
Seamstress Rejects Ex-Husband's Desperate Plea
Chapter 3
The commission came on a Tuesday morning, three months after I'd opened the shop. Mrs. Henderson swept through my door like she owned the air itself, her pearls clicking softly against her silk blouse as she surveyed my modest space with the kind of scrutiny that made my stomach tighten.
"You're the seamstress everyone's been whispering about," she said, not quite a question.
I set down the hem I'd been pinning and stood. "Sarah Meyer. How can I help you?"
She pulled a magazine from her handbag, the pages already marked with pink tabs. "My daughter's wedding is in three months. I need something extraordinary. The dressmakers in the city want six months minimum, and frankly, none of them understood my vision."
I took the magazine, studying the images she'd marked. Elaborate beadwork. Cathedral train. Fitted bodice with hand-sewn lace appliqués. The kind of gown that would take weeks of fourteen-hour days and every ounce of skill I possessed.
"This is ambitious," I said carefully.
Mrs. Henderson's eyes narrowed slightly. "Can you do it or not?"
I thought of my nearly empty appointment book. The rent payment due next week. Abby's wages that barely covered her bus fare. Every practical bone in my body screamed that this was too much, too fast, too risky.
But I'd signed divorce papers that dissolved seven years of my life. I'd scrubbed rat droppings from corners and built shelves with my own hands. I'd already survived the impossible.
"I can do it," I said. "But I'll need your daughter here for fittings every week, and my creative input on the design."
Something flickered in Mrs. Henderson's expression—respect, maybe, or surprise that I'd dared to set conditions. "Five hundred dollars," she said. "Half now, half on delivery."
Five hundred dollars. More than I'd made in the past three months combined.
I extended my hand. "We have a deal."
The next three weeks became a blur of silk and satin, of beads that made my fingers ache and lace so delicate I held my breath while stitching it. I worked until my vision blurred, until Abby had to physically pull me away from the worktable to eat something. The gown consumed me entirely, and I was grateful for it. When I sewed, I didn't think about Colter. I didn't imagine him in Seattle with Melany, building the life he'd deemed more valuable than ours.
Instead, I poured everything into this dress. Every stitch became a declaration: I am more than what he made me believe. Every bead I set by hand whispered: I am building something beautiful from the wreckage. The bodice took shape under my fingers, fitted and elegant, the kind of craftsmanship that couldn't be rushed or faked. I incorporated jade-green accents into the embroidery—subtle, almost hidden, but there. My signature. My reclaiming of something that belonged only to me.
Abby watched me work with wide eyes, absorbing everything. "How do you know where to place each bead?" she asked one night, her own project forgotten.
"You feel it," I said, my hands never stopping. "The dress tells you what it needs."
She nodded slowly, and I saw myself in her—that hunger to create something that mattered, that lasted.
The morning of the wedding, I delivered the gown myself, my hands trembling slightly as Mrs. Henderson's daughter emerged from the dressing room. The dress transformed her. The silk caught the light like water, the beadwork glittering with each movement. The cathedral train flowed behind her like a river of moonlight.
Mrs. Henderson pressed her hand to her mouth, and for the first time since I'd met her, her polished composure cracked. "It's perfect," she whispered.
I stayed for the ceremony, tucked discreetly in the back. When the bride walked down the aisle, a collective gasp rippled through the church. Women leaned toward each other, whispering urgently. I watched them studying the dress, memorizing details, their eyes sharp with want.
Before the reception even started, three women approached me. Then five. Then more than I could count. They pressed business cards into my hands, demanded to know when I could see them, whether I could create something equally stunning for their daughter's wedding, their anniversary gala, their charity benefit.
My appointment book, which had been nearly empty that morning, filled with names and numbers and dates stretching months into the future.
When I finally returned to my shop that evening, Abby was waiting, practically bouncing with excitement. "Mrs. Patterson called from back home," she said. "Everyone's talking about you. About the dress. Sarah, they're calling it a work of art."
I set my bag down carefully, my mind spinning with calculations. Fabric orders I'd need to place. Hours I'd need to work. The life I was building, stitch by stitch, entirely on my own terms.
"Then I suppose," I said slowly, a smile pulling at my lips for the first time in months, "we'd better make sure every piece we create lives up to that.")
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