Every year on her birthday, Helen returns to the same diner booth where everything began, and where she’s kept a promise for nearly 50 years. But when a stranger appears in her husband’s seat, holding an envelope with her name on it, everything Helen thought was finished quietly begins again. When I was younger, I used to laugh at people who said birthdays made them sad.
I thought it was just something dramatic people said for attention, like the way they sighed too loudly or kept their sunglasses on indoors. Back then, birthdays meant cake, and cake meant chocolate… and chocolate meant life was good.
But now I understand. These days, birthdays make the air feel heavier. It’s not just the candles or the silence in the house or the ache in my knees.
It’s the knowing. The kind of knowing that only comes after you’ve been alive long enough to lose people who felt permanent. Today is my 85th birthday.
And much like I’ve done every year since my husband, Peter, died, I woke up early and made myself presentable. I brushed my thinning hair back into a soft twist, dabbed on my wine-colored lipstick, and buttoned my coat all the way up. Always to the chin.
Always the same coat. I usually don’t go for nostalgia, but this is different. This is ritual.
It takes me about 15 minutes to walk to Marigold’s Diner now. I used to do it in seven. It’s not far, just three turns, past the pharmacy and the little bookstore that smells like carpet cleaner and regret.
But the walk feels longer every year. And I go at noon, always. Because that’s when we met.
“You can do this, Helen,” I told myself, standing in the doorway. “You’re so much stronger than you know.”
I met Peter at Marigold’s Diner when I was 35. It was a Thursday, and I was only there because I’d missed the earlier bus and needed somewhere warm to sit.
He was in the corner booth, fumbling with a newspaper and a cup of coffee he’d already spilled once. He looked up at me like I was the punchline to a joke he hadn’t finished telling. I was wary; he was charming in a way that felt too polished, but I ended up sitting with him anyway.
He told me I had the kind of face people wrote letters about. I told him that was the worst line I’d ever heard. And the strange thing is, I believed him.
We were married the next year. The diner became ours, our little tradition. We went every year on my birthday, even after the cancer diagnosis, even when he was too tired to eat more than half a muffin.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇
