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How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 237: Candidates
Two weeks later.
Hana had filtered it down over two weeks, discarding resumes that looked impressive but felt wrong. Anyone who framed healthcare in terms of "patient journeys" was cut immediately. Anyone who led with innovation slogans instead of failure rates didn’t make it past the first page. Founders who talked about disruption were thanked politely and never called back.
What remained were operators.
People who had spent their careers inside regulated environments where mistakes didn’t trend on social media but showed up months later as lawsuits, recalls, or quiet procurement blacklists.
Timothy sat at the small conference table in TG MedSystems’ temporary office, the same room where taped floor plans still lived on the concrete next door. No branding. No projector. Just a carafe of water and three folders laid out in front of him.
Hana arrived exactly on time and took the chair across from him.
"One candidate," she said. "And no, that’s not a lack of options."
Timothy nodded. "Good."
She slid the top folder forward but didn’t open it.
"Before we talk about her," Hana said, "I want to be clear about what she’s being evaluated for. This is not a CEO who will sell dreams. This is not a builder of culture. This is not a visionary."
"Agreed," Timothy said.
"This is someone who will keep regulators satisfied, factories disciplined, and hospitals bored," Hana continued. "If she does her job well, no one outside procurement circles should know her name."
"That’s exactly the profile," Timothy said.
Hana opened the folder.
"Dr. Elena Cruz," she said. "Mechanical engineering background. Fifteen years in medical device manufacturing. Last role was regional operations head for a multinational diagnostics firm operating across Southeast Asia."
Timothy skimmed the first page. No glossy language. No exaggerated impact claims. The career progression was steady, almost quiet.
"She didn’t run hospitals," Hana added immediately, anticipating the question. "She ran plants, service networks, and compliance teams."
"Good," Timothy said.
"She’s handled recalls," Hana said. "Multiple. Voluntary and forced. She’s testified in regulatory hearings. She’s shut down production lines when the data didn’t justify risk."
Timothy looked up. "Did it cost her."
"Yes," Hana said. "It slowed promotions. It annoyed executives. It protected the company."
"That matters," Timothy said.
Hana leaned back. "She doesn’t chase autonomy. She doesn’t touch clinical decision-making. Her entire philosophy is that medical devices should fail quietly and recover fast."
Timothy closed the folder. "Bring her in."
They didn’t do a panel interview.
They didn’t do a presentation.
They didn’t ask for a vision deck.
Elena arrived the next morning alone, carrying a thin notebook and no laptop bag. She wore a plain blazer over a button-down shirt, practical shoes, nothing that tried to signal authority.
She took in the office with one slow look. The unfinished floors. The empty desks. The compliance binders stacked in locked cabinets.
"Temporary," she said.
"Yes," Hana replied.
"Good," Elena said. "Permanent offices lie."
Timothy watched her carefully.
They sat.
No introductions beyond names.
Elena spoke first.
"You’re not building a hospital company," she said. "If you were, I wouldn’t be here."
Timothy nodded once. "Correct."
"You’re building a manufacturing and service organization for regulated medical technologies," Elena continued. "Devices, platforms, components. Things hospitals buy, maintain, and blame."
"Yes," Hana said.
"And you want it separated from your other businesses because failure here contaminates everything else," Elena said.
"Yes," Timothy replied.
She folded her hands on the table. "Then before anything else, I need to say what this company will not do."
Hana glanced at Timothy. He didn’t interrupt.
"We will not design devices that require heroic maintenance," Elena said. "If a machine only works when your best engineer is on shift, it’s a bad machine."
Agreed.
"We will not sell features hospitals cannot support," she continued. "Procurement will buy them. Engineers will hate them. Downtime will rise."
Agreed.
"We will not bypass distributors just to feel disruptive," Elena said. "If we change the supply chain, it will be because we can support it better, not because we want control."
Timothy leaned forward slightly.
"And," Elena said, "we will not touch clinical decision authority. Our systems can monitor, measure, flag, and assist. They do not decide."
Hana exhaled slowly. Timothy felt something settle.
"Why are you interested," Timothy asked.
Elena didn’t answer immediately.
"Because most medtech companies are built backwards," she said finally. "They design for approval, not for use. They optimize for sales cycles, not for ten-year maintenance. They treat service as a cost center and then act surprised when hospitals don’t trust them."
She looked at him directly.
"You’re building service first. That’s rare."
"It’s expensive," Timothy said.
"Yes," Elena replied. "Which is why no one does it properly."
Hana interjected. "If you run TG MedSystems, your success will not be measured in market share."
Elena nodded. "It will be measured in uptime."
"And audit outcomes," Hana added.
"And lack of noise," Timothy said.
Elena smiled faintly. "That’s my preferred metric."
They walked the floor after.
Not ceremonially. Not as a tour.
Elena stepped over tape lines, crouched near marked power runs, traced imagined workflows with her foot.
"This receiving layout will fail unless quarantine is staffed independently," she said.
"It will be," Hana replied.
"This training space needs fixed schedules," Elena continued. "Hospitals will send engineers only if they can plan months ahead."
"We assumed as much," Timothy said.
She stopped near the future testing area. "What are you building first."
"Diagnostics and monitoring systems," Timothy said. "Failure-prone components. Power modules. Sensors. Platforms that integrate but don’t decide."
Elena nodded. "Good. Low drama. High value."
She turned to him. "And what do you want from me, exactly."
Timothy didn’t hesitate.
"I want you to run the company," he said. "Not as a visionary. As a constraint enforcer. You protect us from overreach. You slow us down when speed would create risk. You say no when engineers get clever."
"And when sales complains," Elena asked.
"I will back you," Timothy said.
"And when regulators question intent."
"I will stay out of your way," he replied.
They stopped near the exit.
Elena looked around once more. The empty space. The taped logic. The lack of anything impressive.
"You understand," she said, "that if I accept, I will kill ideas you personally like."
Timothy nodded. "I’m counting on it."
She considered that.
"I’ll need autonomy over hiring," she said. "Especially compliance and service."
"Yes."
"And I will not chase autonomy narratives," she added. "No autodoc theatrics. No marketing speculation."
Timothy met her gaze. "We build machines that don’t need stories."
Silence stretched.
Then Elena nodded once.
"Draft the mandate," she said. "If it’s as strict as this conversation, I’ll accept."
Hana closed her notebook.
"That’s the test," she said.
As Elena left, Timothy remained standing in the quiet space, listening to the freight elevator descend.
"She’s not charismatic," Hana said.
"She doesn’t need to be," Timothy replied.
"She’ll frustrate people."
"That’s fine."
Hana studied him. "This makes it real."
Timothy looked at the empty floor again. Soon it would be full of machines, procedures, arguments, audits, and quiet competence.
"Yes," he said. "That was the point."







