I waited 4 hours for my 6 children to arrive for my 60th, but the house stayed quiet — until a police officer handed me a note that froze my heart. When I married their father, he used to say he wanted a big family. “A loud house,” he’d laugh. “A table that’s never empty.” We had six children in ten years. Then one day he decided the noise was too much. He met a woman online. She lived overseas. Within months, he packed a suitcase and left, saying he “needed to find himself.” He found himself in another country — with her. I found myself alone with six children and a mortgage. I worked mornings at the grocery store and cleaned offices at night. I learned how to fix a leaking sink, how to stretch one chicken into three meals, how to fall asleep sitting upright at the kitchen table. I missed weddings, vacations, even my own doctor’s appointments, so they could have school trips and new shoes. I never bought myself anything unless it was on clearance. Birthdays were always big in our house. Even when money was tight, I made cakes from scratch and let them lick the bowl. I told myself one day they would understand how much I had given. They grew up. Of course they did. College. Jobs. Marriages. Different states. Different time zones. Calls became shorter. Visits became “maybe next month.” I told myself that’s just life. For my 60th birthday, I didn’t want a party. No neighbors. No friends. Just my six children. My whole world in one room again. I cooked their favorites. Lasagna for Mark. Roast chicken for Jason. Apple pie the way Sarah likes it, with extra cinnamon. I set the table for seven and lit the candles. I waited. One hour. Two. Four. The house stayed painfully quiet. I sat at the head of the table and cried into a napkin I had ironed that morning. Then there was a knock at the door. A police officer stood on my porch. He held out a folded note with my name on it. And when I read the first line, my hands went numb.

I stared at the back of the officer’s head. “You know my kid.”

He didn’t answer right away. Then, quietly, “Yes, ma’am.”

My heart lurched. “Are they in danger?”

“No.”

“Then why am I in a police car?”

He exhaled like he was trying not to say the wrong thing. “Just hold on.”

Through the glass, I saw movement.

The police officer turned into a parking lot. A community center I recognized. The one where I used to sit on hard bleachers to support my kids. We always had the best time. The sight brought back so many happy memories, but they couldn’t drown out my anxiety.

Cars were parked out front. Cars I knew. Mark’s SUV. Sarah’s sedan. Jason’s truck.

My mouth went dry. “What is this?”

The officer parked and came around to open my door. He offered a hand. I ignored it and climbed out on my own, legs shaky. He guided me toward the entrance.

Through the glass, I saw movement.

Caleb went pale.

I stopped. “If this is some kind of joke.”

“It’s not.”

My chest tightened. Hope and anger tangled together. He opened the door. The lights snapped on.

“HAPPY,” Jason started, then froze when he saw my expression.

Mark’s face looked guilty so fast it made my stomach twist. Sarah’s expression sharpened into pure alarm. Eliza covered her mouth. Caleb went pale.

“I waited four hours.”

The banner read. “HAPPY 60TH, MOM.” Balloons. Streamers. A cake that looked expensive. And five of my children were standing there like they’d been waiting for the punchline.

I stood very still. Then my voice came out small and sharp. “So you were all here.”

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