©NovelBuddy
How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 255: The Customers
Interest did not announce itself the way Timothy had expected it to.
There was no flood of calls. No breathless requests. No sudden shift from caution to urgency. If anything, the world stayed quieter than he thought it would, and that quiet carried its own kind of information.
Hana delivered the first report three days after the shipment pause had been resolved.
Not by email.
She waited until the late afternoon, when the unit had settled into its steady rhythm and people were focused enough not to overreact. Timothy was standing near the glass wall that overlooked the main floor when she approached, tablet tucked under her arm.
"Do you have ten minutes," she asked.
He glanced at the floor—Jun reviewing logs with a junior engineer, Maria walking a tech through a service checklist, Elena deep in discussion with Victor near the compliance board.
"Yes," he said. "Let’s walk."
They moved toward the quieter side corridor, away from the benches and the low mechanical hum.
Hana didn’t open with numbers.
She never did when the numbers weren’t the point.
"They’ve stopped asking what it does," she said instead.
Timothy nodded slowly. "Who’s ’they.’"
"Everyone who matters," Hana replied. "Hospitals. Procurement groups. Two government health agencies. Even the ones who haven’t contacted us directly."
She tapped her tablet and brought up a summary, but she didn’t hand it to him yet.
"The questions changed after the pause," she continued. "Before, they were curious. Now they’re... measuring."
"Measuring what," Timothy asked.
"Us," Hana said. "Our tolerance. Our behavior under friction."
Timothy let that settle as they reached the end of the corridor and turned back toward the floor.
"Okay," he said. "Start from the top."
Hana nodded and finally turned the screen so he could see.
It wasn’t a sales funnel.
There were no conversion percentages. No projected revenue curves.
It was a list, broken into categories.
Observed Interest — Nonbinding
She scrolled.
"First group is hospital networks," she said. "Not the flashy ones. Regional systems. Public-private hybrids. Places that run on thin margins and can’t afford downtime."
She tapped one entry.
"A Scandinavian network requested our full service documentation—not summaries, the actual manuals. They didn’t ask for pricing. They didn’t ask for demos."
Timothy raised an eyebrow. "What did they ask."
"How many people we’ve fired for violating procedure," Hana said flatly.
He exhaled once. "And what did we say."
"The truth," she replied. "None. Yet. But we’ve frozen people’s work."
Timothy smiled faintly. "That probably scared them."
"No," Hana said. "It reassured them."
She scrolled again.
"Second group is teaching hospitals. They’re not buyers yet. They’re evaluators. They want to know if this thing belongs in their ecosystem without corrupting it."
"Corrupting," Timothy repeated.
Hana nodded. "Their word. They’re afraid of systems that quietly change behavior."
She paused on another entry.
"One dean asked whether Autodoc would create diagnostic complacency."
"And," Timothy prompted.
"And I told him the system refuses to complete scans if calibration drifts beyond threshold. It doesn’t degrade gracefully."
Timothy considered that. "How did he respond."
"He said that was inconvenient," Hana replied. "Then he asked for more detail."
They reached the main floor again and slowed their pace, blending into the movement without interrupting it.
"Third group is the quietest," Hana said. "But potentially the most important."
"Government," Timothy guessed.
"Yes," she said. "Health ministries. Not regulators yet. Policy groups."
She lowered her voice slightly.
"They’re not asking whether Autodoc works. They’re asking whether it sets a precedent."
Timothy stopped walking.
Hana did too.
"That’s a bigger problem," he said.
"It’s a bigger opportunity," she replied. "Depending on how you look at it."
Timothy looked out over the unit again. "What kind of precedent."
"Behavioral," Hana said. "They want to know if a system can be designed to fail safely without becoming unusable. If accountability can be built into architecture instead of policy."
She hesitated.
"One group asked whether they could mandate something like this in public hospitals in ten years."
Timothy didn’t respond immediately.
"That’s... far ahead," he said.
"Yes," Hana agreed. "Which means they’re not buying a product. They’re buying a concept of restraint."
They stood in silence for a moment, watching Maria correct a tech’s grip on a connector, not sharply, just enough to matter.
"Anyone asking for special access," Timothy asked.
"No," Hana said. "That’s the interesting part. No one’s trying to jump the line."
She scrolled again.
"There are buyers," she said. "Real ones. But they’re behaving like engineers, not customers."
She tapped a highlighted section.
"A hospital group in Southeast Asia asked for projected parts availability over seven years. They didn’t ask about features at all."
"And," Timothy said, already knowing the answer.
"And when I told them we wouldn’t commit beyond what we’ve validated, they said they respected that and asked when validation would realistically complete."
Timothy nodded. "They’re planning."
"Yes," Hana said. "Slowly."
They resumed walking, this time toward the prototype corridor, stopping short of the thicker door.
"Anyone scared off," Timothy asked.
Hana didn’t dodge it.
"Yes," she said. "Some private hospital chains backed away."
"Why."
"Too boring," she replied. "Too rigid. Too much oversight. One executive literally said, ’This sounds like it would tell our doctors no.’"
Timothy smiled. "It would."
Hana smiled back, briefly. "Exactly."
They stood there, the door between them and the Autodoc still closed, still uninviting.
"Do they know what it really is," Timothy asked.
"Some of them suspect," Hana said. "But no one’s asking directly."
"Why not."
"Because the ones who understand don’t want us to answer," she said. "They’re afraid of forcing us into claims."
Timothy considered that. "That’s... considerate."
"Or strategic," Hana replied. "They don’t want to contaminate the record."
They turned away from the door and headed back toward the conference area.
Inside, Elena and Victor were still in discussion, low voices, serious but not tense. Jun glanced up as Timothy passed and nodded, then went back to his screen.
Hana closed her tablet.
"There’s one more thing," she said.
Timothy waited.
"Interest is starting to split," Hana continued. "Not by size. By patience."
"Explain."
"Some groups want this now," she said. "They’re used to pushing vendors until something ships. They’re frustrated by our pace."
"And the others."
"The others are watching how we say no," Hana replied. "They’re measuring how consistently we refuse."
Timothy leaned against the table. "That’s... uncomfortable."
"Yes," Hana said. "But it’s working."
He looked at her. "Are we ready for buyers."
Hana didn’t answer right away.
She thought about the calls. The emails. The way language had shifted from curiosity to evaluation.
"We’re ready for the right ones," she said finally. "But the right ones don’t move quickly."
Timothy nodded. "Neither do we."
They were quiet for a moment, then Hana added something softer.
"There’s one email I didn’t log," she said.
Timothy turned to her. "Why."
"Because it wasn’t an inquiry," she replied. "It was... a reaction."
She reopened her tablet and handed it to him.
The email was short. From a biomedical director at a rural hospital. No letterhead. No formal tone.
We don’t have the budget for this yet. But if you’re still around in three years, call us. We’re tired of apologizing for our machines.
Timothy read it twice.
He handed the tablet back without comment.
"That’s the kind of buyer we’re building for," Hana said.
"Yes," Timothy replied. "The ones who can’t afford to be early."
She nodded.
They ended the conversation there, not because there was nothing more to say, but because the work was waiting.
Later that evening, after most of the unit had gone quiet, Timothy sat alone in the conference room and reviewed the report again, this time slowly.
No projections. No hype.
Just impressions.
Patience. Caution. Relief.
Interest that didn’t lean forward aggressively, but didn’t step back either.
He thought about how many companies mistook urgency for demand.
This wasn’t that.
This was something heavier.
Expectation forming without permission.
When Elena passed by the open door, he looked up.
"They’re interested," he said.
She stopped. "In what."
"In us," Timothy replied. "Not just the machine."
Elena nodded once. "That’s harder."
"Yes," he agreed. "But it lasts longer."
She leaned against the doorframe. "Anyone trying to rush us."
"Some," Timothy said. "They won’t stay."
"Good," Elena replied. "We don’t build for the impatient."
She left him then, heading back to the floor.
Timothy stayed seated, staring at the table where so many careful decisions had been made.
Outside, somewhere, budgets were being debated. Committees were forming. People were arguing quietly about whether restraint could be trusted.
Inside this building, no one was celebrating interest.
They were adjusting to it.
Because interest, like respect, wasn’t light either.
It didn’t lift the work.
It pressed down on it.
He closed the report and didn’t file it right away.
He sat there longer than he needed to, listening to the building settle—air handlers cycling, a distant cart squeaking once, then quiet. The report wasn’t a victory lap. It was a map of pressure points, drawn by people who would never step inside this room.
On the table, his phone buzzed once. A short message from Hana: Two more inquiries came in. Logged. No action needed tonight.
He didn’t reply.
Not because he didn’t trust her—because he did.
He stood, turned off the conference room light, and walked back onto the floor. The benches were mostly dark now, status LEDs steady, nothing flashing. Elena’s whiteboard was still there, the same boundary lines staring back like they’d been written for whoever came next.
Timothy slowed near the prototype corridor, stopped short, and kept walking.







