February 22nd, 2028 — TG Tower, Bonifacio Global City
7:10 AM
The first day of migration had a strange energy in the air—half excitement, half organized chaos. It was the kind of morning where the city felt different, as if it sensed a new power being stitched into its skyline.
TG Tower wasn't opening to the public yet.
But today, it would breathe for the first time.
Timothy stepped out of the elevator on the 12th floor—the first of the newly assigned administrative clusters. Hana followed him with her tablet, already flooded with documents, names, and department maps. And behind them trailed a small group of assistants, all moving with the quiet urgency of people who knew they were building something historic.
When the elevator doors slid open, Timothy was greeted by a sight he had anticipated—and demanded.
Organized movement.
Not confusion.
Not noise.
Not panic.
Dozens of employees walked through the polished halls, carrying labeled boxes, pushing computer carts, reviewing seating plans, and coordinating with IT teams who were lining the corridor with networking equipment still wrapped in protective foam.
"Status," Timothy said.
Hana swiped through her checklist. "Twenty-seven managerial divisions are scheduled to move today. TG Motors R&D admin, finance department, TG Energy's planning team, Aurion's Manila-based executives, executives of TG Motors…"
"Good," Timothy replied.
Hana continued, "The group from Subic is en route. They left before dawn."
Timothy nodded.
Subic.
The beating industrial heart of his empire.
The EV gigafactory, the battery production wing, the cathode-anode line, the LithiumX megacell assembly—it all lived there. But he had made a decision early on:
the factories stay outside Manila, but the brains return here.
Today, that philosophy became reality.
A soft chime signaled the arrival of another elevator. When it opened, a team of managers stepped out—badges clipped, suitcases rolling, eyes widening as they took in the pristine interior.
"Sir Guerrero," one of them said immediately, startled to see him. "Good morning."
"Don't greet me," Timothy said. "Find your teams. Integrate. Move fast."
"Yes, sir!"
They scattered.
Velasquez appeared from the far corridor, already giving instructions to a security detail installing biometric scanners.
"Sir, IT has activated the dedicated fiber trunk for the administrative floors," he reported. "Aurion's secure design channel will be online in thirty minutes. The data center on 4th is stable."
Timothy nodded. "And the emergency grid?"
"LithiumX backup array is fully operational," Velasquez replied. "Even if the entire BGC loses power, TG Tower will run for seventy-two hours without tapping the grid."
Exactly as Timothy designed it.
He moved deeper into the floor as the building's rhythm grew clearer. Telephones were being connected. Workstations sanitized. Projectors calibrated. Smart glass screens initialized with welcome displays.
The hum of a new headquarters waking up.
7:42 AM — TG Tower Loading Bay
Timothy inspected the receiving area next. Pallets of equipment arrived from the old office—desktop units, server nodes, sealed archive boxes, prototype components, and files carefully organized from the older BGC building they had outgrown.
A group of employees wearing TG Mobility jackets noticed him and immediately straightened.
"Relax," Timothy said. "Just work."
They returned to unloading with slightly shaking hands.
Hana watched him quietly. "Sir… they're nervous."
"They'll get used to me."
Hana hid a small smile. "Or they'll stay nervous forever."
"Fear is fine," Timothy said. "As long as it doesn't slow them down."
They moved on.
8:15 AM — 21st Floor, Transition Hall
By mid-morning, nearly the entire tower had come alive. The building's internal announcement system activated for the first time—soft chimes echoing cleanly across the floors. Screens along the corridors displayed:
"All employees: CEO Address at 10:00 AM — Executive Conference Hall, 21st Floor."
Hana checked her schedule. "We're expecting around six hundred people to attend in person. The rest will watch from their floors."
Timothy nodded. "Good."
When they stepped into the conference hall, crews were finalizing arrangements. Technicians tested the lights and acoustics. Staff arranged chairs into precise rows. The wide digital screen behind the podium glowed with the TG emblem and the words:
TG TOWER
INAUGURAL INTERNAL ADDRESS
Employees trickled in gradually, filling the seats with muted chatter. Some held laptops on standby. Others adjusted their new TG ID cards, the lanyards still stiff from packaging.
Timothy watched from a distance.
Engineers from Subic.
Financial analysts from Makati.
Project planners from Batangas.
Managers from EV design.
Energy systems leads.
Aurion semiconductor executives.
Interns clutching notebooks like shields.
All of them now under one roof.
His roof.
Hana approached him. "Sir, everyone is ready."
Timothy gave a short nod.
When he stepped toward the stage, the murmurs thinned. Employees straightened. A few sat up a little too stiffly. Someone elbowed a colleague who was nervously tapping their pen.
Timothy stopped behind the podium.
Just a microphone and a room full of the people who would shape the future with him.
He scanned the crowd once before speaking.
"Good morning."
A few employees responded with a soft chorus of greetings. Most simply listened, tense or curious.
"Today is not the grand opening of TG Tower. But make no mistake—this is the day the building begins its life."
Silence.
"This skyscraper is not here to impress the public. It is not a landmark. It is not a trophy."
Some exchanged glances.
"This tower is here because the old BGC office could no longer contain our ambition."
He let that sink in.
"We outgrew the rented floors.
Outgrew the temporary desks.
Outgrew the limitations of a fragmented company."
He stepped away from the podium, speaking plainly, hands at his sides.
"TG Motors. TG Mobility Holdings. TG Energy Systems. Aurion Semiconductor. Separate teams. Separate buildings. Separate fires to put out."
He paused.
"That ends today."
A shift rippled through the room.
"From this tower, we will centralize our strategy.
Coordinate our projects.
Accelerate our timelines."
He lifted a hand slightly.
"But more importantly—this tower represents something I have been building since the very first EV prototype rolled out of our garage shop."
A few employees leaned forward.
"A new standard."
Timothy's voice hardened, just enough to sharpen the air.
"Not just for our company.
Not just for our industries.
But for the country."
Hana stood off to the side, watching him—calm, composed, but with the faint spark of pride in her eyes.
"We are not building cars.
We are not building batteries.
We are not building chips."
He pointed toward the window—the skyline visible through the glass.
"We are building what the Philippines has never had: a unified innovation ecosystem."
A rustle swept through the hall.
Timothy continued.
"Subic will manufacture.
Batangas will fabricate.
Our energy units will power.
But right here—inside these seventy-six floors—will be the mind of everything we build."
His tone cooled, focused.
"This will be the command center that directs the largest industrial expansion in modern Philippine history."
Someone in the back swallowed audibly.
"But I want to make something very clear."
Timothy's gaze traveled through the rows, precise and unblinking.
"You are not here just because you work for TG."
A brief pause.
"You are here because you were chosen."
A ripple of quiet pride spread through the employees.
"We do not hire average people.
We do not tolerate average performance.
We do not reward average results."
He leaned forward slightly.
"From today onward, the moment you walk into this tower, you carry the responsibility of shaping every division. Every factory. Every project. Every breakthrough."
He scanned the room.
"This is where ideas become orders. Where decisions become strategy. Where strategy becomes reality."
"So welcome."
He motioned gently to the hall around them.
"Welcome to the beginning of the next era of TG."
A beat.
"The era that all of you will build with me."
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