I walked into that house after prom wearing a skirt made of my father’s ties, thinking the hardest part of the day had already passed. I had faced whispers, curiosity, and pity, and somehow turned them into something else—respect, understanding, even admiration. People saw my grief and didn’t flinch. They honored it. For the first time since he died, I felt seen without feeling broken. That was when karma chose to arrive, not as revenge, but as revelation.
Watching Carla taken away in handcuffs did not heal me, but it cleared space for healing to begin. In the quiet that followed, my grandmother moved in, and the house slowly filled with warmth instead of fear. We cooked from my father’s old recipes, planted stubborn marigolds, and let the silence become gentle instead of sharp. The skirt stayed folded in my drawer, no longer a wound, but proof: love can be ripped, exposed, and still survive. No one gets to dictate how we carry those we’ve lost. Some memories you don’t just keep—you wear them, and walk forward.