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How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 220: Invitation
January 3, 2030
The first Friday of the year showed its teeth early.
By nine, Timothy had already signed off on three approvals he did not care about and declined two meetings he did not need. He did it fast, clean, and without explanation. The building was back in full rhythm, and that meant the requests came in like water pressure finding cracks.
He kept his door half-closed. Not to be dramatic. Just to cut noise.
Hana did not knock when she came in. She never did anymore. She walked in with her tablet, her hair tied back, and a face that said she had already handled four separate fires before breakfast.
"Before you say anything," she said, "no, we are not doing an interview."
Timothy looked up from the folder on his desk. "I wasn’t going to ask."
Hana dropped into the chair opposite him and exhaled once, controlled. "Good. Because I already told comms we’re not feeding the rumor cycle."
"It’s not a rumor cycle," Timothy said. "It’s a silhouette and people entertaining themselves."
"It’s pressure," Hana replied. "Silhouettes don’t trend for a week unless people want a story."
Timothy closed the folder. "They can want it. We don’t owe it."
Hana’s eyes stayed on him for a moment like she was checking for the second half of the sentence. When none came, she nodded and pulled up her tablet.
"Okay," she said. "Today’s damage."
She ran through the list. A governor’s office requesting a meeting "to discuss transportation modernization." A university wanting "collaboration" on engineering scholarships. A vendor offering "exclusive supply" for the foundation’s repairs. All the requests had the same smell: someone trying to stand close to a moving machine and claim they helped push.
Timothy listened without interrupting, then said, "No, no, no, no. And the university we can respond to later, through foundation ops, not me."
Hana’s fingers moved fast. She typed short replies, clipped and polite. "You know you’re going to have to do something positive for the universities eventually, right."
"We already do," Timothy said.
"You know what I mean," she replied. "A public, structured program. If you ignore it, someone else will frame it for you."
Timothy leaned back in his chair. His eyes went to the window for a second, then back to Hana. "I’m not ignoring it."
Hana raised an eyebrow. "Then what are you doing."
Timothy hesitated, just long enough to be noticeable.
Hana stopped typing. "What."
He didn’t answer right away. He picked up his pen, rolled it between his fingers, then set it down again like he was deciding whether to say something that would create work. He knew it would. That was the problem.
"I’m planning something," Timothy said.
Hana stared at him like he had spoken a foreign language.
"You," she said slowly. "Planning something that is not a memo."
"It’s not a memo," Timothy confirmed.
Hana leaned forward. "Say it."
Timothy’s face stayed neutral, but his posture shifted, the way it did when he was about to give an instruction that could not be taken back.
"Two days," he said. "Next week. Siargao."
Hana blinked once. "What."
"A two-day break," Timothy repeated. "You and me. No staff. No meetings. Phone only for emergencies."
Hana’s expression went flat, as if she was waiting for a camera crew to step out of a plant.
"You’re joking," she said.
"I don’t joke," Timothy replied.
"That’s the problem," Hana said. "If you said it as a joke, I would know it’s not real. But you’re saying it like you’re approving a procurement purchase."
Timothy looked at her. "Are you saying no."
Hana sat back, eyes narrowing. "I’m saying I don’t trust the sudden appearance of a vacation in your head."
Timothy didn’t argue. He expected that. He had asked her because she would push back first. If he could convince Hana, he could convince himself.
"It’s not sudden," he said. "I’ve been thinking about it since the road trip."
"That was a drive," Hana replied. "This is a plane ticket."
"It’s still a reset," Timothy said.
Hana’s phone buzzed on the table. She glanced at it, ignored it, and pushed it face down with a small act of violence.
"You realize what will happen if you disappear," she said.
"I will still exist," Timothy replied.
Hana gave him a look. "You know what I mean. People will assume something. A secret meeting. A health issue. A scandal. Or they’ll assume you’re hiding because the car leaked."
Timothy nodded. "Then we frame it."
"How," Hana asked.
Timothy’s tone stayed steady. "We don’t announce it. We don’t post. We don’t show. We go as private citizens. We don’t take photos. If someone sees us, they see us. That’s it."
Hana’s mouth twitched. "You think you can be a private citizen."
"I can try," Timothy said.
Hana stared at him for a beat, then looked down at her tablet like she needed something solid.
"What do you want from this," she asked, quieter.
Timothy answered honestly, because he knew she would hear the lie.
"I want you to stop carrying everything like it’s a punishment," he said. "And I want to stop doing the same."
Hana looked up, expression unreadable. "That’s not a vacation pitch. That’s a diagnosis."
Timothy shrugged slightly. "Then take it that way."
Hana leaned back and let out a slow breath through her nose. She didn’t laugh. She didn’t soften. But she didn’t reject it either.
"Two days," she repeated.
"Yes," Timothy said. "Leave early morning. Come back the third day before noon."
Hana stared at the calendar in her mind. Timothy could see it in her eyes. She was already checking schedules, already mapping risks, already deciding what would break.
"You’re choosing the week after New Year," she said. "When everything is stacking."
"That’s why," Timothy replied.
Hana shook her head slowly. "You’re going to be unbearable if the plane gets delayed."
"I can handle delays," Timothy said.
"You cannot handle delays," Hana corrected. "You can handle delays when you are the one causing them."
Timothy didn’t deny it. "I’ll follow your lead."
Hana pointed at him. "That sentence is suspicious."
Timothy’s face stayed straight. "I mean it."
Hana picked up her tablet again, but not to type work. She opened her calendar and scrolled through the week. Timothy watched her do it without speaking. He didn’t want to push. Hana pushed herself enough.
"Okay," she said finally, voice flat like she was signing a contract. "Two days is possible."
Timothy didn’t react. He just nodded.
Hana held up a finger. "But we do it correctly."
Timothy waited.
"No villa posts," she said. "No private plane nonsense. We fly commercial. We book a normal place, clean, safe. We don’t take staff. We do not treat it like an executive retreat."
Timothy nodded. "Agreed."
"And we pre-brief Carlos," Hana added. "He will be annoyed, but he will keep Motus moving. Foundation ops gets a backup contact. Security gets our locations. And you, Timothy Guerrero, do not wander off alone on a motorcycle like you’re in a movie."
Timothy looked at her. "I don’t ride motorcycles."
"You will if you see one," Hana said.
Timothy opened his mouth, then closed it. He couldn’t argue with that.
Hana kept going, methodical. "We pack light. No laptops. One emergency phone each. I’ll bring a small tablet for logistics. That’s it."
Timothy nodded again. "Okay."
Hana stared at him. "Are you really doing this."
"Yes," Timothy said.
Hana tapped her pen against the table once. "Then you’re buying the tickets."
Timothy nodded. "Send me the details."
Hana’s eyes narrowed again. "You’re not going to ask where we’re staying."
"You’ll pick something reasonable," Timothy replied.
"That’s not trust," Hana said. "That’s delegation."
"It can be both," Timothy said.
Hana stood up with her tablet. "I hate you."
Timothy looked at her. "No, you don’t."
Hana pointed at him again, then left the office without another word, like she had just accepted a new project she would pretend she didn’t want.
Timothy sat still for a moment after she left, letting the decision settle. It felt strange. Not guilt. Not excitement. Just the quiet discomfort of stepping away from a routine that had become armor.
He looked at the pile of folders on his desk. He didn’t open any of them. He checked his schedule, deleted two items, and added one block labeled Travel. No notes. No details. Just a block.
By noon, the office had moved on. People did not sense the shift because Timothy kept his face the same. He still attended the meeting he couldn’t avoid. He still answered the call from procurement. He still forwarded the right messages to the right teams. But in the background, something had changed. A small decision that did not generate a dashboard.
At two, Hana came back in with a sheet of paper.
She tossed it on his desk.
It was an itinerary, clean and simple. Flight numbers. Departure time. A hotel name. A contact number. Transfer details. Two small lines at the bottom: No work. No meetings.
Timothy read it, then looked up. "You already booked."
Hana crossed her arms. "If I waited for you, we’d end up flying at midnight and landing in the middle of nowhere."
Timothy nodded. "How much."
Hana waved it off. "You can reimburse later. I used a company card. It will look like operations travel. No one will ask."
Timothy stared at her. "That’s your version of relaxing."
Hana’s eyes didn’t soften. "That’s my version of making sure we don’t get interrupted by accounting while we’re trying to pretend we’re normal."
Timothy gave a small nod. He didn’t say thank you yet. Hana hated gratitude when it sounded like praise.
"Any conditions," Timothy asked.
Hana looked at him like he was slow. "Yes. You don’t bring your whole brain."
"I only have one," Timothy said.
"Then leave parts of it behind," Hana replied. "Especially the part that turns every sensation into a project."
Timothy leaned back. "No promises."
Hana’s mouth twitched. "That’s fine. I’ll bully you on the beach."
Timothy stared at her. "We are not doing anything that looks like a beach photo."
Hana sighed. "Relax. Nobody wants to see you in shorts."
Timothy didn’t answer. He wasn’t sure if that was an insult or a gift.
The rest of the day moved. It was Friday, which meant everyone tried to finish a week’s worth of work they had neglected during the holidays. By five, Timothy’s head felt packed again. Hana had taken three calls from legal, two from comms, one from a supplier who pretended he didn’t know what he was asking. She shut each one down like she was closing doors in a hallway.
At six, Timothy stood by the elevator bank. Hana joined him with her bag over her shoulder, jacket on, eyes tired.
"You’re leaving," Timothy said.
Hana looked at him. "It’s Friday."
Timothy nodded. "Right."
They rode the elevator down together. The lobby was busy again. People in groups, some laughing, some complaining, some already in weekend mode. The building smelled like polished stone and air conditioning. Nothing warm. Nothing soft.
Outside, BGC traffic moved in slow lines. Streetlights came on. Cars crawled. People crossed at the corners with shopping bags.
Hana walked beside Timothy toward the curb where her car waited.
"This is still a bad idea," she said.
Timothy didn’t pretend otherwise. "Probably."
Hana looked at him. "Then why do it."
Timothy paused beside the curb and watched a couple in office clothes argue softly while waiting for a ride. Not dramatic. Just tired people trying to decide dinner.
"Because the work will still be there," Timothy said. "And if we don’t learn how to stop, we will keep bleeding people. Quietly."
Hana stared at him for a moment. Then she nodded once.
"Okay," she said. "Two days."
Timothy nodded back. "Two days."
Hana opened her car door, then stopped and looked at him again.
"If you back out," she said, "I will not forgive you."
Timothy met her eyes. "I won’t."
Hana got into the car and shut the door. The window rolled down halfway.
"And Timothy," she said.
"What."
Hana’s face stayed serious, but her voice softened by one degree. "No work talk."
Timothy hesitated, then nodded. "Okay."
Hana drove off into traffic.
Timothy stood on the sidewalk a moment longer, letting the noise wash over him. A car horn blared. A motorcycle slipped between lanes. Someone laughed loudly near a bar entrance.
He turned and started walking to his own car, already picturing a place he hadn’t seen in years, already hearing Hana complain about sand and heat and people, already knowing she would still come anyway.
The city kept moving. The year kept moving. For the first time in a while, Timothy had placed something on the calendar that wasn’t a deadline.
He got into his car and pulled into traffic, the itinerary folded in his pocket like a small piece of contraband.







