She Traced The Stolen Orders To One Door—And Found Family Wearing Her Business Like Skin-yumihong

The phone kept ringing across the cutting table while the kettle gave off small dry clicks beside the sink. Blue light from the map search washed over the satin hanging on the dress form, turned the cream fabric cold, and left the scissors looking black. I knew that address. Third floor. Narrow balcony. Cheap metal railing. Alyssa’s apartment.

My hand stayed on the trackpad until the pad of my finger went numb. Then I picked up the phone.

Her name glowed against the screen.

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Not Cousin Alyssa. Just Alyssa.

That change had happened sometime in winter, after she had missed my birthday dinner and sent a thumbs-up to the cake photo instead. I let the call ring out. She called again at 8:19 p.m. Then a message landed.

Can we talk? There’s something you don’t understand.

I looked at the stack of invoices warming under the desk lamp. Cotton poplin from North Carolina. Pearl buttons from a supplier in Atlanta. Two dye-lot confirmations, one photo-release form, one customs sheet for the lace trim I had saved six weeks to afford. Things I had built line by line, payment by payment, night by night.

At 8:26 p.m., I printed the carrier lookup and slipped it into a folder. At 8:31, I pulled the August admin logs from my platform backend. Alyssa’s login showed up three times after midnight on dates I had been asleep on the studio couch. Draft exports. Vendor sheet views. Customer list downloads. My throat tightened, but my hands stayed steady.

Outside, rain started needling the window. The smell of wet pavement pushed through the cracked frame above the sink and mixed with burnt coffee and fabric sizing. Somewhere downstairs a car alarm chirped twice and stopped.

I called the only person I knew who never confused panic with action.

Mara answered on the second ring.

She had been my first pattern tester, my first customer, and later the attorney who fixed the mess when a wholesaler tried to bury me in chargebacks my second year in business. Forty-three, silver clip in her dark hair, voice like the flat edge of a blade.

I gave her the short version.

She asked only two questions.

Do you have proof she accessed unpublished material?

Yes.

Do you have proof the counterfeit shipments trace to her address?

I looked at the screen again. Yes.

Then stop reading comments and start preserving everything, she said. Screenshots with timestamps. Source files. Metadata. Download the pages before she changes them.

By 9:07 p.m., we were on a shared video call. Mara’s office was all walnut shelves and yellow lamp light, a silent contrast to my studio with its dress forms and shipping bins and the iron still cooling on the board. She told me to screen-record the fake store page. We captured the copied review section, the duplicated product copy, the stolen launch photos, the pricing structure, even a typo from an early listing I had fixed in March on my own site but forgotten in one archived draft description. There it was on her counterfeit page like a fingerprint left in wet paint.

At 9:42, Mara said, There’s one more thing. Check your customer export history against the email complaints.

So I did.

The first three refund requests that morning had come from women who had bought from me before. Customers who only knew my work because they were already on my list. Alyssa had not only taken the dresses. She had taken the names, sizes, shipping histories, anniversaries, bridal notes, altered inseam requests, all the small private details customers gave when they trusted a tiny brand enough to order by message.

The skin at the back of my neck went cold.

One note from a repeat buyer in Michigan stared at me from the screen: Same bust adjustment as last spring please.

Alyssa had seen that. She had seen all of it.

Mara must have heard the silence through the speaker because her voice dropped lower.

That makes this easier legally, she said. And uglier.

At 10:11 p.m., Alyssa called again. I answered this time and put her on speaker. Rain tapped the window. The printer smelled hot. Mara muted herself but stayed on the line.

Alyssa started soft, almost bored.

You always go nuclear before listening.

I pulled the carrier sheet closer. The paper edge pressed into my thumb.

I have your shipping origin, I said.

Nothing on her end for a second. Then a laugh, light and practiced.

You have an address. That doesn’t mean anything.

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