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Her Turn to Lead Novel Cover

Her Turn to Lead

After a month of hard work, Ms. Caldwell faces a brutal betrayal when her brother removes her from a major tender meeting. Her fiancé compounds the insult by handing her finished proposal to an intern named Jenna, claiming the CEO's daughter doesn't need the credit. However, a sudden message from her father's secretary changes everything. Assigned to lead the massive Wetland Project, she now has a direct path to becoming the company heir and proving her worth.
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Chapter 3

Not in the Same League

The news of Jenna officially taking charge of the Cirrus Project spread through the company at lightning speed.

When Celeste sent me screenshots, I was crouched at the construction site, going over the latest quotation with the contractor.

'Ms. Cladwell, Jenna has already added several people into her project team group. They're all close to her. Everyone is congratulating them, saying the Cirrus Project is a billion-dollar cake. Whoever gets in is guaranteed a share.'

I glanced at the screenshot.

Jenna had posted a long message in the group, her tone modest but laced with pride. 'Thank you, Adrian and Harvey, for trusting me, and thank you all for your support. I'll do my best to complete the Cirrus Project and live up to everyone's expectations. I hope for your guidance and cooperation moving forward!'

A stream of replies followed.

'Congratulations, Jenna. Well deserved!'

'Jenna's incredible. Her first independent project and it's already at this scale. Her future's limitless.'

'Mr. Cladwell and Mr. Grant really have an eye for talent. Jenna truly deserves it.'

'Jenna, take me with you. I want to join the Cirrus Project team too!'

I scrolled past without expression.

Adrian posted a message next, his tone openly smug. 'The Wetland Project is garbage. My dad gave it to her because he's already given up on her and doesn't want her competing for the inheritance. Look at the numbers. It's already down more than eight million. Whoever takes it is finished.'

Harvey followed up. 'She's too arrogant. Let her stumble this time. It might teach her something. Some people only learn after they take a loss.'

I let out a quiet scoff and turned back to my work.

At three in the afternoon, Adrian showed up with Jenna and Harvey in tow.

The three of them stepped out of the car and stood at the project entrance like executives inspecting a site.

Jenna was dressed head to toe in luxury brands, carrying a limited-edition bag. She looked nothing like the fragile girl she had pretended to be in the hallway before.

Adrian swept his gaze around and let out a derisive laugh. "What can possibly come out of a dump like this? The weeds are taller than people, the equipment's rusted, and there isn't a single worker in sight."

He turned to me, mockery filling his eyes. "Ayla, are you here for the experience? Or just playing house?"

Jenna walked over as well, her voice soft and sugary. "Ayla, do you need help? I can teach you how to run a project."

Tilting her head, she smiled with feigned innocence. "I just secured the Cirrus Project. There are several senior staff members on my team. I could lend you a couple. The Wetland Project is so small, after all. It doesn't need that many people…"

Harvey stood beside her silently, but he was not looking at me. His gaze rested on Jenna, a faint smile at the corner of his lips.

That smile was so jarring it made me nauseous.

"There's no need." I folded up the blueprints, my tone flat. "I can handle it myself. I don't need your help making things worse."

Adrian's expression darkened slightly before he laughed. "You? Alone? In this dump?"

He stepped closer and lowered his voice. "Ayla, stop wasting your time. Dad gave you this project to take the fall. You really think he values you? Even if the Wetland Project succeeds, at best you'll break even. The Cirrus Project, on the other hand, is worth tens of billions without even trying. You and Jenna aren't even in the same league."

Jenna immediately put on a sympathetic look. "Adrian, don't say that about Ayla… It hasn't been easy for her either."

At that, she tugged lightly at Harvey's sleeve. "Harvey, don't you think so?"

Harvey finally looked at me. His expression was complicated—guilt, reluctance, but most of all, impatience. "Ayla, listen to me. Just do your best with the Wetland Project, but don't take it too seriously. Some things can't be changed just by trying harder."

I looked at him. This was the same man who had once told me that he would always stay by my side. Now he stood next to another woman, telling me not to take things so seriously.

"Are you done?" I asked. My voice was so calm it sounded foreign even to myself.

Adrian paused.

"If you are, leave. I have deadlines to meet. I don't have time to entertain you." With that, I turned and walked into the project office, closing the door behind me.

Jenna's voice drifted in from outside. "Is Ayla angry? Did I say something wrong again…"

"Don't mind her," Adrian said dismissively. "She won't give up until she hits a wall."

I did not look back.

Back in the office, a message from my father's secretary popped up. 'The chairman said you've been doing very well on the Wetland Project. The project outlook is highly promising. Not only can it recover all losses, it may even turn a profit. Keep it up.'