How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System

Chapter 155: Prototype One


March 3rd, 2028 — Subic Bay Freeport Zone

TG Energy Test Site Alpha

The air in this part of Subic felt different.

Colder, cleaner, sharper—like the wind itself knew it wasn't supposed to carry the sound of traffic or civilization here. Just the low rumble of distant generators, the occasional thump of rotor wash from passing choppers, and the steady whisper of waves hitting the rocky shoreline far below.

The test site sat on an isolated plateau carved out of the terrain, ringed by fences, bollards, and layered security checkpoints. Warning signs were posted every few meters:

AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY

RADIATION CONTROLLED AREA

NO UNAUTHORIZED ELECTRONIC DEVICES

A full kilometer out, the perimeter was empty. No workers. No stray vehicles. Just sensors and cameras.

Exactly as Timothy ordered.

A ACH175 helicopter had dropped them off twenty minutes ago. Now it was gone, a shrinking speck over the coastline.

That left just two people on the open platform overlooking the heart of the site:

Timothy Guerrero.

And Dr. José Reyes.

Below them, housed inside a circular concrete pit lined with reinforced shielding, stood the "patient."

The original NuScale module.

Standard pressure vessel.

Standard containment.

Standard everything.

To the untrained eye, it looked like a massive, overbuilt steel cylinder—ugly and industrial. To Reyes, it was still his legacy design. The version that got approved. The version he had compromised on.

"It's strange," Reyes murmured, leaning against the safety rail. "I used to think this was beautiful."

Timothy glanced at him. "You don't anymore?"

Reyes gave a small, humorless smile.

"Not after seeing the HyperCore drawings," he admitted. "Now this just looks… clumsy."

He exhaled, gaze tracking the weld lines and access ports.

At this distance, they could see every detail: the conventional vertical coolant headers, the bulky flange mounts, the traditional dome-like top head. Heavy. Reliable. Boring.

"Is the radius clear?" Timothy asked.

Reyes glanced at his watch, syncing with the test site network.

"Security feed says all non-essential staff are in Bunker Bravo," he answered. "Shielded, one point one kilometers east. This platform and the control chamber below us are the only active points within the radius."

"Good," Timothy said. "I want no surprises."

They started down the steel staircase bolted to the side of the pit wall, descending level by level until they reached the maintenance deck—a ring-shaped walkway halfway up the height of the reactor module. From here, the NuScale vessel towered over them, a gray monolith anchored into the concrete like a buried missile.

Reyes ran a gloved hand along the railing.

"All readings are nominal," he said, checking a handheld detector. "Cold, de-fueled, no live systems. Just a shell."

"Perfect," Timothy replied.

He stepped closer to the vessel until he could place a hand against the steel. It was cool to the touch, slightly rough where micro-wear had accumulated during transport and installation.

"This is our template," Timothy said quietly. "Our scaffolding."

Reyes studied him.

"Are you sure you want to do it at this scale right away?" he asked. "A full module reconstruction is… big. Even for you."

Even for you.

The way he said it was casual. Familiar.

As if Timothy's ability was just another tool, like a lathe or a high-end 3D printer—remarkable, yes, but not world-shattering.

The neuralyzer conditioning was holding.

Yesterday, Timothy had "reinforced" their previous session—gently rewriting Reyes' mental framing so that the Reconstruction System felt natural to him. Something extraordinary, but not something to panic about. Just a fact of working with Timothy: he could rewrite matter. You accept it, you work with it, you don't obsess over the metaphysics.

Now, seeing Reyes' calm expression, Timothy knew it had worked.

He nodded once.

"This is precisely why we're here," Timothy said. "We can't iterate HyperCore in CAD forever. At some point, we need steel. We need mass. We need an actual reactor."

Reyes snorted lightly. "You mean we need whatever alloy that thing will end up being."

Timothy's lips tugged into a faint smirk.

"That too."

He placed his right palm flat against the NuScale shell.

Even through the glove, he could feel the System waking up—an invisible tension in the air, like static before lightning.

"Last chance to back out," he said without looking at Reyes. "Once I do this, there's no going back. This module won't be standard ever again."

Reyes looked up at the giant cylinder, then at the empty sky above the pit.

"We didn't come here to play it safe," he said. "Do it."

Timothy closed his eyes.

Inside his head, he formed the command clearly, precisely:

Reconstruct this NuScale standard reactor module into one fully realized NuScale HyperCore 227-X prototype, configuration v3.7. Integrate all internal structures, Q-LM coolant pathways, TRISO-Alpha fuel architecture in cold, inert state. No active reaction. All diagnostics self-check ready.

His fingers tightened.

His palm grew warm.

"Reconstruct."

The word left his mouth like a quiet trigger.

The world responded.

The steel under his hand vibrated—subtly at first, like the hum of a distant train, then growing stronger, deeper, until the entire vessel seemed to resonate with a frequency that human engineering had never produced.

The air thickened.

Reyes felt the hairs on his arms stand on end.

The NuScale module began to glow—not externally, but from within. Lines of light traced along invisible paths, like veins illuminating under an X-ray. Weld seams blurred. Bolt lines softened. Edges rounded and then sharpened again in new positions.

The concrete beneath their feet trembled softly.

Above them, the sky seemed to dim as the smart sunshades deployed automatically, misreading the internal flash as a sudden flare.

Metal shifted without noise.

The old geometry liquefied into possibility.

For a moment, the reactor was neither NuScale nor HyperCore—just a shimmering column of potential, a liminal object between what was and what would be.

Then, as quickly as it started, the effect stopped.

The glow died.

The vibration faded.

The air cleared.

A new reactor stood where the old one had been.

Reyes realized he'd been holding his breath.

He let it out slowly.

"…Jesus," he whispered. "That never stops being ridiculous."

He stepped forward, instinct kicking in as an engineer before anything else. His hands moved on their own—scanner up, visual survey mode on, mind cycling through checklists of things that shouldn't exist but were now right in front of him.

The NuScale shell was gone.

In its place stood the HyperCore.

The difference was obvious even to a layman.

The vessel was slightly slimmer but denser, its surface smoother, its profile more unified. No exposed flange patterns, no unnecessary protrusions. The outer casing flowed in segmented bands, each band corresponding to a different internal shell.

Reyes touched the surface.

"Temperature?" Timothy asked.

"Just above ambient," Reyes replied, checking his handheld. "No hotspots. No residual weirdness."

He walked around the circumference, eyes scanning the embedded access panels. The ports weren't standard circular hatches; they were seamless, multi-lock petals integrated into the casing—flush until needed.

"This outer shell…" he muttered. "This must be the tertiary containment. Composite matrix?"

"HyperCore shield-alloy," Timothy answered. "Call it HC-γ for now. It's what you'd get if you forced tungsten, carbon nanotubes, and a few things you don't have names for yet to cooperate."

Reyes didn't even pause at the "few things" line.

The conditioning made it easy to file it under: Timothy-stuff.

He stopped at a narrow vertical seam glowing faintly blue.

"What's this?"

"Primary coolant interface," Timothy said. "Non-contact diagnostics. It's tied to the Q-LM loop."

Reyes glanced at the handheld again, flipping through the modes.

"Mass profile says this thing is slightly heavier than the original NuScale module," he reported, "but the distribution is completely different. More density near the core, less near the extremities. That'll help with seismic loads."

"Check the internal geometry," Timothy suggested.

Reyes nodded and tapped the screen. The handheld linked with the HyperCore's embedded sensors. A wireframe model appeared—cross-sections of the internal structure rendering in real time.

His jaw tightened.

"Spiral coolant loops… integrated micro-lattice exchangers… the triple-shell core housing is actually there…" he muttered. "It's not just a shell. You reconstructed the whole damn thing."

"That was the point," Timothy said.

Reyes zoomed into the core region, tracing the coolant paths.

He could see it now, not as a drawing but as reality: the central composite fuel region, surrounded by Q-LM channels in a spiral-cyclonic arrangement, feeding into high-efficiency exchangers coiled around the upper third of the vessel.

"This coolant profile…" he said slowly. "Q-LM placeholders are installed but dry. No liquid loaded yet. That's good. Gives us a chance to confirm channel integrity before we fill anything."

"Exactly," Timothy said. "We'll treat this as a manufactured unit. Full cold-commissioning protocol first. Flow tests. Pressure tests. Stress tests. Then we talk about bringing it to life."

Reyes nodded absently, fingers dancing across the handheld.

"Fuel architecture," he murmured. "TRISO-Alpha composite, sealed, 30-year life… neutron reflectors integrated… cross-checking against your previous spec…"

He froze.

"Timothy," he said, looking up. "The predicted efficiency just jumped. We modeled fifty-two percent. This is showing fifty-four point one at nominal load."

Timothy shrugged lightly.

"The System tends to optimize on its own when I give it enough constraints," he said. "Think of it as… manufacturing plus iterative design rolled into one."

Reyes stared at him for a moment, then shook his head with a half-laugh.

They both turned to look at the reactor again.

"This is Prototype One," Timothy said quietly. "And this is going to be our product. We'll make it live next year after getting certifications from it. This will revolutionize the energy industry."

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