The morning of Linda’s sixtieth birthday arrived quietly, carrying with it a mixture of anticipation and nostalgia. For weeks she had imagined how the evening might unfold. Sixty years felt like a milestone worthy of celebration, not because of the number itself, but because of everything it represented—decades of raising children, working long hours, making sacrifices, and building a life that revolved around family. Linda had always been the center of her household, the person who organized birthdays, holidays, and Sunday dinners.
She remembered baking cakes late into the night for her children when they were young, decorating living rooms with balloons, and making sure every celebration felt special. Now, as she stood in her kitchen preparing food for her own birthday dinner, she felt a quiet hope that the same warmth she had given for so many years would return to her. Her six children had promised to come. Some lived nearby while others had traveled farther over the years, but birthdays had always been one of the occasions when everyone tried to gather. Linda spent the afternoon cooking dishes she knew each of them loved—roasted chicken, warm bread, vegetables seasoned the way her youngest daughter preferred, and a chocolate cake she carefully frosted herself.