How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 223: Enjoying the Day

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Chapter 223: Enjoying the Day

January 9, 2030

Timothy woke to the sound of water moving.

Not waves crashing. Just the steady pull and push of the shoreline, like someone dragging a sheet across concrete. The room was dim, curtains not fully closed. A thin strip of morning light cut across the floor.

Hana was already awake.

She sat on the edge of the bed with her hair tied up, phone in hand. Her face looked calm but tight. When she noticed Timothy’s eyes open, she locked the screen and set the phone down like it had bitten her.

"Emergency?" Timothy asked.

"No," Hana replied.

Timothy waited.

Hana exhaled once. "Not an emergency. Just messages that want to pretend they are."

Timothy sat up, rubbed his face, and looked toward the balcony. The air conditioner had cycled off. The room felt humid. He could smell salt even inside. Outside, a scooter passed somewhere. A bird kept repeating the same call.

Hana stood and rolled her shoulders like she was clearing stiffness out of joints.

"You slept," Timothy said.

"I slept," Hana confirmed. "Don’t make it a ceremonial event."

Timothy swung his legs off the bed and stood. His feet hit the cool tile. He drifted toward his bag without thinking.

"Don’t," Hana said.

Timothy froze. "Don’t what."

"Don’t reach for a laptop you didn’t bring," Hana replied.

Timothy looked down. His hand had been moving toward the zipper like a reflex.

"I didn’t bring it," he said.

"Good," Hana said. "Then stop moving like you did."

Timothy set his hands on his hips and stared at the wall for a moment, then nodded.

"Okay," he said. "What’s the plan."

Hana’s eyes narrowed. "You’re doing it again."

"Doing what."

"Turning time into a schedule," Hana said. "We’re not doing that."

Timothy held her gaze. "Then tell me what you want to do."

Hana looked toward the balcony. "Coffee. And I want you to stop asking questions like a manager."

Timothy nodded. "Coffee."

They went downstairs. The hotel breakfast area was small and plain. A few guests ate quietly. A staff member moved between tables with a tray of cups.

Hana picked a table near the window. Timothy sat across from her.

Coffee came in simple mugs. Hana drank first. Timothy followed, then sat still for a moment like he was waiting for someone to hand him a report.

Hana watched him. "You look lost."

"I’m not," Timothy said.

Hana lifted her mug. "You are."

Timothy exhaled. "Then tell me what to do."

Hana blinked at him. "That sentence sounds wrong."

"It’s honest," Timothy said.

Hana pointed at him with her mug. "Don’t use that word again."

Timothy kept his face straight. "Then what do you want."

Hana thought for a moment, eyes tracking outside where the street was starting to fill. "We walk. But this time we don’t stop at the water."

Timothy nodded. "Okay."

Hana set her mug down. "And you’re going to try surfing."

Timothy stared at her. "No."

Hana’s expression didn’t change. "Yes."

"I don’t surf," Timothy said.

"You also don’t rest," Hana replied. "Yet here we are."

Timothy leaned back. "I can walk. I can swim. I don’t need to get dragged by a board."

Hana took a bite of food like she wasn’t negotiating. "You’re going."

Timothy watched her chew, annoyed at the calm.

"Why," he asked.

Hana swallowed. "Because you need to do something that makes you look stupid for ten minutes."

Timothy stared at her. "That’s your reason."

"Yes," Hana said. "And because you’ll like it once you stop acting like you’re above it."

"I’m not above it."

Hana’s eyes sharpened. "Then prove it."

They finished breakfast without rushing. Hana checked her phone once, then shoved it back into her bag. Timothy didn’t check his.

Outside, the heat arrived early. The sky was bright. The street smelled like sunscreen, exhaust, and fried food. People moved in shorts and sandals with no urgency.

A surf shop sat near the road with boards stacked in a rack. Hana walked straight toward it.

Timothy slowed when he saw the boards. "You already booked."

"Yes," Hana said.

Timothy sighed and followed her inside.

The shop was crowded but relaxed. Boards leaned against walls. A fan pushed warm air that smelled like wax and ocean. A few instructors stood around talking like they’d been waiting for the day to start.

Hana spoke to staff, confirmed names, then turned to Timothy.

"Beginner session," she said. "One hour."

Timothy looked at her. "You’re doing it too."

Hana pressed her lips together. "No."

"Why not."

"Because I don’t want to," Hana said.

Timothy nodded once. "Then I don’t want to either."

Hana stepped closer. Her voice dropped. "This isn’t about wanting. This is about you being incapable of not being competent."

Timothy held her gaze. "That’s not true."

Hana pointed toward the boards. "You don’t fail in front of strangers."

Timothy’s jaw tightened. "I fail all the time."

"Not where anyone can see it," Hana said.

Timothy looked toward the open doorway. Outside, waves rolled in. People walked by carrying boards like it was nothing.

He exhaled through his nose. "Fine."

Hana nodded, satisfied, and stepped back like she’d completed the whole point of the trip.

An instructor introduced himself with a quick smile.

"First time?" he asked.

"Yes," Timothy said.

The instructor nodded. "Good. Easier to teach. No bad habits."

Hana stood off to the side with her arms crossed, watching.

Timothy glanced at her. "You’re just going to stand there."

Hana raised an eyebrow. "Yes."

Timothy stared at her, then followed the instructor out.

On the sand, the board felt heavier than Timothy expected, awkward under his arm. He tried to carry it like equipment. The instructor corrected him in two seconds.

"Relax your grip," the instructor said. "It’s not going to run away."

Timothy adjusted.

The instructor ran through basics on the sand. How to lie flat. How to paddle. How to push up. How to bring a foot under. How to stand.

Timothy listened and repeated. His movement was clean, like he was following a drill. The instructor nodded.

"Okay," the instructor said. "You can do the motion. In water, everything changes."

They waded in.

The water hit Timothy’s legs, cold enough to bite, then faded as his body adjusted. The board floated and pulled against his hands in small, constant corrections. The instructor guided him to a shallow spot where small waves rolled through.

"Lie down," the instructor said.

Timothy did.

"Paddle."

Timothy paddled.

The first wave lifted the board and pushed it forward. Timothy felt the sudden change and immediately tried to compensate like he was driving. The board wobbled.

"Stop fighting," the instructor said. "Let it go."

Timothy tried again. Another wave came. He paddled, felt the lift, then tried to push up.

Too slow.

The wave passed under him and he ended up sitting on the board, awkward and annoyed.

Hana’s voice carried from shore. "That looked terrible."

Timothy turned his head toward her, water dripping off his hair. "Thank you."

Hana shrugged. "I’m helping."

The instructor laughed once. "Again."

Second try: Timothy pushed up too fast. Feet slipped. The board shot out from under him. He fell into the water, swallowed salt, eyes stinging.

He surfaced coughing, wiping his face.

Hana clapped once. Not loud. Just enough.

Timothy stared at her. "Stop."

Hana called back, calm. "No."

The instructor steadied the board. "You’re fine. Happens to everyone."

Third try: Timothy timed it better. Paddled hard. Felt the lift. Pushed up. One foot under. The other forward. He stood for half a second—knees shaky, arms out—and then the wave faded and he fell again.

He surfaced and laughed once without meaning to.

The sound came out rough and quick. Not controlled. He looked toward Hana.

Hana had stopped smiling. She looked at him like she’d just seen something she didn’t expect.

"What," Timothy called.

Hana shook her head once. "Nothing."

"Close," the instructor said. "You stood. Next one."

Fourth try: Timothy stood again, longer. The board held steady for a few seconds. His legs shook but didn’t collapse immediately. He didn’t grab for control; he just balanced. When he fell, he came up laughing again, coughing and laughing at the same time.

Hana walked closer into shallow water, stopping where it reached her calves. She didn’t step deeper. She just watched him.

"You look stupid," she said.

Timothy wiped water from his face. "Yes."

Hana nodded. "Good."

When the hour ended, Timothy’s arms felt heavy. His shoulders burned. His throat tasted like salt. He dragged the board out like he’d wrestled it.

The instructor took it with an easy grip. "You did fine. If you stay two more hours, you’ll stand."

Timothy shook his head. "No."

Hana stepped beside him. "He’s done."

Timothy looked at her. "I could do another."

Hana stared at him. "No, you can’t."

"Yes, I can."

Hana’s voice stayed flat. "This is what you do. You find a limit, then you keep going until it breaks. Today, you stop before you turn it into a project."

Timothy wanted to argue. He also knew she was right.

He exhaled. "Fine."

They walked back toward the street. Hana bought him a cold drink from a stall and handed it over without comment.

Timothy drank half in one go.

Hana watched him. "How does it feel."

Timothy stared at the ocean. "Annoying."

Hana nodded. "And."

Timothy swallowed. "Good."

Hana’s mouth twitched. "Okay."

They moved slower after that. Hana bought two cheap towels from a small shop and handed him one like it was a tool. They found shade near a quieter section of beach and sat on a low concrete edge.

Timothy wiped salt from his arms and face. Hana dabbed her hands, then stared at the water like she was counting something.

"You’ll be sore tomorrow," Hana said.

Timothy nodded. "Yes."

"And you didn’t die," Hana added.

"I didn’t," Timothy said.

Hana looked back at the ocean. "See. You can do things that don’t pay you."

"It paid me," Timothy said.

Hana’s eyes narrowed. "How."

Timothy stared at the water and answered plain. "It forced me to stop thinking. For a few seconds."

Hana didn’t reply right away. She nodded once like she accepted the data and filed it.

Silence sat between them. Not awkward. Just quiet.

Then Hana asked, "Do you regret inviting me."

Timothy turned his head. "No."

Hana studied him. "You hesitated."

"I didn’t."

"You did."

Timothy gave up. "I hesitated because I expected you to say no."

Hana’s face stayed neutral. "I almost did."

Timothy nodded. "I know."

"I didn’t because you asked directly," Hana said.

Timothy watched her. "That’s it."

Hana looked away. "Yes."

Timothy didn’t push. He didn’t try to turn it into a moment. He sat there with her and listened to the water.

Later, Hana stood and dusted sand off her shorts. "Food."

Timothy stood too. "Yes."

They ate at a small place near the beach. Rough wooden tables. Food came fast. Nobody recognized them. Nobody cared. The staff served and moved on.

After lunch, Hana pointed down the road. "We walk there."

Timothy looked. "What’s there."

Hana shrugged. "I don’t know. That’s the point."

They walked until the shops thinned and the sound of scooters faded into wind and birds. The heat pressed down, but the breeze off the water helped.

They reached a quieter stretch of sand. Fewer people. A couple near rocks. A dog asleep in shade.

Hana sat down on the sand without caring how it looked. Timothy sat beside her after a moment.

Hana glanced at him. "Don’t start."

Timothy frowned. "Start what."

"Start talking about building a retreat for employees," Hana said.

"I wasn’t going to."

Hana’s eyes narrowed. "You were thinking it."

Timothy exhaled. "Maybe."

Hana shook her head. "You can’t just exist."

"I’m trying," Timothy said.

"Try harder," Hana replied.

Timothy stared out at the water. He didn’t like being told what to do. He did like that the instruction was simple: stop.

His phone buzzed in his pocket.

He froze.

Hana’s head snapped toward him. "Don’t."

The phone buzzed again.

"If it’s not fire, you ignore it," Hana said.

Timothy swallowed and kept his hand away. It buzzed a third time, then stopped.

Hana watched him, waiting for his willpower to crack.

Timothy exhaled slowly. "Okay."

Hana’s shoulders dropped by a degree. "Good."

A minute later, the phone buzzed again, different pattern—short, spaced. The one Hana had set for real emergencies months ago.

Hana went still.

Timothy didn’t reach for it yet. He looked at Hana first.

Hana’s jaw tightened. "Fine. Check."

Timothy pulled it out.

Carlos. One line.

Need confirmation. Track booking moved. Still secure. Call when you can.

Timothy stared at it, then looked at Hana.

Hana’s face was flat. "That’s not an emergency."

"It’s not," Timothy agreed.

Hana held out her hand.

Timothy hesitated.

"Give it," Hana said.

Timothy handed the phone over.

Hana typed a reply in two seconds.

Not now. Proceed as planned. Use your judgment. Only call if someone is hurt or something is burning.

She handed it back.

Timothy looked at the message, then at Hana. "Thank you."

Hana stared at him. "Don’t thank me. Learn."

Timothy put the phone away and sat down again.

The ocean rolled in and pulled back. Hana’s knee bumped his once as she adjusted. Neither of them moved away.

Hana stared at the water. "Two days isn’t enough."

Timothy nodded. "No."

Hana turned her head toward him. "But it’s something."

Timothy looked back. "Yes."

Hana stood first, dusting sand off her hands. "Come on. We’re not ending the day sitting like old people."

Timothy stood, arms tired, shoulders tight from the hour in the water, and followed her down the sand toward the shoreline.

The tide crept up around their feet as the wind pushed harder from the open sea. Hana stepped forward without hesitation. Timothy matched her pace, the water cold at his ankles, the pull steady as the next wave gathered and came in.

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