My daughter wore a prom dress she made from her late father’s police uniform. When a girl poured punch all over it, she just stood there, trying to clean his badge. Then the girl’s mother took the mic… and exposed something no one saw coming.
“I don’t need to go to prom,” Wren said.
We were standing in the school hallway after parent-night check-in. Wren had wandered half a step ahead of me, then she stopped near the flyer for prom.
“A Night Under the Stars,” it said in gold lettering. The borders were decorated with glitter.
“It’s all fake, anyway,” she added.
She gave a small shrug and kept walking.
But that night, long after I heard her bedroom door click shut, I went out to the garage looking for the extra paper towels and found her standing completely still in front of a storage closet.
“I don’t need to go to prom.”
A garment bag hung from the open door.
Her father’s police uniform.
She didn’t hear me come in. She was staring at the zipper with her hands hovering near it, not touching.
Then she whispered, so softly I almost thought I imagined it, “What if he could still take me?”
I stood there for another second before I said, “Wren.”
She jumped and spun around.
Her father’s police uniform.
“I wasn’t—” she started.
“It’s okay.”
She looked back at the garment bag. “I had a crazy idea… I mean, I don’t want to go to prom, so it’s fine if you say no, but… but if I did go… I’d want him with me. And I thought, maybe, if I used his uniform…”
Wren had spent years pretending not to want what other girls wanted. Birthday parties, team trips, and father-daughter events at school.
She had turned disappointment into a personality so early that it scared me sometimes.
“I had a crazy idea.”
I stepped closer. “Open it. Let’s see what you have to work with.”
She looked at me. “What?”
“The bag. Open it.”
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