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How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 240: Baseline
The engineer’s finger hovered over the start control long enough that the room’s hum felt louder than it was.
Elena didn’t rush him. She watched the screen and the machine the way she watched a line before a run—waiting for the first error to show itself, not hoping it wouldn’t.
"Hold," Victor said, calm but sharp.
The engineer froze.
Victor stepped closer to the panel and pointed at the top right of the interface where a status tile sat in grey.
"Logging," he said. "It says armed, not active."
Jun leaned in. "That’s a software state."
Victor didn’t argue. "And it’s the difference between a test and an unrepeatable story."
Timothy didn’t react. He stayed by the cabinet, hands at his sides, letting them do what he’d brought them here to do.
Elena looked at the engineer. "Don’t start until Victor sees ’active.’"
The engineer nodded and moved his hand away.
Jun opened the side diagnostic window. He didn’t touch the main controls. He navigated like someone afraid of leaving fingerprints on evidence.
"Audit trail service," Jun said. "It’s waiting on a key."
Maria frowned. "Key?"
Jun pointed at Victor. "He wants immutability. That means no one starts a run without a sign-off token."
Victor’s expression didn’t change. "Exactly."
Hana crossed her arms. "We didn’t discuss tokens."
Timothy answered without looking at her. "We discussed accountability." 𝐟𝕣𝗲𝕖𝕨𝗲𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝗲𝚕.𝗰𝚘𝐦
Victor pulled a small hardware dongle from his pocket. Simple. No branding. It looked like something an IT department would issue, not a medical device team.
"I asked for this yesterday," Victor said. "Elena approved it."
Elena nodded once. "I approved it."
Hana’s eyes narrowed slightly, but she didn’t fight it. She had asked for discipline. This was discipline.
Victor plugged the dongle into the panel’s port.
The grey tile changed.
LOGGING: ACTIVECHAIN: LOCKEDSESSION ID: QC-MEDSYS-0001
Victor looked at the screen, then at Jun. "Now you can press your button."
Jun nodded to the engineer, but Elena gave the order.
"Start baseline scan sequence," she said.
The engineer pressed the control.
A tone sounded once. Not pleasant, not alarming. Just a confirmation that something had begun.
The Autodoc’s sensor frame shifted. A set of panels slid into position above the table, stopping with tight mechanical clicks that sounded like factory equipment, not hospital gear. The articulated arms didn’t move yet. They stayed in ready position, holding, waiting.
On the interface, a checklist ran down the center.
ENV CONTROL: STABLEPOWER: PRIMARY / UPS OKFRAME LOCK: CONFIRMEDCAL: SENSOR ARRAY A... OKCAL: SENSOR ARRAY B... OKCAL: ACTUATION ARMS... HOLDPATIENT LOAD: NONETEST MODE: PHANTOM
Maria’s eyes went to the "patient load" line.
"Phantom where," she asked.
Timothy nodded at the sealed cabinet.
Jun’s engineers moved as a unit. One went to the cabinet, looked to Elena, then to Victor. Victor nodded once.
The cabinet opened with a keypad and a mechanical latch. Inside were packed cases with foam cutouts and barcodes.
The engineer lifted one case carefully, set it on the floor, then carried it to the table like it mattered. He opened it and pulled out a torso phantom—dense material shaped like a human chest and abdomen, with embedded channels and sensor points marked with small metal tags.
Maria crouched. "Instrumented?"
"Instrumented," Jun said.
Elena watched the placement like she was watching a cleanroom protocol. "No gloves?"
Jun shook his head. "Controlled assembly level, not sterile. But we still do standard handling."
Maria stood. "Add gloves anyway. Not for sterility. For habits."
Elena didn’t even look at her. "Do it."
One of the engineers grabbed a box of nitrile gloves from the shelf and handed them around. The change was small. The point wasn’t hygiene. The point was pattern.
They placed the phantom onto the table and anchored it using the rails.
The interface prompted.
PHANTOM ID: SCAN OR ENTER
The engineer scanned the barcode on the case.
The system accepted it without delay.
PHANTOM PROFILE LOADED: TOR-3 (CARDIO-PULM)EXPECTED SIGNALS: 124TOLERANCE BAND: STRICT
Victor’s eyebrows lifted slightly at "strict."
"Strict tolerance on day one," he said.
Jun shrugged. "If it passes strict, we know something. If it fails strict, we still know something."
Maria watched the arms again. "When do those move."
Timothy answered before Jun could. "When repeatability needs them."
Elena shot him a look. Not anger. Just a warning: don’t start narrating.
Timothy shut up.
The interface displayed a map of the phantom with scan zones highlighted.
Elena pointed. "Run it."
Jun nodded at the engineer.
The machine began.
A sweep of the sensor array passed over the phantom. Not fast. Consistent. Each segment moved, paused, recorded, moved again. The hum changed as different modules engaged. A low vibration came through the floor, muted by the dampers.
On the screen, raw readouts filled in.
Heat map. Density profile. Flow estimate. Rhythm simulation signals from the phantom’s embedded generator. External ambient conditions. The data looked like something that belonged in industrial testing, not a glossy medtech promo.
Maria leaned in, eyes tracking the status lines instead of the graphics.
"Cycle time," she said.
Jun glanced at the corner. "Seven minutes baseline."
Maria shook her head. "Too long for a real hospital."
Elena didn’t disagree. "It’s a baseline."
"Baseline becomes habit," Maria said.
"Noted," Elena replied.
The scan continued.
Halfway through, the screen flashed yellow.
ALERT: SENSOR ARRAY B — DRIFT (0.8%)AUTO-CORRECT: ATTEMPTINGETA: 14 seconds
Jun’s engineer reached for the stop without thinking.
Elena caught his wrist with two fingers. Not hard. Just enough to make a point.
"Don’t panic," she said.
Victor moved closer. "Let it run. Document."
The engineer let go.
The machine paused, ran an internal calibration routine, then resumed.
DRIFT CORRECTED: 0.1%STATUS: WITHIN BANDNOTE: RECAL EVENT LOGGED
Victor nodded once, satisfied.
Jun looked annoyed, but not at the machine. At the fact that drift happened at all.
He turned to one of his engineers. "Where’s that module from."
The engineer answered quietly. "Prototype lot. Early board."
Jun’s jaw tightened. "We don’t ship early boards."
Elena didn’t look away from the screen. "We don’t ship anything."
The scan completed.
A tone sounded again.
SCAN COMPLETEDATA PACKAGEDANALYSIS START
Maria exhaled slowly like she’d been holding her breath without noticing.
Victor checked the session ID and took a photo of the screen—not the interface, just the session ID tile.
Jun noticed and didn’t complain. It was evidence. He understood that.
The Autodoc’s analysis phase ran without moving parts. The arms stayed still. The sensor array held position.
On the screen, a progress bar moved with no drama.
Then a report layout appeared. Plain. Structured. Like a physician’s note, but colder.
SUMMARY: Phantom signals within expected ranges.NOTED VARIANCE: Sensor Array B drift event.SYSTEM CONFIDENCE: High (Synthetic model)RECOMMENDED ACTION: Verify module B thermal stability; repeat run after cooldown.
Elena stared at it.
"That’s not a diagnosis," Maria said.
"It’s not supposed to be," Elena replied.
Timothy finally spoke, careful. "This is a controlled test profile. The diagnostic engine is constrained."
Victor turned to him. "Show the diagnostic engine. Not the origin. The output."
Timothy hesitated just long enough for Elena to notice.
Elena didn’t say no. She just narrowed the scope.
"Show a simulated case," she said. "No clinical claims. No names."
Jun’s engineer opened a menu.
TEST PROFILES:
Trauma (external)
Respiratory compromise
Arrhythmia simulation
Febrile pattern set
Metabolic anomaly set (non-invasive)
Multi-system failure cascade
Maria pointed. "Respiratory compromise."
Victor held up a finger. "Before you run anything else, I want a boundary statement and a screen watermark."
Hana stepped forward. "Already prepared."
She handed Victor a printed sheet. One paragraph. Boring language. Clear.
Victor read it, then looked at the interface. "Watermark."
Jun’s engineer typed quickly.
A thick banner appeared at the top of the screen:
INTERNAL TEST MODE — NOT FOR CLINICAL USE
Victor nodded. "Now you can play."
They selected the respiratory compromise profile. The phantom generator changed its signals. The scan sequence ran again, shorter this time because it reused calibration states.
Three minutes in, the analysis output changed.
FINDINGS (SIMULATED):
Reduced effective ventilation pattern (Zone 2–4)
Flow irregularity consistent with partial obstruction model
Compensatory tachy pattern detected (simulated)RISK FLAG: MODERATESUGGESTED DIFFERENTIAL (SIMULATED):
Obstructive event model
Restrictive pattern model
Fluid accumulation modelRECOMMENDED CONFIRMATION: Targeted imaging module; external vitals correlation; manual review
Maria leaned closer. "That’s... readable."
Jun didn’t sound impressed. "It’s a template."
Victor shook his head. "It’s worse than a template. It’s a liability draft."
Elena looked at the line that said "suggested differential."
"You see the danger," she said.
Timothy nodded. "Yes."
"So why show us," Elena asked, voice flat.
Timothy didn’t posture.
"Because this is what people will demand eventually," he said. "Machines that don’t just measure. Machines that interpret. If we don’t build the discipline around it now, it becomes a marketing trap later."
Hana cut in. "We are not selling interpretation."
Maria didn’t look away from the screen. "Hospitals will still treat it like interpretation if they see it."
Victor tapped the watermark. "This is why language matters."
Jun’s engineer shifted. "It’s impressive though."
Elena looked at him. "Don’t say that word here."
The engineer shut up.
Elena turned to Timothy. "You’re not deploying this. You’re not even building toward deployment until we have products under registration that support the ladder."
Timothy nodded. "That’s why you’re here."
Elena moved to the panel and closed the test profile menu.
"Now," she said, "we decide what comes out of this room first."
Jun answered immediately. "Power modules. Stable. Simple. Serviceable."
Maria added, "Monitoring devices that can survive QC heat and hospital brownouts."
Victor said, "And documentation that doesn’t lie."
Hana looked at Timothy. "No more surprises like this without my sign-off."
Timothy didn’t argue. "Understood."
Elena faced the team.
"This machine stays locked," she said. "Only test profiles. Only phantom runs. No photos. No casual talk. If anyone asks what we’re doing, we say we’re building a regulated manufacturing and service facility. Which is true."
Victor pointed at the session ID tile again. "And every run gets a session record. If we can’t reproduce it, it didn’t happen."
Jun nodded. "I want the drift issue investigated today."







