I was seventeen when my stepmom laughed at the prom dress my little brother made for me from our late mom’s jeans. By the end of that night, everyone knew exactly who she was. After Dad died from a heart attack last year, everything shifted. Carla took control of the money, the house, even the savings Mom had left for Noah and me—money meant for our futures, not daily expenses she now claimed as her own.
When I mentioned needing a prom dress, she barely looked up from her phone. “That money keeps this house running,” she said, followed by a sharp laugh that stung more than her words. I tried to argue, but it only made things worse. I ended up in my room, crying into my pillow, feeling small and powerless all over again.
Two nights later, Noah walked in carrying a stack of Mom’s old jeans. “Do you trust me?” he asked. He’d taken sewing classes and wanted to try making me a dress. I didn’t hesitate. We worked in secret, pulling out Mom’s old sewing machine and stitching pieces together late at night. It wasn’t just fabric—it felt like we were holding onto something she left behind.
The dress turned out beautiful. Different shades of blue flowed together, shaped with care and love. When I wore it to prom, people noticed. Not because it was expensive—but because it meant something. And for the first time since Dad died, I didn’t feel invisible.