How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 224: The Bar

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Chapter 224: The Bar

January 10, 2030

The bar was a low building with a tin roof and a sign that had faded until the last letters were guesswork. It sat a few steps off the beach road, close enough that sand still tracked in on people’s slippers, far enough that the noise from the shoreline didn’t drown out conversation.

Hana stopped at the entrance and looked inside.

Timothy stood half a step behind her, towel still in his bag, salt still on his skin no matter how much he had rinsed. His shirt was clean but light, the kind of thing he never wore in Manila unless someone forced it on him.

Hana glanced back. "One drink."

Timothy stared at her. "You’re setting a limit again."

"I’m setting a boundary," Hana said. "There’s a difference."

Timothy didn’t answer. He followed her in.

The place smelled like beer, fried food, and old wood that had taken too much humidity. A small TV played a local channel on low volume, half covered by a dangling banner advertising a brand of gin. Two electric fans pushed warm air around the room, doing more noise than cooling. A few tables were occupied by tourists with sunburned shoulders. At the bar itself, three locals sat in a row, talking in short bursts and laughing like they weren’t trying to be heard.

Hana picked stools at the end, not in the center where people would look. She sat first. Timothy sat beside her.

A bartender approached, wiping his hands on a rag that did nothing.

"Beer?" he asked.

Hana nodded. "Two."

Timothy opened his mouth, then closed it.

Hana didn’t look at him. "Don’t ask for water."

Timothy stared at her. "I wasn’t going to ask for water."

Hana finally looked at him. "You were going to ask for something that tastes like nothing."

"I don’t like getting drunk," Timothy said.

Hana’s eyes stayed flat. "Then don’t. Drink one beer and stop."

The bartender set two bottles down, cold enough that condensation formed fast. He placed two small glasses that looked like they were optional.

Hana didn’t use the glass. She drank from the bottle.

Timothy picked up his bottle and held it for a second like he was checking weight, temperature, and risk.

Hana watched him. "It’s beer, not a contract."

Timothy took a sip. It was cold and bitter and cheap in a way he didn’t mind. He swallowed and set it down.

Hana’s phone buzzed inside her bag.

Timothy’s eyes went to it out of reflex.

Hana didn’t reach for it. She took another sip, kept her face forward, and let it buzz again.

Timothy waited for her to crack.

She didn’t.

The buzzing stopped.

Timothy took a longer drink, then leaned back on the stool. His shoulders still felt tight from surfing. His forearms ached in a dull way that didn’t feel like work. The ache was honest.

Hana’s gaze moved across the room without her head turning much. She clocked the exit, the bar mirror, the table near the door, the men on the far side of the room. The scan was automatic.

Timothy noticed. "You’re still on."

Hana didn’t deny it. "It keeps me quiet."

"That’s what you told me about the car," Timothy said.

Hana’s mouth twitched. "Don’t start."

Timothy stared at his bottle. "I’m not starting. I’m observing."

Hana glanced at him. "That word again."

Timothy took another sip to avoid answering.

A couple at the next table laughed. The woman leaned into the man’s shoulder and pointed at something on the TV. The man nodded like he didn’t care what the TV was showing but cared that she wanted him to look.

Hana watched them for one second, then looked away.

Timothy said, "Do you come to places like this alone."

Hana’s eyes stayed forward. "No."

"Why," Timothy asked.

Hana drank. "Because I don’t like being watched."

Timothy nodded once. "Same."

Hana looked at him. "No. You don’t like being interrupted."

Timothy stared at her. "That’s also true."

The bartender returned with a small plate of peanuts and set it down without asking. Hana slid the plate between them.

Timothy took one peanut and ate it, then took a handful like he didn’t want to show he was hungry.

Hana watched him eat, then said, "You didn’t finish the surf lesson."

"I finished the hour," Timothy replied.

"You quit," Hana said.

Timothy’s jaw tightened. "You told me to stop."

"I told you to stop turning it into a project," Hana said. "Not to quit."

Timothy took a drink. "That’s the same."

Hana shook her head. "No. That’s you. You only know two modes. All in or gone."

Timothy stared at her. "What do you want me to do."

Hana leaned back. "You did it. You fell. You laughed. You walked away. That’s already new."

Timothy didn’t answer. He watched the condensation drip down the bottle and collected the drops at the base with his thumb. He wiped it on his shorts without thinking.

Hana said, "You’re still thinking about the track."

Timothy’s eyes lifted. "I’m not."

"You are," Hana said. "Your face does the thing."

"What thing."

Hana held up her hand and made a small tightening motion with her fingers, like something was pulling invisible string.

Timothy stared. "That’s not helpful."

"It’s accurate," Hana said. "You tighten when you want to control."

Timothy took a slow breath through his nose. "Carlos said it’s secure."

"Then it’s secure," Hana replied. "Your brain wants a live feed. It wants a dashboard."

Timothy’s mouth twitched. "Yes."

Hana pointed at his bottle. "Use that instead."

Timothy drank again.

For a moment, there was no conversation. Just the low TV audio, the clink of bottles, the fans pushing air around. Outside, a tricycle passed and the engine sound thinned out into the night.

Hana set her bottle down and looked at Timothy straight.

"You’re not going back to the tower the same," she said.

Timothy frowned. "That sounds like a speech."

"It’s not," Hana replied. "It’s a warning."

Timothy didn’t respond.

Hana continued, "If you go back and keep the pace the same, you’ll hate everyone for being slow."

Timothy stared at her. "I already do."

Hana nodded. "Exactly."

Timothy took a longer sip. The beer wasn’t strong, but it loosened the edges. He felt his shoulders drop by a small amount, like his body was tired of holding tension and took permission to let go.

Hana watched him again. "There. That."

Timothy looked at her. "What."

"You look less armed," Hana said.

Timothy let out a short breath. "Good."

Hana took another sip. "You should try talking like a person."

Timothy stared at his bottle. "I am a person."

Hana’s eyes didn’t soften. "You talk like a memo."

Timothy tapped the bottle lightly against the bar. "What do you want, then."

Hana’s gaze moved to the shelves behind the bartender. Rows of bottles. Local rum. Whiskey he didn’t trust. Something bright blue in a tall bottle. A few expensive labels that looked out of place.

Hana said, "Tell me what you wanted before you started building the tower."

Timothy’s eyes narrowed. "That’s a trap."

"It’s a question," Hana said.

Timothy stared at the bar surface. It had scratches, old stains that wouldn’t come out, and small dents where people had slammed bottles down.

He said, "I wanted to not be broke."

Hana nodded once. "That’s obvious. After that."

Timothy took a breath. "I wanted to build things that worked."

Hana didn’t interrupt.

Timothy continued, "When I was younger, I hated how everything here felt temporary. Projects started, then died. Roads got patched, then broke again. People always had excuses ready. I wanted something that didn’t depend on luck."

Hana listened like she was taking it in and not trying to weaponize it.

Timothy glanced at her, then kept going. "Then it got bigger. It stopped being about a thing working and started being about the machine staying alive."

Hana nodded. "Because you made it your responsibility."

Timothy gave a small shrug. "Someone had to."

Hana leaned forward slightly. "No. You decided you had to."

Timothy looked at her. "Same outcome."

"No," Hana said. "Different cost."

Timothy didn’t answer. He took another sip. His stomach warmed.

Hana said, "Do you know what you want now."

Timothy stared at the room, the people, the old wood, the fans.

"I want to stop being needed," he said.

Hana’s eyebrows lifted a little. "That’s the most honest thing you’ve said since we left." 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝒆𝒘𝙚𝓫𝙣𝙤𝒗𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢

Timothy stared at her. "Don’t say it like it’s cute."

"It’s not cute," Hana replied. "It’s rare."

Timothy looked away.

The bartender came back and asked, "Another?"

Hana looked at Timothy. Not a command, a check.

Timothy thought for a second, then nodded once. "One more."

Hana nodded. "One."

The bartender took their bottles and replaced them with fresh ones.

Timothy drank slower this time.

Hana said, "You know what you did today."

"I surfed badly," Timothy replied.

Hana snorted. "You let people see you fail. You didn’t buy your way out of it. You didn’t turn it into a competition."

Timothy stared at her. "It wasn’t a competition."

"It is in your head," Hana said. "Everything is."

Timothy’s jaw tightened, then relaxed. "Okay."

Hana watched him for a moment, then said, "I didn’t bring you here to fix you."

Timothy glanced at her. "Then why."

Hana’s hand moved on the bar, tracing a small circle in spilled condensation.

"Because I’m tired too," she said. "And if I took a break alone, I’d just sit in my apartment and stare at a wall until I started cleaning again."

Timothy looked at her. "So you used me as an excuse."

Hana nodded without shame. "Yes."

Timothy took a sip and let out a short laugh. "Fair."

Hana’s mouth twitched. "You’re not fun when you’re in Manila."

Timothy stared at her. "I’m never fun."

Hana shook her head. "No. You can be. You just don’t allow it."

Timothy looked at the bottle again, then said, "You’re also not fun."

Hana stared at him. "I didn’t claim to be."

Timothy’s mouth twitched. "Fair."

They drank in silence for a minute.

A group of locals near the other end of the bar started singing along to something on the TV. Not loud, not good, but committed. One of them slapped the bar twice and laughed.

Hana watched them with a flat expression, then looked at Timothy.

"You would hate that," she said.

Timothy nodded. "Yes."

Hana tilted her head. "But you’re watching."

Timothy didn’t deny it.

Hana said, "You know what happens when we go back."

Timothy kept his voice even. "Work."

"Pressure," Hana corrected. "The foundation. The car program. The track. The people who want your signature and your face and your time."

Timothy took a sip. "Yes."

Hana continued, "So I’m telling you now. You can’t keep me as your buffer forever."

Timothy turned his head. "I don’t."

Hana’s eyes were steady. "You do."

Timothy stared at her. The words landed because they were true.

Hana said, "I’ll do my job. I’ll keep doing it. But you need to build more people who can say no to you."

Timothy nodded once. "I can."

Hana raised an eyebrow. "Will you."

Timothy held her gaze. "Yes."

Hana didn’t look relieved. She just nodded like she’d heard a statement and filed it under prove it.

Timothy said, "You can also say no."

Hana looked at him like he’d just suggested something illegal. "I do."

Timothy waited.

Hana added, "Sometimes."

Timothy nodded. "More."

Hana’s mouth tightened. "You’re pushing."

Timothy leaned back. "I’m learning."

Hana stared at him for a long moment, then drank again.

When she set the bottle down, she said, "If you build that track, don’t build it like a toy."

Timothy looked at her. "It’s not."

Hana’s eyes stayed hard. "Then prove it. Make it useful. Make it teach drivers. Make it safe. Make it public on some days. Don’t lock it behind gates and call it innovation."

Timothy nodded slowly. "Okay."

Hana watched him. "And don’t name it after yourself."

Timothy frowned. "I wasn’t going to."

Hana didn’t believe him. "Good."

Timothy took a sip, then said, "Why do you care."

Hana’s eyes stayed on him. "Because you’re going to build things anyway. If you’re going to do it, at least don’t make it stupid."

Timothy let out a short breath. "That’s your love language."

Hana stared at him. "Don’t."

Timothy held his hands up. "Noted."

They finished their second beers.

Hana checked the time by looking at the wall clock behind the bar instead of her phone.

"Okay," she said. "We go."

Timothy nodded and slid off the stool. His legs felt steady. Not drunk. Just warm. He left cash on the counter without asking for change.

Outside, the air was cooler. The road was darker now, lit by scattered storefront lights and passing scooters. Somewhere farther down, music thumped from a louder place near the beach, but it was distant enough to ignore.

They walked side by side back toward the hotel.

Hana kept her hands in her pockets. Timothy kept his arms loose at his sides, a towel slung over his shoulder.

At the corner before the hotel driveway, Hana slowed.

Timothy matched her pace without thinking.

Hana said, "Tomorrow we do something simple."

Timothy glanced at her. "Like what."

Hana looked ahead. "I don’t know yet."

Timothy nodded. "Okay."

They crossed the small driveway, stepped onto the hotel path, and moved past the lobby without stopping.

Upstairs, the hallway was quiet. Only the hum of an air conditioner from another room and the faint sound of water outside.

Hana reached their door, slid the key card in, and pushed it open.

Timothy followed her in.

Hana kicked off her sandals and dropped her bag on the chair. She didn’t check her phone. She didn’t sit down right away.

She looked at Timothy, eyes steady.

"You did good today," she said.

Timothy stared at her. "Don’t make it a ceremonial event."

Hana’s mouth twitched. "Shut up."

Timothy walked to the balcony door and cracked it open. The air came in damp and salty. The shoreline sound was steady, pull and push.

He stood there for a moment.

Behind him, Hana moved around the room, turning off lights, setting her bag in the right place, making the room ready for sleep like she couldn’t help herself.

Timothy listened to the water, then heard Hana’s footsteps stop behind him.

He didn’t turn.

Hana stood close enough that her presence warmed the air at his back.

The night wind pushed in, and the curtains shifted. Timothy kept his hand on the balcony frame, steady, as the sound of the ocean dragged and pulled in the dark below.

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