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Prom photos filled social media.
My friends looked beautiful.
Everyone was having fun.
I felt miserable.
Then I heard engines.
At first, I thought it was distant traffic.
But the sound grew louder.
Closer.
The windows began vibrating.
I wiped my eyes and went downstairs.
Vanessa stood frozen by the window.
My father finally lowered his newspaper.
“What is that?”
Neither of us knew.
Then I looked outside.
A black Lamborghini sat at the curb.
Behind it stood a massive 18-wheeler.
The entire neighborhood was gathering outside.
Phones appeared everywhere.
The doorbell rang.
Dad opened the door.
Arthur stood there.
My heart nearly broke.
“Arthur?”
His expression softened immediately.
“Hello, sweetheart.”
Dad looked confused.
“What is going on?”
Arthur adjusted his jacket.
“I received a text message this afternoon.”
Vanessa folded her arms.
“Whatever this is can wait.”
Arthur looked directly at her.
“No. It can’t.”
Then he turned toward my father.
“Did you know Vanessa sold Chloe’s prom dress?”
Dad looked stunned.
“What?”
Vanessa rolled her eyes.
“She was being ridiculous.”
Arthur’s expression hardened.
“You mean she worked for months to buy something important and you stole it.”
The neighbors outside were listening now.
Vanessa noticed.
For the first time, she looked uncomfortable.
Then Arthur opened a leather folder.
“Actually, there is something else we need to discuss.”
He handed documents to my father.
Dad scanned the first page.
Then another.
Then another.
His face turned white.
“What is this?”
Arthur smiled sadly.
“It’s your late wife’s trust.”
My father looked up.
“The trust?”
“When Elaine was diagnosed, she transferred everything into a blind trust for Chloe.”
Silence.
“The house.”
He pointed to the papers.
“The savings.”
Another page.
“The investments.”
Another.
“It all belongs to Chloe.”
Vanessa laughed nervously.
“No. That’s impossible.”
Arthur shook his head.
“It became Chloe’s property the day she turned eighteen.”
Vanessa’s face drained of color.
“What?”
Dad stared at her.
Then at me.
Then back at the papers.
The realization hit all of us at once.
The house.
Everything.
Mine.
Arthur wasn’t finished.
He pointed toward the 18-wheeler.
“Your mother left more than money.”
The truck doors opened.
Inside were dozens of carefully labeled boxes.
Each one marked in my mother’s handwriting.
I couldn’t breathe.
Arthur guided me toward the truck.
Then he opened a garment bag hanging near the center.
Inside was a dress.
Ivory silk.
Elegant.
Timeless.
Beautiful.
“My God,” I whispered.
Arthur smiled.
“Your mother’s prom dress.”
My hand flew to my mouth.
Tears filled my eyes.
“She wanted you to have it someday.”
I looked at the dress.
Then at the boxes.
Every missing photograph.
Every keepsake.
Every memory Vanessa had tried to erase.
My mother had protected them all.
Arthur handed me the garment bag.
“Go get ready.”
Twenty minutes later, I walked down the front steps wearing my mother’s dress.
It fit perfectly.
As though it had been waiting for me.
Arthur opened the Lamborghini door.
“Ready?”
I nodded.
Before getting in, I looked back.
Vanessa stood in the driveway surrounded by suitcases.
Dad had finally found his backbone.
And for the first time since she entered our lives, she wasn’t smiling.
Tears streamed down her face.
Our eyes met briefly.
Then I looked away.
Because she no longer mattered.
The Lamborghini roared to life.
As we pulled away, I smiled through my tears.
Vanessa had spent years trying to erase my mother.
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