Her Cheap Dance Dress Made Them Laugh Until Her Father Walked In-kieutrinh

The ballroom went quiet when Lena walked in.

Not because she was late.

Because her dress didn’t belong.

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The school had rented the ballroom of a polished downtown hotel, the kind of place students whispered about all month as if the room itself might make them older, prettier, and less afraid.

There were chandeliers above the dance floor, glass doors at the back, and a check-in table near the hallway where a small framed map of the United States hung crooked beside a poster about senior pictures.

The room smelled like hairspray, frosting, and the sharp chemical sweetness of new dresses pulled from plastic garment bags.

Lena knew the smell because she had walked past plenty of those bags in the hallway that week.

Girls had carried them over their arms like trophies.

They had talked about fittings, heels, nails, spray tans, and whose parents had paid for what.

Lena had said almost nothing.

She had a navy dress hanging on the back of her closet door.

It was clean.

It was pressed.

It was the best she had allowed anyone to see.

Her mother had stood in the doorway that afternoon, holding a paper coffee cup from the gas station and watching Lena smooth the skirt with both hands.

“You don’t have to go,” her mother had said.

Lena had looked at herself in the mirror.

The dress was plain.

Too plain for that school.

Too plain for a night when girls had been treating fabric like social currency.

“I want to,” Lena said.

That was only half true.

The other half was harder to explain.

She wanted to know what they would do when they thought she had nothing behind her.

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