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Logistics Strikes Back: Fire Me, Lose Everything Novel Cover

Logistics Strikes Back: Fire Me, Lose Everything

During the annual banquet, a logistics manager is publicly humiliated when his boss replaces his seat with a dog bowl and labels him a watchdog. After being forced to wear a trash bag while coworkers mock him, he decides he has had enough. He abandons his ID badge, knowing the company's vital infrastructure and property approvals rely solely on his personal connections. Without his behind-the-scenes management, the firm faces total collapse as he prepares his professional revenge.
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Chapter 3

Only when the air is stripped away will those high-and-mighty elites understand what suffocation truly feels like.

I raised a hand and flagged down a taxi.

"Home, please."

My phone vibrated—a bank notification. My salary had been deposited.

Just the base pay. No year-end bonus. They had even deducted the past few days' attendance.

A moment later, a message popped up on WhatsApp.

Vanessa: [Sandra, don't think you're off the hook just because you left. If you dare spread rumors about the company, I'll sue you for defamation.]

They probably really believed that discount had come from the boss's personal charm. Now that I was gone, the favor was gone. Everything would return to its true, transactional nature.

The holidays began.

The first thing I did after returning to my hometown was switch my phone to silent.

I blocked my ex-boss, Vanessa, and those former colleagues who used to do nothing but tag me in group chats—"change the water," "fix the lights," "pick up deliveries."

On the first morning, I woke to sunlight already spilling across the windowsill.

No more 5 a.m. ticket-booking calls. No more sudden repair requests lighting up my phone.

The silence was so complete it almost made me want to cry.

With nothing to do, I absentmindedly scrolled through TikTok.

Big data can be eerily precise—and cruel. It pushed me a local post. The cover image was a carefully edited collage of photos from the annual party.

The poster was none other than Vanessa. In the photos, she stood center stage, holding a glass of champagne, laughing as if she owned the world.

Her caption read: [Out with the old, in with the new. Removing negative energy from the team. Next year, I'll lead the administrative department onto the international stage!]

I tapped into the comments.

Just as I expected—it was lively.

A few familiar accounts chimed in below, their profile pictures belonging to the so-called "socialites" in the company.

Keisha Brody from reception commented: [Finally, don't have to deal with that hag's mood swings anymore. Always meddling in everything like someone's mom. She's so annoying. Last time I was just a little slow picking up a package, and she nagged forever.]

I let out a cold laugh.

What she called "nagging" was me reminding her that the package contained perishables that would spoil if not refrigerated.

Another girl from the finance department wrote: [Exactly. Dresses like a cleaning lady every day. Just standing at the front desk ruins the company's image. Vanessa is amazing—should've kicked her out long ago.]

Someone even posted a photo of that dog bowl in the comments.

The caption was even more vicious: [Some people should know their place. The annual party is for those who create value, not for janitors. Everyone belongs where they belong.]

As I read through the posts, I didn't feel angry.

If anything, I laughed.

They had no idea that what they called "low-skill work" was built upon a system held together by countless invisible details.

Like an iceberg—they only saw the polished surface above water, never realizing how vast the foundation beneath it truly was.

Just then, a message popped up. It was from Lisa Trudy, the only intern in the administrative department.

[Happy New Year, Sandra.]

A crying emoji followed.

[I don't want to stay anymore. Vanessa doesn't teach anything—she only scolds. You used to guide me step by step with spreadsheets and processes. Now that you're gone, I'm completely lost.

[And she told me to go back to the office during the holiday to feed the fish. She said if they die, she'll dock my pay. I told her I'd already gone back to my hometown, so she dropped it.]

Lisa had joined just a month ago. No one in administration had taken her under their wing. I couldn't bear to see it, so even though I was in logistics, I quietly taught her the administrative workflow.

Now, she was the only one in the company who understood that the sky was about to fall.

Me: [Don't rush to quit. There's a good show coming after the holiday. That tank of tropical fish is delicate—if the power and oxygen cut out for more than two hours, they'll start floating belly-up. Vanessa definitely has no idea where the backup power supply for the tank is.]

That tank of red arowana was the boss's prized possession, worth a fortune.

During the New Year holidays, the building would undergo electrical maintenance, cutting power for half a day.

Every year at times like this, I would go to the low-voltage room and switch on the backup power supply to keep the tank oxygenated.