The kitchen window catches morning light. The second bedroom smells faintly of fresh paint. In the back, there is space enough for potted herbs and maybe a chair where you can sit in the evenings without hearing mechanics shouting downstairs or neighbors arguing through thin walls.
You stand in the empty living room while Marco unlocks windows and Lara chatters about curtains and paint colors and whether you would like raised garden beds. Their voices blur together around the edges as you turn slowly in the center of the space. For the first time in your adult life, a room exists that is not arranged around survival.
A room built not from necessity, but from gratitude. You touch the wall lightly. Then you look down at yourself.
You are still wearing the green dress. Not because you planned to. Not because there was nowhere else to go.
Because somehow, in the rush of gifts and signatures and tears and the exhaustion of the day after a wedding that cracked the world open, you never took it off before coming here. The old fabric hangs softly over your body, a little tired, a little too loose at the waist, a little frayed at one hem. And suddenly you laugh.
Lara turns. “What?”
You shake your head. “Nothing.”
But it is not nothing.
It is the strange, tender humor of life. That the very dress you thought might shame your son in front of the world became the thread that bound all of you more tightly together. That a garment worn thin by years and memory could walk into a church full of polished people and leave wearing glory.
That a woman who planned to hide in the back pew would end the day in the front row, in the center of the dance floor, in the heart of a new family’s first promise. Later, after Marco and Lara leave, you sit alone on the floor of your new living room with the folder of papers in your lap and the windows open to the afternoon. A breeze moves through the house.
You can hear neighborhood sounds outside. A dog barking. Someone dragging a trash bin.
A radio playing far away. Ordinary sounds. Beautiful sounds.
The sounds of a life waiting to be lived. You close your eyes. And because there is no one there to perform for, no one there to reassure, no one there to protect from your feelings, you let yourself speak aloud the thing you have never said in full.
“I did it,” you whisper. Not the wedding. Not the dress.
Not even the house. The life. You did it.
You raised your son. You carried him across the roughest years. You stood in rooms that wanted to make you feel smaller and you did not break.
You bent, yes. You worried. You hid your needs too often and your loneliness too deeply.
But you did not break. And one day, against every budget, every social rule, every humiliating glance, love came back for you in public and called you by your true worth. Outside, the light shifts.
Inside, the house breathes around you. You sit there in the old green dress until the sun begins to sink and the walls turn gold. And for the first time in a very long time, you do not feel ashamed of what you have worn to survive.
You feel dressed exactly right. THE END







