"Sasha, just sign it." A termination notice was pushed in front of me by a greasy hand. I didn't move. My gaze traveled past my boss, Richard Wade, and landed on the sofa across from me. The new intern, Lily Clarke, was burying her face deep into Ethan Miller's chest, her shoulders shaking violently as she sobbed like she was about to pass out. "Ethan, this is all my fault... I shouldn't have touched that contract. Now I've ruined Sasha. How can I ever make it up to her..." Ethan Miller, my boyfriend of five years. At this moment, he was patting Lily's back with a tenderness I'd never seen before. Then he raised his head. The look he gave me instantly turned to ice, filled with condescending reproach. "Sasha, stop making a scene. Lily didn't mean it. She's only twenty-two, fresh out of college and doesn't know anything yet. You've been in this position for five years. What's wrong with taking some responsibility for her?" Richard was tapping the table impatiently. "The company has invested so much in you over the years. Now that there's been a ten-million-dollar mistake, having you resign voluntarily is already saving you face. Don't be ungrateful." "Her father is Mr. Clarke from Skyhigh Group. Our company's second-round funding depends on him." Ethan lowered his voice to a volume only the three of us could hear. "You're just taking the fall. It's not like you're losing anything. Don't ruin Lily's bright future." I looked at this absurd scene unfolding before me and suddenly laughed. Laughed until tears nearly came. The images from my past life cut through my mind like rusted blades.

The same words, the same scene. Back then, I had cried and screamed like a madwoman, swearing the contract wasn't lost by me, that it was Lily who had taken it upon herself to make copies and then it disappeared. I begged Richard to check the security footage. The cameras were "conveniently" broken. I grabbed Ethan's hand and begged him to believe me. He yanked his hand away and publicly accused me of shirking responsibility and having poor character in front of the entire company. Together they forced me to take the fall for that ten-million-dollar disaster. Then Richard used his connections to blacklist me across the entire industry. Buried under massive debt with nowhere to turn, I jumped from the rooftop of a twenty-eight-story building on a rainy night. The dull thud of my body hitting the concrete, the excruciating pain of shattered bones—I still remember it all clearly. And them? They rode the "angel round" investment that Lily secured by selling out our company's bottom-line pricing to competitors, stepped over my corpse to a glorious IPO, and became an industry legend. Ethan even became the golden son-in-law of Skyhigh Group. Now, heaven had brought me back to this very moment of signing. "Sasha..." Lily peeked out from Ethan's embrace, looking at me with tearful eyes. But deep in those eyes flashed an extremely subtle provocation. "Will you forgive me?" I withdrew my smile. My gaze turned cold, as if I were looking at three corpses. "Sure." I picked up the Montblanc pen from the table and removed the cap. Ethan froze for a moment, apparently not expecting me to be so agreeable today. A hint of relief flashed in his eyes. "Sasha, I knew you were reasonable. Don't worry, once this blows over, I'll..." Two swift strokes. I signed "Sasha Clarke" on the termination notice with sharp, forceful strokes that nearly tore through the paper. Lily's crying stopped abruptly. Her eyes widened in shock. I threw the signed notice in Richard's face. The sharp edge of the paper left a red mark on his fat cheek. "What are you doing!" Richard clutched his face and roared. Ignoring him, I unzipped my Hermès bag, pulled out another document I'd prepared, and slammed it on the table. "Read it carefully. This is my resignation letter." I braced my hands on the table, looking down at these three scheming people, enunciating each word. "You don't need to fire me. I quit. And I'll take this fall." With that, I turned toward the conference room door. "Sasha! What kind of attitude is this!" Richard bellowed furiously behind me. "Do you still want your separation certificate and industry references? Believe me, I can make sure you never work in this field again!" I gripped the door handle, not looking back, coldly tossing out. "Save it for your own epitaph."

Pushing open the conference room door, I collided face-first with a solid chest. A faint scent of oud mixed with tobacco instantly invaded my nostrils. I stepped back half a step and looked up. The man wore an impeccably tailored black custom suit, tall and straight with broad shoulders and a narrow waist. One hand was tucked in his pocket, the other playing with a pure black Zippo lighter. His features were sharp and striking, his jawline cutting like a blade, and a pair of dark eyes were watching me with an ambiguous smile. Jackson Cross. The youngest capital shark in the elite circles, head of Daybreak Capital. Also the top-tier investor Richard had been groveling to like a dog lately, trying to court. And the client on the other side of that "lost" ten-million-dollar contract. "Miss Clarke, quite the temper." Jackson's thin lips parted slightly. He'd obviously been standing outside the door listening to everything. I looked directly into his eyes without any trace of retreat. "Mr. Cross, have you enjoyed the show? If not, there are still three clowns performing inside." Jackson raised an eyebrow. The lighter spun once around his fingertips and snapped shut. "Do you know that the mess you just took the fall for involves my project?" He stepped closer, his imposing height forcing me to tilt my head back slightly. "I know." I met his gaze without flinching, my eyes sharp and aggressive. "So let me warn you now, Mr. Cross—this company is rotten to the core. Your money won't even make a splash here." Jackson laughed softly, his chest vibrating. He leaned down close to my ear, warm breath brushing my earlobe. "Oh? What about investing in you?" "Guaranteed profit." I answered without hesitation. He straightened up, gave me a long look, then drew a gold-embossed black business card from his inner suit pocket, holding it between his slender fingers and extending it toward me. "I'll be watching." I took the card, my fingertips deliberately brushing across the back of his hand. His eyes darkened, but I had already turned away, walking toward the office area in my four-inch heels without looking back. Behind me, the conference room door opened. Richard's obsequious voice came through. "Oh, Mr. Cross! You came personally! Please, come in, come in..." I sneered and returned to my private office. According to labor law, I had three days for the transition. In my past life, I spent those three days with swollen eyes from crying, begging everyone I could find to prove my innocence, pathetic as a homeless dog. This life, these three days would be enough for me to strip this company to the bone.

I locked my office door and opened my computer, logging into a private cloud drive with triple encryption. Inside was everything I'd fought for with my life over five years—all core client information, contact details, personal preferences, and the underlying logic and profit margins of every project. I picked up my phone and dialed the first number. "Mr. Lewis, it's me, Sasha." A hearty laugh came from the other end. "Sasha! What's up? Did that Phase Two project pan out?" "Mr. Lewis, I've left my old company." My tone was calm. "What?!" Mr. Lewis was shocked. "Has Richard lost his mind? You're his cash cow!" "Difference of vision, that's all. I'm going out on my own. The company's already registered—it's called Stellar Tech." I got to the point. "That project you're working on, the previous proposal actually had a critical flaw. I've redone the entire framework. It'll boost your product performance by twenty percent, and I'll give you two more profit points. What do you say..." "Sasha, listen to me." Mr. Lewis interrupted, his tone serious. "In business, I've never cared about company names. I care about people—and I trust you, Sasha Clarke! If you're going independent, I'm absolutely on board! I'll have my people stop the contract immediately and transfer it directly to your new company!" "Thank you, Mr. Lewis." Hanging up, I didn't pause before dialing the next number. "Mr. Johnson, your wife's birthday is coming up, right? I remember she loves that brand's limited edition haute couture. I had a friend in Paris secure one. I'll have it sent to your home tomorrow. And while I'm there, shall we discuss working with my new company?" "Mr. Collins, I have a new solution for that technical problem you've been stuck on..." All morning, I didn't even drink water. My phone grew hot from continuous use. The client trust I'd built over five years through countless all-nighters, countless drinking sessions that left me with stomach bleeding—it couldn't be easily destroyed by some intern who got in through connections, a scumbag boyfriend who only knew how to make empty promises, and a bloated, stupid boss. By noon, eighty percent of the company's core clients—the ones generating the revenue—had all verbally agreed to transfer their contracts to my new company. First step of pulling the rug out from under them: complete. At two PM, I pushed open the door to the tech department.

The tech department was chaotic, keyboard clicks thundering. Tech Director Sam Johnson was sporting massive dark circles, cursing at his screen. "What kind of garbage code is this?! Does that new girl Lily have rocks in her head? Creating a deadlock in a simple loop! I stayed up all night rescuing the servers!" Seeing me enter, Sam quickly stubbed out his cigarette. "Sasha, what brings you here? I heard Richard gave you trouble this morning?" I walked to the meeting room and knocked on the glass door. "Everyone, stop what you're doing. Meeting room, now." A dozen core team members exchanged glances, then set down their keyboards and filed in. I closed the door and pulled down the blinds, blocking outside view. "I'm leaving." Straight to the point, no preamble. The meeting room exploded. "Sasha, what happened?!" Sam jumped up in agitation. "Is this about that ten-million-dollar contract? I heard it was that little snake Lily who lost it. Why should you take the fall!" "Exactly! Is Richard blind? We only recognize you as our project director!" "Sasha, what are we supposed to do without you? Who's going to shield us from those idiotic client demands?" Watching these pure tech geeks, warmth flooded my heart. In my past life, Sam was the only one who brought flowers to my grave and got fired for publicly cursing out Richard at the company. I raised my hand, signaling them to quiet down. "I'm not here to listen to complaints or to whine." I pulled out a stack of printed documents from my bag and pushed them to the center of the table. "This is the equity distribution plan for my new company. It's called Stellar Tech. I hold fifty-one percent. Of the remaining forty-nine percent, I'm allocating thirty percent as an option pool for the founding technical team." I looked Sam in the eye. "Sam, you'll be Technical Director with ten percent equity. Everyone else gets shares based on level and contribution." The air seemed to freeze. Everyone's eyes widened. Even their breathing grew quiet. For employees, empty promises were commonplace, but real equity incentives—especially such a large percentage of actual shares—was an absolutely irresistible temptation. Sam swallowed hard, his voice trembling slightly. "Sasha... are you serious?" "When have I ever joked about money?" I braced my hands on the table, my gaze sweeping across each young face, my voice steady and seductive. "Follow me. I can't promise you'll be driving Ferraris tomorrow. But I promise that every line of code you write won't be wasted. Your talent will receive maximum respect and direct monetization." "No more suffering under incompetent management, no more all-nighters cleaning up stupid decisions, no more watching the face of an intern who can't even write 'Hello World.'" "We work for ourselves." Silence. Ten full seconds of silence. Suddenly, Sam slammed his hand on the table so hard the water in the cups splashed out. "Damn it! I've been sick of serving that idiot Richard anyway! Sasha, I'm with you!" "Count me in! I'm writing my resignation right now!" "Me too! Whoever wants to stay at this dump can have it!" The entire tech team—fifteen core members—every single one chose to follow me. Looking at their excited faces, a cold smile curved my lips. Richard, Ethan, did you think getting rid of me would let you rest easy with your little white lotus? You have no idea that a storm capable of crushing you to dust has already formed.

The three-day transition period flew by. I didn't hand over any substantive client information, leaving only superficial documents of no consequence. On the afternoon of the third day, I walked out of the building where I'd worked for five years, carrying a cardboard box. The sunlight was a bit blinding. I took a deep breath of freedom. "Sasha!" Urgent footsteps sounded behind me. Ethan rushed out and grabbed my arm. I shook off his hand in disgust, looking at him coldly. Today he wore a well-tailored suit, his hair meticulously styled, but his face showed a kind of condescending, pained expression. "Do you have to make this so ugly?" Ethan frowned, his tone full of reproach. "You haven't shown your face these three days, and the transition documents are a mess. Mr. Wade is very angry." "Whether he's angry or not is none of my business." I jostled the box in my hands. Ethan took a deep breath, suppressing his anger, and put on an affectionate face. "Sasha, I know you feel wronged. But you have to understand my position. Lily has a powerful background. We can't afford to offend her. What can you do out there alone? This industry is only so big. Without Mr. Wade's reference letter, you can't even find a decent job." He paused, stepped forward, and tried to take my hand again. "Stop being stubborn. Go back and apologize to Mr. Wade. Humble yourself. I'll give you the director position and work as your deputy. We'll start fresh, okay?" Looking at this face that once captivated me, I only felt my stomach churning with nausea. "Ethan Miller, do you know what you look like right now?" I stepped back, creating distance. "What?" "A dog that wants to eat shit but also finds it disgusting." Ethan's face instantly turned ashen. "Sasha! Watch your language! I'm trying to help you!" "Help me?" I laughed coldly, my eyes like knives. "Helping me by throwing me under the bus without hesitation to protect your little mistress when things went wrong? Helping me by watching me get buried under ten million in debt and blacklisted across the industry?" "What are you talking about! What industry blacklist!" Ethan's eyes shifted, clearly guilty. "Drop that disgusting act of deep affection." I moved closer to him, lowering my voice. "From the moment I signed that paper, we were completely done. You'd better pray you never fall into my hands, because if you do, I'll make you wish you were dead." With that, I stopped looking at his face that changed colors like a palette and turned toward the curb. A black Maybach glided silently to a stop in front of me. The rear window slowly descended, revealing Jackson Cross's chiseled profile. He wore gold-rimmed glasses, adding a touch of refined menace to his appearance. He glanced at Ethan frozen in place, then his gaze landed on me, a playful smile curling his lips. "Miss Clarke, get in. Let's discuss your 'guaranteed profit.'" I opened the door and got in without hesitation. The car pulled away smoothly. In the rearview mirror, Ethan's face was twisted beyond recognition.

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