She Faked Failure to Expose Her Father’s Plan to Steal Her Inheritance-olive

I lied to my father and told him I had flunked the entrance exam, even though my score was 98.7.

That was the first lie I had ever told him that mattered.

Not because Gregory Hayes valued honesty.

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He valued obedience.

There is a difference, though people like him spend their whole lives trying to confuse the two.

I was eighteen when the score came in, sitting on the edge of my bed with my knees pressed together and my phone trembling in my hand.

The room was dark except for the pale glow of the screen.

98.7 percentile.

One of the highest marks in the nation.

For almost a full minute, I just stared at it.

I thought of my mother first.

Evelyn Hayes had been the kind of woman who made ordinary mornings feel protected.

She kept fresh flowers in chipped blue jars, wrote grocery lists in perfect slanted handwriting, and kissed the top of my head every time she passed me in the kitchen.

When I was six, she took me to the Charleston house in spring.

Jasmine climbed the porch railing.

Pink flowers framed the front steps.

She knelt beside me in the garden and said, “One day, Madeline, this house will always know you.”

I had not understood what she meant then.

Children think love is permanent because they have not yet watched adults sign it away.

After she died, the house became more than wood and windows.

It became proof.

Proof that she had existed.

Proof that she had planned for me.

Proof that even if Gregory remarried and built a new family around Vanessa and Chloe, something in the world still had my name on it because my mother had wanted it that way.

Gregory never forgave her for that.

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