Chapter 723 Return Of Ex-wife
- Liam was extremely distressed. He was flustered. It had been three days, and he had not dared to show up at the office. He did not dare to answer calls from the shareholders of the company. They were now calling his home phone in an attempt to reach him. Lola said, “Hubby, Mr. Bourn, Mr. Nelson, and the others have already called the home phone. “You’d better hurry to the office. Hiding like this won’t solve anything.” Lola also had a worried expression on her face. She was anxious about the situation that Liam was in. Liam remained silent. He sighed heavily. The company had lost so much money.
- There was no way Liam could avoid facing the problem. The small shareholders were even more adversely affected. They faced an unprecedented blow. Even though Liam did not want to go to the office, he had to bite the bullet and go. “Driver, please arrange the car.” “Okay, Mr. Miller” At half past nine, Liam slowly arrived at Everett Group’s office. “Mr. Miller is here. Mr. Miller is here.” “Mr. Miller, what do you think we should do now? The company is in such a situation. We don’t know what to do.” As soon as Liam appeared, the shareholders were in an uproar. One after another, they chased after him to ask questions. Liam pulled a long face.
- His chubby face showed a helpless expression. He said, “You people ask me, but who am I supposed to ask?” When the shareholders heard this, they were even more furious. “You’re the chairman of the company. Who else should we ask if not you?” “That’s right. You’re the leader now, so we naturally listen to you. When Mr. Everett was still around, the company had never fallen to such a state.” The shareholders could not help but complain. When Liam heard this, he became even more dejected. “I’m also very upset that something like this has happened to the company, but what can I do?” he said. “I’ve lost more money than you.” “What should we do now? We’re about to go bankrupt…” Shareholders who owned a lot of company shares were doing fine. They had other forms of investment, and they had relatively strong assets. Although they were anxious and upset about the significant losses, they would not go bankrupt.