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I folded to my knees, gathering the pieces into my arms as if I could hold the whole thing together by will alone. “You destroyed the last thing I had of him.”
“Please,” she said, sipping. “He’s dead. Ties won’t resurrect him.” The front door slammed; the house echoed.
I texted Mallory with shaking thumbs. Twenty minutes later she arrived with her mom, Ruth—a retired seamstress with a voice like a warm blanket. They didn’t ask questions. Ruth threaded a needle and said, “Your dad will still walk you into that room tonight.” We spread the shredded silk across my floor. For hours, Ruth stitched and re-stitched, reshaped and reinforced. We lost some length. We added layers. Some repairs showed like tiny scars. When I tried it on again, it was different—but stronger. It looked like it had survived.
By six, I pinned one of Dad’s cufflinks to the waistband and walked downstairs. Carla looked up, made a face like she’d bitten a lemon. “You’re still wearing that? Don’t expect me to take pictures.” I didn’t answer. Mallory’s parents honked, and I left.
Prom was a soft kind of magic. The gym lights turned my skirt into stained glass. People stopped me, asked, listened. “My dad’s ties,” I said. “He died this spring.” Teachers blinked fast. Friends squeezed my hands. Someone whispered, “That’s beautiful,” and for the first time in months I didn’t feel weighed down—I felt carried. Near the end of the night, Mrs. Henderson handed me a ribbon for “Most Unique Attire,” pinned it near the cufflink, and murmured, “He would be so proud of you.” I believed her.
The ride home ended in flashing red and blue. Police cars lined our driveway. An officer stood at the door. Carla hovered in the entryway, pale for the first time I’d ever seen. “Do you live here, miss?” he asked. I nodded. “We have a warrant for Carla,” he said. “Insurance fraud and identity theft.” My mouth fell open. Carla sputtered and pointed at me. “She set this up!” “I didn’t even know,” I said, which was true. The officer remained calm. “Your employer reported it this morning after an audit. False medical claims under your late husband’s name and Social Security number.” Another officer retrieved her purse and phone. They cuffed her. She twisted toward me, eyes wild. “You’ll regret this!” The officer glanced at my skirt, then at Carla. “Ma’am, you’ve got enough regrets for tonight.” The car door shut with a solid thunk, and the sirens washed our windows in color as they pulled away.
Three months later, the case drags through court: over $40,000 in fraudulent claims, continuances, a judge losing patience. In the meantime, Dad’s mom—my grandmother—arrived with three suitcases and a round, indignant cat named Buttons. “I should’ve come sooner,” she said, pressing me into a hug that smelled like lavender and soap. Now the house feels like a home again. She makes Dad’s Sunday eggs too runny on purpose, tells me stories about him taping his broken glasses in middle school, and keeps his picture on the mantel where the light finds it in the afternoons.
The tie skirt hangs on my closet door. Some seams are still visibly mended. I like it that way. When I touch the silk, I don’t think of destruction anymore. I think of hands working together at my bedroom floor. I think of a cufflink catching light. I think of how love survives the tearing and becomes something stronger in the re-stitching. And when I step out into the world, I don’t feel like I’m clinging to a memory.
I feel like I’m wearing one that chose to stay.
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