“Yes. And I think this is inappropriate.”
He ignored her.
“I knew their mother,” he said.
He looked at me. Then at Noah.
“She volunteered here. Raised money here. And she talked constantly about the savings she left for her children. She wanted those kids protected.”
Carla’s face drained of color.
“This isn’t your business,” she snapped.
“It became my business,” the principal said calmly, “when I heard one of our students almost skipped prom because she was told there was no money for a dress.”
A ripple moved through the crowd.
He gestured toward me.
“Then I heard her younger brother made one by hand from their late mother’s jeans.”
Now everyone was staring.
Carla tried to laugh it off.
“You’re turning gossip into theater.”
Before the principal could answer, a man stepped forward from the aisle.
I recognized him vaguely from Dad’s funeral.
He took the spare microphone from a teacher.
“I can clarify something,” he said.
He introduced himself as the attorney who handled my mother’s estate.
He explained that he had been trying for months to contact Carla about the children’s trust funds.
He never received answers.
Now the room was whispering loudly.
Carla hissed, “This is harassment.”
The attorney shook his head.
“This is documentation.”
Then the principal turned to me.
“Would you come up here?”
My legs were shaking.
But I walked onto the stage.
“Tell everyone who made your dress,” he said.
“My brother,” I said.
“Come here, Noah.”
Noah looked like he wanted to disappear, but he walked up beside me.
The principal gestured toward the dress.
“This,” he said, “is talent. This is love.”
Nobody laughed.
They clapped.
Real applause. Loud and sudden.
An art teacher called out, “Young man, you have a gift.”
Someone else shouted, “That dress is incredible!”
I looked back into the crowd.
Carla was still holding her phone.
But now it wasn’t recording my humiliation.
It was capturing her own.
Later that night she made one last mistake.
She shouted across the room, “Everything in that house belongs to me anyway!”
The attorney answered immediately.
“No. It doesn’t.”
Three weeks later Noah and I moved in with our aunt.
Two months later Carla lost control of the money.
She fought it.
She lost.
The dress is hanging in my closet now.
One of the teachers sent photos of it to a local design program.
Noah got accepted to a summer course.
He pretended to be annoyed for a full day before I caught him smiling at the email.
Sometimes I still run my fingers along the denim seams.
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