The first night I tried to stitch the dress, my hands wouldn’t stop shaking. The needle slipped, piercing my thumb. I swallowed the cry, wiped the blood on an old rag, and pressed on—careful not to let a single drop touch the olive fabric spread across my quilt. It wasn’t just cloth. It still carried his scent—aftershave, metal, something warm and familiar that hadn’t yet faded. If Camila or her daughters ever caught me with it, I knew what would follow: laughter first, then the kind of comments that linger long after. So I worked in silence. Every cut of…
The first night I tried to stitch the dress, my hands wouldn’t stop shaking. The needle slipped, piercing my thumb. I swallowed the cry, wiped the blood on an old rag, and pressed on—careful not to let a single drop touch the olive fabric spread across my quilt. It wasn’t just cloth. It still carried his scent—aftershave, metal, something warm and familiar that hadn’t yet faded.
ADVERTISEMENT