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How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 229: Watching Movies
January 19, 2030
The apartment was quiet in the way only a city apartment could be quiet—never silent, just layered with distant movement. Traffic hummed several floors below. An elevator chimed somewhere in the building. A neighbor’s television leaked faint dialogue through a wall Timothy had learned to ignore.
He stood in the kitchen while the microwave finished reheating dinner, watching the reflection of the city in the darkened window. His laptop sat closed on the dining table, deliberately so. He had spent the entire week buried in numbers that behaved the way numbers were supposed to behave. Manufacturing yields had improved. Energy forecasts stayed within tolerance. Automotive testing continued without incident.
Everything was stable.
That stability left him restless.
He carried his plate to the couch and ate without paying attention, chewing out of habit rather than appetite. When he finished, he set the plate aside and picked up the remote. He didn’t scroll aimlessly. He already knew what he was looking for, even if he hadn’t admitted it to himself yet.
Science fiction.
Not the kind that chased spectacle for its own sake, but the kind that treated technology as environment rather than miracle. Worlds where machines didn’t announce themselves, where they existed because they had to, because someone once decided that human limitation was not a reason to stop building.
He selected a film he had seen years ago and let it play.
At first, he watched passively. The opening scenes rolled by with familiar pacing, familiar tropes. Space. Isolation. The quiet assumption that advanced technology simply worked. His attention sharpened when the medical bay appeared onscreen.
The autodoc unfolded smoothly, metal arms emerging from recessed panels, instruments arranging themselves with calm inevitability. No dramatic music. No frantic shouting. The machine didn’t rush. It didn’t hesitate. It scanned, assessed, and acted.
Timothy leaned forward.
The scene lingered longer than most audiences probably cared for. The camera tracked internal imaging displays. Readouts shifted in real time. The system adjusted its approach as new information came in, altering pressure, angle, sequence. There was no single "fix" moment. Healing was treated as a process, not an event.
He paused the movie.
The frozen frame showed the machine mid-operation, tools aligned with mathematical precision. Timothy stared at it, his mind already pulling the scene apart.
Power requirements were obvious. Redundant systems would be mandatory. Imaging resolution exceeded anything available in most hospitals, but not conceptually. The logic of it was familiar. Sensors feeding data into control systems. Actuators responding faster than human reflexes. Software coordinating the whole thing without ceremony.
Nothing about it violated physics.
It violated logistics.
He resumed the movie, but his attention had shifted. He stopped following the story and started tracking the assumptions behind the technology. That the patient did not need to wait for a specialist. That diagnosis did not bottleneck care. That the system was designed around worst-case scenarios, not ideal conditions.
By the time the credits rolled, Timothy hadn’t moved.
He shut the screen off and sat in the dark for a long moment, hands resting loosely on his knees. The city noise outside seemed louder now, as if it had noticed him paying attention.
He stood and began pacing.
Healthcare had never been part of his plans. Not directly. It existed at the edge of his work, intersecting with energy resilience, disaster response, infrastructure stability. He had funded backups, improved power delivery, ensured uptime where it mattered most.
But he had never touched the machines themselves.
He thought of hospitals he had walked through over the years, not as a visitor, but as an inspector. Corridors that smelled of antiseptic and heat. Machines patched together through maintenance ingenuity rather than manufacturer support. Doctors working around limitations so ingrained they no longer complained about them.
At the time, he had filed those observations away as constraints. Facts of the environment. Not problems he was meant to solve.
Now, sitting alone in his apartment, those constraints felt optional.
He queued another movie. Older this time. Less polished. The medical technology bordered on absurd—instant cellular regeneration, tissue reconstructed in seconds. He didn’t take it seriously. He wasn’t interested in fantasy. He watched for intent.
Again and again, the same assumptions surfaced. That diagnosis should be immediate. That treatment should not depend on the availability of specific people. That machines should absorb complexity so humans could focus on judgment.
He muted the movie halfway through and let it play silently.
His thoughts wandered.
He considered how much effort went into making cars safer, more reliable, more forgiving of error. Redundant braking systems. Fail-safes layered on top of fail-safes. Entire industries built around reducing the consequences of human mistakes.
Healthcare, by contrast, often accepted fragility as unavoidable.
He turned the sound back on, then shut the movie off entirely.
This wasn’t about copying fictional machines. It wasn’t about chasing some imagined future. It was about acknowledging how far reality lagged behind its own potential.
He went to his desk and opened a notebook, not rushing, not dramatic. He wrote at the top of the page:
Medical technology.
He didn’t underline it. He didn’t embellish it. He let it sit there and waited for the discomfort to fade.
It didn’t.
Instead, questions followed.
Why did imaging machines require months-long procurement cycles?
Why were critical components manufactured continents away from where they were used?
Why did hospitals accept downtime as a scheduling problem rather than a failure condition?
He didn’t write answers. He wrote more questions.
Later that night, he returned to the couch and watched documentaries instead of fiction. Real hospitals. Real equipment. Footage of crowded emergency rooms, aging machines beeping steadily, alarms ignored because they never stopped.
One segment showed a doctor waiting for replacement parts delayed by customs clearance. The delay was framed as unfortunate but normal. Timothy felt irritation settle behind his eyes.
Normal was the problem.
He shut the documentary off before it ended and leaned back, staring at the ceiling. His apartment felt smaller than usual, as if the walls had inched closer while he wasn’t looking.
He slept poorly.
The next day, he watched more films. Not obsessively, not in a binge, but deliberately. Each one added texture rather than answers. He paid attention to how technology was framed. In the better stories, machines weren’t heroic. They were quiet. Reliable. Taken for granted.
That was the point.
He paused one film during a scene where a patient was stabilized automatically, the machine handling triage before any human arrived. He replayed the scene twice, then a third time.
Triage without delay.
He thought of emergency rooms he had seen where patients waited not because no one cared, but because systems were overwhelmed. He thought of how manufacturing lines were designed to prevent bottlenecks long before they occurred, how capacity planning assumed surge, not average load.
Healthcare rarely did.
By evening, his notebook had filled several pages. He hadn’t realized how much he’d written until he closed it and felt the weight in his hand.
He wasn’t excited.
He was irritated.
Irritation had always been his most reliable signal. It meant he had found inefficiency that refused to justify itself. It meant something didn’t align with reality, and reality was paying the cost.
He cooked dinner and ate it standing up, attention elsewhere. He didn’t check his phone. He didn’t need to. Nothing urgent would be waiting. Everything urgent had already happened somewhere else.
That night, he sat by the window and watched the city.
Ambulances passed occasionally, sirens cutting through traffic. He watched how drivers reacted, how lanes shifted just enough to let them through, how the city adapted momentarily before snapping back to chaos.
Response without preparation.
He imagined what happened at the other end of those sirens. Waiting rooms. Machines warming up. Staff compensating.
He turned away from the window.
This wasn’t about saving the world. He had never believed in that kind of narrative. This was about fixing things that were clearly broken because they had been allowed to stay that way.
He returned to the couch and queued one last film, not science fiction this time, but a speculative drama grounded in near-future technology. The medical scenes were understated. Portable diagnostics. Modular equipment. Systems that traveled to patients instead of the other way around.
That idea stayed with him.
Mobility.
Manufacturing closer to use. Devices designed for serviceability, not replacement. Diagnostics built to survive unreliable environments.
He paused the movie and wrote again.
Not plans. Principles.
Design for uptime.
Assume surge, not average.
Manufacture near demand.
Reduce dependency without isolating innovation.
He stopped there.
The list was incomplete. It was supposed to be.
When he finally turned the television off, the apartment felt quieter again, but not empty. The thought had settled into him, no longer sharp, no longer demanding attention every second.
He didn’t feel resolved.
He felt oriented.
Medical was not a new ambition. It was a blind spot he could no longer ignore.
He closed the notebook and placed it on the shelf beside others that marked different phases of his work. He didn’t label it. He didn’t need to.
Outside, the city continued its argument with itself. Somewhere, a machine failed in a small, ordinary way. Somewhere else, a person compensated.
Timothy stood by the window a moment longer, then turned the lights off and went to bed.
Tomorrow would bring meetings. Approvals. Systems behaving the way systems were supposed to behave.
But something had shifted.
And once he noticed it, he knew he wouldn’t be able to unsee it.







