How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 248: Teaser

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Chapter 248: Teaser

The first contact with the outside world didn’t come through rumors or leaks.

It came through a calendar invite.

Hana forwarded it to Elena at 6:03 a.m. without comment. The subject line was ordinary enough to be dangerous.

Stakeholder Alignment — TG MedSystems (Q2)

Elena read it while walking into the unit, coffee still untouched. The invite list was long. Too long. Names from TG Holdings, strategy, procurement. People who didn’t belong near a regulated build this early.

She stopped at the door before stepping inside.

Jun was already at the bench, arms folded, reading the same invite on his phone. Maria was organizing spare parts bins. Victor sat at the small table, reviewing volunteer test notes from the previous week, marking language with a pen.

Elena held up her phone. "We have a meeting."

Jun didn’t look up. "With who."

Elena read the names out loud. When she finished, Jun exhaled through his nose.

"They want a demo."

Maria didn’t look up from her labels. "No."

Victor set his pen down. "When."

"Friday. Ten."

Victor nodded once. "That’s pressure."

Hana stepped in from the corridor. "Timothy didn’t send it."

Elena’s eyes narrowed. "Who did."

Hana showed the organizer’s name. A senior TG Holdings executive. The kind who asked why compliance always slowed things down.

Elena pocketed her phone. "We’re not doing a demo."

Jun leaned back against the bench. "They won’t accept that."

"They don’t have to," Elena said. "They just don’t get one."

Victor stood. "If they’re coming, they’ll try anyway."

Elena walked to the whiteboard and wrote one word.

BOUNDARY

Under it, she wrote four lines.

No demos

No clinical language

No claims

No photos

She turned back to the room. "They can see the facility. They can see process. They cannot see the machine."

Maria capped her marker. "Then why meet them."

"Because ignoring pressure doesn’t remove it," Elena said. "It just moves it sideways."

The next two days weren’t preparation in the usual sense.

There were no slides. No pitches. No renders.

Elena mapped a walking route through the facility that avoided anything ambiguous. Hana wrote a script that sounded boring on purpose. Victor built a vocabulary list and taped it near the entry.

Allowed:

Prototype

Test rig

Engineering validation

Regulated path

Not allowed:

Diagnosis

Autonomous

AI doctor

Replacement

Jun walked the floor and listed every object that could be misread. Maria added rules for visitors the way she wrote service manuals—assuming people would touch what they shouldn’t.

By Thursday night, even Jun stopped arguing and started acting like it mattered.

Friday arrived hot and gray. The unit stayed cool and quiet.

At 9:50, Elena gathered the team who would be visible.

Elena. Hana. Victor. Jun. Maria.

Timothy stood just outside the group.

Elena looked at him. "If they ask for the machine, you say no."

Timothy nodded. "I will."

"They’ll treat that like negotiation."

"Then we don’t negotiate."

At 9:58, the freight elevator opened.

Six people stepped out. Two suits. One polo. One leather folder. Two with the look of people expecting to be impressed.

Elena stepped forward. "Good morning."

The organizer smiled. "We’ve heard a lot."

Elena didn’t respond to that. "This is a controlled site. Phones stay here."

Hana held out a lockbox.

There was hesitation. Then compliance.

Elena led them onto the floor.

She didn’t start with prototypes. She started with receiving.

"Everything inbound is traceable," she said. "Nothing skips quarantine."

Jun took over at the bench. "We’re building power stability modules first. Hospitals don’t have clean power. Devices that assume they do fail."

One visitor nodded. Another looked bored.

Victor spoke next. "We assume audits. Evidence first. If it’s undocumented, it didn’t happen."

Maria stood near the service bay. "This is where devices survive or die. Not features. Service."

One of the visitors leaned in. "You’re dedicating this much space to service."

"Yes," Maria said. "Because it’s honest."

The organizer tried again. "And the bigger platform. The one everyone’s talking about."

Elena kept walking. "We’re building registered hardware."

He kept pace. "But there is something more."

Elena stopped and turned. "No."

The word wasn’t angry. It was final.

Timothy stepped in calmly. "We’re not teasing machines by showing them. We tease by proving discipline."

An older man with an expensive watch smiled thinly. "Just a glimpse. We’re not asking for secrets."

Timothy met his eyes. "Pressure doesn’t care who you are."

The man frowned. "So there is a direction."

Elena answered before it turned into a trap. "Regulated diagnostic hardware. That’s the direction."

They finished the walk without approaching the prototype corridor.

In the conference area, the organizer leaned forward. "The board needs a reason to accelerate funding."

Elena didn’t blink. "We scale when process survives stress."

"We need a narrative."

Victor spoke quietly. "We need evidence."

Timothy leaned forward slightly. "You want a tease. Here it is."

The organizer relaxed.

"We’re building a unified diagnostic platform internally," Timothy said. "Focused on sensing, stability, and serviceability. It will not replace clinicians. It will not make decisions."

The older man nodded. "Decision support."

"No," Victor said sharply.

Silence.

"That word creates liability," Victor continued. "We don’t use it."

Maria added, "And we don’t pretend ’support’ means safe."

"So what do we say," the organizer asked.

Elena answered. "Internal diagnostic platform under validation."

"That sounds weak."

"It’s accurate."

Jun leaned back. "Let others oversell. We’ll outlast them."

The organizer exhaled. "Fine. But rumors are already starting."

Hana leaned forward. "From who."

A name was given. Facilities. Someone who’d been near the back corridor.

Hana wrote it down.

Elena didn’t react outwardly. "This is why we don’t tease."

"What can we say at the board," the organizer asked.

Timothy answered without hesitation. "TG MedSystems is preparing regulated diagnostic hardware focused on stability and service. First products are power and monitoring subsystems. Larger platforms remain internal until regulatory path is defined."

The organizer repeated it quietly.

The meeting ended without photos or promises.

Hana returned phones at the door and checked screens. No accusations. Just verification.

After they left, Jun spoke first. "They’ll push again."

"Yes," Elena said.

Maria crossed her arms. "Someone’s already looking."

Victor nodded. "We tighten."

Visitor controls increased that afternoon. Escort-only access. Corridor reviews. No unscheduled work near sensitive areas.

Timothy stood near the back, watching the room reset.

"They’ll want the Autodoc," Elena said quietly.

"I know."

"We’re not releasing it."

"Not now."

Elena looked at the team dispersing back into work. "We build the ladder. Slowly."

Timothy nodded. "That’s how it lasts."

At the far end of the unit, the thicker door remained closed.

For the first time, it felt like someone outside the room had started walking toward it.

And inside, no one moved faster because of it.

---

No one said anything for a few seconds after that.

The unit settled back into its normal soundscape—fans cycling, a bench supply clicking as it stepped down load, the distant echo of a cart rolling somewhere in the building. The visit was over, but the pressure it left behind didn’t leave with the elevator.

Elena stayed where she was, eyes on the closed prototype corridor.

"Facilities," she said at last. "That’s not curiosity. That’s proximity."

Hana nodded. "I’ll pull access logs. Badge history. Camera coverage."

"Quietly," Elena added. "No accusations. We don’t scare people unless we’re sure."

Victor gathered his papers and slid them into his folder. "This is how leakage starts," he said. "Not theft. Familiarity."

Jun rubbed the back of his neck. "Someone walks past something enough times, they start filling in blanks."

Maria looked toward the service bay, then back at the corridor. "Then we reduce blanks."

That afternoon, the prototype hallway changed.

Nothing dramatic. No new locks. No alarms that would draw attention.

Just friction.

Hana shortened badge windows so access timed out faster. Escort requirements became explicit instead of implied. Cleaning schedules were adjusted so no one was alone near sensitive doors after hours.

Maria added one more rule to the service manual draft—internal only.

If you don’t need to be here, you aren’t.

Jun reviewed bench layouts and moved a diagnostic cart six feet closer to the main line, blocking the cleanest sightline down the corridor. It wasn’t concealment. It was inconvenience.

Victor updated the boundary memo with a new clause: **External stakeholder presence does not alter internal validation posture.**

He printed it, signed it, and had Elena countersign.

That evening, Timothy stayed later than usual.

He didn’t go into the prototype room. He didn’t need to. He stood at the edge of the main floor, watching the engineers finish their last checks before shutting down benches.

No one rushed.

That mattered more than the visit.

Jun walked over, holding a tablet. "Supplier just emailed again."

Timothy didn’t look surprised. "Same one."

"Yes."

"What do they want."

Jun tilted the screen so Timothy could see. "They want to schedule a call. ’Clarify future roadmap alignment.’"

Timothy exhaled once. "They smelled something."

Jun nodded. "They always do."

Elena joined them. "We don’t take roadmap calls."

Jun looked at her. "They’ll push."

"Let them," Elena said. "We don’t owe them a future. We owe ourselves a stable present."

Jun thought about it, then nodded. "I’ll reply tomorrow. Short."

That night, after most of the floor went dark, Maria stayed behind again.

This time she wasn’t writing. She was reading.

She sat on a rolling stool with the service manual open on her lap, flipping pages slowly, marking spots with a pencil she kept behind her ear. Not errors. Assumptions.

At one point, she stopped and crossed out a sentence entirely.

She rewrote it underneath.

If resistance is felt, stop. Verify alignment. Do not force.

She underlined it once, then closed the binder.

In the prototype corridor, the thicker door stayed closed.

Inside, the Autodoc sat powered down, panels cool, logs sealed. It didn’t hum. It didn’t ask for attention.

It waited.

The next Monday, an internal bulletin went out from TG Holdings.

Nothing flashy.

**TG MedSystems: Q2 Focus — Infrastructure and Compliance Readiness**

No mention of platforms. No vision statements. No buzzwords.

Just process.

Elena read it once and archived it.

"Good," she said to no one in particular.

By midweek, rumors surfaced anyway.

Nothing concrete. Just phrases overheard. A facilities tech mentioning "that big medical thing." A procurement analyst asking about "future diagnostics."

Hana logged each one without reacting.

Victor reviewed the logs and said, "Noise. Not signal." 𝐟𝕣𝕖𝐞𝐰𝕖𝚋𝐧𝗼𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝗰𝐨𝐦

Timothy agreed. "Not yet."

The real test came quietly.

A junior engineer—new, capable, eager—approached Jun late one afternoon.

"Hey," he said, carefully casual. "Quick question."

Jun didn’t look up from the board he was reviewing. "If it’s quick, ask."

The engineer hesitated. "People are saying there’s a full system somewhere in here. Like... something big."

Jun set the board down.

He didn’t smile. He didn’t threaten.

He just asked, "What are you working on."

"Power module testing," the engineer said immediately.

Jun nodded. "Then that’s what exists."

The engineer flushed slightly. "Right."

Jun picked the board back up. "If you hear things that don’t match your task, ignore them. Curiosity isn’t rewarded here. Discipline is."

The engineer nodded and left.

Jun didn’t report it.

He didn’t need to.

That evening, Elena updated the whiteboard near her desk.

BOUNDARY stayed at the top.

Under it, she added one more line.

Silence is also a control.

Timothy saw it as he passed by and stopped.

He read it once, then nodded.

This was the phase most projects failed.

Not because of bad engineering.

Because of attention.

Too much of it. Too early.

TG MedSystems didn’t announce anything.

They didn’t tease publicly. They didn’t leak selectively. They didn’t correct rumors.

They built.

Slowly. Deliberately. Boringly.

And behind a thicker door that stayed closed, the Autodoc remained what it was supposed to be at this stage—not a promise, not a threat, not a headline.

Just a reminder.

That the moment you showed something before it was ready, it stopped belonging to you.

And they weren’t done owning it yet.

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