Grief sat at our kitchen table and learned to sew. My father, who once fixed leaking pipes, now wrestled with my dead mother’s wedding dress, turning memories into something I was supposed to wear in public. I walked into prom already trembling, but I didn’t expect the first laugh to come from my own teacher. Her voice sliced through the music, mocking the crooked hem, the faded lace, the way the bodice didn’t quite fit my shoulders. Every insecurity I’d ever tried to hide bloomed under the fluorescent lights as the room turned to stare, and for a second I wished the floor would just crum…
Officer Warren’s calm interruption felt unreal, like a scene from a movie I’d accidentally wandered into. One moment my teacher towered over me with her microphone and her perfect hair; the next, she was walking toward the exit, flanked by authority and silence. The assistant principal’s tight jaw said everything: this wasn’t sudden, it was overdue. The whispers came in waves—stories of other students, other nights, other times she’d crossed lines no one wanted to name.
When the doors closed, the music limped back to life. A girl from my math class touched the sleeve of my dress and asked if those tiny blue flowers were hand-stitched. A boy I barely knew said my dad must really love me. Their words didn’t erase the sting, but they shifted its weight. My father hadn’t just sewn a dress; he’d given me armor disguised as silk, proof that love can stand in the ugliest rooms and not come apart at the seams.