An invitation for Rachel — VIP tickets to the Spaledo Legacy Gala. $500 each. Charity event honoring Charleston philanthropists.
Your attendance is requested.
She’d come.
I knew she would.
Rachel never missed an opportunity to be seen.
Saturday, June 14th, I went to Jasmine’s salon on King Street.
“Make me look like myself again,” I told the stylist.
She cut away the choppy, uneven style, shaped it into something elegant. $150. Charles paid. Professional makeup — not the hollow, sallow look I’d been wearing, but color. Life. And a dress — Oscar Dearenta. $2,800 borrowed from a friend I hadn’t spoken to in years. Navy blue. Simple. Powerful.
When I looked in the mirror, CEO Elizabeth Hayes looked back.
Anna came home from her morning shift and stopped in the doorway.
“Mom, you look amazing.”
“I have one last thing to do,” I said.
That evening, I handed her a box.
“Tomorrow night, there’s a gala at Dock Street Theater. I need you to come with me.”
“But I don’t have a dress.”
I gestured to the box.
She opened it slowly. Inside: a navy dress. Simple. Elegant. $120. Charles had picked it out.
Anna’s eyes filled with tears.
“Mom, this is too much.”
“You deserve it.”
She held the dress against herself, looking in the small mirror by the door.
“Why are we going to a gala?”
“You’ll see.”
That night, I sat at Anna’s small table with my laptop and wrote:
Four parts, four truths.
Part one: I faked terminal illness.
Part two: I tested my daughters.
Part three: the truth about John’s passing. How Rachel missed his final days. How Anna stayed.
Leave a Comment