Chapter 888
Spoiled (Lily)
Chapter 888 I Swear, I Did Not Take The Gifts From The Parents âIs this how you are as a teacher?â
In the office, the principal was so angry that he slammed the documents on the desktop on Ms.
Montagueâs head.
He was so angry that he couldnât hold back!
Ms. Montague quickly said, âPrincipal, those parents are just kind. The parents of the students often ask for dinner for the students, but I never promisedâ¦â
The principal sneered, âNo? You nodded just now, and I saw it with my own eyes and said no?â
Ms. Montague, I just nodded politelyâ¦â
Slap!
The principal smashed the mobile phone in his hand on the table.
He was so angry that his chest heaved, and for a moment he was so angry that he lost his voice and couldnât speak.
The principalâs office was very quiet, except for the beeping, beeping, beeping, and beeping of the printer.
Ms. Montague subconsciously glanced at the printer, but the printer was in the office, and she didnât know what it was printing, but she just felt restless and irritable when she heard the sound.
In the dead silence, the principal who drank a few sips of tea finally recovered his voice and said:
âThere was a fight in Class 1 (1) today, whatâs going on?â
Ms. Montague thought to herself, it really was because of this incident that all the troubles had come to the principal, and Lillyâs parents must have reported it!
She was already upset enough to make a fuss over the academic affairs side, but she didnât expect to make a fuss with the principal, so couldnât they save some time?
âThe situation is like this, Peter, a boy in our class, joked with the new girl, Lilly, and gave her a nickname. Before I had time to mediate⦠Lilly dragged her brother and sister over to beat him.
âI Ms. Montague sighed as she spoke, âItâs really wrong for others to call her nicknames, but itâs definitely worse to form cliques and fight!â
âSo I asked Lilly and her brothers and sisters to go out and stand for punishmentâ¦â
The headmaster stared at her, âIs that really the case?â
-Ms. Montague panicked. After thinking about it, she didnât tell a lie, did she?
âThatâs true, absolutely true!â She said.
The headmaster was really angry, âDid Lilly bring her brother and sister here?â
Ms. Montague opened his mouth and coughed, âHmm⦠This is indeed my misexpression. It was her brother and sister who came to her after class and happened to seeâ¦â
âWhy did they beat people?â The principal asked again.
This Ms. Montague quickly replied, âItâs just because someone called her a nickname as a jokeâ¦â
The headmaster wanted to smash things again, but he had already smashed all that could be smashed on the table, and the cup was ceramic and needed to be smashed.
He could only slap on the table fiercely, and said angrily, âLilly repeatedly told Peter not to give her a nickname, you really didnât mention it at all!-Itâs so biased, did you accept bribes from Peter Szellâs family?!â
Ms. Montagueâs heart thumped again, âNo, absolutely not!â
âItâs just because taking a nickname is just a trivial matter, itâs insignificant. Itâs very common and normal for children to like to call others nicknames!â
âIsnât it the worst thing to form gangs and fight?â
Of course there were also many students hypocritically saying that it was not good to take a nickname, it hurts the soul and so on.
If she had to tell the truth, she felt that it was just a child trying to gain attention!
What was the point of caring about other peopleâs gossip? She could choose not to listen!
What else could hurt the soul? Why didnât they say it hurt the soul if they fail the exam? Why didnât they know how to work hard?
Anyway, no matter what the principal said, Ms. Montague always had words of defense.
She refused to admit that she accepted gifts and bribes. As a teacher, of course she knew that she could not accept bribes. If she admitted it, she would be fined!
The principal suppressed the anger in his heart, took a sip of water, and said, âSomeone reported that you accepted bribes and gifts from studentsâ parents. What do you have to say?â
Ms. Montague quickly said, âNothing! I really think that fighting is more serious than nicknames, so Lilly and the others should be punished instead of Peter. Maybe itâs because of this that Lillyâs parents think that I am taking favors⦠But I swear itâs absolutely nothing.â
The principal sneered, âOh? Then you please swear.â
He was really going to laugh out loud, he wanted see what outrageous lies Ms. Montague can come up with.
Ms. Montague raised her hand, her words were plausible, and her face was misunderstood with grief and indignation:
âI swear, I have never accepted gifts, bribes, or dinner invitations from studentsâ parents⦠If what I say is untrue, let me get hit by a car when I go out! Get bitten by a dog when I walk! I have sores on my head and bleeding on my feet. Pus, the sky strikes five thunders!â
The principal, â
He backhanded out the evidence of her accepting bribes.
â
âI swear well, as expected of a teacher,â The principal sneered, âLetâs see, this is the proof that you received bribes from ten parents including the Smiths, the Greyharts, and the Lorrens, at the beginning of the semester.â
âThis is evidence that you received expensive gifts from Peterâs parents, and this is evidence that you had dinner with the Smiths, the Greyharts, the Lorrens and other parents.â
The headmaster threw the photos and documents that had just been printed out of the printer on Ms.
Montagueâs face.