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How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 226: Return from Work
The last morning didn’t feel like a last morning until Hana’s bag hit the floor.
She dropped it near the door like she wanted it out of her hands. The room still smelled like salt and shampoo. The air conditioner hummed against humidity that didn’t care. Timothy stood by the window again, not looking for anything specific, just letting his eyes sit on movement.
Hana opened the mini-fridge and pulled out two bottled waters. 𝐟𝕣𝗲𝕖𝕨𝗲𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝗲𝚕.𝗰𝚘𝐦
She tossed one to him.
Timothy caught it with one hand.
"Hydrate," Hana said. "Before you pretend you don’t have a body."
Timothy twisted the cap off and drank. His shoulders still felt sore. His forearms still felt heavy. It was a clean soreness, not the kind that came from sitting too long.
Hana sat on the edge of the bed and started rolling shirts into her bag with short, efficient movements.
Timothy watched her for a moment. "You pack like it’s a drill."
Hana didn’t look up. "It is."
"It’s a two-day trip," Timothy said.
"It’s two days," Hana replied. "That’s why it has to work."
Timothy nodded and stepped away from the window. His phone stayed on the nightstand, face down. He noticed it the way you notice something you decided not to pick up.
Hana zipped her bag and finally looked at him.
"You’re quieter," she said.
Timothy blinked. "Is that a complaint."
"It’s an observation," Hana replied. "Don’t make me compliment you."
Timothy’s mouth twitched. He didn’t let it turn into anything else. "Okay."
They left the room a little after nine. The hallway smelled like floor cleaner and warm air. Downstairs, the breakfast area was busy. Guests checked out. Suitcases rolled. Someone argued softly near the front desk. A child cried near a vending machine.
Hana didn’t stop for breakfast.
Timothy did.
He grabbed two pieces of fruit from the buffet line and handed one to Hana without asking.
Hana stared at it like he’d handed her a tool she didn’t order.
"What," Timothy asked.
Hana took it. "You’re doing domestic behavior. Stop."
Timothy shrugged. "Eat."
Hana rolled her eyes and peeled it anyway.
Outside, the transfer van waited near the curb. The driver stepped out and took their luggage. Hana checked the plate number out of habit, then got in.
Timothy sat beside her.
The van pulled into the road. Town slid by in pieces: small storefronts, scooters, groups of tourists in wide hats, locals carrying sacks. A dog lay in shade near a fence, unmoving.
Hana watched the street like she was trying to memorize it, or trying to avoid thinking about the return.
Timothy ate his fruit quietly.
After ten minutes, Hana spoke.
"When we get back, you’re going to pretend this didn’t affect you," she said.
Timothy looked at her. "You said don’t erase it."
Hana’s eyes stayed forward. "Good. So don’t."
Timothy didn’t rush his answer. "I won’t."
Hana glanced at him. "Say it like you mean it."
Timothy held her gaze. "I won’t."
Hana looked back out the window. "Okay."
The airport was crowded and slow. Lines moved like people had nowhere to be. Sunburned tourists stood with damp hair and beach bags. Someone laughed too loud near a kiosk. A couple argued quietly near check-in, trying to keep their voices low and failing.
Hana guided them through the process like she was back at the tower, only with less anger. Tickets. Bag drop. Security. Gate.
They sat down near a window. Planes rolled on the tarmac. A ground crew worker waved a baton in slow motions. Everything had the rhythm of operations, just under harsh daylight.
Hana checked her phone once.
Her face didn’t change.
"What," Timothy asked.
Hana put it away. "Nothing. Just confirmation nobody burned the building down."
Timothy nodded. "Good."
Hana looked at him. "You want to check yours."
Timothy didn’t deny it. "Yes."
Hana leaned back and crossed her arms. "Wait until we land."
Timothy exhaled. "Okay."
They boarded when their row was called. The cabin was cold. Air smelled like plastic and recycled breath. Timothy put his bag under the seat and sat back, hands resting on his thighs.
Hana buckled in beside him and took a breath like she was bracing for delays.
Timothy glanced at her. "You hate flying."
"I hate delays," Hana said. "And I hate being trapped."
Timothy nodded. "Fair."
The plane took off. The island dropped away under clouds. Water turned into a flat sheet, then disappeared.
Hana stared straight ahead.
Timothy watched her hands. She wasn’t gripping anything. Just resting them there, fingers still.
"You’re okay," Timothy said.
Hana didn’t look at him. "Don’t do that."
"Do what," Timothy asked.
"Don’t narrate," Hana replied. "I’m not going to cry on a plane. Relax."
Timothy kept his face neutral. "Okay."
Mid-flight, the cabin lights dimmed. People slept or scrolled. Hana didn’t sleep. Timothy didn’t either.
His brain tried to build lists anyway: schedule, inbox, track run, internal noise, supplier pressure, the slow climb of attention. He felt it start to collect in his shoulders.
He shifted in his seat.
Hana noticed. "Stop."
Timothy looked at her. "Stop what."
"Stop loading," Hana said. "You look like you’re drafting an email in your head."
Timothy held her gaze for a moment, then looked away. "Habit."
Hana’s voice stayed flat. "Break it."
Timothy closed his eyes for ten seconds. Just ten. He listened to the hum of the plane, the faint rattle of a cart, someone coughing a few rows behind.
When he opened his eyes, Hana was still facing forward, jaw set like she was guarding the space.
"You’re tense too," Timothy said.
Hana blinked once. "I’m fine."
Timothy didn’t argue. He just nodded.
When they landed in Manila, heat hit them as soon as they stepped out of the jet bridge. The airport smelled like fuel and sweat and floor polish. The crowd moved in waves.
Outside, cars crawled at pickup. Horns layered into a steady noise. The city felt louder than it had a week ago, like it had been saving up.
Their driver was waiting. Normal vehicle. Tinted windows. A man with a neutral face who looked like he’d been trained not to be impressed.
They got in. The door shut. The cabin cooled.
As soon as they hit the main road, Timothy’s phone buzzed in his pocket.
Hana looked at him.
Timothy didn’t touch it yet. "We landed."
Hana stared at him. "I know."
Timothy pulled his phone out slowly. Notifications stacked like a wall. Carlos. Procurement. Legal. Comms. Unknown numbers that already meant media.
He scrolled without opening anything, eyes moving fast.
Hana watched him. "Don’t answer in the car."
Timothy nodded. "I won’t."
Hana’s mouth twitched. "You’re going to."
Timothy looked at her. "I won’t."
Hana studied him, then turned to the window. "Okay."
BGC came into view as the sun dropped. Taller buildings. Cleaner roads. More guards. More lights. More order.
TG Tower showed up like a block of glass waiting.
Hana stared at it. "I hate that we’re going straight back."
Timothy looked at her. "We can go home."
Hana turned her head. "You can. I can’t."
Timothy paused. "Why."
Hana’s voice stayed calm, but it was sharper. "If I don’t go in now, I’ll spend the whole night imagining what I’m walking into tomorrow. I’d rather see it and kill it."
Timothy didn’t argue. "Okay."
They entered through a side entrance. Security nodded. Familiar faces. No holiday softness.
The elevator ride up was quiet again, but it wasn’t calm. It was restrained.
When the doors opened on the executive floor, the air changed. Cooler. Cleaner. The smell of carpet and printer toner. The sound of keyboards in the distance.
Hana walked straight to her office and dropped her bag on the chair.
Timothy followed her in and stood near the door.
Hana turned on one lamp, then opened internal comms. Calendar. Inbox. No scrolling. Straight to the point.
Her shoulders tightened by a degree.
Timothy waited.
Hana spoke without looking up. "They tried to schedule you."
Timothy’s eyes narrowed. "Who."
"Everyone," Hana said. "Comms tried to slot you for a sit-down with a business magazine. Legal wants a call about potential IP exposure. Procurement wants you in a supplier meeting with someone offering ’performance-grade’ parts."
Timothy exhaled. "No."
Hana nodded. "Already declined."
Timothy looked at her. "You declined without asking."
Hana glanced up. "Yes."
Timothy held her gaze. "Good."
Hana looked annoyed that he agreed.
Timothy’s phone buzzed again. Carlos calling.
Hana pointed at it. "Answer."
Timothy picked up. "Carlos."
Carlos’s voice came through tight but controlled. "Welcome back. Sorry to ruin your last hour of pretending you’re human."
Timothy didn’t react. "What happened."
"Track owner moved our slot earlier," Carlos said. "Seven AM instead of nine. Also, tire shipment got stuck. We have spares but not the exact compound."
Timothy leaned against the desk edge. "Do we still run."
"Yes," Carlos said. "Data changes, but we can log it. I just need confirmation."
"We run," Timothy said. "If it feels unsafe, we stop."
Carlos exhaled. "Copy. The driver asked if you’ll be there."
Timothy didn’t answer instantly.
Hana watched him, quiet.
"I’ll be there for the first block," Timothy said. "Then I leave."
Carlos paused. "Good. I’ll brief the team. Media’s making noise, but security’s fine."
"Ignore it," Timothy said.
"Already doing that," Carlos replied. "See you tomorrow."
Timothy ended the call and placed his phone face down on Hana’s desk.
Hana looked at it. "You said no work talk."
Timothy nodded. "We’re back."
Hana’s eyes narrowed. "That’s not an excuse."
Timothy didn’t argue. He looked at her bag on the chair, out of place in the clean room.
"Did it help," he asked.
Hana’s fingers paused on her keyboard. "Did what help."
"The trip," Timothy said.
Hana stared at him for a beat. "Yes."
Timothy held her gaze. "Good."
Hana closed her laptop with a firm click and grabbed her bag again. "I’m going home."
Timothy blinked. "Now."
Hana nodded. "Yes. I saw what I needed to see."
They walked out together and rode the elevator down.
Outside, BGC traffic moved slow under streetlights. The air smelled like exhaust and warm concrete.
Hana stopped at her car.
Timothy stood beside her.
Hana looked at him. "If you go back upstairs after I leave, I’ll know."
Timothy met her eyes. "How."
Hana’s expression stayed flat. "Because you’ll send an email at eleven and it will have that tone."
Timothy paused, then nodded. "I won’t."
Hana studied him. Then she opened her door.
Before getting in, she looked at him again.
"You asked," she said. "Directly. That’s why I said yes."
Timothy nodded once. "Okay."
Hana got in, shut the door, and pulled into traffic.
Timothy watched her disappear, then stood for a moment with the tower behind him and the city in front.
His phone buzzed again.
He didn’t pull it out.
He turned toward his own car, walked at a steady pace, and got in. The engine started. Cabin lights came on, then dimmed.
As he pulled into traffic, the familiar load started to settle back into place, but it didn’t feel welded on the way it used to.
It felt like something he could set down again, if he remembered to.







