
Grandma Rose used to tell me that some truths don’t sit right in small hands.
“They fit better,” she’d say, “when you’re grown enough to carry them.”
I didn’t understand what she meant. Not when I was eight and trailing her through the garden. Not when I was fifteen and convinced I already understood everything about the world. Not even when I turned eighteen and she brought out her wedding dress in its faded garment bag, holding it under the porch light like it was something sacred.
“You’ll wear this one day,” she told me.
“It’s sixty years old,” I laughed.
“It’s timeless,” she corrected gently. “Promise me you’ll alter it yourself. Stitch by stitch. And wear it. Not for me — for you. So you’ll know I was there.”


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