“Why do you even bother working?” Vanessa asked one night.
“I want to buy my own dress for prom.”
She laughed lightly. “How sweet. Such a little grown-up.”
I ignored her.
I had learned that arguing only fed her.
After months of double shifts, I found the perfect dress.
It was pale lavender, simple, with delicate embroidery along the neckline. When I tried it on at the boutique, I caught my reflection and felt something I hadn’t felt in years.
It brought back a rush of memories that brought tears to my eyes.
I remembered Mom smiling in photos I hadn’t seen in years, her fingers moving deftly through my hair as she braided it, and the warm safety of her hugs.
I looked so much like her that it hurt my heart.
I brought the dress home and tucked it carefully into a garment bag at the back of my closet.
I told no one. Not even my best friend.
“You’re awfully cheerful lately,” Vanessa observed over breakfast one morning.
“Just excited for graduation.”
She studied me for a moment too long. “Mmm.
Don’t get too excited. Life has a way of disappointing girls who hope too much.”
The way she said it made my stomach twist.
Looking back, I think she already knew exactly what she was planning.
My father stirred his coffee and said nothing.
That night, I sat on my bed and held the garment bag against my chest.
I imagined Mom seeing me in it, somehow, somewhere. For the first time in years, I let myself feel close to her again.
A few days after I brought the dress home, Vanessa stopped in my doorway.
The question caught me off guard. Vanessa never asked me about my life.
“Maybe,” I replied, wary of where this was going.
“So defensive,” she remarked, her eyes drifting toward my closet. “I just want to see it.”
For a moment, something flashed across her face before the smile returned. “Suit yourself.”
Prom was only days away.
I had no idea Vanessa had already been watching that closet for weeks.
On the day of prom, I climbed the stairs two at a time after school, my backpack still slung over one shoulder.
Prom was four hours away, and I had a routine planned down to the minute: hair first, then makeup, then the dress.
I dropped my bag and opened the closet, reaching for the soft plastic garment bag I had hung there last night.
My hand closed on empty hangers.
For one irrational second, I thought maybe I’d moved it myself.
I pushed every coat aside, every old shirt, and even went through the shoeboxes at the bottom of my closet.
Nothing.
The dress was gone.
A horrible suspicion made my stomach drop.
“Vanessa?” I called down the hall. My voice came out higher than I meant it to.
“In the kitchen,” she called back cheerfully.
Vanessa was sitting at the kitchen table, scrolling through her phone with one hand and stirring coffee with the other.
“Your prom dress?” She sipped her coffee and shrugged.
“I sold it.”
For a moment, I couldn’t breathe. “You did WHAT?”
She finally lifted her eyes, and there was something almost amused in them. “A woman down the street has a daughter your size.
She paid cash.”
“That dress was mine. I worked months for it!”
“And you would have worn it once,” she said, shrugging. “I did you a favor.
That money can go toward something practical.”
“Practical?” My voice cracked. “Tonight is my prom.”
I stared at her, trying to find any flicker of regret in her face. There was none.
Just that same flat boredom she wore whenever I spoke.
She thought she was untouchable, but I had one last move I could try.
“Does Dad know you sold my prom dress without asking me?”
She smiled. “Your father trusts my judgment with the household.”
I stood there, staring at her, as I slowly realized there was nothing I could do about this.
She was right — Dad always took her side, and I had no reason to believe this time would be any different.
I was powerless.
Little did I know that by the end of the night, our roles would be reversed and Vanessa would be staring at me with tears brimming in her eyes.
I ran upstairs.
In my room, I sat on the floor and let the tears come.
Not pretty crying, but the ugly, shoulder-shaking kind I had not done since the day I found out Mom had died.
Somewhere out there, another girl was getting ready for prom in the dress I’d spent months working for.
But it wasn’t just about the dress.
It was every photo of my mother that Vanessa had quietly taken down, and every dinner where my father had stared at his plate while she sliced into me with a smile.
I picked up my phone and opened the group chat.
Something happened. I can’t make it tonight.
The replies came fast.
What? Chloe, no. 😭
What happened?
Are you okay?
I thought about telling them what had happened, but in the end, I sent a message saying I just couldn’t come.
I sat there for a while, staring at my phone. Then I sent a text to an old friend of my mom’s. I just wanted to vent to somebody who’d understand in a way my friends couldn’t.
He never replied.
At seven thirty, photos started flooding my feed.
My best friend in emerald green, laughing on her porch. The guys in matching boutonnieres. The limo.
The hotel ballroom.
I assumed the night was over for me. As it turned out, it was barely beginning.
I changed into sweatpants and curled up on top of the covers.
I thought about my mother. About what she would have said if she had been here, brushing my hair, fixing my zipper, telling me I looked just like her.
I almost did not hear the engines at first. A low rumble, like distant thunder, growing closer down our quiet street.
Then a second engine joined it, deeper and heavier, and the windows began to shake.
I crept down the stairs, still in my sweatpants, my eyes swollen from crying.
The roar outside grew louder, vibrating through the walls of the living room.
Vanessa stood frozen at the window, her phone forgotten on the couch behind her.
“What is that?” my father called from the kitchen, finally setting down his newspaper.
Vanessa did not answer. Her knuckles had gone white against the windowsill.
I peered around her shoulder.
A sleek black Lamborghini gleamed against the curb outside our house, and behind it, a massive 18-wheeler hissed as its brakes released.
Neighbors had already gathered on their lawns, phones raised.
The doorbell rang.
My father opened the door, and a tall man in a charcoal suit stood on the porch, holding a leather folder.
I recognized him instantly.
It was Arthur, the person I’d texted earlier, my mother’s oldest friend.
“David,” Arthur said, nodding at my father.
Then his eyes softened when they landed on me. “Hello, sweetheart. I’m sorry I’m late.”
“Arthur, what is going on?” my father asked, glancing nervously at the crowd outside.
“I was planning to visit this week anyway,” Arthur said.
“There were some things Chloe’s mother instructed me to deliver once Chloe became an adult. But then I received a message this afternoon.”
Vanessa stepped forward, plastering on a thin smile. “Whatever this is, it can wait.”
“No, it can’t.” Arthur turned to my father.
“Did you know Vanessa sold Chloe’s prom dress?”
My father’s head snapped toward Vanessa. “What is he talking about?”
Vanessa’s smile vanished. “She was being wasteful.
Someone had to teach her.”
I felt every neighbor’s eyes on us through the open door.
My cheeks burned, but I lifted my chin. “You did it to hurt me.
Like you always do.”
“Oh, don’t flatter yourself, sweetheart.” Vanessa rolled her eyes. “The world does not revolve around you.”
Arthur cleared his throat.
“Speaking of the world revolving, Vanessa. I think it’s time we discussed exactly whose house you’re standing in.”
He opened the folder and held out a thick stack of documents to my father.
My father took them with shaking hands.
“What is this, Arthur?”
“Elaine prepared this before she passed. The house, the savings, the investment portfolio. All of it was placed into a blind trust on the day of her diagnosis.
When Chloe turned 18 a few weeks ago, the trust transferred fully into her name.”
Vanessa’s face drained completely.
My father stared at the papers.
“Elaine left everything to Chloe,” he whispered. “The house.
The accounts. All of it is in her name.”
“What?” Vanessa shrieked. “You told me this was YOUR house.
You told me everything was YOURS.”
“I thought it was,” my father said quietly.
“Elaine left more than money,” Arthur said gently.
Then he turned toward the 18-wheeler and raised one hand. The driver hopped out and walked round to the back of the truck.
“When Elaine got sick,” Arthur continued, “she rented a storage unit and filled it with the keepsakes and family heirlooms she wanted Chloe to have someday.
Today, I brought everything home.”
