She Canceled My 60th Birthday, Then My Office Called Me Boss-hihehu

My daughter-in-law canceled my sixtieth birthday dinner at my own kitchen table.

She did it on a bright, cold morning while drinking coffee from my dead husband’s favorite mug.

The mug was blue ceramic with a little chip near the handle, the kind of small flaw Edward loved because he believed useful things deserved loyalty.

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Vanessa held it like it had always belonged to her.

“No birthday dinner,” she said.

Not gently.

Not awkwardly.

Like she was changing a delivery date.

My son Julian sat beside her with his phone in one hand and his eyes lowered toward the screen.

He was scrolling, but he was not reading.

I knew that because I had raised him.

I knew the tightness in his jaw.

I knew the way his shoulders rounded when he wanted somebody else to be the bad guy.

I knew the tilt of his head toward Vanessa, the silent permission he gave her before she spoke for both of them.

I had been folding a pale blue cloth napkin in my lap.

There were four of them, freshly ironed, because I still believed a table should look like somebody cared.

The house smelled faintly of coffee and lemon dish soap.

Cold light came through the blinds in thin white lines.

For one foolish minute, before Vanessa spoke, I had been thinking about candles.

I had already called the bakery on Maple Street.

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