"What's wrong?" I looked at Marius and asked.
Frowning, Marius closed the door of the room that had been open. "Don't you think Don Logan is strange?"
I was stunned for a moment when I heard this but then quickly laughed. "You think he's strange, right? You've been cynical about him ever since you first met him."
He waved his hand, his expression serious. "I'm bringing it up now after putting aside my personal grievances."
"Tell me what about him do you find strange, then?" I sat down, deciding to hear Marius out.
Marius hemmed and hawed for a long time before finally saying to me, "I can't put my finger on it. He's just… He's just weird!"
I smiled lightly and shrugged my shoulders. "Are you alright, Marius? I wanted to hear you out seriously, but I guess that was a waste of sentiment."
Just when I was about to leave, Marius stopped me. "Anyway, he just doesn't look like a good guy."
I crossed my arms and laughed. "Come on, stop speculating about the man. He's helped me quite a lot. We can't be like this."
Seeing how I did not believe him and how he could proffer no real evidence, Marius sighed. "Whatever. I'll be watching him anyway. You'll know when I catch him!"
"Alright. I'll hear you out when you have a handle on him. I've matters to attend to now, so I'll be leaving first." I left the place after saying that.
Not long after, Grant Corporation was cut off by many companies one after another as expected, but it did not matter to them.
I managed to get the media to report that our companies were jointly bidding for North Courts’ development rights. In fact, all sorts of exaggerations were made.
Not long after this information was released, Sylvester asked to meet me and talk.
Although he was the one who asked me out on the surface, Silas was the one who wanted to talk to me in reality. Thus, I readily agreed.
The person who met me first was Sylvester.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Scrambling to Be the Father of His Ex-Wife's Kid