My husband brought me a $7,800 blue silk dress from a business trip and said, “The seller told me it was one of a kind.” The next afternoon, his sister tried it on, clawed at the zipper, and screamed, “Don’t look at the back.” That was when the gift stopped looking like love.-criss - US Social News

My husband brought me a $7,800 blue silk dress from a business trip and said, “The seller told me it was one of a kind.” The next afternoon, his sister tried it on, clawed at the zipper, and screamed, “Don’t look at the back.” That was when the gift stopped looking like love.-criss

My husband brought me a $7,800 blue silk dress from a business trip and said, “The seller told me it was one of a kind.” The next afternoon, his sister tried it on, clawed at the zipper, and screamed, “Don’t look at the back.” That was when the gift stopped looking like love.

Natalie clawed the blue dress off her body. Her knees hit my bedroom rug. I stood behind her with the zipper half-open and my hands shaking.

The house smelled like rain on wool coats, vanilla candle wax, and the garlic soup I had left cooling on the stove. At 3:18 p.m., gray winter light pressed against the windows of our Boston townhouse. The silk whispered against the hardwood floor like water sliding away.

My husband, Adrian, had brought the dress home the night before.

A long ivory box. Silver tissue. Deep blue silk. Open back. Hand-stitched seams.

“I saw it and thought of you,” he said, watching my face too closely. “The seller told me it was one of a kind.”

I should have been happy.

I was.

Until Natalie arrived the next day without calling.

She was Adrian’s younger sister, all sharp perfume, diamond studs, and the kind of smile that made waiters apologize before they knew why. Then she saw the dress laid across my bed.

Her face emptied.

“Where did you get that?”

“Adrian bought it in New York,” I said.

Her fingers touched the fabric.

Only once.

Then she laughed too loudly.

“Let me try it on.”

I said yes because I didn’t know I was handing her a loaded gun wrapped in silk.

Five minutes later, she stepped in front of my mirror.

The dress pulled tight across her ribs. She lifted her hair.

Then she saw the back.

Her mouth opened.

“Take it off,” she whispered.

“Natalie?”

“Take it off me right now!”

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