The afternoon sun filtered through the oak tree in Emily Carter’s backyard, casting dappled shadows across the mismatched lawn chairs and the folding table she’d borrowed from her neighbor. Eleven blue balloons—one for each year of Jacob’s life—bobbed gently in the breeze, tied to the fence posts with curling ribbon she’d found on clearance at the dollar store. Emily stood at the kitchen window, surveying her work with a mixture of pride and exhaustion, wondering if the decorations looked homemade-charming or just plain homemade.
She’d been preparing for this party for three weeks.
Not because eleven was a milestone birthday in any official sense, but because last year’s party had been canceled when she’d picked up double shifts at the hospital to cover an unexpected car repair. Jacob had said he understood, had even smiled and told her it was okay, but Emily had seen the disappointment in his eyes when she’d brought home a grocery store cake and a single wrapped present instead of the celebration with friends he’d been promised.
This year would be different. This year, she’d made it work.
The cupcakes had taken her until two in the morning to bake and frost—chocolate with vanilla buttercream, each one topped with a blue sugar star.
The decorations were hand-painted on poster board during her lunch breaks at work. She’d saved for two months to rent the projector sitting in her living room, ready to screen Jacob’s favorite superhero movie once the sun went down. The backyard had been transformed from its usual state of benign neglect into something that actually looked festive, even if every element bore the unmistakable mark of careful budgeting.
“Mom, they’re starting to arrive!” Jacob’s voice called from the front of the house, high and excited in that way that made Emily’s chest both swell and ache.
She wiped her hands on her jeans—the good ones without holes, reserved for occasions—and headed through the house. Through the screen door, she could see Jacob greeting his friends from school, his face lit up with genuine joy.
He wore the new shirt she’d bought him, blue with thin white stripes, and his hair was still damp from the shower where he’d actually used soap without being reminded. The first wave of children arrived in a chaotic burst of noise and energy, followed by parents carrying wrapped gifts and offering friendly smiles.
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