My Stepmom Refused to Give Me Money for a Prom Dress – My Brother Sewed One from Our Late Mom’s Jeans Collection, and What Happened Next Made Her Jaw Drop

My Stepmom Refused to Give Me Money for a Prom Dress – My Brother Sewed One from Our Late Mom’s Jeans Collection, and What Happened Next Made Her Jaw Drop

I looked into the crowd and saw Carla still holding up her phone. Except now it was useless. She wasn’t recording my humiliation. She was standing in the middle of her own.

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Then she made one last mistake.

I don’t remember leaving the stage.

She yelled, “Everything in that house belongs to me, anyway.”

The room went dead.

The attorney spoke before anyone else could. “No. It does not.”

Carla looked around like she was finally realizing there was nowhere to hide.

I don’t remember leaving the stage. I remember Noah beside me. I remember crying. I remember people touching my arm and saying kind things. I remember Carla disappearing before the final dance.

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Then, for the first time in a year, he didn’t go quiet.

When we got home, she was waiting in the kitchen.

“You think you won?” she snapped the second we walked in. “You made me look like a monster.”

I said, “You did that yourself.”

She pointed at Noah. “And you. Little sneaky freak with your sewing project.”

Noah flinched.

Then, for the first time in a year, he didn’t go quiet.

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She opened her mouth, but he talked over her.

He stepped in front of me and said, “Don’t call me that.”

She laughed. “Or what?”

His voice shook, but he kept going. “Or nothing. That’s the point. You always do this because you think nobody will stop you.”

She opened her mouth, but he talked over her.

“You mocked everything. You mocked Mom. You mocked Dad. You mocked me for sewing. You mocked her for wanting one normal night. You take and take and then act offended when anyone notices.”

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A knock hit the front door before she could answer.

I had never heard him talk like that.

Carla looked at me. “Are you going to let him speak to me this way?”

I said, “Yes.”

A knock hit the front door before she could answer.

It was the attorney. And Tessa’s mom. They had come straight from the school.

The attorney said, “Given tonight’s statements and prior concerns, these children will not be left alone without support while the court reviews the guardianship and the funds.”

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Three weeks later, Noah and I moved in with my aunt.

Carla just stared at him.

Tessa’s mom walked past her like she was furniture and said to us, “Go pack a bag.”

So we did.

Three weeks later, Noah and I moved in with my aunt.

Two months later, control of the money was taken away from Carla.

She fought it. She lost.

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The dress is hanging in my closet now.

Noah got invited to a summer design program after one of the teachers sent photos of the dress to a local arts director. He acted annoyed about it for a full day before I caught him smiling at the acceptance email.

The dress is hanging in my closet now.

I still touch the seams sometimes.

Carla wanted everyone to laugh when they saw what I was wearing.

Instead, it was the first time people really saw us.

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