He barely turned away to look at me.
—It was always worth it, Mom. It’s just that everyone understood it today.
At the end of the party, when the guests were starting to leave and the bride and groom were saying goodbye under a shower of lights and hugs, Lara came looking for me again.
She removed one of the pins from her hair, let go of just a strand of hair, and sat down next to me like a tired daughter after a huge day.
“Were you offended because I called you Mom?” he asked me quietly.
I looked at her.
His eyes were red, but serene.
I took his hand.
—No, daughter. It healed something in me that I didn’t even know was hurting.
She smiled.
—Then let me keep doing it.
And he hugged me.
Not as a daughter-in-law.
Not like a well-mannered girl.
As a daughter.
That night I returned home with the green dress neatly folded on my lap. The embroidery was still simple. The fabric was still worn. Nothing about it had really changed.
And yet, it was no longer the same dress.