Hello, Bad Boss

Chapter One Ye Lixie, 29 years old, was the CEO of Kaiwei Trading Company. The textile and chemical fiber products the company represented were marketed in over ten countries, including Europe and North Africa.

He was known as the most valuable golden bachelor in high society, young and wealthy, with his own business empire.

The Ye family business, originally owning several textile manufacturing plants in the previous generation, was handed over to the Ye family’s only son, Ye Lixie. Within just five years, he single-handedly supported the business, becoming the most legendary young CEO.

It was said that he was cold and decisive, maintaining extremely strict attitudes towards others and himself. Those who had seen his demeanor claimed he was simply a cold-faced noble, with every word he spoke and action he took related to work.

An employee who had reportedly resigned due to work pressure said that when working, Ye Lixie was like a tightly wound machine, capable of working continuously for three to five days without rest, and never giving himself a single day off all year round.

Although his nerves were always tense, always ready to calmly judge and handle any potential problems with the most agile mind, his body was like an invincible steel machine. Even common ailments like a cold had never interfered with his life.

Now, this so-called enterprise iron man who never needed rest had finally collapsed, and the culprit forcing him into hospitalization was none other than Lin Weiwan, riding that damned old scooter!

Yan Xukang was the steward of the Ye family, responsible for all living matters in Taiwan except for work-related issues. Although he was over sixty years old, he was reluctant to retire because of the Ye family’s care for him, especially since Ye Lixie, the current head of the family, was someone he had watched grow up from childhood.

He looked at Ye Lixie lying in the hospital bed, his left calf badly injured and fractured by Lin Weiwan’s scooter, already in a cast. But what worried him most was a potential head injury, which would be truly serious.

“I… I don’t know either! I didn’t see him at the corner, and it was at night… But I did tell him to move! He just couldn’t dodge…”

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