It started with an innocent compliment. “You’re so lucky to have that dress,” she said. I didn’t think much of it — not until the next morning, when the garment bag was gone… and my heart sank with it.
I can still see her, soaked to the skin, and laughing like the rain was her dance partner.
My mom in her wedding dress, standing under a summer downpour, the lace clinging to her arms, her veil wrapped like seaweed around her shoulders. I must’ve been five when I saw that photo for the first time.
“How did you survive getting drenched like that?” I asked, horrified at the thought. She only laughed, shook her curls like a wet dog, and said, “It was just a short shower, sweetheart.
Then the rainbow came.”
That dress wasn’t just stitched from fabric and thread.
It was stitched from her. From the love she carried into her marriage, the joy she wrapped around our home, and the strength she left behind when she passed away six years ago. She died when I was 18, but before she did, she made very sure I had the dress.
And not just the original.
A seamstress, handpicked by Mom, transformed it. The sleeves were modernized, and the silhouette updated.
But the soul of it, the soft ivory lace from her bodice, the scalloped trim she adored, the covered buttons she once fastened on her own wedding day — all of it was still there. Waiting for me.
Wrapped gently in a garment bag, tucked at the back of my closet, untouched.
Untouched for six years until her. Two months before my wedding, my sister in law, Kayla, burst through my apartment door like she owned the air around her. “Oh my god, you have to see this dress I’m wearing to the Goldsmith Gala,” she trilled, spinning in place, her oversized sunglasses still on indoors.
“It’s black.
Velvet. Plunging neckline.
Sexy, but still classy. My boyfriend nearly passed out when he saw it.”
Kayla was always…
a lot.
Logan’s sister, a self-proclaimed socialite, and the kind of woman who made every room feel like a stage. She flopped onto my couch, kicked off her heels, and started scrolling through her phone, barely letting me get a word in. “I swear, if I had your figure, I’d be unstoppable,” she said, tossing her platinum waves.
Then she paused mid-scroll, eyes narrowing on the corner of my room.
The garment bag. Her voice dropped an octave.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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