The hesitation hit me before I even stepped out of the car. My hands were still on the steering wheel when I heard faint singing spill out of the house—high, chaotic, unmistakably ten-year-old birthday energy. I hadn’t been invited to the last two birthdays.
I’d sent gifts from a distance—never sure if they landed well, never sure if I landed well anymore. But this time, Nadia had texted: You should come. If you want.
That tiny invitation felt like a hand held out in a dark room. I wasn’t sure if it was genuine or a test, but I showed up anyway. When I walked in, they were already mid-chorus around the cake.
I froze at the door, not wanting to interrupt. Then my daughter spotted me and shouted over the singing:
“Mum! You missed the key again!
Just like old times!”
Everyone laughed, but it wasn’t cruel. It was warm. It was familiar.
Before I could react, she barreled toward me, arms thrown around my waist, smelling like vanilla frosting and apple juice. For the first time in months, something inside me unclenched. The room was a beautiful mess—balloons hanging lopsided, paper crowns half-crushed, wrapping paper underfoot.
My son, Isaac, gave me a stiff little wave from across the room before turning back to whatever game he was playing with his friends. Nadia glanced at me, gave a small nod—neutral, but not icy. For us, that was progress.
I stayed in the background while the presents were opened, my heart pounding like I was waiting for a verdict. When my daughter got to my gift—the illustrated journal with a tiny lock—she squealed and held it up. “Look!
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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