The Approval System
I had not asked my mother for money in three months.
She thought I had finally learned to be a good, obedient son and, in a rare act of mercy, sent me a message.
"I already had Calvin pay the registration fee. Learn to be more sensible from now on. Stop thinking about scamming money from the family.
"I know your dad is having a hard time right now, but since you chose to stay with me, you need to be on the same side as me."
When she said this, she did not yet know that I had already transferred my in-state residency out.
No one believed that I, Miles Hart, who appeared on the surface to be the young master of a wealthy family, had a closet filled entirely with clothes bought before my parents’ divorce. For three full years, there was not a single new piece of clothing.
Every dollar I spent privately had to be submitted through an internal approval system, with a written application and justification. Even fees for school activities required screenshots of official notices and formal quotations.
All expenses had to pass the review of my stepfather, Calvin Pierce.
Just because my mother constantly suspected I was siding with my father and was afraid I would secretly funnel money to him.
A month ago, I needed $500 for a math competition registration fee. Calvin rejected the request again and again.
"There isn't enough justification.
"Why do you have to participate in this competition?
"Wait until the end of the month for unified approval."
By the time approval finally came through, the registration window had already closed.
Mom did not know that I had endured these three years for only one reason: an in-state residency, which would make college admissions easier.
Now, I was officially recommended for admission to a top university.
This family was no longer a place I needed to stay in.