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Amid the soaring building of Bonifacio Global City, in a room covered in glass and expensive furnishings, everyone seemed to hold their breath. Don Alfonso, the so-called “Iron King” of Philippine industry, was not in his seat.

Five minutes had passed since the signing of the largest merger in his corporation’s history was supposed to begin. Foreign investors were already murmuring, while board members were sweating with nervousness.

Don Alfonso was not just a boss; he was the epitome of strength and discipline. In three decades, he had never been late or absent from an important meeting. But this morning, his office was empty, his coffee still steaming, but the man had vanished like a bubble.

Elena, Don Alfonso’s loyal executive assistant, nearly stumbled as she ran from floor to floor. They had checked every CCTV, but the last shot of him was when he entered the elevator down from the penthouse, wearing his expensive suit worth hundreds of thousands.

No one had seen him in the lobby. No one had seen him in the parking lot. The nervousness in Elena’s chest felt like a drum beating faster. She knew something was different.

This wasn’t the work of a syndicate or any evil plan because the building’s security was more than a fortress, but the silence of Don Alfonso’s disappearance was truly frightening. With each passing minute, the millions of pesos of investment were gradually at risk, but more important to Elena was the safety of the man she had already considered a second father.

The news spread quickly throughout the building. Employees from marketing to accounting had also begun searching as best they could. There was a murmur in the pantries.

Some were even joking that the old man might have “walked out” due to too much pressure, while others were seriously worried. They tried to call her family, but her husband was abroad and her children were also busy with their own businesses.

Amidst the chaos and tension, a janitor approached Elena. He was holding his walkie-talkie and seemed to want to say something but hesitated. According to the janitor, he heard a strange noise in the very bottom of the building—in an old storage room that had been unused for a long time and was far from the luxurious part of the office.

Page: SAY – Story Around You | Original story

Elena immediately rushed with two security guards to basement 4. The air there was cold and smelled of dust, far from the scent of the diffusers above.

When they opened an old door made of heavy steel, they could not believe what they saw. There, among old cardboard boxes and broken equipment, sitting on the floor was billionaire Don Alfonso.

But he was not sitting idle. His expensive coat was hanging on a broken chair, and his sleeves were rolled up to his elbows. His hands, which usually only held expensive fountain pens, were covered in grease and grime.

He was holding an old rag and a bottle of cheap cleaner. He was diligently wiping down an old brass plate that had the inscription: “Alfonso – Maintenance Staff, 1985.”

“Sir? Don Alfonso?” Elena called softly, almost in disbelief.

The old man turned, and for the first time, Elena saw an expression she had never seen in the boardroom—a sweet and peaceful smile, but one tinged with confusion.

“Elena, it’s good that you’re here,” Don Alfonso said in a gentle voice. “I’ve been waiting for the supervisor for a while. I told him it needs to be polished by ten o’clock because the owner of the building is coming. I can’t get my name dirty.”

Everyone froze where they stood. The security guards didn’t understand what was happening, but for Elena, the truth felt like a heavy slap. Don Alfonso doesn’t hide, and he doesn’t joke either.

At that moment, her mind went back to the time when she didn’t have any wealth, when she was just starting out as a simple worker.

All the tension about the multi-million-peso merger suddenly became meaningless. Elena realized that the “Iron King” who everyone feared and looked up to was slowly being consumed by a condition that no amount of money could cure.

Alzheimer’s disease does not discriminate by status. In the midst of his success, all he wanted to do was to go back to a time when his life was simple and his only problem was polishing a piece of brass.

This was not about keeping a secret, but about finding oneself in the midst of oblivion. The employees who followed him to the basement did not laugh or whisper; instead, the entire room was enveloped in a deafening silence and profound compassion.

Elena slowly approached and knelt down next to her boss. She took another piece of rag and began to help wipe it down.

“Yes, Sir Alfonso. It’s almost ten o’clock. It’s clean, it’s beautiful,” Elena whispered as she fought back tears.

The security guards stood tall, not as a sign of protection for a billionaire, but as a sign of respect for someone who came from the bottom and never forgot his roots, even as his mind slowly began to unravel.

That day, no merger had taken place. The big news at BGC was not the collapse of a deal, but the story of someone at the height of his power choosing to return to his simplest form.

It was a reminder that in the end, the titles we worked so hard to earn will fade away, and all that remains is the character we built before we became “famous.”

Over the years, Al-Corp has had new leadership, but the old storage room in basement 4 has never been touched. It is kept clean and tidy in honor of the man who taught them that true success is not measured by the height of the building, but by the depth of the foundation of your character.

Every employee who passes by the building looks up at the penthouse, but those who know what really happened look down, where the true spark of copper remains alive in the memory of each of them who witnessed Don Alfonso’s last “job.”