The Dress in the Window

The Dress in the Window

Part I — The Glass Between Them

By the time the little girl lifted her hand toward the boutique window, shame was already waiting for her.

It lived in places like this street, where the paving stones were washed every morning, where the store windows gleamed like promises, where women with polished shoes and glossy handbags drifted past as if beauty belonged naturally to them. Even the air felt different here—expensive somehow, touched by perfume and roasted coffee and the low hum of people who had never had to count coins before opening a door.

Leonie knew she did not belong on streets like this.

She knew it from the way people looked at her faded denim overalls and the cream sweater that had once belonged to someone older and larger. She knew it from the scuffed toes of her sneakers and the frayed cuff on one sleeve. She knew it from her grandmother’s hand, always gentle but always steering her away from places where wanting things could turn dangerous.

Still, when she saw the dress, she forgot all of that for half a heartbeat.

It floated in the display window on a child-sized mannequin, white as early snow, white as wedding cakes in bakery windows, white as the clouds Leonie used to trace with her finger on the rare days she had nothing to worry about. The skirt was full and soft. Tiny folds of fabric caught the afternoon light. It looked like the kind of dress worn by girls in framed photographs, girls whose hair was brushed smooth and whose smiles were never apologetic.

Leonie stepped closer without meaning to.

She didn’t press her hand against the glass. She barely touched the air in front of it. But her face tipped up with such open longing that anyone looking would have understood.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *