This is a somewhat difficult question to answer, given the brevity of the short story format. I think Margot very easily could be kind (she has traits that would suggest this), but I can't state that with absolute certainty the same way that I can say with surety that her classmates were cruel. This cruelty is depicted within the narrative. As far as Margot herself goes, however, I would say Bradbury places more focus on her status as an outsider and as someone who does not fit in well with the other children in the group than on the question of whether she is kind. That being said, I do think she easily could be kind (and I'd certainly add that she seems to have traits which correspond well to kindness).
The short story doesn't give us enough information to say for certain that Margot is a kind person, but all indications are that she is. For example, when the bullying William pushes her, she does not shove back or attack him, even though he seems repeatedly to torment her. As Bradbury puts it:
He gave her a shove. But she did not move; rather she let herself be moved only by him and nothing else.
This reaction, arguably, could simply be the passivity that comes with depression, but it also seemingly indicates that she lacks unkind impulses. She is a highly sensitive child, who misses the sun and refers to it using poetic language, such as likening it to a copper penny. When the other children grab her and shove her into the closet just before the sun comes out, she protests, pleads, and cries, but she doesn't fight back against them in a violent manner. More than hostility or unkindness, she simply indicates throughout the story that she wants to be back on earth, where the sun she loves shines on a frequent basis.
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