Chapter 769 Expel her
Chapter 769 Expel her
"And when Bella tried to tell the professor," Karl continued, "the professor was too busy. Too stressed. Too overwhelmed with annual day preparations to listen. She told them to come back later. She told them their problem could wait."
The professor sitting in the front row went pale. Her hands gripped the armrests of her seat so hard her knuckles turned white. She looked like she wanted to disappear, to sink into the floor, to become invisible. A few people turned to look at her, their eyes cold and judgmental.
Krystal stood frozen on the stage. Her confidence, which had carried her through so many lies, was gone. It had finally been exposed for what it was: a mask.
She looked small and scared. She looked like a cornered animal with nowhere left to run.
She opened her mouth, but no words came.
Karl continued, his voice rising with each word. "And she also put Bella’s name in the annual day performance without her consent. If someone hadn’t told Bella, she would have embarrassed herself in front of this entire audience. She would have walked onto that stage not knowing what to do. She would have been humiliated. Just like all of you."
He turned to face the crowd, his eyes sweeping across the sea of faces.
"Krystal has been doing this for years. To students. To professors. To anyone who got in her way. She has stolen work, ruined reputations, destroyed futures. And tonight, she finally got caught."
The audience erupted again, louder this time. A roar of anger and vindication filled the auditorium, bouncing off the walls, shaking the rafters.
The auditorium had turned into a storm.
Parents stood up from their seats, their faces flushed with anger, their voices rising above the chaos. They pointed at Krystal and her friends, their fingers trembling with rage.
A father shouted, his fist raised high. "If such a person is studying in this university, my child is not safe. How many other students has she hurt?"
A mother demanded, her voice shaking with fury. "What about the other girls? The ones she bullied? The ones she humiliated? What about them?"
Another parent stood up. "We send our children here to learn, not to be terrorized."
Another said, "Expel her. Expel all of them."
The principal stood at the side of the stage, his face pale, his hands trembling. He exchanged hurried whispers with the dean and the professors. The board members huddled together, their expressions grim, their voices low and urgent.
Finally, the principal stepped forward. He raised his hand for silence.
It took a long time for the crowd to quiet.
"Effective immediately," he announced, his voice loud but unsteady, wavering at the edges, "Krystal and her associates will be suspended from this university, pending a full investigation."
The audience erupted again. Some cheered. Some shouted. Some cried with relief.
"We will not tolerate bullying. We will not tolerate theft. We will not tolerate students who prey on the kindness of others." The principal’s voice grew firmer, stronger, as if he was finally finding his footing. "A full investigation will be conducted. If the allegations are proven true—and it seems they are—further action will be taken. Expulsion. Legal consequences. Whatever is necessary to ensure the safety and integrity of this institution."
Krystal’s friends, the girls who had laughed at her jokes, who had stood beside her, who had benefited from her cruelty, began to cry. Some ran off the stage, their heels clicking against the floor, their hands covering their faces. Others stood frozen, their faces blank with shock, unable to move, unable to think.
Krystal herself did not move. Her eyes were empty.
Leo watched everything from the front row.
His gray eyes took in the chaos: the shouting parents, the crying students, the panicked administrators running back and forth. He observed it all with detachment.
He turned his head slightly, looking over his shoulder, searching the rows of seats behind him.
Bella was sitting near the back. Her tablet was in her hands, her fingers still moving across the screen. Her head was lowered, her brown hair falling forward, hiding her face.
She had done this. She had planned this. And she had executed it beautifully. She had brought Krystal down not with fists or threats but with intelligence and patience and careful, quiet work.
Leo’s heart beat a little faster.
He watched her. The way her brow furrowed in concentration. The way her lower lip caught between her teeth. The way her hair fell across her cheek, soft and shining under the dim lights.
She was beautiful.
And day by day, she was growing more attractive. Not just in body, though she was, her curves filling out, her skin glowing, her eyes sparkling with intelligence and mischief, but in spirit.
Leo felt like a young man with a crush, stealing glances at the girl he loved, his heart fluttering in his chest like a bird trapped in a cage.
He could not look away.
Samuel followed Leo’s gaze.
He had been watching the mess on stage, the drama unfolding, the girl falling apart. But Leo’s movement caught his attention. The way Leo turned. The way his eyes softened. The way his lips curved into a small private smile.
He looked toward the back of the auditorium.
He saw Bella.
She was sitting in the shadows, her face illuminated by the glow of her tablet. Her brown hair fell around her shoulders, soft and shining, like dark silk. Her skin was fair, almost luminous, as if she carried her own light. Her eyes were focused, intense, intelligent. They moved quickly across the screen.
Samuel stared. He was unable to look away.
"Sam."
Boba’s voice pulled him from his thoughts.
He turned to look at her. She was sitting beside him, her blue dress shining under the lights, her dark hair styled in loose waves. Her brown eyes—brown contacts, he reminded himself, contacts she wore to hide their true color—were wide, questioning, hurt.
He had been staring at Bella for too long. She had noticed.
Samuel’s expression changed. His jaw tightened. His eyes grew cold. The warmth that had been there a moment ago vanished, replaced by coldness.
He did not answer her.
"Sam," Boba said again, softer this time, almost pleading.
Samuel’s voice was flat and irritated. "What?"
She flinched. Her lips pressed together. Her hands clasped in her lap, fingers twisting together.
"Nothing," she whispered.
She turned back to the stage, her eyes unfocused, staring at nothing.
Samuel did not apologize. He simply turned back toward the back of the auditorium and continued watching Bella.
Boba’s eyes filled with tears. She blinked them away quickly before they could fall.
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