On September 1, Su Lixing arrived punctually at the Xilin Company's office at 8:30 am, just as he always did.
His company registered in Xilin was also named Li Cheng, formally Xilin Licheng Technology Development Co., Ltd.
Although it shared the same name as Linhai's Licheng Software, the two companies had no subsidiary relationship; it was simply a case of a CEO's lackluster naming creativity.
The legal representative was Su Lixing, but the largest shareholders were Qiao Ze and Su Mucheng, with the two youngsters holding eighty percent of the shares and him holding ten percent.
The remaining ten percent of the shares were temporarily held by him and would be distributed to some key company staff in the future.
All this had been discussed with Qiao Ze.
But it couldn't really be called a discussion.
Su Lixing remembered that when he talked to Qiao Ze about this at the time, the boy had only replied with three sentences, a total of seven words.
"Whatever."
"Okay."