Her Parents Stole $2.3 Million. The Account Was a Trap.-ginny

The first thing Felicia Reynolds learned about money was that her family never called it money when they wanted hers.

They called it responsibility.

They called it helping out.

They called it being mature, being grateful, being less selfish than other people her age.

By the time Felicia was sixteen, George Reynolds had already taught her to hand over birthday checks “for safekeeping,” and Margaret Reynolds had already mastered the soft voice she used when she wanted cruelty to sound reasonable.

Hannah, younger by four years, learned a different lesson.

She learned that wanting something loudly was almost the same as earning it.

If Hannah wanted imported tea, there was room in the grocery budget.

If Hannah wanted a trip, there was some family emergency fund George could magically locate.

If Hannah needed application fees, wardrobe money, rent help, or another chance, Margaret would sigh and say, “Your sister has always been more fragile.”

Felicia became the durable one.

That was the role they gave her before she understood how roles could become cages.

She worked through school, took pharmacy tech shifts, saved every dollar she could, and learned to listen carefully whenever her parents discussed her future as if it were a resource they managed.

George liked control disguised as guidance.

Margaret liked sacrifice disguised as love.

Hannah liked benefits without invoices.

Felicia liked none of it, but for years she obeyed because obedience felt safer than war.

The trust signal came early.

At twenty, after a payroll mistake delayed her check and her father offered to “help organize” her accounts, Felicia gave him copies of records she should have guarded with her life.

Her birth certificate.

Her Social Security card.

A scanned driver’s license.

Employment details.

George said families did not need secrets.

Margaret said only guilty people guarded paperwork from their parents.

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