But the room was already shifting. The bridesmaids whispered. Anne stared, pale and wide-eyed. Ethan himself appeared in the doorway, having overheard the last exchange. His face was stricken. “Mom?” he said, his voice breaking.
And in that instant, I knew I was right. Her silence said more than any denial could.
The confrontation that followed was ugly. Margaret finally erupted, admitting she had cut the dress because she thought if the wedding were delayed, she might still talk Ethan out of it.
“You’re throwing away your future!” she shouted at him, her voice trembling with fury. “She’s not good enough for you. None of them are.”
Ethan, to his credit, didn’t waver. “Mom, if you can’t respect the woman I love, then you don’t respect me either.” His words silenced the room.
But none of this fixed the most immediate problem: the wedding was hours away, and Lily’s dress was in ruins. She clung to me, tears streaking her face. “Grandma, what do I do?”
I looked at the shredded fabric in her hands, and something fierce rose inside me. They might have destroyed the gown, but they had underestimated me. I had spent a lifetime sewing miracles out of scraps. If there was one thing I knew, it was how to make something beautiful out of disaster.
“Give me space,” I said. “I need everyone out of this room.”
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