The gym had gone completely silent.
A few students wiped at their eyes. Parents stood with their arms folded, listening.
Even the music from the speakers had stopped.
“I thought I came here tonight to honor my granddaughter,” I said quietly. “But I think she was honoring me.”
I stepped down from the stage.
The crowd parted for me as I walked toward the edge of the room.
The gym had gone completely silent.
I stood there and looked down at the dress.
The lights caught the fabric the way they would have caught it on Gwen; the way they were supposed to.
I thought about her at eight years old, telling me not to worry.
I thought about her scrolling through dresses on that old phone with the cracked screen she refused to let me replace.
I stood there and looked down at the dress.
I thought about every little moment in the weeks before her death when she’d seemed tired or withdrawn.
She had been so much braver than I knew, and she’d carried it all alone to protect me from worrying.
But that letter wasn’t the last of Gwen’s surprises.
The next morning, my phone rang just after seven.
“Is this Gwen’s grandmother?” A woman’s voice.
“It is. Who is this?”
That letter wasn’t the last of Gwen’s surprises.
“I made her dress.” A pause. “It’s been bugging me ever since I heard she died. I want you to know that she came to my shop a few days before. She gave me a note and asked me to sew it into the lining of the gown.”
I was quiet for a moment.
“She told me she wanted the note hidden somewhere only you would find it,” the woman added. “She said her grandmother would understand.”
“I did. I found it, but thank you for letting me know.”
When the call ended, I looked at the dress hanging over the chair. Gwen always believed I would understand.
And she was right.
“She said her grandmother would understand.”
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