When I got engaged to Mike, my world was filled with light — the kind that makes everything feel new and full of promise. My cousin Anna was the first to congratulate me, her excitement so genuine that I didn’t think twice when she offered to design my wedding dress. We’d grown up like sisters, sharing summers and secrets, and she was a talented designer with a growing reputation.
“I want this to be my gift to you,” she said with a soft smile.
I remember hugging her, believing it was an act of love. But somewhere behind that smile was something darker — a thread of envy that I was too blind to see.
The first fitting was the beginning of the unraveling.
The dress was breathtaking — lace, silk, hand-stitched detail — but when I slipped it on, the zipper stopped halfway up my back. “Did you gain a little weight?” Anna asked lightly, her eyes cool and calculating.
I brushed it off, embarrassed, though I hadn’t changed size in years.
The next fitting was worse. It was suffocatingly tight, leaving red marks along my ribs. “It’s meant to be fitted,” she insisted, feigning confidence.
My fiancé saw the bruises and shook his head.
“She’s not making a mistake,” he said quietly. I didn’t want to believe him — not yet.
But when I showed up for the final fitting and the gown wouldn’t go past my waist, the truth hit like a slap. Anna stood there watching, lips curved in a tiny, triumphant smile.
That’s when I knew.
She hadn’t made an error. She wanted me to feel small on my own wedding day — literally and emotionally.
I could’ve cried. Instead, I smiled.
“Don’t worry,” I told her calmly.
“I have an idea.” I took the dress home, called my friend Tara — a brilliant seamstress — and together we spent the night remaking it. We opened the seams, added lace panels, softened the lines, and turned Anna’s trap into a masterpiece.
By dawn, the gown was no longer a weapon — it was a symbol. On my wedding day, when I walked down the aisle, the sunlight caught every stitch Tara had saved, and gasps rippled through the room.
It wasn’t just beautiful; it was radiant.
Anna arrived late, wearing a bright red dress that screamed for attention, but the moment she saw me, her face froze. “You… changed it?” she stammered. “I improved it,” I said simply.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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