Chapter 419
Tricia was mad as hell. She whipped out her phone, and dialed Maja.
At that moment, Maja was still lost in dreamland, answering the call in a daze, only to be met with
Tricia’s furious rant on the other end.
“You shameless jerk! Karma’s going to bite you in the ass! Just you wait and watch!”
What an absolute drama queen!
Maja hung up in a heartbeat and resumed her beauty sleep.
Tricia was left screaming her lungs out; tears and snot mingling down her face.
She tried to storm up to the second floor of the mansion, but the bodyguard stopped her in her tracks.
“Ms. Pennyfeather, Mr. Pennyfeather is resting.”
“Dad! Dad! I’m your only daughter! How can you do this to me!”
She cried out, rage burning in her eyes, looking every bit the lunatic,
But all was quiet upstairs, no one responded to her call.
Tricia was so furious she was shaking, and nearly fainting.
Her health was never great, the screaming and crying took a toll on her.
But Neil never showed up.
Tricia’s eyes grew cold.
She snatched the bank card from the lawyer’s hand, scoffing, “I’m getting the hell out of Greenfield right
Follow on NovᴇlEnglish.nᴇtnow. What’s the pin for this card?”
She showed the lawyer the flight ticket she’d already bought on her phone. After a moment, the lawyer
rattled off a string of numbers.
“Ms. Pennyfeather, Mr. Pennyfeather has the right to freeze this card at any time. If anyone spots you
in Greenfield later, your card will be frozen.” Tricia just sneered, her nails digging into her palm until
blood marked the floor.
She wasn’t going down without a fight; she’d get back at Maja come hell or high water.
Yes, all because of that shameless Maja.
Maja stole her position as the Pennyfeather family’s daughter and usurped her role as lan’s wife!
But no worries, her upcoming plans would be a death sentence for Maja!
When Maja went to the office, she ran into the janitor in the lobby again.
The janitor was mopping the floor with great concentration; she had a bucket in hand.
Maja paused, finding her familiar, but couldn’t quite place her.
Upon reaching her office on the top floor, she started dealing with company files and summoned the
HR director.
The HR director was one of the few who’d climbed the ranks to leadership, only thirty years old but
quite inconspicuous.
The main reason was that there were too many old leaders, who didn’t quite accept late bloomers like
him.
But surviving in the Pennyfeather group environment was no ordinary feat. The HR director was no
pushover.
“Ms. Pennyfeather.”
“Any resignations yet?”
Maja asked nonchalantly, accepting the files he handed over.
None of the eight people she’d named had resigned.
“I haven’t received any resignation notices yet. I’ve sent people to discuss compensation with them, but
they aren’t cooperating.“‘
Maja looked up at the HR director.
After a few seconds, she tossed the files back onto the desk.
“Staff turnover is HR’s responsibility. I can sign off on the compensation on behalf of the company, but
don’t bring it up in front of me again.”
Everyone in the workplace was cunning. The HR director might not have talked to those people at all,
because, without the resignation notice, nobody knew for sure if they were really leaving the company
or not. If he approached them, he might offend people and face trouble later.
Maja figured out his game pretty quickly – he didn’t want to piss off either side.
The HR director didn’t expect Maja to react so swiftly and quickly bowed his head.
“I’ll try to persuade them again.”
“You may leave. Also, inform others that the representatives from Silverstone Enterprises may come
Follow on Novᴇl-Onlinᴇ.cᴏmhere to sign a contract today. Make sure to thoroughly check the paint quality; we can’t afford any
mishaps.”
The man nodded, breaking out in a coid sweat, then left respectfully.
When it was almost noon and Maja was busy, someone brought her a cup of coffee. She was parched
and about to take a sip when there was a knock
on the office door.
“Come in.”
She put down the coffee cup, and the cleaner walked in, head low, and briskly approached her desk.
“Ms. Pennyfeather, let me clean your cup for you.”
She picked up the coffee Maja was about to drink and dumped it straight into the trashcan she was
holding.
Then she picked up a cloth, pretending to wipe the desk.
Maja watched her face, a sharp look flashing in her eyes, “I haven’t started drinking yet.”
“I’ll go pour you another cup.”
The cleaner, who never once met her gaze, said she’d go get a fresh cup of coffee and left.
In another office of the company, Tom was sneering at the people present
“As long as she drinks that coffee, she’ll drop dead from a heart attack without suspecting a thing. With
the Pennyfeather family in such a mess, who’s going to care for her?”
The eight people Maja had named were all sitting there, their faces grim.
This was Tom’s plan; the others were just playing along.