Montag was home sick. Never before.
Mildred ran to the parlor to hide the presence of the illegal books Montag had been hoarding, as she was afraid of getting into trouble if they were discovered by Captain Beatty.
because they found books in Montag's house.
The final informant on Montag's home in "Fahrenheit 451" was Captain Beatty, his boss at the fire station. Beatty had grown suspicious of Montag's growing interest in books and ultimately turned him in for possessing illegal literature.
Captain Beatty drove the Salamander to Montag's house in "Fahrenheit 451." Beatty was aware that Montag had secretly been collecting and hiding books, and he wanted to confront Montag about his subversive actions.
Montag called emergency medical services when Mildred overdosed on sleeping pills. The technicians arrived promptly to assist Mildred.
First off, Guy doesn't betray Mildred; Mildred betrays Guy (turns him over to the firemen). The reader never sees the interaction between Mildred and the firemen, only Guy's reaction to seeing Mildred (pg 114; or a couple paragraphs into part 3). Montag kills Beatty (pg 119; or about 7 paragraphs into the 2nd break into part 3).
The main characters in "Fahrenheit 451" are Guy Montag, Clarisse McClellan, Mildred Montag, Captain Beatty, and Professor Faber. Guy Montag is a fireman who starts to question his society's censorship and book burning practices, while Clarisse is a young girl who challenges his views. Mildred is Montag's wife who conforms to society's norms, Captain Beatty is Montag's superior who enforces the government's rules, and Professor Faber is a former English professor who helps Montag understand the value of books.
Beatty taunted Montag about his growing curiosity and defiance towards the rules. He provoked Montag to burn his own house by quoting books, knowing that Montag was hiding illegal books, resulting in Montag turning the flame-thrower on Beatty.
Montag kills Beatty out of self-defense. Beatty represents the oppressive society that Montag is rebelling against, and Beatty threatens Montag's life, leaving Montag with no choice but to defend himself.
montag burns beatty with the flame thrower and kills him and the others!!
Beatty's allusion in his first statement to Montag in "Fahrenheit 451" is to a quote by the playwright William Shakespeare: "But all’s too weak; For brave Macbeth—well he deserves that name— Disdaining fortune, with his brandish'd steel, Which smoked with bloody execution, Like valor's minion carved out his passage." Beatty uses this allusion to compare Montag to Macbeth, implying that Montag, like Macbeth, is brave and capable of great deeds, but also suggesting that he may be on a dangerous path.
Captain Beatty hints to Montag that he knows about his secret stash of books by subtly referencing specific titles during their conversations. Beatty mentions classics like "Romeo and Juliet," "Julius Caesar," and "David Copperfield," which could indicate his awareness of Montag's illegal activities.
Montag realized that Beatty wanted to die and provoked Montag to kill him. He knew this when Beatty goaded him and knew all the details about the hidden earpiece that Faber had given Montag.