I thought turning 60 would feel warm, like a full table and familiar voices. Instead, the house stayed too quiet, the food went cold, and every minute that passed made the empty chairs feel louder. By the time the knock finally came, it didn’t sound like family at all.
I waited four hours for my six kids to arrive for my 60th birthday.
Four hours is a long time to sit in a quiet house with seven place settings and a stomach full of hope. Completely alone, on top of that.
When I married their dad, he used to say he wanted a big family.
“A loud house,” he’d laugh. “A table that’s never empty.”
We had six kids in 10 years.
Mark. Jason. Caleb.
Grant. Sarah. Eliza.
Four boys, two girls, and enough noise to shake the walls.
Then one day their dad decided the noise was too much. He met a woman online. Overseas.
Within months, he packed a suitcase and left, saying he “needed to find himself.”
I cooked their favorites. I set the table for seven. My good plates.
Cloth napkins I ironed because I wanted the night to feel like it mattered.
At four, I peeked through the blinds like a kid.
At five, I texted the group chat. “Drive safe.”
Three dots appeared from Sarah, then vanished. No message.
At six, I called Mark.
Voicemail. Jason. Voicemail.
Caleb. Voicemail. Eliza.
Voicemail. Grant. Straight to voicemail, like it didn’t even ring.
At seven, the food cooled.
At eight, the candles burned low. At nine, I sat at the head of the table and stared at six empty chairs. I tried to tell myself I was being dramatic.
But the silence felt personal. I cried into the napkin I had ironed that morning.
Then there was a knock at the door. Not a friendly knock.
A firm, official knock. I wiped my face fast and opened the door.
A police officer stood on my porch. Young.
Clean cut. Serious.
“Are you Linda?” he asked.
I nodded because my throat wouldn’t cooperate.
He held out a folded note. “This is for you.”
My name was on it.
The handwriting was familiar enough to make my hands go numb. Grant. I unfolded it right there, under the porch light.
Mom don’t call anyone.
Don’t ask questions. Just listen to him and get in the car.
For a second, I couldn’t breathe. Grant was my wild one.
The one I worried about when my phone rang late.
The officer said, gently, “Ma’am, I need you to come with me.”
I looked up, panicked. “Is my son alive?”
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