Big Data Cultivation-Chapter 1821 - 1823: Director Si’s Fury (First Update Celebrating Chief Patron An Lang)

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Chapter 1821: Chapter 1823: Director Si’s Fury (First Update Celebrating Chief Patron An Lang)

Feng Jun wasn’t too angry, just the familiar sight of mutual destruction; on his end, it’s a minor wound, but it’s uncertain how many times the other party can be hurt.

Nevertheless, he still informed Chief Lin, "If all of your state-owned enterprises keep playing like this, I will consider terminating all cooperation."

Beauty Lin was very familiar with most situations at Luohua and naturally knew about this matter, though she was helpless since it wasn’t within her business scope, so she expressed with an odd look, "You might want to review the information on the next batch of cancer patients."

Feng Jun didn’t have the heart to delve into it, and directly handed the decision-making power to Sister Hong.

Upon checking the list, Sister Hong and Liu Yuting indeed found a key figure, who happened to be in charge of that enterprise.

The subsequent matters didn’t require Sister Hong to arrange; Liu Yuting directly authorized Li Nansheng, "Inform this Director Si, saying that his situation doesn’t meet Luohua’s treatment criteria, so he needn’t come."

Director Si received this call, and was completely bewildered; five days were left until admission into the center, and now you tell me my conditions aren’t met?

He tried to understand through his own channels but discovered no one had heard of this matter, and if he were formally excluded, someone should replace his spot—every slot is immensely precious, but he hadn’t heard who took it.

Therefore, he believed this might be a prank, and thus dialed the contact number of the healthcare center.

However, the person answering the phone told him, "Your slot has indeed been canceled. As for who will replace you, we’re not concerned, but in one or two days, we’ll inform your organizer of the situation, and they’ll handle other matters."

Director Si hurriedly asked, "Then, may I ask why I don’t meet the conditions?"

The receptionist across the line politely stated, "Sorry, we’re not aware of those details; we only know it’s arranged by Assistant Li."

Director Si couldn’t obtain Assistant Li’s contact details, nor would the receptionist provide them.

Anyone else might have gotten angry by now, but Director Si was well aware of the prowess of this healthcare center, so he could only mutter in annoyance, "Such a big attitude."

Ending the call, he began to inquire about what exactly had happened for him to be rejected.

Others were also puzzled; nothing of this sort had ever occurred with Luohua before, why now... was there an accident?

After probing around, no one could figure out what went wrong, so someone suggested to Director Si that since there were our men at the Luohua Sect’s entrance, he could personally approach them to see if they were in the know.

Director Si indeed got in touch with a cured patient through connections, and from that patient’s mouth, learned about Beauty Lin’s unit, eventually contacting Chief Lin.

Beauty Lin expressed, "I’m not very clear on these matters," but after understanding Director Si’s identity, she did mention, "Recently, Luohua seems to be having conflicts with a certain factory."

At this, Director Si understood; that factory was a subsidiary of their unit.

Director Si was merely a deputy at the unit, originally full of confidence aiming for a head position, but after battling cancer, he lost all zest and had no interest in handling unit matters; he wouldn’t try to contend even if he could.

But now, he couldn’t ignore it, so he directly dispatched a driver to find out what happened.

The driver quickly gathered information and reported back to the boss.

Upon hearing, Director Si flew into a rage; he knew his subordinate enterprises were sometimes disorganized, but generally, he wouldn’t interfere—a truly troublesome business; honest people often struggle with running enterprises.

Yet, this concerned his life and death, so he couldn’t hold back, and directly summoned the boss of the enterprise over, unleashing a tirade, and eventually expressed, "If you can’t manage the enterprise, I’ll find someone else to manage it!"

Having had cancer for over two years, Director Si was virtually invisible at the unit; this enterprise boss felt slightly disdainful but still displayed a respectful facade, "Could you tell us what exactly we did wrong?"

"I’m about to go to Zhengyang for cancer treatment," Director Si glared at him brutally, speaking through gritted teeth, "now, thanks to you, they’ve canceled my treatment eligibility... If I had a gun, do you believe I’d shoot you right now?"

Upon hearing this, the boss was genuinely frightened; during typical power struggles, he could ignore this transparent deputy director, but because of his actions, he directly delayed the other party’s treatment—his superior wouldn’t back him for such actions.

Consequently, he nodably stated, "I’m not very clear on this issue; I’ll verify it immediately upon returning, tomorrow... oh, tonight, I’ll provide you with accurate information."

In fact, there’s no need to investigate—that he already had heard; it wasn’t his doing though, perhaps the office director might have had a part. Anyway, a single inquiry would get the answer.

In a day, he identified the problem and immediately contacted that Luohua woman.

Sister Hong stated there’s no need for negotiations—you want to delay, then continue delaying; as of now, the work progress has already been postponed.

If genuine negotiations were desired, pay the penalty first and then talk.

The penalty payment was certainly impossible; most state-owned enterprises were dragging out payable dues, let alone penalty fees—once paid, you would be admitting defeat, leading to numerous passive consequences.

The more they wanted to negotiate, the less it came to fruition; ultimately, this boss got aguish, "What exactly do you want?"

Sister Hong answered nonchalantly, "Want you to execute the contract."

"I’m not aware of the contract’s execution status; I acknowledge my oversight... Isn’t immediate correction underway?"

However, Sister Hong held steadfast opinions, refusing further comment and directly hung up.

Director Si had bureaucratically reprimanded—he believed he had delivered a scolding, and once the matter was resolved below, he could re-enter the treatment list, so merely gave a phone urging.

The next day, he called the healthcare center again, only to learn his slot hadn’t been restored; so, he called Beauty Lin again, asking, "What exactly is happening—I’ve arranged people to handle the matter!"

He originally wanted to receive treatment along with those peers three days later.

"You needn’t think about it," Beauty Lin responded bluntly, "People at Luohua are very pragmatic; they don’t care about what’s arranged—only results... so, for this treatment cycle, I estimate you can’t make it."

"Are you kidding me, I’m already in the late stages!" Director Si exploded in anger, "Waiting another cycle, who knows if I’ll live or die... I’ve made arrangements; if they don’t execute, when I recover, I’ll see how they deal!"

Beauty Lin coolly replied, "Director Si, speaking to me is pointless; the decision wasn’t mine; I’ve also informed you of their procedural principles... they’re happy to spend but hold no tolerance for unjust treatment."

"Zero tolerance?" Director Si perceived the nuance, "Not fond of patching things up?"

"Considering you’re critically ill, I’ll offer one more hint," Beauty Lin somberly stated, "The healthcare center recently implemented a blacklist system; for now... you haven’t made it onto the blacklist, so should feel relieved."

"Blacklist... relieved?" Director Si felt like laughing out of anger, but ultimately controlled himself; what he needed to consider was how to regain treatment eligibility, "So you’re saying, just arrangements won’t suffice, better to dismiss personnel?"

Beauty Lin replied softly, "If you can accomplish that, I personally think it’s a good choice, and... the sooner, the better."

"No matter how fast, it takes a process?" Director Si quipped, half-crying, half-laughing, "You’re also within the personnel system; wanting to dismiss a factory manager isn’t a matter of a day or two—I probably cannot make this treatment cycle."

"You definitely won’t make this cycle," Beauty Lin quickly responded without hesitation, "I’m saying, you might want to strive for the next treatment cycle."

Director Si observed momentarily in silence, gently voiced the words, "Understood."

He placed the Mobile Phone on the table, speaking through clenched teeth, "Using some skills to act unrestrained, forcibly squeezing others for benefit exchange, and still implicating... what’s wrong with people these days?"

"Alright, no need for such indignation," his elder brother commented while flipping through the newspaper, without raising his head, "Your unit is the same, what’s allowed for corporate enterprises not allowed for private ones?"

The elder brother had retired not long ago, came over to assist this cancer patient; without desires, forthrightness prevailed, he was candid.

Reflecting on it, Director Si strived to rise, "No, I must speak to the boss."

Critical moments call for unavoidable action; he initially didn’t want to meddle with personnel arrangements at the unit, but since it impacted his survival, he had no choice but to fight it.

Importantly, he knew that guy’s seat wasn’t particularly clean—he wasn’t keen on pursuing it before, but now he had to... plus, there wasn’t much fault with Luohua; his own people were the first to err.

The unit boss was quite considerate of him and took the matter seriously—truthfully, no one could guarantee they wouldn’t face cancer in the future.

Three days later, a solution was issued, directly transferring the deputy director managing the issue to a peaceful office; unfortunately, the factory’s main manager was retained, albeit with a warning punishment.

Such a warning would potentially affect future promotions—in theory.

Previously signed contracts resumed, with an assurance letter sent from the factory to guarantee completion within the deadline, and no further payments would be collected until after the completion and delivery.

Indeed, even after personnel adjustments, the penalty couldn’t be demanded; it’s a matter of principle, state-owned enterprises have comprehensive considerations that are substantial.

To say nothing else, given their loans owed to banks, handling others’ penalty fees first, how would the banks perceive it?

(First update, celebrating Master Anhui Lang 11, seeking white base monthly ticket support.)