My stepmom RUINED the skirt I made from my late dad’s ties to honor him during my prom. ______ When my dad died, I was left with my stepmother, Carla — who didn’t shed a single tear. At the funeral, while I could barely stand, she leaned over and hissed, “You’re embarrassing yourself. Stop crying — he’s gone.” Two weeks later, she cleaned out dad’s closet, tossing his favorite collection of ties into a trash bag. “They’re not junk. They’re his,” I begged. She rolled her eyes. “HE’S NOT COMING BACK FOR THEM. GROW UP.” I saved them when she wasn’t looking. Each still smelled faintly like my dad’s cologne. Prom was coming up. I didn’t want to go, but I knew Dad would’ve wanted me to. So I decided to honor him and stitched those ties into a skirt. Each pattern held a memory — his job interview, my recital, Christmas mornings. When I tried it on, I whispered, “He’d love this.” The night before prom, I hung it on my closet door. The next morning, I smelled Carla’s perfume in my room. The skirt was on the floor — RIPPED APART, ties scattered like bones. I screamed. Carla appeared, sipping coffee. “That thing was HIDEOUS anyway. DO NOT PRETEND TO BE A PATHETIC ORPHAN!” “You destroyed the last thing I had of Dad’s!” She smirked. “He’s DEAD, not magic. Get over it.” But karma was faster then I thought, as police lights flashed outside. A knock. Carla froze. The officer came in and looked at me. “You live here?” “Yes… why?” He turned to Carla. “We’re here for Mrs. Miller.

“I almost didn’t come,” he said. “I was told not to.”

“Told by who?”

He swallowed. “Mom.”

I stared at him. “That’s not funny.”

“I swear to you. A lawyer called me this morning. He knew her name. Her illness. The date she died.”

My chest tightened.

“She asked him to contact me when Dad remarried,” Robert continued. “Specifically when he married Laura.”

He pulled an envelope from his jacket. Thick. Sealed.

“She wrote this when she already knew she was dying.”

“What’s in it?” I whispered.

“The truth.”

I asked him to read it. He shook his head.

“Once you know, you can’t un-know it.”

Someone inside cheered. They were about to cut the cake.

“What did Mom find out?” I asked.

“She discovered Dad had been lying for years,” he said. “About his entire life. And the woman wasn’t a stranger.”