It felt like Mom was there with us somehow—in the faded denim, in the careful way Noah handled every piece, in the hush that settled over the kitchen while the machine buzzed and stitched.
He worked with a kind of concentration that made me stop breathing sometimes. He used the different shades of blue like they were deliberate brushstrokes. He kept pockets in places that made the skirt feel alive. He turned seams into structure, old wear into beauty.
When he finished, the dress was fitted through the waist and opened into a flowing skirt made of panels in different washes of denim. It looked modern and sharp and unlike anything I’d ever seen.
I touched one of the faded pieces and whispered, “You made this.”
He shrugged like it was nothing, but his ears turned red.
The next morning, Carla saw it hanging on my bedroom door.
She stopped in the hallway. Walked closer.
For one second, I thought maybe even she would have enough decency to recognize what it was.
Then she laughed.
Not because she was surprised. Because she was delighted.
“Please tell me you are not serious.”
I stepped into the hall. “That’s my prom dress.”
She laughed harder. “That patchwork mess?”
Noah came out of his room right away, like he had heard the exact tone in her voice and knew what was happening.
“I’m wearing it,” I said.
Carla looked between us, smiling with that slow mean smile people use when they’ve found the weak spot.
“If you wear that,” she said, “the whole school will laugh at you.”
Noah went rigid beside me.
“It’s fine,” I said quietly.
“No, actually, it isn’t.” She waved at the dress. “It looks pathetic.”
Noah’s face turned bright red. “I made it.”
That seemed to please her even more.
“You made it?” she asked sweetly. “That explains a lot.”
I took a step forward. “Enough.”
She ignored me.
“Oh, this should be fun,” she said. “You’re going to show up to prom in a dress made out of old jeans like some kind of charity project, and you think people are going to clap?”
I looked at her and said, very quietly, “I’d rather wear something made with love than something bought by stealing from kids.”
The hallway went silent.
Her face changed.
“Get out of my sight,” she said, “before I really say what I think.”
I wore the dress anyway.
Noah helped zip me into it that night, his hands shaking the whole time.
I turned to look at him.
“Hey,” I said.
“What?”
“If one person laughs, I am haunting them.”
That got a small smile out of him.
“Good,” he said. “They should be afraid.”
Carla had announced earlier that she wanted to “see the disaster in person.” I overheard her on the phone telling someone, “Come early. I need witnesses for this.”
She thought she was attending my humiliation.
What happened instead was better than anything I could have planned.
At prom check-in, people stared at the dress.
But not the way Carla expected.