I Quit After My Rebirth,Now They're Begging Me to Come Back


I was reborn back to the day before the long holiday weekend. I slapped my resignation letter on my boss's desk, grabbed my bag, and caught a flight to a resort town a thousand miles away. Because in my previous life, I'd been on vacation when my coworker Sybilla Gilbert made an operational error and called me in a panic, telling me one of the company's precision instruments had malfunctioned. I rushed back to the office and helped Sybilla repair the instrument. In the end, I saved the company from losses worth tens of millions. But even so, the emergency repair had caused a delay in production, and the company owed a client a million dollars in damages. Sybilla was the one who'd made the mistake. She pinned every last bit of it on me. "If Layla Dickerson hadn't come back and messed with the controls, the instrument never would've broken down!" I tried to explain myself to the boss, but he just looked at me, his expression ice-cold. "Layla, you were supposed to be on vacation over the holiday. Why would you have been anywhere near the office?" "You obviously cut a deal with a competitor and came back to sabotage company property!" "You're paying for every cent of the damage!" He took me to court. I lost. The judgment was over a million dollars. I sold everything I owned and it still wasn't enough. I worked myself to the bone trying to pay it off, until one day my blood sugar bottomed out, I collapsed, and I fell down a flight of stairs. By the time the ambulance got me to the hospital, it was too late. When I opened my eyes again, I was back to the day before the long holiday weekend.

I was reborn back to the day before the long holiday weekend. I slapped my resignation letter on my boss's desk, grabbed my bag, and caught a flight to a resort town a thousand miles away.

Because in my previous life, I'd been on vacation when my coworker Sybilla Gilbert made an operational error and called me in a panic, telling me one of the company's precision instruments had malfunctioned.

I rushed back to the office and helped Sybilla repair the instrument.

In the end, I saved the company from losses worth tens of millions.

But even so, the emergency repair had caused a delay in production, and the company owed a client a million dollars in damages.

Sybilla was the one who'd made the mistake. She pinned every last bit of it on me.

"If Layla Dickerson hadn't come back and messed with the controls, the instrument never would've broken down!"

I tried to explain myself to the boss, but he just looked at me, his expression ice-cold. "Layla, you were supposed to be on vacation over the holiday. Why would you have been anywhere near the office?"

"You obviously cut a deal with a competitor and came back to sabotage company property!"

"You're paying for every cent of the damage!"

He took me to court. I lost. The judgment was over a million dollars.

I sold everything I owned and it still wasn't enough. I worked myself to the bone trying to pay it off, until one day my blood sugar bottomed out, I collapsed, and I fell down a flight of stairs. By the time the ambulance got me to the hospital, it was too late.

When I opened my eyes again, I was back to the day before the long holiday weekend.

——

I walked into my boss's office and handed him my resignation. Victor Henson looked at the paper, then looked at me. "Layla, you're quitting?"

I nodded. "Mr. Henson, aren't you the one who's always saying my salary alone could pay for five fresh college grads?"

"So isn't my resignation exactly what you wanted?"

I knew Victor had been itching to get rid of me for a while now.

After all, my salary was high.

But if he fired me, the severance package alone would cost more than he could stomach.

On top of that, I was genuinely the backbone of the company. That precision instrument? I was the only person who could operate it.

Then Sybilla Gilbert came along. She told Victor she could handle the instrument too.

From that moment on, Victor started undermining me at every turn, sometimes openly, sometimes behind my back.

All to pressure me into quitting on my own.

In my previous life, I couldn't bring myself to walk away from the money.

And I'd had feelings for this company. Loyalty. Attachment. So I never left.

This time was different.

Why would I stay at a company that was a week away from going under?

Once Victor went bankrupt, he wouldn't even be able to make payroll.

"Layla, if that's what you want, then consider this resignation approved!"

Victor looked at me, nodded quickly, and said the words like he couldn't get them out fast enough.

There was a flicker of excitement in his eyes.

Clearly, my departure meant he'd be saving a fortune.

What he didn't know was that Sybilla Gilbert, the woman he was banking everything on, was a complete amateur.

Not that I had any intention of telling him.

"Mr. Henson, once I finish the handover, if everything checks out, I'll be on my way."

I looked at him evenly as I said it.

Victor immediately picked up the phone and called Sybilla and someone from HR.

Within minutes, Sybilla and the HR manager walked in together.

When Sybilla heard I was leaving, she froze for a second. Then her whole face lit up.

In her mind, the moment I walked out that door, the technical lead position was hers.

She'd watched me operate that instrument plenty of times. It never looked that hard.

What she didn't know was that the machine was old and deteriorating. Victor was too cheap to replace it.

Without me, half the problems that thing threw up were problems she couldn't solve.

Chapter 2

Victor had taken on a wave of new orders, and keeping the workers on the clock through the long holiday weekend meant paying double overtime.

If that instrument went down, the penalties alone would bankrupt him.

"Layla, you're really leaving?"

Sybilla's face was all surprise, but it melted into a grin almost immediately. "Well, I guess that's for the best!"

"Your salary was way too high, Layla."

"Mr. Henson's been saying for a while now that keeping you on was dragging the whole company down."

"But don't worry, Mr. Henson. I've had that instrument figured out for ages. Layla leaving won't affect operations one bit!"

Sybilla looked at me with absolute certainty as she spoke.

I just smiled.

Looking at her standing there, I couldn't quite keep the disgust off my face.

If she hadn't spent every day since joining the company whispering in Victor's ear that I didn't actually understand the technology, that her skills far surpassed mine, he never would have believed it.

"In that case, Mr. Henson, here's my handover checklist."

I held out the document I'd prepared.

Every known issue with the instrument was listed in detail.

I knew that even with everything spelled out line by line, Sybilla wouldn't be able to make sense of it.

But I had to write it all down.

Because I knew exactly what would happen. Even after I was gone, Sybilla would find a way to pin the blame on me.

This checklist was my proof.

Every problem that machine had, I'd documented in black and white.

And in my previous life, I'd repaired it with my own hands. I knew every fault inside and out.

"Layla, we don't need your little checklist. I know exactly what's wrong with that machine!"

Sybilla was putting on a show for Victor, projecting confidence she didn't earn.

I smiled, then turned and handed the document to Victor. "Mr. Henson, since that's settled, this document is in duplicate. Sign both copies, and I'll take one with me."

I met his eyes. "After all, if anything goes wrong down the line, I'd like to have proof that I did my part."

Something in my tone made Victor pay attention. He straightened up slightly.

He read through the document carefully. Every item was a maintenance protocol for the instrument.

Then he passed it to Sybilla.

She glanced at it the way someone skims a restaurant menu they've already decided on. Then she looked up at me. "This is it, Layla?"

"I've been doing the maintenance work on that machine myself."

"Obviously I know how to maintain it."

She lifted her chin, smug as ever.

I just smiled.

Every bit of that maintenance work had been done under my guidance. She thought she could manage without me.

And now she was scrambling to claim credit right in front of Victor.

I understood perfectly. Sybilla knew this was the moment to grab whatever glory she could, and she knew I wouldn't bother fighting her for it.

I kept smiling, watching as Victor signed both copies and pressed the company stamp onto each one. Only then did I relax.

I stood up. "Mr. Henson, now that you've signed, I'm officially no longer an employee of this company."

"I'll pack my things and be out of here."

Victor looked at me, frowning. "Layla, I have no problem with you leaving. But I'm having security escort you out."

"You are not to take any company property with you."

The words had barely left his mouth before Sybilla chimed in. "Exactly, Layla. Who knows if you'd try to leak company secrets?"

I looked at the two of them and shook my head.

Chapter 3

Victor was my classmate. I still remembered how it was back when he first started his company. Nobody knew how to operate that precision instrument.

He came to my house multiple times, practically begging me to come work for him.

Later, as the company found its footing, he even promised me profit shares and equity once the business took off.

Back then, I felt for him. I knew how hard he had it, and I went out of my way to look out for him at every turn.

But as the company grew, Victor decided my salary was too high.

Especially after Sybilla joined. His attitude toward me took a nosedive.

I understood now. He thought Sybilla was younger and cheaper.

He'd been looking for an excuse to get rid of me for a long time.

All those years I'd poured everything I had into that company. Now, at least, I finally had time to enjoy myself.

I went back to my desk with the security guards flanking me and packed up my things under their watchful eyes.

They didn't leave until I'd finished. Then they escorted me to the front door.

I turned and took one last look at the building. Ten years of my life, poured into that place. Then I got in the car and drove away.

From now on, none of it was my problem.

Better yet, the long holiday weekend was right around the corner. I could actually go somewhere.

Before, I'd always been terrified that something would go wrong with the instrument and no one else could handle it. Even on holidays, I never went farther than the suburbs. I just stayed home or visited somewhere nearby.

I had to be able to reach the office within thirty minutes, no matter what.

None of that mattered anymore.

I went home, packed my bags, and bought a ticket straight to a resort town.

I even booked a suite at a hotel for a full two weeks.

Once everything was settled, I posted on social media.

"Officially resigned. The world is big, and I'm going to see it!"

I attached a photo of my plane ticket.

The likes poured in.

Of course, a few comments had that unmistakable passive-aggressive edge.

"Layla, I'm sooo jealous you get to travel! Unlike me, stuck working overtime at the office all through the long weekend!"

"Mr. Henson promised me quadruple pay, though!"

I read Sybilla's comment underneath my post and smiled. I didn't bother replying.

She was showing off her quadruple overtime pay. And so what?

I couldn't have cared less.

Besides, once that machine broke down, no amount of overtime pay would cover what she'd owe.

I was about to put my phone down and get some sleep.

My plan was to head out to the resort first thing in the morning.

Then my phone rang.

It was a headhunter.

They told me a major firm had been watching me for a while.

The moment they saw my resignation post, they reached out.

And the salary they offered was the kind you don't say no to.

The headhunter mentioned that the company was based in the exact city I was traveling to. If I was willing, they wanted me to come in for an interview.

I agreed without hesitation.

After I hung up, I let out a long breath.

Sure enough, the moment I cut Victor and Sybilla out of my life, good things started happening.

This time around, I was a whole lot luckier than before.

What I didn't expect was a call from Victor that same evening.

"Layla, you left the company with a few expenses still unsettled. Finance tells me you owe us five hundred dollars."

I listened to his voice on the other end and laughed in disbelief.

Chapter 4

"Mr. Henson, did you forget?"

"That five hundred dollars was money I used to buy materials. I gave you the receipt at the time!"

I still remembered. It had happened last week. I'd been in a rush to purchase materials, so I withdrew the funds from accounting.

But by the time I finished repairing the instrument, the accounting department had already closed for the day.

Victor happened to walk by, so I handed the receipt to him.

On the other end of the line, his voice turned cold. "Have you forgotten the company's rules and regulations?"

"You gave the receipt to me? What kind of procedure is that?"

"Besides, I lost it."

He said it without a shred of guilt, as if it were the most reasonable thing in the world.

I kept my tone flat. "Mr. Henson, since the receipt is gone, that five hundred is on me."

"I'll transfer it to you right now. Will that settle it?"

My voice was cool, detached.

But Victor's response was ice. "That was a mistake you made on the job."

"Company policy: any error is penalized at triple the amount. Did you forget that too?"

"Fine. Then I'll send you fifteen hundred."

I had zero interest in dragging this out any longer.

If fifteen hundred dollars would make this go away, then so be it.

Besides, he'd be bankrupt soon enough. Fifteen hundred dollars wasn't going to save him.

I opened my phone and sent the transfer immediately.

I made sure to note the purpose of the payment.

Victor accepted it almost instantly.

Watching the transfer go through, I finally let out a breath.

After all, I wanted nothing to do with him anymore. Not even the thinnest thread of connection.

After I hung up, I fell into a deep, dreamless sleep.

The next morning, I was up and heading straight to the airport.

I arrived at the resort town first, checked into my suite and stored all my things, then contacted the headhunter.

She told me the company had been waiting for me.

That same day, I went in.

Compared to Victor's operation, this company was in a different league entirely.

Their instruments and equipment alone dwarfed anything I'd worked with before.

All of it required specialized operators, and someone with my skill set was exactly what they needed.

I accepted their offer on the spot. The onboarding paperwork was done before I left the building.

They agreed to let me start after the holiday.

Only then did I leave.

For the next few days, I threw myself into the resort. Hiking, sightseeing, eating whatever I wanted. I knew this stretch would be peaceful.

But Victor's company equipment had been deteriorating for a long time.

And with Sybilla constantly mishandling the instruments, it was only a matter of time before something went wrong.

I just hadn't expected it to happen on the very first day of the holiday.

"Layla! The instrument broke down. You need to come back right now!"

Sybilla's voice was tight with panic.

I could hear the tremor running through every word, the barely concealed fear underneath.

I kept my voice even. "Sybilla, you seem to have forgotten. I don't work there anymore."

Silence on the other end. Brief, loaded.

Then her voice came back, strained. "I know you resigned!"

"But this was your job. You didn't do a proper handover. The instrument is malfunctioning now, so you're still responsible!"

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