She Brought A Broom To Shame Me, But My Son Had One Last Gift-vivian

Elina knew birthdays could become proof of love because she had been building this one out of almost nothing for two weeks.

She bought streamers at the discount store, saved points for the cake ingredients, and let Micah choose blue frosting because he said blue tasted happier.

The party was supposed to be small enough to feel safe.

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Just a few school friends, the neighbor twins, her mother Marta, her brother Eli after work, and Derek if he remembered to show up without making the room colder.

Derek was Micah’s father, and for twelve years he had also been Elina’s husband, until space became an apartment downtown and then a diamond ring on Sierra’s hand.

Elina had learned to survive the kind of humiliation that arrived politely, then still make lunches, pay bills, answer school emails, and cry only where Micah would not hear.

Micah noticed anyway, so she wanted his tenth birthday to feel untouched by grown-up damage.

Two days before the party, Derek called while Elina was sorting cupcake liners.

“Sierra wants to come,” he said.

He said it as if he were requesting an extra chair, not permission to bring the woman he had chosen into the house he had left behind.

Elina looked at Micah, who was painting a cardboard treasure sign for the backyard game.

“It’s Micah’s day,” she said.

Derek took that as a yes because men like Derek heard politeness as consent when it benefited them.

On the morning of the party, Marta arrived with cupcakes and the expression of a woman prepared to smile and swing if needed.

“If she says anything sharp, I will drop something glass,” Marta muttered.

“No broken dishes today,” Elina said.

Elina laughed because she needed to.

Micah woke up glowing.

He climbed onto her bed before breakfast and handed her a wrapped box he had decorated himself.

“You cannot open it until tonight,” he said.

“It is your birthday,” she told him.

“I already have my present,” he said, then threw both arms around her neck.

That was the kind of sentence a mother stores somewhere deeper than memory.

By noon, the living room smelled like frosting and pizza, and the kids were taking turns making the dragon balloon guard the hallway.

Elina was lighting candles when Derek arrived.

He walked in with Sierra beside him, fingers laced through hers in a way that felt rehearsed.

Sierra wore a white dress that did not belong at a children’s birthday party and heels that clicked against the floor like a countdown.

She leaned down to kiss Micah’s cheek, but her eyes were already moving across the room.

They passed over the folding chairs, the discount-store plates, the plastic cups, the homemade banner, and finally Elina.

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