I went cold.
She tilted her head. “Did you really think you could compete for prom queen in that, Sydney? It looks like somebody turned old curtains into a home economics project.”
My whole body locked up.
I heard someone inhale sharply behind me.
Lila said, “Mrs. Tilmot…”
But the teacher laughed.
She reached toward the blue flowers on my shoulder like she had some right to touch them.
“Mrs. Tilmot?” a man’s voice said from behind her.
The room shifted, and she turned.
Officer Warren wasn’t a stranger to me.
He’d come by our house two weeks earlier to take my dad’s statement after the school finally opened a formal review into Mrs. Tilmot. He was one of those steady, quiet men who made a room calm just by standing in it.
I remembered the way he’d listened while my father sat at our kitchen table, turning his coffee mug in both hands and saying, as evenly as he could, “I’m not asking for special treatment. I just want my daughter left alone.
“Hand-stitched pity?”
So when I heard his voice behind me at prom, I knew it before I turned.
“Mrs. Tilmot?”
She went still.
Officer Warren stood at the edge of the crowd in full uniform, with the assistant principal beside him, pale and furious.
Mrs. Tilmot tried for a smile. “Officer. Is there a problem?”
“Yes,” he said. “You need to step outside with me.”
“Is there a problem?”
Her chin lifted. “Over what? A harmless comment?”
The assistant principal cut in. “We warned you earlier to keep your distance from Sydney.”
Mrs. Tilmot gave a sharp laugh. “Oh, please.”
Officer Warren didn’t react. “This didn’t start tonight, Mrs. Tilmot. We’ve had statements from students, staff, and Sydney’s father about the way you’ve treated her.”
A murmur moved through the room.
Lila grabbed my hand.
“We warned you earlier to keep your distance from Sydney.”
Mrs. Tilmot looked around like the room had betrayed her. “This is absurd.”
“No,” the assistant principal said. “What’s absurd is that, after a direct warning, you still chose to humiliate a student in public while drinking at a school event.”
Her face changed. So did the room.
“Ma’am,” Officer Warren said, his voice going firm, “you need to come with me now.”
She looked at me then.
I touched the blue flowers on my shoulder and heard my own voice come out steadier than I felt.
“This is absurd.”
“You always acted like being poor should make me ashamed,” I said. “It never did.”
Nobody spoke.
Then Mrs. Tilmot looked away first, and Officer Warren led her out.
“Enjoy your night, Sydney,” he called over his shoulder.
When they were gone, the room seemed to breathe again.
Lila touched my arm. “Sydney?”
I looked down at my dress. My hands were shaking.
“Enjoy your night, Sydney.”
“Hey,” she said. “Look at me. You look beautiful.”
A boy from my history class stepped closer. “I heard your dad made that? Really?”
“Yeah,” I said. “He did.”
He let out a low whistle. “Then your dad’s a genius.”
And just like that, people stopped staring at me like I was something fragile. They smiled, someone asked me to dance, and Lila pulled me onto the floor before I could say no. And for the first time all night, I laughed without forcing it.
“I heard your dad made that? Really?”
When I got home, Dad was still awake.
“Well?” he asked. “Did the zipper survive?”
“It did, but tonight… everybody saw what I already knew.”
“What was that, hon?”
I smiled at my father. “That love looks better on me than shame ever could.”