Login via

Sir, You Don’t Know Your Wife novel Chapter 132

Sir, You Don’t Know Your Wife Chapter 132

Such a tacky way of pleasing her simply didn’t work for her.

At that juncture, those boys walked over to Emily and offered the drinks to her instead.

Emily first gave them a once-over before brushing her hair back. “I’m not that cheap,” she rejected their gestures with displeasure.

There was no way she would take something which had been rejected by Janet.

The boys first exchanged a glance before they turned back to face Emily. “Are you sure you don’t want the drinks?” they asked.

Madelained shooed them away with a disgusted tone, “Oh, please just leave us alone. Why are you guys offering us something Janet didn’t want?”

“It’s because the two of you are only worth rejected goods!” one of the boys snapped back resentfully.

Who did Emily think she was and what was so special about her?

Madelaine was left so exasperated that she was speechless.

Emily waved her hand dismissively. “Forget about them because I need to get ready for my 100 meters sprint now.”

Although it was very tiring to run under such torrid weather, she counted herself lucky because she was only involved in one sports event.

She might not be as excellent in sports as her academic achievements but she was still confident that she could win at least a bronze medal in the race.

The sports day officially began following an announcement by Mr. Wilson, the sports teacher.

As the sports events Janet was involved in were arranged subsequent to most other events, she decided to watch the performance of her classmates under the shade of a tree.

Indeed, all of them turned out to be weak and were way more inferior to the students from other classes in terms of their stamina.

After watching for a while, she expected that Emily would be the second one who would be able to get a medal for Class A after Gordon who had clinched the gold medal in the men’s 100 meters sprint.

Amidst the rapturous cheers, Emily successfully finished third in her race.

Comments

The readers' comments on the novel: Sir, You Don’t Know Your Wife