How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 231: Reconnaissance

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Chapter 231: Reconnaissance

January 24, 2030

Timothy woke before his alarm, not because of habit but because his mind had already decided the night was finished. The apartment was dim, the city outside not yet loud but never fully still. Traffic murmured at a distance. Somewhere below, a delivery truck idled too long.

He lay on his back and stared at the ceiling until the urge to reach for his phone grew sharp enough to be irritating. When he finally picked it up, he didn’t open messages. He opened a note instead.

The words from the night before came back intact. Uptime. Serviceability. Local manufacturing. Integration without lock-in.

They felt too clean. Clean ideas were easy. Dirty systems were where resistance lived.

He got up, showered, dressed, and made coffee quickly. The routine stayed intact even as his attention drifted. He slowed himself down deliberately, not because it helped, but because he noticed he was rushing without reason. The coffee tasted the same either way.

By eight, he was inside TG Tower. The lobby moved with practiced efficiency. Security watched entrances. A few employees clustered near reception, voices low, eyes on screens. The building did not care about his thoughts. It cared about access cards and elevators arriving on time.

He went straight up.

His floor was active but contained. Assistants crossed corridors with tablets. A courier cart rolled past. Someone laughed once and cut it short. The rhythm was familiar. Predictable.

Timothy walked into his office and didn’t sit.

He stood by the window, looking out over the city. Traffic lines thickened as the morning progressed, headlights tracing routes that would repeat tomorrow with minimal variation. Farther out, he spotted a hospital building he recognized from past foundation work. It blended into the skyline, present but unremarkable.

He turned back to his desk and opened his laptop.

The first email went to legal. Short. Direct.

Set up a rapid review of the regulatory landscape for medical device manufacturing and diagnostics in the Philippines. Focus on compliance baselines and typical bottlenecks. I want constraints, not opinions.

The second went to procurement.

Compile what we have on hospital equipment import cycles from foundation projects. Lead times, customs delays, service gaps. Use actual cases.

The third email took longer. He searched through an old thread until he found the name.

Dr. Angela Lim.

He remembered her clearly. Direct. Unimpressed. Tired in the way only people who worked inside hospitals got tired.

He stared at the blank message box longer than he expected, then typed.

Dr. Lim, this is Timothy Guerrero. We spoke last year during a backup power audit. I’m looking into upstream medical infrastructure—devices, servicing, supply chains. If you have 30 minutes this week for a candid call, I’d appreciate it. No announcements.

He sent it before he could revise the tone into something safer.

After that, he finally sat down and opened his calendar. He didn’t cancel anything. He read it, shifted two meetings by ten minutes, and blocked a single hour late in the afternoon.

Field visit.

It was vague enough to pass without comment.

The morning ran as expected. A manufacturing yield review ended quickly once he asked three questions no one wanted to answer twice. A logistics reroute was approved without debate. Energy operations flagged a substation upgrade and received contingency funding immediately.

Everything worked.

Between meetings, he caught himself noticing small things he usually ignored. A printer jammed in the corridor. A staff member walking fast with a box of parts. An assistant rubbing her eyes while waiting for an elevator. Small delays absorbed without complaint.

Healthcare, he thought, was built on the same tolerance. Systems survived by leaning on people.

At noon, he ate at his desk, something bland in a paper container. He didn’t taste it. He opened a browser and pulled up public procurement data, then stopped himself. That wasn’t the right angle yet. Lists didn’t explain behavior.

He needed to see how the system felt from the inside.

His phone buzzed around one.

An unfamiliar number.

He answered anyway.

"This is Timothy."

A pause, then a voice that sounded professional and tired at the same time.

"Mr. Guerrero. This is Angela Lim."

He straightened slightly. "Doctor. Thank you for calling."

"Just Angela," she said. "And I’m calling because your message made me curious and suspicious."

"That’s fair," Timothy replied.

"You don’t usually reach out for infrastructure," Angela said. "People reach out for donations or photo ops."

"I’m not doing either," he said.

There was background noise on her end. A monitor beeping steadily. Footsteps on tile.

"Thirty minutes," she said. "Now, if you can."

"Yes."

"Then talk."

He didn’t lead with ambition. He kept it simple.

"I’ve been inside enough hospitals to see competent people compensating for unreliable systems," Timothy said. "I’m looking at reducing that burden."

Angela laughed once, sharp and humorless. "That’s a large promise."

"It’s a narrow one," he said.

"And what do you think you can do," she asked, "that decades of policy and committees haven’t?"

"I can build and supply devices designed around service reality," Timothy said. "I can shorten lead times by manufacturing closer. I can design for maintenance instead of pretending it’s optional."

Angela was quiet for a moment.

"You’re talking about medical devices," she said.

"Yes."

"Which ones," she asked. "Because that’s not one category. It’s thousands, each with its own traps."

"I’m not starting invasive," Timothy said. "Diagnostics. Imaging components. Monitoring systems. Equipment that fails too often because parts and service arrive late."

"So you’re avoiding blood and scalpels," Angela said.

"For now."

"That’s the first sane thing I’ve heard today," she said. "Most people want to build hospitals."

"I don’t want my name on a building," Timothy replied. "I want machines to work."

Angela exhaled slowly. "Then here’s the reality. Uptime isn’t just about the device. It’s procurement. Training. Budget cycles. Hospitals buy machines they can’t maintain because the purchase is funded and the service isn’t."

Timothy listened.

"Second," she continued, "engineering staff are stretched thin. Public hospitals run on workarounds. A broken system becomes stable because people adapt."

Broken stability.

"And third," Angela said, "suppliers don’t like disruption. Delays make money for someone."

"I expected that," Timothy said.

"You should still be careful," she replied. "They don’t fight clean."

"I’m familiar," he said.

"That’s not a compliment."

"It’s not meant to be."

She paused.

"If you’re serious," Angela said, "don’t start with products. Start with hospital engineers. Sit with the people who fix machines. Ask what breaks. Ask what parts they can’t get."

"Can you introduce me," Timothy asked.

"I can," she said. "One visit. No entourage. No executive tour."

"Understood."

"Why are you doing this," Angela asked.

Timothy didn’t answer immediately.

"Because I see the same failure pattern everywhere," he said finally. "And I know how to fix patterns when they’re allowed to be fixed."

Another pause.

"Send your availability," Angela said. "I’ll arrange it."

The call ended.

Timothy set the phone down and stared at his desk.

He didn’t feel excited. He felt focused.

Legal replied within the hour, confirming a preliminary regulatory map in forty-eight hours. Procurement sent an attachment with import timelines that were worse than he wanted and exactly what he expected.

Lead times measured in months. Replacement parts trapped in customs. Hospitals cannibalizing old machines to keep newer ones alive.

He rubbed his eyes once.

At six, the office quieted. The building shifted into its night rhythm. Timothy stayed. He didn’t play movies. He didn’t need them now.

He opened his notebook and forced himself to write full sentences.

If healthcare is treated as a market, it optimizes profit and fails under stress. If it is treated as infrastructure, it becomes boring and resilient.

He paused.

Boring was still the goal.

He wrote again.

Design for maintenance first.Assume failure and shorten recovery.Manufacture close to use.Make service inevitable.

He stopped before the list grew comfortable.

He walked the executive corridor once, empty and quiet, and stopped by the window at the end. Across the river, a hospital tower glowed unevenly, windows lit like a scattered pattern.

Hospitals weren’t supposed to be dramatic. They were supposed to work.

His phone buzzed.

Angela again.

Thursday, 9 AM. Public hospital in QC. Engineering head knows I’m bringing someone. He doesn’t know who. Wear something ordinary.

Timothy replied immediately.

Understood.

He packed up without rushing. Laptop shut down. Notebook into his bag. Lights off, one by one.

Before leaving, he looked back at the office once.

This wasn’t a decision. It was reconnaissance.

The elevator ride down was silent. The night guard nodded. Timothy returned it and stepped outside into cooler air.

Traffic was lighter now. The city settled instead of argued.

He drove home without the radio, the road noise steady. He thought about hospital engineers keeping machines alive with limited parts and patience. He thought about how often systems survived only because people refused to let them fail.

He parked and sat in the dark car for a moment, listening to the engine tick as it cooled.

Thursday was close.

That was enough.

He got out, went upstairs, and turned in for the night knowing he wouldn’t sleep easily—not from anxiety, but because the system in his head had started to move.

And once it moved, it didn’t stop just because the day ended.

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