The first night I started sewing, my hands wouldn’t stop shaking.
At one point, I pushed the needle straight through my thumb. I bit down hard, wiped the blood away, and kept going, making sure not a single drop touched the olive fabric spread across my bed.
If Camila or her daughters found out what I was doing with Dad’s uniform, I knew exactly how it would go.
Endless comments. Mocking smiles. Another thing to tear apart.
My dad’s jacket was worn at the cuffs, soft from years of use. The fabric still carried traces of him. Faint aftershave. A hint of oil. Something steady, familiar.
The night we found out he wasn’t coming home, I held that jacket and breathed it in like it could bring him back.
Now, every stitch felt like I was holding onto him in a different way.
Like I was putting something back together that had been broken.
Prom had never meant much to me.
Not like it did to my stepsisters, Lia and Jen.
One morning, I walked into the kitchen and found them surrounded by magazines, circling dresses and pointing at models.
“Chelsea, which one do you like?” Lia asked. “Strapless or sweetheart neckline?”
Before I could answer, Jen smirked.
“Why are you asking her? She’ll probably show up in one of her dad’s old shirts or some outdated thing from the attic.”
They laughed.
I didn’t.
Because they had no idea how close they were to the truth.
For weeks, I worked in secret.
Late at night, door locked, music low.
Cutting. Sewing. Reworking pieces over and over until it felt right.
I used parts of his jacket, sections of his uniform, even one of his patches that I stitched carefully near the waistline.
Not as decoration.
As meaning.
By the time I finished, it wasn’t just a dress.
It was him.
It was me.
It was everything I didn’t know how to say out loud.
The night of prom, I stepped out of my room and into the hallway.
For a moment, no one said anything.
Then Lia laughed.
“Oh my God… is that actually made out of his uniform?”
Jen covered her mouth, trying not to laugh louder.
“That’s… wow. That’s kind of weird, don’t you think?”
Camila leaned against the wall, arms crossed.
“You couldn’t just wear something normal for once?” she said. “This isn’t a costume party.”
I felt the words hit, but I didn’t move.
“I wanted to wear something that mattered,” I said quietly.
She shook her head. “It looks like you’re trying too hard.”
For a second, I almost went back to my room.
Almost.
Then—
A knock at the door.
Sharp. Unexpected.
Camila frowned. “Who is that?”
She opened it.
Standing outside was a man in full military uniform.
The room went still.
“Good evening,” he said. “I’m looking for Chelsea.”
My heart stopped.
“That’s me,” I said, stepping forward.
He looked at me… and then at the dress.
And something in his expression softened.
“I was a colleague of your father’s,” he said. “We served together.”
My throat tightened.
“I heard about what you did,” he continued. “About the uniform.”
He reached into his pocket and pulled out an envelope.
“This was meant to be delivered to your family,” he said. “But after seeing this… I think it belongs to you.”
I took it carefully, my hands trembling.
Then he turned slightly toward Camila.
“And this,” he added, handing her a second note, “is for the current head of the household.”
She took it, confused.
As I opened mine, my vision blurred.
Inside was a letter.
My father’s handwriting.
I recognized it instantly.
If you’re reading this, it means I didn’t make it home.
My breath caught.
Chelsea, I hope you grow up knowing how proud I am of you. You’ve always been stronger than you realize. Don’t let anyone make you feel small. Not even family.
Tears slipped down before I could stop them.
And if you ever wear this uniform in your own way… know that you carry more than fabric. You carry everything I believed in.
I pressed the letter to my chest.
Behind me, I heard silence.
I turned.
Camila’s face had gone pale.
She was staring at her note like it had undone something inside her.
“What does it say?” Lia asked.
Camila didn’t answer right away.
Then, quietly, she spoke.
“He… left the house to her.”
The room shifted.
“What?” Jen said.
Camila looked up at me, something entirely different in her eyes now.
“He made it clear,” she said slowly. “Everything connected to him… belongs to you.”
No one laughed anymore.
No one said a word.
I stood there, in that dress, holding his letter, feeling something settle inside me.
Not anger.
Not victory.
Just… clarity.
That night wasn’t about proving them wrong.
It wasn’t about impressing anyone.
It was about reclaiming something that had always been mine.
As I walked out the door, I caught my reflection for a second.
And for the first time in a long time…
I didn’t feel like I was living in someone else’s shadow.