
My stepsister, Jade, was getting married and couldn’t find bridesmaid dresses that worked on all six girls. I used to be a seamstress before maternity leave, so she asked me to make them.
“I’ll pay you as soon as they’re done,” she promised.
I said yes. She’s family.
I worked through midnight feeds, a crying baby, sheer exhaustion. No upfront payment—so I dipped into our baby fund for fabric. Two days before the wedding, I delivered six olive, custom-fitted dresses.
She barely looked up.
“Meh. They’ll do. Thanks.”
I asked, “So… when can I get reimbursed? I used some of our baby money for fabric, and I’ll need it back soon. Max needs a winter coat.”
She laughed.
“OH, YOU’RE JOKING, RIGHT? THIS IS YOUR GIFT. WHAT ELSE WERE YOU GONNA GIVE ME? A TOASTER? YOU’RE HOME DOING NOTHING ANYWAY.”
I went home and cried. My husband wanted to go off—I told him not to. I’d find another way.
At the wedding, the girls looked amazing. My dresses. My work.
But then, right before the first dance, Jade dragged me into the bathroom, crying. She whispered, “Please, I need your help!!!”
I looked at her and gasped.
The zipper on her wedding dress had completely split down the back. Not just stuck—torn open. The lace flared out like a peeled banana, exposing the corset lining beneath.
“I leaned down to hug Aunt Paula and it just popped!” she wailed. “Please. Please fix it. You’re the only one who can!”
My first instinct was to walk away. Just walk out of that marble-tiled bathroom with its gold fixtures and leave her to deal with it. But instead, I slowly unzipped the emergency sewing pouch I always carried in my purse—a habit from years ago.
“Take it off,” I said quietly. “Hang it on the door. We have ten minutes before the first dance. Fifteen, tops.”
She stripped, still sobbing, and I got to work. My fingers flew, muscle memory guiding every stitch. My mind wasn’t quiet, though. It was screaming:
“She disrespected you. She used you. She laughed at you.”
And still, I sewed.
Fifteen minutes later, the back of the dress was secure—reinforced, seamless. She looked in the mirror and wiped her tears.
“You saved me,” she whispered.
“No,” I replied, standing. “I saved the night. There’s a difference.”
Then I pulled a folded invoice from my purse.
“I brought this just in case. You said you’d pay. And I need it—for my son.”
She blinked at it, stunned. I turned to leave but paused at the door.
“One more thing. Next time you ask someone for help, remember that kindness isn’t a currency you can just cash in whenever it suits you. You owe people more than convenience.”
Later that night, her husband’s mother—the woman funding most of the wedding—found me and pulled me aside.
“I heard what happened. I saw those dresses. And I know quality when I see it.”
She handed me a card. “I run a boutique downtown. We’re looking to expand. If you’re interested in contract work—or even your own line—call me.”
Jade never apologized. But I didn’t need her to.
Because sometimes, life finds ways to pay you back in interest.