I unzipped it, and the dress was exactly as I remembered: ivory silk, lace at the collar, and pearl buttons down the back. It still smelled faintly of Grandma.

I stood there for a long time, holding it against my chest. Then I remembered the promise I’d made at 18 on that porch, and I didn’t even have to think about it.

I was wearing this dress. Whatever alterations it took.

I found the garment bag.

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I’m not a seamstress, but Grandma Rose had taught me to handle old fabric gently and to treat anything meaningful with patience.

I set up at her kitchen table with her sewing kit, the same battered tin she’d had since before I could remember, and I started with the lining.

Old silk needs slow hands. I was maybe 20 minutes in when I felt a small, firm bump beneath the lining of the bodice, just below the left side seam.

I thought at first it was a piece of boning that had shifted. But when I pressed it gently, it crinkled like paper.

I sat with that for a moment.

It crinkled like paper.

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