But My Father Made Sure She’d Never Forget It

I’m 17, and for as long as I can remember, my prom night wasn’t about crowns or limos. It was about one dress. My mom’s dress. The soft lavender gown she wore to her own prom decades ago. When I was little, she showed me photos and told me stories, smiling like that night still lived inside her. When cancer took her when I was twelve, that dress became more than fabric. It became her voice. Her memory. My anchor.

Years later, my dad remarried. Stephanie moved in and slowly erased every trace of my mom. Photos disappeared. Boxes were thrown out. Furniture replaced. She called my mom’s belongings “junk” and said we needed a “fresh image.” I swallowed my anger until the day before prom, when I stood in front of the mirror wearing my mom’s dress, finally feeling close to her again.

Stephanie laughed. Not nervously. Cruelly. She told me I’d embarrass the family, that the dress looked old and pathetic. She held up a designer gown worth thousands and said that was what I’d wear instead. I told her no. Calmly. Firmly. I said I was wearing my mom’s dress. She stormed out, furious.

That night, I went to change. I unzipped the garment bag — and my heart dropped. The seams were torn. The satin was stained, dark and ugly, like it had been soaked on purpose. I couldn’t breathe. Stephanie stood in the doorway smiling and said, “Oh, you found it.” When I asked if she did this, she snapped. She screamed that she was my mother now, that the dress should’ve been trashed years ago. I broke down. I felt like I’d lost my mom all over again.

I didn’t know my dad had heard everything.

An hour later, he walked into the room, picked up the ruined dress, and said nothing. He didn’t yell. He didn’t argue. He simply told Stephanie to pack a bag. She laughed, thinking it was a joke. Then he told her she’d destroyed the last thing his daughter had of her mother — and that was unforgivable. He canceled her access to his accounts, called a lawyer, and told her she’d be staying elsewhere permanently.

That night, I wore a simple backup dress. But I walked into prom knowing something more important had happened. My dad chose me. He chose my mom’s memory. And Stephanie learned that some lines, once crossed, can never be undone.

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