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Mighty Garry Smith's Love Story

Chapter 8 Jealous Classmates

Word Count: 512    |    Released on: 08/09/2022

thousand dollar

llars you owe me after I washed yo

f the mone

d don't pester me

son, who was still seated with

nt to die,

r the shock and banged

as so silent that you

their breaths and stared

coward in their class could dar

s even more shocke

his desk an

Where did you get so much mon

arry is a

teal to sa

e many predators on the loos

ld his body t

slender legs sprang to her f

s furrowed as h

as named Ce

ful girl in the class a

oked down her

prise to him that she felt he

s snobbish and judgy classmate

you to know that

housand dollars

owd exclaimed

on the lotto? Y

e your winn

d in a cur

y, he must've won a lot, at least ten thousand or twen

such a poor guy like Garry would

twenty thous

urpose but that did not dissip

t. It was enough for an ordinary college s

bvious. How could such a poor wr

u are so lucky, why don't you invit

vite us out

tially green with envy sud

long-haired girl

's en

by this money. Why are you all t

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Mighty Garry Smith's Love Story
Mighty Garry Smith's Love Story
“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!"”