They say money can’t buy love, but my ex’s wife thought a $1,000 prom dress could win my daughter over. Cassandra, cold and condescending, mocked me for being “homemade.” But in the end, it wasn’t price tags that won. I’m April, and after my divorce from Mark, I raised our daughter Lily with care, not cash.
When Lily fell in love with a shimmering satin gown she couldn’t afford, her disappointment broke my heart. That night, I remembered how my mother taught me to sew. I asked Lily, “What if we made one together?” Soon, evenings were filled with fabric, laughter, and the quiet hum of determination.
Then Cassandra appeared—uninvited—with the exact dress Lily had once wanted. She boasted about the price and mocked the one we were making. But on prom night, Lily came down the stairs in the gown we’d created by hand. At school, Cassandra scowled. “That’s not the dress I bought,” she snapped.
“Nope,” Lily smiled. “I’m wearing the one stitched with love.” The next day, Lily posted a photo with the caption: “She worked on this every night after two jobs. I’ve never felt more beautiful or loved.” Cassandra tried to bill me for the unused gown. Lily shut her down. And I? I went back to sewing—one thread, one memory at a time.