Camila tried to fold the note before I could see it, but the officer stopped her. He explained that my father had written the letter before his final deployment and asked that it be delivered on the night of my prom. He had known he might not return, and he wanted to make sure one promise was kept.
The letter said that money had been placed in a protected account for my education, along with the family home, which was legally meant to become mine when I turned eighteen. My father had trusted Camila to care for me until then, but he had also arranged for someone from his unit to check on me if anything seemed wrong.
Camila’s face lost all its color. The officer revealed that he had recently learned how I had been treated and that the account had not been used for my care as intended. Lawyers were already reviewing the records, and Camila would have to explain where the missing money had gone.
Then he turned to me and handed me a second envelope. Inside was a short message from my father: “Wear whatever makes you feel close to me. I will be beside you, even if you cannot see me.” I held the letter against my chest as the officer saluted the dress I had made from his uniform.
That night, I walked into prom wearing the same dress they had mocked. I no longer felt embarrassed. Every stitch carried a piece of my father, and for the first time in years, Camila and her daughters had nothing left to say.
