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Transmigration; Married to My Ex-Fiancé's Uncle-Chapter 185; Executive meeting 2
As the door closed behind her, the quiet clicked into place like a lock.
The warmth in Shuyin’s expression faded, not abruptly, but with the controlled precision of someone who knew exactly when sentiment became a liability. She paused in the corridor, breathing once, slow and measured, as if sealing something away.
Motherhood sentiments stayed behind.
What stepped forward was Lin Shuyin.
The elevator ride to the top floor was smooth and silent. Numbers climbed steadily, each floor carrying her further from the room where children waited with snacks and tablets, and closer to the men who believed power was something they still possessed.
Her access card chimed softly as it registered at the executive level.
Authorization granted.
A small smile curved her lips, not warm, not pleased. Anticipatory.
Tank, Blade, and Razor fell into formation without a word. They didn’t ask where they were going. They already knew. This was not protection.
This was presentation.
By the time the elevator doors slid open, the softness had vanished entirely. Her posture adjusted by a fraction, her gaze sharpening, her presence expanding until it filled the corridor with something unspoken and dangerous.
Somewhere below, she was a gentle woman....
Up here, there would be no mercy.....
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THE BOARDROOM
The boardroom was designed to intimidate, and it succeeded magnificently.
Located on the top floor of the building, literally above everyone else, the symbolism impossible to miss, it was a massive space that could have served as a small theater.
The ceiling soared overhead, at least fifteen feet high, creating a sense of vast scale that made individual humans feel small and insignificant by comparison.
The room was dominated by a long table of polished dark wood that could seat thirty people comfortably, though today only about twenty positions were filled.
The table itself was a work of art, a single massive slab of rosewood that must have cost a fortune, its surface polished to mirror brightness, its grain creating patterns that looked almost liquid in certain light.
One wall was entirely glass, floor to ceiling, offering a view of the city that served as a constant reminder of the power and wealth the company commanded.
The afternoon sun painted everything gold, the financial district’s towers gleaming like monuments to human ambition and greed.
The other walls were lined with expensive art and corporate achievements, framed awards, photos of major deals sealed with handshakes in front of prominent buildings, symbolic representations of the company’s success over decades.
Every piece had been chosen to communicate a message: We are powerful. We are successful. We are untouchable.
When Shuyin entered with her three enforcers at her back, the room was already half-full.
Directors and executives clustered in small groups near the windows or along the walls, their conversations dying as she appeared.
Eyes tracked her movement with various combinations of curiosity, hostility, and fear, the expressions of people who knew something dangerous had entered their carefully controlled environment but weren’t yet sure exactly what kind of threat she represented.
Shuyin ignored them all, walking directly to the table with measured confidence.
She didn’t hesitate, didn’t pause to assess seating arrangements or social hierarchies.
She simply walked to a specific seat and claimed it, fifth position from the head of the table on the right side, traditionally reserved for senior advisors or important stakeholders.
Not at the periphery where new attendees might be expected to sit.
Not in some subordinate position that would signal her inferior status.
But in the inner circle.
Among the power players.
Where decisions were actually made.
The claiming of that space was deliberate, symbolic, and impossible to miss for anyone who understood boardroom politics.
She sat there with elegance that spoke of no words, crossing her legs and folding her hands on the table before her like she’d been attending board meetings in this exact seat for years.
Her posture was perfect, straight but not rigid, relaxed but not casual, projecting confidence without arrogance.
Tank, Blade, and Razor took positions standing behind her in a loose triangle formation, their presence a clear statement: she has protection, she has loyalty, she has force.
The room’s energy shifted palpably, becoming more tense, more wary, charged with unspoken hostility.
Director Chen, mid-fifties, expensive suit that probably cost more than most people’s cars, the weathered look of a man who’d spent decades climbing corporate ladders and crushing anyone who got in his way, was the first to approach.
"Miss Lin," he said with forced politeness, positioning himself across the table where he could maintain some symbolic authority.
His smile didn’t reach his eyes.
"I wasn’t aware you’d been granted board attendance privileges. When did this happen?"
"This morning," Shuyin replied pleasantly, her voice carrying just enough warmth to sound professional without being remotely friendly.
"Special Executive Advisor to the President. The position comes with full access to board meetings and strategic planning sessions. I’m sure President Lu Zeyan mentioned it when he updated the attendance roster."
The implication was clear as crystal: Take it up with him if you have a problem.
Director Chen’s expression tightened fractionally, lines appearing around his mouth.
"I see. Well. Welcome to the team."
The words were polite enough.
The tone conveyed exactly the opposite, You’re not welcome, you don’t belong here, and we’re going to find a way to remove you as quickly as possible and send you packing.
Other executives filed in, taking their seats with varying degrees of reluctance, their conversations muted but charged with speculation and barely concealed hostility.
Director Wang from Operations, a thin man with sharp features and sharper eyes, the kind of executive who probably kept detailed files on everyone’s weaknesses, sat three seats down from Shuyin, watching her with the wariness of someone who’d just spotted a predator in his carefully managed territory.
Director Liu from Human Resources, a woman in her forties with severe features pulled into a perpetual expression of disapproval, her dark hair scraped back so tightly it must have given her headaches, took a seat directly across from Shuyin, her gaze openly hostile, making no attempt to hide her contempt for this interloper.







