, the shock of reincarnation, the complete helplessness of being a newborn—Runar felt something unexpected bloom in his chest.
Excitement.
He had a second chance. A whole new world to explore. A system that promised incredible power. And if the mantra was anything like what he’d felt when the truck gave it to him, he had the tools to actually make use of it all.
Alright, Telstra, Runar thought, letting his baby body relax in his mother’s arms. Let’s see what you’ve got. And truck-kun?
The system flickered slightly, as if acknowledging his thoughts.
One day, I’m going to find you. And when I do, we’re going to have a conversation about proper mission protocols.
His mother began humming a lullaby, and despite himself, Runar felt his consciousness beginning to drift. Baby bodies apparently needed a lot of sleep. As darkness pulled at the edges of his awareness, one final thought crossed his mind:
This is going to be interesting.
The system pulsed once in agreement, and Runar Cross—genius programmer turned reincarnated baby—slept.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 163: Mastery in a Day 2
- Chapter 162: Mastery in a Day
- Chapter 161: GLOBAL REACTION 2
- Chapter 160: GLOBAL REACTION
- Chapter 159: The World Transforms
- Chapter 158: Plans
- Chapter 157: Tests 2 - Energy Control and ELEMENTAL MANIPULATION
- Chapter 156: Tests
- Chapter 155: Gravity Chamber
- Chapter 154: Attempting the Third Ring
- Chapter 153: Saturation Point
- Chapter 152: The First Ring
- Chapter 151: Abundance
- Chapter 150: Forge Installation
- Chapter 149: The Synthesis
- Chapter 148: Exotic Forge
- Chapter 147: Exponential Manufacturing
- Chapter 146: Two Days Forward 3
- Chapter 145: Two Days Forward 2
- Chapter 144: Two Days Forward
- Chapter 143: Technological Explosion 3
- Chapter 142: Technological Explosion 2
- Chapter 141: Technological Explosion
- Chapter 140: Transformation Assessment
- Chapter 139: Full Cultivation - First Hour
- Chapter 138: First Circulation
- Chapter 137: THE INFINITE CIRCULATION METHOD
- Chapter 136: Knowledge Transfer
- Chapter 135: Hybrid Quantum-Optical Computing Architecture
- Chapter 134: Public Release & Quantum Leap
- Chapter 133: Night of Breakthroughs 2
- Chapter 132: Night of Breakthroughs
- Chapter 131: Going home to study 3
- Chapter 130: Going home to study 2
- Chapter 129: Going home to study
- Chapter 128: The Reward That Wasn’t 2
- Chapter 127: The Reward That Wasn’t
- Chapter 126: Technology Boom 2
- Chapter 125: Technology Boom
- Chapter 124: The Launch Event - Part 5 (Fusion Reactor Debut)
- Chapter 123: The Launch Event - Part 4 (Starr VR Debut)
- Chapter 122: The Launch Event - Part 3 (Starr VR Debut)
- Chapter 121: The Launch Event - Part 2
- Chapter 120: The Launch Event - Part 1
- Chapter 119: The Replicator Project 2
- Chapter 118: The Replicator Project 2
- Chapter 117: The Replicator Project
- Chapter 116: New Home, New Attention
- Chapter 115: New Look
- Chapter 114: Rapid Progress
- Chapter 113: Mind Cultivation and Confession
- Chapter 112: Cultivation
- Chapter 111: Explosive Growth 2
- Chapter 110: Explosive Growth
- Chapter 109: Planning and New Normal 2
- Chapter 108: Planning and New Normal
- Chapter 107: Dinner
- Chapter 106: Verification
- Chapter 105: First Day at Helix
- Chapter 104: Preparation
- Chapter 103: Protection
- Chapter 102: Perfect Design 2
- Chapter 101: Perfect Design
- Chapter 100: Breakthroughs
- Chapter 99: Family Business
- Chapter 98: The Cleansing
- Chapter 97: Digital Revolution
- Chapter 96: Neural Interface 2
- Chapter 95: Neural Interface
- Chapter 94: Foundation 2
- Chapter 93: Foundation
- Chapter 92: Enhancement
- Chapter 91: Awakening in Another World
- Chapter 90: Accumulation and Discovery
- Chapter 89: Vacuum Combat 2
- Chapter 88: Vacuum Combat
- Chapter 87: Mission Evaluation
- Chapter 86: Mission Hall
- Chapter 85 : Battle With Instructor and Assasinations
- Chapter 84: First Day
- Chapter 83: Earth-Prime 2
- Chapter 82: Earth-Prime 1
- Chapter 81: Trading Post
- Chapter 80: Assessment Conclusion 2
- Chapter 79: Assessment Conclusion
- Chapter 78: Shock
- Chapter 77: First Blood
- Chapter 76: Pirate Den 3
- Chapter 75: The Pirate Den 2
- Chapter 74: The Pirate Den
- Chapter 73: Quasar Metamorphosis 2
- Chapter 72: Quasar Metamorphosis 1
- Chapter 71: Soul Tempering
- Chapter 70: Reality Fragments & Soul Tempering
- Chapter 69: Soul Tempering Preparation 2
- Chapter 68: Soul Tempering Preparation
- Chapter 67: The Runic Clone 2
- Chapter 66: The Runic Clone
- Chapter 65: The Soul Problem
- Chapter 64: Body Reconstruction 2
- Chapter 63: Body Reconstruction 1
- Chapter 62: Universe Genesis
- Chapter 61: Origin Essence
- Chapter 60: The Path to Universal Seed
- Chapter 59: Extreme Training Decision
- Chapter 58 - 49: Training
- Chapter 57: Meeting in Suite 4701
- Chapter 56: The Tower of Stars
- Chapter 55: The Cosmic Vessel
- Chapter 54: Transition
- Chapter 53: Happy New Year and The Final Goodbyes
- Chapter 52: Adaptive Nano Combat Suits
- Chapter 51: Preparations & Shopping Morning
- Chapter 50: The Incident - Arrogant Young Master
- Chapter 49: Three Days of Farewell
- Chapter 48: Family Discussion
- Chapter 47: Gaia’s Invitation
- Chapter 46: Final Statistics
- Chapter 45: Confession
- Chapter 44: Satellite Orbit Advancement and Battle
- Chapter 43: Sixteen Years in Moments (Flashback)
- Chapter 42: Final Years and Legacy Real World Interlude
- Chapter 41: Years of Growth Training Complex
- Chapter 40: First Steps Into Eternity
- Chapter 39: Creating Techniques for the Parents
- Chapter 38: Space-Time Jump
- Chapter 37: Sealed Transformation
- Chapter 36: Pills and Seals
- Chapter 35: Solving the imbalance
- Chapter 34: Void Severance - Primordial Grade Weapon Soul
- Chapter 33: Transformation and Awakening
- Chapter 32: System Rewards and Reflection Late Night - Runar’s Room
- Chapter 31: Aftermath and Return
- Chapter 30: Journey to Shelter - The Families
- Chapter 29: Universal Will and Ascension The Pill’s Fury
- Chapter 28: Starlight Judgment Return to Reality
- Chapter 27: Comprehension and Evolution
- Chapter 26: The calm before the storm 2
- Chapter 25: The calm before the storm
- Chapter 24: The Realization 2
- Chapter 23: The Realization
- Chapter 22: The Spars Begin 2
- Chapter 21: The Spars Begin
- Chapter 20: Secret Assistance 2
- Chapter 19: Secret Assistance
- Chapter 18: What do you mean techniques aren’t hoarded like a national treasures
- Chapter 17: Transcendent Comprehension 2
- Chapter 16: Transcendent Comprehension
- Chapter 15: Cultivating the Path
- Chapter 14: Perfecting the Path
- Chapter 13: Explanations and Adjustments
- Chapter 12: Revelations 2
- Chapter 11: Revelations
- Chapter 10: Dual Cultivation Mall
- Chapter 9: Foundation Awakening
- Chapter 8: Back Home and Preparations
- Chapter 7: Meeting Family Friends
- Chapter 6: System’s Bounty
- Chapter 5: Runic Synthesis 2
- Chapter 4: Runic Synthesis
- Chapter 3: Newbie Gift Package 2
- Chapter 2: Newbie Gift Package
- Chapter 1: Truck-kun’s First Mission