Prom night arrived, and Cassandra was glowing with pride. She strutted into my driveway, phone in hand, ready to capture Lily in the $1,000 gown she had swooped in to provide. Her smug smile told me she thought she had won.
Then Lily stepped outside.
But she wasn’t wearing Cassandra’s designer dress. She was wearing mine.
The gown I had stitched with calloused fingers and sleepless nights shimmered in the porch light. Every seam, every bead, every detail glowed with love. And on Lily’s face? Pure pride.
Cassandra froze. “What… what is this?” she stammered.
Lily smoothed her skirt and looked her straight in the eye. “This is my mom’s dress. The one she poured her heart into. I’ll always remember this night—and I want to remember it in what she made for me. Not something you bought just to make her feel small.”
Cassandra’s smug smile cracked, and for the first time, she had nothing to say.
I stood there silently, tears burning my eyes. Not because I was hurt, but because in that moment, I realized Lily understood everything. She didn’t need expensive gowns or flashy gifts to know who truly loved her.
She chose me.
And when the limo pulled up, my daughter twirled in her handmade dress, more radiant than I’d ever seen her. Cassandra’s $1,000 gown hung useless in its bag, forgotten.
It was the last time Cassandra ever tried to compete with me. Because she finally learned: love can’t be bought.