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Maybe it’s stress.

Or bad sushi.

Or a cursed cheese stick from the back of my fridge.

Ugh, I need a distraction. I grab my phone and start furiously texting.

Sara: I’m stuck in a silk sausage casing and Nick just gave me an eyebrow.

Laura: What kind of eyebrow?

Sara: THE eyebrow.

Laura: OMG do you need to fake a fainting spell?

Tempting.

But I can’t even pretend to faint in this thing. If I fall down, I might not get back up. I’ll be trapped in a puddle of red satin and crushed dignity until Bianca and her clipboard gently poke me with a hanger.

There’s a rustling outside. Probably Bianca coming to check on me with another designer death trap. I whisper a prayer to the gods of elastic and body tape and prepare to be emotionally steamrolled by whatever’s next.

Dress number three is… asituation.

There’s a neck ruffle.

A big one.

Elizabethan-court-drama-meets-high-fashion neck ruffle. The dress is black and sharply structured, the kind that probably once strode a runway to polite applause and lofty compliments about its “architectural” design.

I look vampiresque, refined and dark.

Brooding on a windswept castle balcony, reciting poetry to the moon, sipping blood from a vintage crystal coupe.

Halfway through struggling with the zipper, I black out. Between twisting my shoulder into unnatural positions and smelling my own panic sweat, I catch a glimpse of my soul slipping away, hovering near the ceiling light.

I stagger out anyway, dizzy and breathless and fully dead inside.

Bianca lets out a sound. It might be approval. Or concern. Hard to tell with her. She says, “It’s veryeditorial,” and I want to crawl into the coat rack and live there.

Nick’s glance lasts only a blink. No raised eyebrow. He leans against the velvet chair, the picture of effortless control. Calm, detached, absorbed in his phone while I spiral through a fashion meltdown in real time.

I drag myself back into the fitting room and peel off the Vampire’s Revenge, muttering curses in three languages, two of which I made up.

Then comes dress number four.

By the time I force the dress over my hips, my deodorant has given up, my bangs plaster against my forehead, and sweat beads beneath a suffocating mix of Chanel No. 5 and shame.

I step out, but even Bianca looks hesitant this time. That’s when you know it’s bad.

I turn. Look in the mirror.

And lose it.

Not a loud, frantic breakdown. More the silent kind, the kind where my spirit slips away and quietly weeps into a forgotten heap of tulle and regret.

I retreat to the dressing room and collapse onto the tiny velvet ottoman, every inch of me drained, swallowed by the weight of a private defeat no one else sees.

I sit there in my underwear, surrounded by sequins, silk, and moral decay, and question every life choice that led me here.