To my beautiful sister, Emily. I know you’ve had a rough time lately, but you deserve the best night ever! Enjoy the limo, and don’t worry about a thing. I’ve been saving all my birthday and Christmas money. Have a magical night, sis. Love, Mason.
I blinked back fresh tears, my hands trembling. Mason. My 11-year-old stepbrother—who was more like a real brother than anything—had done all this? For me?
I bolted upstairs and found him in his room, trying (and failing) to act casual.
“You did this?” I asked, my voice catching.
He shrugged, cheeks pink. “I heard Carla on the phone canceling your appointment. I figured you’d need help. So… I asked Mr. Johnson if he could help with the limo. You know he owns the company, right?”
“But the money—”
He grinned sheepishly. “Well… Carla’s been hiding cash in her closet for some necklace she’s been bugging Dad about. She left her drawer open. I borrowed it. I’ll put it back, I swear.”
That wasn’t all.
“Also, Mrs. Evans from across the street? Her daughter, Rachel? She’s a stylist. I asked if she could help you. She’s on her way. Should be here any minute.”
As if on cue, the doorbell rang.
Rachel, with her makeup kit and curling irons, breezed in like a fairy godmother. Mason gave me a proud wink before leaving us to it.
In under an hour, I went from tear-streaked and broken to glowing and red-carpet ready. My hair curled into soft waves, my makeup flawless, and my violet dress—my mom’s favorite color—fit like a dream.
The moment I stepped outside, Carla pulled into the driveway. Her expression when she saw me walking toward a black limo, radiant and smiling, was priceless. She froze like she’d seen a ghost. And when the driver tipped his hat and opened the door for me? She looked ready to combust.
“Richard, did you do this?” she screeched at my dad, who only looked more confused than ever.
I didn’t stick around to hear the rest. The driver closed the door, and just like that—I was off to prom.
Arriving in a limo was like a scene out of a movie. Heads turned. Friends gasped. I could see some mouths actually drop open. I felt like royalty. Not because I had a fancy car or perfect makeup, but because I knew someone had gone out of their way to make sure I felt loved.
Prom was everything I imagined. I danced, laughed, and made memories. But the highlight wasn’t the photos or the dress—it was Mason. That night, I knew for certain: blood doesn’t make someone your sibling. Love does.
And Carla? Well, she didn’t say a word for the rest of the weekend. Her necklace dreams probably shriveled the moment she realized her own son would rather stand up for me than be her pawn.
Let’s just say she’s been much quieter since.
Some people say magic doesn’t exist. But for me, it arrived in the form of an 11-year-old boy, a black limo, and a card written with more love than any promposal could hold.
And I’ll never forget it.