Hours passed in a blur of needle and thread. My hands moved with a determination I hadn’t felt in years. I trimmed away the worst of the damage, reshaping the skirt into a slimmer silhouette. I patched the bodice with the spare lace I had packed just in case.
I stitched pearls back into place with trembling fingers, improvising new patterns where the old ones had been destroyed. Sweat beaded on my forehead, and my back ached, but I didn’t stop.
By the time Lily returned, her eyes red but hopeful, the dress had been transformed. It wasn’t the same as before—it was sleeker, bolder, less delicate. But when she slipped it on and looked in the mirror, she gasped. “Grandma… It’s still beautiful.”
I smiled, tears blurring my vision. “So are you, my love. They can’t take that from you.”
The wedding went ahead as planned. Lily walked down the aisle in the gown that had been nearly destroyed but reborn stronger, just like her spirit. Ethan’s eyes shone with love as he saw her, and I watched from the front pew, my heart swelling with pride.
Margaret did not attend. She left the house in disgrace after her confession, and though her absence cast a shadow, it did not dim the joy of the day. Lily and Ethan spoke their vows, the guests cheered, and when they kissed, I knew that nothing, not bitterness, not sabotage, not cruelty could undo the love they shared.
Later that evening, Lily pulled me aside. “Grandma,” she whispered, “I don’t know how to thank you. You saved my wedding.”
I cupped her face in my hands. “You don’t need to thank me. All I ever wanted was to see you happy. That’s enough.”
As I watched her dance with her new husband under strings of fairy lights, I thought about the ruined gown, the scissors, the tears. And I realized something important: love, in its truest form, can never be destroyed. It may be torn, it may be tested, but with enough faith and determination, it can always be mended.
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