Sylvie and I had always been close, but living together magnified our quirks. My habit of leaving tea cups around and her tendency to “borrow” clothes were tolerable—until the laundry debate started. I thought she was nitpicking; she thought I was careless. Towels, sweaters, delicates—it became a quiet war of principles.
Weeks passed, and my clothes began to show wear—thin sweaters, tired seams. Then came the heartbreak: my first-paycheck cream wool sweater, ruined in the dryer. Shrunken beyond repair, it felt like losing a piece of myself. Sylvie’s gentle “I told you so” stung more than if she had yelled.
That night, I researched and realized she’d been right all along: dryers kill delicate fabrics, and mixing heavy with light clothes is a slow disaster. The next morning, I admitted it. To my surprise, she didn’t gloat. She only smiled, saying, “We all learn the hard way sometimes.”
But fate had a sense of humor. In the laundry basket lay her once-perfect cardigan, now stretched and misshapen. We both laughed, realizing the dryer spares no one. The sweater was gone, yes—but the bond remained. Sometimes, even a ruined piece of clothing can stitch sisters closer together.