How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 227: Prelude to Work
Timothy woke to light leaking through the edge of the curtains, pale and steady, not the harsh glare of a weekday morning. For a moment he did not move. He lay still, listening to the low hum of the city outside his apartment. A distant horn. The muted sound of tires on asphalt. Someone upstairs dragging a chair across the floor.
His phone sat on the bedside table, screen dark.
That alone felt strange.
He checked the time anyway. Just after seven. Early, but not aggressively so. His body had not learned how to sleep in. He accepted that and sat up, feet touching the cool floor.
Sunday.
He said the word silently like he was testing whether it still applied to him.
Timothy went through his morning routine slower than usual. He showered without rushing, let the water run warmer than he normally allowed himself, stood under it longer than necessary. He shaved, then stopped halfway through wiping the mirror because there was no reason to hurry. No meeting waiting. No schedule snapping at his heels.
In the kitchen, he brewed coffee and did not open his laptop while it dripped. He leaned against the counter and watched the city from the window. The roads were lighter. Fewer cars. More space between noise.
When the coffee finished, he poured a mug and took it to the small table by the window. He sat down without opening anything. No reports. No dashboards. Just the mug warming his hands.
His phone buzzed once.
He looked at it, then didn’t pick it up.
The vibration stopped.
He took a sip of coffee and grimaced slightly. Too strong. He had mismeasured. Normally he would adjust it next time. Today he just drank it anyway.
He thought of Siargao, of sand still clinging stubbornly to his shoes even after he’d cleaned them twice. Of Hana’s face when she realized he had actually followed her rules for almost an entire day. Of the way the ocean didn’t care whether he was learning anything or not.
The thought stayed with him, not as nostalgia, but as reference.
At eight-thirty, he checked his phone.
Three missed notifications. One from Carlos. One from a foundation ops lead. One from Hana.
He opened Hana’s first.
You awake or pretending to be normal?
He exhaled through his nose and typed back.
Awake. Not pretending.
The reply came faster than he expected.
Good. I’m at home. Don’t ask me to work.
He didn’t.
Instead, he replied:
Coffee later?
There was a pause long enough that he wondered if he had crossed a line he hadn’t intended to draw.
Then:
Somewhere quiet. Not BGC.
Timothy considered it for a second.
Quezon City. Late morning.
Another pause.
Acceptable. I’ll drive.
Timothy set the phone down and finished his coffee.
He dressed simply. No jacket. No watch that screamed anything. He picked up his keys, hesitated, then left his work phone on the table. He took only his personal one.
Outside, the air felt softer. Manila on a Sunday morning moved differently. Less compressed. Less angry.
He drove without urgency, letting Hana choose the route once she sent him the address of the café. It was tucked into a side street near an old residential area, the kind of place that survived because it didn’t try to scale itself into something louder.
Hana was already there when he arrived, seated at an outdoor table under a wide umbrella. She wore jeans, a plain shirt, hair tied back loosely. No tablet. No bag large enough to hide a laptop.
Timothy noticed that immediately.
"You’re early," he said as he approached.
"You’re late," Hana replied, glancing at her watch. "By three minutes."
Timothy sat across from her. "You timed me."
"I always time you," Hana said, then slid a cup toward him. "I ordered."
He took it without comment. Iced coffee. Balanced. Not too sweet.
"Thank you," he said.
Hana waved it off. "You didn’t ask what it was. That’s progress."
They sat in silence for a few seconds, listening to the quiet clatter of dishes from inside, the low murmur of other conversations that didn’t overlap.
"You look less tense," Hana said finally.
Timothy raised an eyebrow. "Is that an observation or a warning."
"Both," she replied.
He took a sip and nodded. "I slept."
Hana stared at him. "You keep saying that like it’s a breakthrough."
"It feels like one," Timothy said.
She leaned back in her chair. "Did you work this morning."
"No," Timothy replied.
Hana waited.
"I thought about work," he added.
"That doesn’t count," Hana said. "Thinking is free."
They ordered food without ceremony. Something simple. Shared plates without discussing it.
As they ate, Hana talked about nothing important. A neighbor’s dog that barked only at delivery riders. A book she’d started and abandoned halfway through because it annoyed her. A café she used to go to years ago before it turned itself into a brand.
Timothy listened. Not because he was trying to be present. Because it came easily today.
At one point, he noticed he hadn’t checked his phone in nearly half an hour.
He didn’t say anything.
After they finished, Hana stood first.
"Walk," she said.
Timothy nodded.
They moved through the neighborhood without direction. Narrow streets. Older houses. Kids riding bicycles too close to parked cars. A small sari-sari store with plastic chairs out front, people sitting and talking like time wasn’t expensive. 𝘧𝓇ℯ𝑒𝓌𝑒𝑏𝓃𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭.𝒸ℴ𝓂
Hana slowed near a bookstore with sun-faded posters in the window.
"Don’t," Timothy said.
Hana glanced at him. "What."
"You’ll go in and buy something practical and call it leisure."
Hana smiled thinly. "You don’t get to judge my coping strategies."
They went in anyway.
Inside, the air smelled like old paper and dust. The shelves were uneven. Nothing was categorized properly. Hana wandered without urgency. Timothy stayed near the entrance, scanning titles he had no intention of buying.
Hana picked up a thin paperback, flipped through it, then put it back.
"You read fiction," she said.
"Sometimes," Timothy replied.
"You don’t look like it."
"I don’t look like most things I do," he said.
She accepted that.
They left without buying anything. Outside, the sun had climbed higher. The heat pressed down gently, not punishing yet.
Hana checked her phone once, frowned, then put it away.
"Carlos," she said.
Timothy didn’t ask.
"Nothing urgent," Hana added. "He just wanted to update me. I told him it’s Sunday."
"And," Timothy prompted.
"And he respected it," Hana said. "Which means you scared him properly."
Timothy considered that. "Good."
They found a small park nearby and sat on a bench under a tree. Leaves rustled above them. Somewhere, someone played music from a phone speaker, the sound thin but persistent.
Hana stretched her legs out and leaned back, eyes closed.
"You know," she said, "if people saw us like this, they wouldn’t believe it."
Timothy glanced at her. "Like what."
"Doing nothing," Hana replied.
Timothy looked around. "Everyone else seems to manage."
"Yes, but they don’t run a company that refuses to behave," Hana said.
He smiled faintly. She noticed.
"There," she said. "That."
"What," Timothy asked.
"That almost-smile," Hana said. "You’re dangerous when you do that."
Timothy shook his head. "You say that about everything."
"Because it’s usually true," she replied.
They sat for a while longer. The conversation drifted and looped back on itself. Work came up once or twice, but only as reference, not as agenda.
Eventually, Hana stood and dusted off her jeans.
"Lunch somewhere not pretentious," she said.
They drove to a place Hana remembered from years ago. It hadn’t changed much. Plastic chairs. Laminated menus. Loud ceiling fan.
They ate quietly, shoulder to shoulder at a narrow table, watching people come and go. No one recognized Timothy. Or if they did, they didn’t care enough to react.
After lunch, Hana drove him back toward his place.
At a stoplight, she glanced at him.
"You’re going to ruin this if you overanalyze it," she said.
"I know," Timothy replied.
"Then don’t," Hana said.
"I won’t," Timothy said, knowing full well he would later, but not now.
They stopped outside his building. Timothy got out, then paused.
"Thank you," he said.
Hana raised an eyebrow. "For what."
"For today," Timothy said. "For not turning it into something else."
Hana considered that. "You did most of the work."
He nodded. "I know."
She waved once and drove off.
Timothy went upstairs and let himself into his apartment. It felt quieter than it had in the morning. Not emptier. Just settled.
He put his keys down, kicked off his shoes, and stood by the window again. The city had shifted into afternoon mode. Louder than morning. Still slower than weekday.
He checked his phone.
One message from Carlos. One from foundation ops. Nothing was on fire.
He replied briefly to both. Clear. Calm. Contained.
Then he set the phone down.
Timothy went to the kitchen and started cooking something simple. Not efficient. Not optimized. Just food.
As the afternoon stretched, he realized something without ceremony.
The work would still be there tomorrow.
And today, for once, that didn’t feel like a threat.
It felt like permission.







