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Untamed Growth: I'm My Own Person Novel Cover

Untamed Growth: I'm My Own Person

Raised by billionaire parents who enforce extreme frugality, the protagonist must justify every cent spent. When he requests a ride to his SATs during a rainstorm, his father violently refuses, forcing him to trek eighteen miles on foot. While he struggles through the mud, he discovers his family has spent ten million dollars on a private concert for his adopted sister, Selene. This blatant hypocrisy forces him to redefine his identity and survival in a world of wealth.
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Chapter 3

Hearing this, Mom, Dad, and William all looked a little uncomfortable, each in their own way. Even Selene, who had been pretending to be pitiful, froze for a moment.

They were probably wondering why, after all her provocation on the day of the SATs, I still wasn't causing a scene or making a fuss.

I just said calmly, "Mom, Dad, William, I just got back and am a little tired. May I go to my room now?"

Dad cleared his throat and said, "Go ahead."

I turned and started walking upstairs. But I'd only taken a few steps when Selene, unwilling to let it go, called out, "Aster, wait! Mom, Dad, William—look! Aster's new dress is so pretty!

"It's strange, though. Aster, shouldn't you be broke? So, where did this dress come from?"

After seeing how soaked I was, Ms. Decker bought me this dress to change into on the day of the SATs. It was just a plain, simple white maxi dress.

But with the way Selene asked, it sounded as if my dress had come from some shady source or I had done something disgraceful to get it.

Hearing this, Dad, who was always so stern, narrowed his eyes.

"Aster, be honest with us. Where did you get that dress? Have you done anything to bring shame to our family?"

Mom clutched her chest in agony. "What sin have I committed to raise a daughter who doesn't even know how to respect herself?"

Seeing her tactics work, Selene continued in a deliberately innocent tone, "Dad, Mom, how can you talk about Aster like that? She really does respect herself. In school, many guys are always circling around her, but she only accepts their gifts and money.

"She never actually gets into a relationship with any of them, so don't worry. It's just a dress, and plenty of guys are willing to pay for her things anyway."

If this had happened in the past, I would've desperately explained myself and tried everything to prove my innocence, just to salvage my image in my parents' eyes.

But now, I just stared blankly at Selene's smug, gloating face.

In the years since my return, she had come up with many schemes just to push me completely out of the family—from accusing me of poisoning her food to stealing the birthday gift I worked so hard to make for Mom and claiming it as her own.

She also led the bullying against me at school and spread vile rumors about me everywhere.

And yet, clinging to that faint hope of family affection, I even tried to please her. In fact, I never dared to say a single word against her to Mom and Dad.

Looking back now, the whole thing was really laughable.

Seeing that I still hadn't said a single word in my own defense, William took my silence as an admission of guilt.

After striding toward me, he grabbed my collar and snarled, "You shameless good-for-nothing! How dare you wear something so filthy and unclean!"

Then, without any regard for propriety or the fact that the maids were present, he began tearing at my dress.

The back zipper split open, and I was on the verge of being exposed. In a moment of desperation, I slapped him across the face.

Instantly, the entire room fell silent.

Clutching his cheek, William asked me in disbelief, "Aster, are you out of your mind?"

With reddened eyes, I stared at the man who wanted to strip me bare in front of everyone.

I knew then without a doubt that he was no longer the boy from my childhood who carried me on his shoulders and promised that I'd always be his little princess.

Trembling, I clutched the front of my dress tightly to keep it from slipping down.

An overwhelming sense of humiliation nearly choked me. I bit my lip as hard as I could to keep myself from crying out loud.

"So, you do know it's impossible to live without a single cent to your name. But you're wrong. Even though I grew up in the mountains, I'm not as shameless as you think. I just don't understand why you always assume the worst of me."

Mom and Dad didn't bother giving me an explanation. Instead, they just shoved me into the detention room on the third floor.