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How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 221: The Vacation Part 1
January 8, 2030
Timothy did not tell anyone he was leaving.
He kept his calendar blocked and his face blank. He signed what needed signing, forwarded what needed forwarding, and let Hana handle the rest the way she always did—quiet and hard. By Tuesday night, the building had stopped feeling like a holiday hangover and started feeling like a machine that wanted to run faster than people could maintain.
That was why the two-day break felt illegal. And on this trip, they are going lowkey. That meant no private aircrafts, things like that.
At four thirty in the morning, Timothy’s driverless car rolled into the underground parking and stopped in its slot like it was arriving for work. The tower above was dark in most floors, with a few windows lit where someone had decided sleep was optional.
Hana was already waiting by the elevator bank.
She wore plain clothes that still looked sharp because she didn’t own anything loose. Small backpack. No carry-on that screamed business travel. Hair tied back. Eyes half awake.
"You’re on time," she said.
Timothy glanced at the time on his phone. "You expected me to be late."
"I expected you to try to send one last email," Hana replied.
Timothy didn’t deny it. He had stared at his inbox for five minutes in his car before getting out, finger hovering over a draft he didn’t need to send. He had deleted it instead.
Hana noticed the hesitation in his face anyway.
"You already miss it," she said.
"I miss control," Timothy replied.
"That’s the same thing," Hana said, then started walking.
They took the service elevator to avoid the lobby and the cameras. Not because they were hiding from the public. Because it was easier to move without getting stopped by someone with a question and a smile.
Down in the basement, a security lead waited near a plain van that looked like it belonged to any logistics company. He wore a jacket with no logo and a face Timothy didn’t recognize, which was how it should be.
The man nodded once. "Sir. Ma’am."
Hana handed him a printed sheet. "We’re on the list. You have the contacts. You call only if something is broken, not if someone feels nervous."
The security lead didn’t smile. "Understood."
Timothy watched Hana do it—still managing, still building structure even while pretending to take time off. He didn’t call her out. She would bite if he did.
They rode in the van in silence for the first ten minutes. Manila was quiet in that early hour, but not empty. A few trucks moved with sleepy aggression. Street sweepers worked under orange lights. A security guard outside a closed convenience store waved at a passing motorcycle like it was the only interaction he would get before sunrise.
Hana looked out the window.
"You’re thinking about the test run," she said without looking at him.
Timothy kept his eyes forward. "I’m not."
Hana snorted once. "Liar."
"I’m not thinking about the run," Timothy corrected. "I’m thinking about whether I left enough instructions." 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖
"You did," Hana said. "Carlos has the program. He will call if the car catches fire."
Timothy glanced at her. "If."
"If," Hana repeated. "Don’t make me comfort you about a car while we’re trying to rest."
"I’m not asking for comfort," Timothy said.
"You’re asking for permission to stay anxious," Hana replied.
Timothy didn’t answer. The van hit a small bump and both of them shifted slightly. Hana adjusted her bag strap. Timothy checked the time again.
Hana watched him.
"Stop checking," she said.
Timothy put his phone in his pocket. "Fine."
At the airport, everything smelled like cleaning solution and coffee. The lights were harsh. Lines moved slowly. People held paper cups and carried children who had fallen asleep in strange positions. Timothy wore a cap low and kept his face turned slightly down. Not paranoia. Habit.
Hana moved like she had done this alone a hundred times. She handled check-in, answered one question from staff, and walked through security without breaking stride. Timothy followed. No entourage. No staff. Just two tired people trying to disappear in a crowd.
At the gate, Hana sat and pulled out her tablet.
Timothy stared at it. "No work."
Hana didn’t look up. "It’s not work."
"What is it," Timothy asked.
"Hotel confirmation," Hana replied. "And I’m checking that the pickup driver isn’t fake."
Timothy sat beside her. "You can’t stop."
Hana’s fingers paused. "Neither can you."
Timothy watched her screen for a second. It wasn’t spreadsheets. It was a message thread with the hotel and a driver’s name. Hana asked two short questions and got clean answers. She closed the tablet and put it away.
"There," she said. "Now you can breathe."
Timothy didn’t respond. He watched people at the next gate argue softly over a seat. A mother wiped her kid’s face with a tissue. An older man in a collared shirt held a paper boarding pass and looked lost until a younger woman pointed him toward a line.
Hana leaned back, eyes half closed.
"Do you even like beaches," she asked.
"I don’t know," Timothy replied.
Hana opened one eye. "You don’t know."
"I haven’t had time to like things," Timothy said.
Hana stared at him for a moment, then looked away like she refused to treat that as a serious statement.
"That’s your fault," she said.
"Yes," Timothy replied.
They boarded when the line moved. Timothy took a window seat. Hana took the aisle. She didn’t ask; she just did it, like she knew Timothy would rather look out and pretend he wasn’t trapped in a metal tube with strangers.
The plane took off smoothly. Manila shrank into blocks of lights, then disappeared under cloud.
Hana buckled in, then took off her watch and put it in her bag.
Timothy noticed. "Why."
Hana didn’t look at him. "Because I keep checking it."
Timothy nodded, then did something that surprised even him. He took his own watch off and set it in the seat pocket in front of him.
Hana turned her head slowly. "Are you copying me."
"Yes," Timothy said.
Hana’s mouth twitched. "This is going to be a weird trip."
Timothy looked out the window. "Probably."
Hana leaned back and closed her eyes. After a few minutes, her breathing slowed. Not fully asleep. Just lower. Like she had finally let her shoulders drop by a few degrees.
Timothy stayed awake. Not anxious. Just alert, the way his body had learned to be after years of early meetings and late problem-solving. He watched the wing and the sky and tried to do nothing with it.
He failed.
His mind kept reaching for tasks like a hand reaching for a railing. He wanted to check messages. He wanted to list risks. He wanted to write a short note to Carlos. He clenched his jaw once, then let it go.
No work talk.
He forced his eyes back to the window.
When they landed, the air felt different. Warmer. Wet. The smell of salt and fuel mixed in the open-air walkway. The airport was smaller, louder in a different way, with voices bouncing off concrete and metal.
Hana woke fully as soon as they stood up. She looked sharp again in seconds, like sleep was a switch she could flip.
Outside, a driver held a small sign with Hana’s name. She walked over, confirmed his identity with one question, then motioned for Timothy to follow.
They rode in a compact car that rattled slightly on rougher road. Outside the window, the landscape shifted from small buildings to stretches of greenery and scattered houses. Motorcycles passed close. People stood outside stores in slippers and shorts. Dogs wandered like they owned the road.
Timothy watched it all with quiet attention.
Hana leaned her head against the seat for a second. "This is already better."
Timothy glanced at her. "Because it’s messy."
Hana opened her eyes. "Because it doesn’t care who you are."
Timothy didn’t argue. The road didn’t give him any special treatment. It was bumpy, inconsistent, and honest.
They arrived at the hotel—a simple place, clean, with a low lobby and staff who looked calm. No marble. No gold. The kind of place that made money by being reliable.
At check-in, Hana used a name Timothy didn’t recognize. Not fake, just shortened, plain. Timothy gave his own and watched the staff’s eyes move over him without recognition.
Good.
Their room was on the second floor. Balcony facing trees and a slice of water in the distance if you leaned to the side. The air conditioner hummed. The bed was firm. The shower pressure was decent.
Hana dropped her bag on the chair and walked straight to the balcony.
Timothy followed.
Outside, the sound was wind, scooters in the distance, and faint voices. No sirens. No horns. No echo of a building.
Hana rested her hands on the railing and stared.
"You’re going to try to build something here," she said.
Timothy shook his head. "No."
Hana glanced at him. "Don’t lie."
"I’m not lying," Timothy said. "I’m observing."
Hana stared at him like she was tired of his word games. "Observation turns into plans in your head. That’s building."
Timothy didn’t answer. He didn’t want to argue. He wanted to keep the peace that had followed them into the room.
Hana exhaled. "Okay. Ground rules."







