The prison drama was unfolding at a speed that appeared slow but was actually violent.
It's not even an undercurrent anymore; it's open hostility, the accumulated tensions put on Feng Mu's table like a powder keg, waiting for him to strike a match and set them off, one by one.
But not today. Killing your boss on the first day in prison is terribly inauspicious. If it ended up scaring the prison chief, things wouldn't look good; he has to give the prison chief some face.
The main reason is that killing his superior now would be like making room for someone else, and he has neither the achievements nor the reason to step up.
Feng Mu is not the kind of foolish villain who stirs up trouble only to benefit others.
He needs to lie low and wait for the right opportunity.
Feng Mu estimated that this waiting period wouldn't be too long because he could sense astutely that his direct superiors were also up to no good, seemingly even more anxious to push him "up the ranks" than he was.
