The dress was destroyed.
The seam ripped open.
Stains soaked into the satin.
Ink smeared across the bodice.
My hands started shaking.
“No… no, no…”
Then I heard her voice.
“Oh. You found it.”
Stephanie stood in the doorway.
Calm. Almost amused.
“You did this?” I whispered.
She didn’t even deny it.
“I warned you,” she said. “I wasn’t going to let you humiliate us.”
“It was my mom’s.”
“And now I’m your mother,” she snapped. “It’s time to grow up.”
Something inside me broke.
I don’t know how long I sat there crying.
But then my grandma walked in.
She had come early.
She saw the dress. Saw me.
And something in her changed.
“Get up,” she said. “We’re fixing it.”
For two hours, she worked.
Hands shaking, but steady.
She scrubbed the stains.
Stitched the seam.
Did everything she could.
I just sat there, holding my breath.
When she finished, she held it up.
“Put it on.”
It wasn’t perfect.
But it was still hers.
That’s all I needed.
At prom, people stared.
Not in a bad way.
“You look amazing,” someone said.
“It was my mom’s,” I told them.
And for the first time that night…
I smiled for real.
When I got home, my dad was waiting.
He looked tired. Still in his work clothes.
But when he saw me…
He froze.
“You look just like her,” he said quietly.
Then he hugged me.
And I finally let myself cry again.
Then Stephanie spoke.
“So this is what you wore?” she said. “You really let her embarrass us like that?”
The air changed instantly.
My dad turned.
And I’d never seen him look like that before.
“She didn’t embarrass anyone,” he said. “She honored her mother.”
Stephanie laughed.
“You call that honoring? That dress looks cheap.”
And that’s when my dad stepped forward.
“That dress belonged to my wife,” he said. “And you had no right to touch it.”
She hesitated.
“You destroyed something that mattered to my daughter,” he continued.
“And I won’t let you hurt her again.”
“You’re choosing her over me?”
“Yes,” he said. “Every time.”
Silence.
Then she grabbed her bag and left.
Slamming the door behind her.
The house felt different after that.
Quieter.
But not empty.
That night, I hung the dress back in my closet.
Carefully.
Like something that survived.
Because it did.
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