A Blue Castle Cake, Five Candles, And The Envelope That Broke Her Family-yumihong

The blue castle cake was supposed to be the one thing that belonged entirely to Ivy.

Her mother had saved for it eight weeks at a time, one skipped coffee and one extra dental office shift after another.

It was not a large cake by bakery standards.

It was not the kind of cake people photograph for magazines.

It was a two-tier blue castle with little frosting towers, silver sugar pearls, and Ivy’s name written across the front in careful white icing.

To a five-year-old girl living in a two-bedroom Columbus apartment after her father left, it looked like proof that a hard year could still have one beautiful day in it.

Ivy had chosen it herself from the bakery binder.

She had pressed one finger to the picture and whispered, ‘That one, Mommy. Because castles don’t leave.’

Her mother laughed when Ivy said it, but only because crying in a bakery felt like too much honesty for a Tuesday afternoon.

She paid the deposit with a debit card that had less money on it than she wanted to admit.

Then she worked.

She cleaned exam rooms at the dental office after patients left.

She filed insurance forms through lunch.

She stayed polite to people who snapped at her about appointment times and copays.

At night, she came home to Ivy drawing castles on printer paper at the kitchen table while the upstairs dryer shook the ceiling.

Every time Ivy asked about the party, her mother said, ‘It’s coming, baby.’

She did not tell Ivy that she was counting dollars on the laundry room counter.

She did not tell Ivy that the community room rental receipt made her stomach tighten.

She did not tell Ivy that she had invited her own family because some childish, stubborn part of her still wanted them to show up right for once.

That was the part she would regret.

The party was set for Saturday afternoon.

By 1:42 p.m., the balloons were taped to the wall of the community room.

The folding tables had plastic cloths clipped at the corners.

A small American flag decoration hung near the apartment complex bulletin board because the manager never took down anything from summer events.

The coffee urn smelled burnt before anyone poured a cup.

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