For two years, our local church lady measured my skirts with a wooden ruler in front of the entire church. Last Sunday, she tried again until she tripped, her purse burst open, and something heavy rolled across the marble floor. What fell out exposed far more than my knees ever could.
The cold edge of a wooden yardstick snapped against my kneecap, the sound echoing off the marble foyer like a gavel in a courtroom.
Mrs. Gable was already on her knees, her floral Sunday dress bunching around her as she squinted through thick spectacles.
The entire congregation slowed its pace to witness my weekly public shaming.
“Three inches above the joint, Katherine,” she announced, her voice projected with the practiced authority of a drill sergeant.
She didn’t look at my face; she stared at the hem of my navy dress as if it were a tear in the fabric of the universe itself. Her self-appointed role as the morality police was in full swing.
I stood frozen, the heat of a hundred eyes crawling up my neck while my parents looked everywhere but at me.
They always whispered about “keeping the peace” and “respecting our elders,” even when that elder was treating my legs like a construction site.
Mrs. Gable’s daughter stood behind her mother with a smug, thin-lipped grin that told the whole story: I was the first soprano in the choir, and she was the perpetual second, a fact that galled her mother to the point of obsession.
This wasn’t about modesty; it was about professional sabotage.
“We must pray for this rebellious spirit,” Mrs. Gable continued, finally standing up and smoothing her skirt with a sharp, dismissive snap.
She leaned in close, her eyes darting to the music conservatory scout nearby.
She knew exactly what was at stake for me today.
I had a solo during the offertory, a performance that could dictate the next four years of my life if the scout liked what he heard. Mrs. Gable knew it too, and she seemed determined to rattle my nerves until I couldn’t hit a middle C.
Her timing was as calculated as a tax audit.
“Don’t let your vanity outshine your vocals, girl,” she hissed, her fingers twitching near the handle of her oversized, quilted handbag.
I tried to step past her as the bells began to chime.
But she wasn’t finished with her display of power.
The foyer was a bottleneck of expensive perfume and stiff wool suits, making the air feel thick and cramped as the service neared. Mrs. Gable moved to block my path again.
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