
The man’s voice rang clear in the boardroom.
“Five million dollars!” “Three million dollars! And the last on the list is one million dollars!” Then he paused, adjusting his glasses as his sharp eyes swept over the room. “According to the new rules of the Brown family,” he continued, his tone calm but heavy, “if anybody does not match up to that amount, they will forfeit their position here on the board. The company will determine a lesser position for you or this could very well be your departure point from the company.” At that moment, the words dropped like stones in water. The air shifted. Chairs creaked, whispers spread, and a low hum of voices filled the space. But it wasn’t panic. No. What rose from the room was joy, almost relief. More smiles broke out. Some leaned back with grins, others clapped their hands together in quiet triumph. A few exchanged looks, eyes gleaming with excitement, as if this change had been long awaited. The air carried laughter, nods, and small cheers of agreement. It seemed everyone was eager to embrace the new rule, everyone except one man. However David Malcolm sat stiffly, his body held in check, his hands folded tightly on the polished table. He didn’t move, didn’t join in their joy. His face was still, his lips pressed in a thin line. Beside him, Elizabeth Brown, the CEO, sat with poise, her presence commanding without words. She did not smile, nor did she frown. She simply watched, her silence far louder than the noise around her. “If you are handed a piece of paper,” the man continued, “it means you no longer meet the standard of the company. You are to check if you are still qualified to work here or if the company has simply paid you off.” Immediately the room grew quiet again, though the silence wasn’t heavy. It was the silence of expectation. Eyes flicked from face to face, waiting to see who would be singled out. At that moment, a woman who had been standing near the man stepped forward. Her heels tapped softly against the floor as she made her way through the line of directors. She stopped at David’s side. Without a word, she placed a folded sheet neatly on the table in front of him. Gasps rose. Some covered their mouths, others smirked. Every gaze turned toward David Malcolm. It seemed almost natural, as if they had been waiting for this very moment. Whispers swept the room like a tide. ‘Finally’. That was the thought painted on every smiling face. To them, David had been living on borrowed time. A man pretending to belong among them. A nobody who had dared to sit with the upper class. David didn’t move at first. His posture stayed straight, his hands resting on the table. Only one small sign betrayed him his eyebrows twitched, lifting so slightly as his eyes fell on the paper. The man at the front let out a laugh, soft and edged, and this time his lips curved into a smile. “Oh well,” he said, his voice laced with mockery, “it seems only David Malcolm has received the piece of paper. David, could you tell us what the company intends for you?” David’s eyes darkened the instant they fell on the paper. One glance was enough he already knew what it meant. The company had drawn its line against him. They planned to lay him off, to cast him aside with nothing more than a payout of one hundred thousand dollars. A sound escaped him then, sharp and unexpected. David chuckled. It wasn’t loud, it wasn’t long, but it cut through the air like a knife. That small, controlled laugh wrapped around the room and pulled tight at every chest. The faces around the table shifted. Smiles faltered. Their expressions grew stiff, uneasy. None of them had expected this. They thought he would drop to his knees, beg, plead for mercy. Instead, his laugh light but laced with fire shook them in ways silence never could. The man at the front blinked, his composure breaking for the first time. “Is there anything wrong with your paper?” he asked, voice rising with forced calm. “Did the company not state anything for you?” But David gave no answer. His ears did not catch the man’s words, or perhaps he chose not to hear. His gaze stayed on the paper, heavy and unyielding. His mind pulled backward, replaying the path that had brought him here. He could hardly believe it. That the same company he had lifted from the edge of ruin would now try to push him into the dirt. Only a year ago, the name Brown had been hanging by a thread. Bankruptcy loomed, hope was gone. Yet he had stepped in, steady and relentless, his hands turning their downfall into triumph. He had dragged them higher than they ever dreamed they could stand. And this was how they intended to repay him. With betrayal dressed as business. At that moment, another thought struck him deeper. This wasn’t only the company. His fiancée, her family they were part of this decision. The cut was not just professional. It was personal. Then the man at the front leaned closer, his voice lower now, almost cautious. “Are you aware of this?” David slowly slid the piece of paper across the polished table toward Elizabeth Brown, his wife and the CEO, who sat just inches away from him. His hand lingered for a moment, as if weighing the silence in the room against the weight of her answer. Elizabeth didn’t even glance down. Her eyes remained steady, her face calm, as if she had been expecting this moment. “I’m aware of it,” she said flatly. Her voice carried no hesitation, only certainty. “The company is planning a major push in the social rankings. For that to happen, every board member must come from a reputable family and must be financially abundant. That way, the public will trust and buy into the new products we intend to launch.” The words struck David harder than the paper itself. His jaw tightened as disbelief flared through him. He couldn’t help but ask, his tone edged with disbelief, “And how exactly do you plan to climb that high in the social rankings?” Elizabeth’s posture didn’t change. Her calmness was unnerving, as if she had rehearsed every line. “I plan to re-register the company under a triple-digit number. The 333.” A murmur swept the room. Even before she explained, the weight of those numbers was understood. But she went on. “The 333 number is special in Hills Town,” she said. “Only the most influential, the truly powerful, can secure it. The lowest of the special numbers is 111. Then comes 222. And above them all is 333. Each comes with privileges and benefits that money alone cannot buy. Very few can even afford 111, let alone the rare 333. To obtain it requires nothing less than a fortune that could consume generations.” David’s brow twitched, his eyes narrowing at the sheer audacity of her plan. His silence stretched, but Elizabeth pressed forward, her tone brightening with confidence. “With the company listed as a 333,” she said, a faint smile curling at her lips, “we will rise instantly in the social rankings. The privileges alone will push our new products to the top of the market. Sales will soar. Success will be guaranteed.” She paused, then smiled wider, though her eyes remained cold. “I’ve figured everything out. And for it to work, you must go. The company no longer needs you.”Latest Chapter
Chapter 417
The manager's face went through several expressions in rapid succession.Disbelief arrived first.It moved across his features with the particular quality of a man who has occupied a position of authority long enough that direct challenge has become genuinely unfamiliar to him—who has grown so accustomed to rooms reorganizing themselves around his entrance that he has lost the muscle memory for what to do when one doesn't.He looked at Serena.As if checking—confirming with a witness that what he had just heard was, in fact, what he had heard.Then he looked at Nicky.Then he looked at David.Slowly. The slow look of a man rebuilding his composure around a core of something that was no longer just professional irritation but something more personal—the particular, burning offense of ego that has been touched in a place it is not accustomed to being touched.He pointed at himself.The gesture was almost involuntary—the physical punctuation of a man who cannot quite believe he needs to
Chapter 416
The manager's composure cracked.Not gradually—not the slow erosion of patience that builds over the course of a long conversation—but suddenly, the way a surface cracks when the pressure beneath it has been building quietly and then finds a point of release all at once.His face changed."So you want to teach me my job."The words came out low and tight—compressed, the way heat compresses before it becomes fire."You walked into my store," he said, "you caused disruption in my section, my staff calls me, I come down here, and your response—your actual response to being caught—is to stand there and lecture me about management?"He shook his head slowly."Look at you," he said, and the words carried a particular contempt—the specific, practiced contempt of a man who has spent years in a position of authority and has learned to use it as a blunt instrument when he feels it is being questioned. "Standing there, blabbing. Uttering absolute nonsense as if the words coming out of your mouth
Chapter 415
The footsteps resolved into a figure.And the figure was not what Serena had been expecting.She had expected security—the familiar uniforms, the radio equipment, the practiced neutrality of men who had been trained to de-escalate first and ask questions later. She had worked with the security team enough times to know how they moved, how they spoke, what their presence in a situation looked and felt like.This was not that.The man who came through the entrance of the dress section walked with the particular bearing of someone who does not need a uniform to communicate authority—who carries it in the set of his shoulders, in the pace of his stride, in the way the space around him seems to reorganize itself slightly as he moves through it.Mr. Harrington.Department Manager of the entire clothing division of Everything Luxury.Not a section supervisor. Not a floor coordinator. The man whose name appeared at the top of the internal organizational chart for every rack, every display, ev
Chapter 414
He paused briefly."But I'm not built the same way," he said.There was no threat in the delivery—no raised voice, no attempt at intimidation. Just the simple, factual statement of a man drawing a line."She doesn't want to get involved in your childish behavior," he said. "She doesn't want to engage with whatever this is that you're performing right now. And I've respected that—I've stood here and watched her try to manage you with more patience than this situation has earned."He reached slowly into his jacket."But patience has a limit," he said. "And mine has been reached."He looked at Serena with the particular quality of attention that belongs to someone who is no longer deciding whether to act but has simply decided."Make your call," he said. "Go ahead. Call whoever you're planning to call, bring whoever you're planning to bring, and set whatever chain of events into motion that you've been building toward since the moment we walked in."He held up his own phone."And I'll ma
Chapter 413
The shift in her delivery was deliberate—a rhetorical move, the kind that sounds like an invitation but is structured as a trap."If I'm wrong," she said, "prove it. Tell me you have money to afford something in this store. Go on. Give me the number. Show me what you're working with. Because if you can do that—if you can actually demonstrate that you came here as genuine customers—then I'll stand here and apologize."She smiled."But you can't," she said. "Can you?"What Serena did not show—what existed entirely in the private interior of her own thinking, invisible to everyone in the room—was the calculation running underneath the performance.Because this was not entirely spontaneous.The accusation had begun as a reaction—an instinctive escalation, a weapon grabbed in the heat of a confrontation she had felt herself beginning to lose. But somewhere in the last two minutes, as she had watched David reach for his phone and seen the quiet certainty in his expression, something had shi
Chapter 412
She shook her head with the theatrical disappointment of someone who had expected exactly this outcome and is taking great satisfaction in being proven right."All that posturing," she said. "All that serious voice and the meaningful looks and the phone coming out like you were about to do something significant." She clicked her tongue. "And nothing. You cannot do anything. You don't have anything to actually back it up."She straightened behind the desk."Do you know what I think?" she said, leaning forward slightly, her voice dropping into something that was trying for confidential and landing closer to theatrical. "I think both of you have been in that corner whispering because you don't know how to leave without looking like you lost. And that's fine. That's actually fine."Her eyes moved between them."But since we're still here," she said, her voice shifting again—taking on a new edge, something sharper and more deliberate, "and since neither of you seems to be in any hurry to d
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