“Maybe if your son weren’t so strange, people would actually want to come to his birthday party,” said Victoria Harrington, my sister-in-law, adjusting her pearl necklace like she had just delivered some sophisticated truth instead of pure cruelty.
I felt my chest tighten instantly.
It was 4:30 in the afternoon, and the July heat hung heavily over our backyard in Cedar Grove, California. The rented white canopy trembled softly in the wind, almost like even it felt uncomfortable standing there. Twenty tiny chairs sat perfectly arranged around folding tables covered with dinosaur tablecloths. Twenty goodie bags waited beside paper plates and green napkins. A giant T-Rex piñata swung gently from the old maple tree.
And only two children had shown up.
My son Noah was turning seven years old.
For weeks, he had talked nonstop about this party. He picked the chocolate cake himself. He chose green and orange balloons because dinosaurs “needed jungle colors.” He practiced thanking people for gifts in front of the bathroom mirror every night before bed.
Every time a car passed our house, he sprinted toward the front gate with hope lighting up his face.
And every single time, that hope faded a little more.
“Mom…” he whispered softly, tugging on my sleeve. “Are you sure the kids know where we live?”
I crouched in front of him and gently wiped frosting from the corner of his mouth.
“Of course they do, sweetheart,” I said with a smile I barely managed to fake. “People are probably just running late.”
But deep down, I already knew something was wrong.
We had sent invitations through St. Andrew’s Academy two weeks earlier. Several parents RSVP’d. Some even texted me asking what kind of toys Noah liked. His teacher told me the entire first-grade class was excited.
Nothing explained those empty chairs.
Victoria slowly walked between the tables in her designer beige dress and impossible high heels, carrying herself with the smug confidence of someone who believed wealth made her superior to everyone else.
“Honestly, it’s sad,” she said loudly enough for our neighbors to hear. “Children can sense when someone doesn’t fit in socially. Unfortunately, awkward parents tend to raise awkward children.”
I clenched my jaw so hard it hurt.
I had endured Victoria’s comments ever since I married her brother, Ethan. According to her, I came from “forgettable people.” My family was “painfully middle class.” Before marrying Ethan, I was “basically invisible.”
Every time she insulted me, Ethan would sigh and say the same thing.
“That’s just how Victoria is. Ignore her.”
But today she wasn’t attacking me.
She was humiliating my son.
Noah sat beside his only two guests, quietly staring at the untouched birthday cake while trying not to cry.
“Do you think maybe they don’t like me?” he asked softly.
My heart shattered.
Before I could answer, my purse vibrated suddenly.
Not my regular phone.
The old black phone.
The one I had kept hidden for years.
Only three people in the world had that number.
My stomach tightened as I pulled it out.
One message.
We’re outside. Stay calm.