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Penniless Or Peerless: How Garry Smith Strikes Back

Chapter 10 Pay The Bill

Word Count: 439    |    Released on: 22/08/2022

lly at the rest

interested in having

xcused himse

to the restaurant, he could make out Lars

are you st

his eyebrows ra

ps and walked slowly

st actions. We are classmates

dered expression on his face, he wa

s, and there was nothing that couldn't b

y no

wardly, 'Hey, he

go to the bar and hav

rrived at th

ckering neon lights, he felt a deep

ion of it wa

smell of alcohol in the air seemed

y are you

out from a nearby booth

wn and said, "Come on, let me

t Garry out in the cold and went ahead to order all

if I order a few more bottles of

rry nodde

inking, and Celia immediately s

en as much as

y didn't bother to invite Garry to p

stared at t

t the sofa and moti

ill now please," said

quickly calculated the cost of t

r thousand and two h

a's friends were already aware that Garry, who was sitting oppo

rry to falter or look em

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Penniless Or Peerless: How Garry Smith Strikes Back
Penniless Or Peerless: How Garry Smith Strikes Back
“Ever since I was a child, I had always been poor. Every time I came home from school, I would be met with the sight of my father busying himself in the kitchen. From my earliest recollection, I would always remember my father wearing his old factory uniforms in the house. His hair was snow-white and he had very dark skin. He would usually smoke cheap cigarettes and the car he drove around was a Santana which was a real wreck. Despite all our hardships, my father threw himself into his work for 18 years and raised me to his best abilities, and I ended up not disappointing him as I managed to get into a very good university. Because I came from poverty, I had to work a part-time job in order to pay the high tuition fees. I knew my classmates must've looked down on me because I was so poor, but I did my best to not let that bother me. On the day of my 18th birthday, my father announced that he was going to give me a birthday present and that he would bring it to me in person. That day I saw my father in a new light. My father's coarse snow-white head had turned shiny black. He had replaced his tattered clothes with expensive Givenchy suits, and he even wore a Patek Philippe watch around his wrist. The old Santana was now a limited edition Rolls Royce. I stared at my father with bewildered eyes and asked him in an incredulous voice, "Dad, is our family really the richest in the world right now?" My father took out a Mayan Sicars cigar worth $500,000, lit it, and blew out a smoke ring. "Son, I know you've suffered a lot for the past 18 years, and I feel ashamed that I couldn't have provided more for you. I want you to take this ten million as pocket money first. You can ask me for more later if it's not enough!"”