So, I’ll Fall For You • Chapter 76 • Page ik-page-3702525
So, I’ll Fall For You • Chapter 76 • Page ik-page-3697014
So, I’ll Fall For You • Chapter 76 • Page ik-page-3697015
Chapter 76
This is a locked chapterChapter 76
About This Chapter
Back at the orphanage, the Governess tells the boy that she will not sign the contract because she is getting old. She tells him that he should be glad he is not a homeless kid because he will not have to live in the cold and hunger. The Governess admits that she recognizes that what he is doing is good, but she knows that the welfare home cannot make ends meet. She says it is wasteful of the orphanage to have a "practical empty welfare home" occupying such high-valued land. She warns the boy to shelter himself from the rain and tells him to open the door and come inside. She asks him if he lost his way home. He replies that he did not. He tells her that he has put so much into the orphanage all these years and now she is telling him that all efforts he spends most of his life is in vain. She reminds him that the government has final say over the land and that he can send the children to other rescue stations in the city tomorrow. She dismisses the idea of scholarships as a trick to appease social justice warriors and says that when the situation calms down and the orphanage is demolished, people will not care about the scholarships. She explains that the scholarship is a gift from the real estate company yisu. The mayor has said that the contract will not be signed for now. The speaker tells the girl that it has been a month since
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So, I’ll Fall For You • Chapter 76 • Page ik-page-3702525
So, I’ll Fall For You • Chapter 76 • Page ik-page-3697014
So, I’ll Fall For You • Chapter 76 • Page ik-page-3697015
Chapter 76
This is a locked chapterChapter 76
About This Chapter
Back at the orphanage, the Governess tells the boy that she will not sign the contract because she is getting old. She tells him that he should be glad he is not a homeless kid because he will not have to live in the cold and hunger. The Governess admits that she recognizes that what he is doing is good, but she knows that the welfare home cannot make ends meet. She says it is wasteful of the orphanage to have a "practical empty welfare home" occupying such high-valued land. She warns the boy to shelter himself from the rain and tells him to open the door and come inside. She asks him if he lost his way home. He replies that he did not. He tells her that he has put so much into the orphanage all these years and now she is telling him that all efforts he spends most of his life is in vain. She reminds him that the government has final say over the land and that he can send the children to other rescue stations in the city tomorrow. She dismisses the idea of scholarships as a trick to appease social justice warriors and says that when the situation calms down and the orphanage is demolished, people will not care about the scholarships. She explains that the scholarship is a gift from the real estate company yisu. The mayor has said that the contract will not be signed for now. The speaker tells the girl that it has been a month since
Close Viewer