She Shut the Account Before Dinner, Then the Birthday Bill Arrived-eirian

The first thing I noticed was the silence.

Not complete silence, because Harrington’s was too expensive to ever feel empty.

There was still the soft clink of silverware against porcelain, the whisper of silk dresses brushing chair backs, and the low hum of waiters moving between tables like they had been trained not to disturb rich people’s secrets.

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But when Linda Calloway lifted her crystal glass and tapped it with the side of a knife, the private dining room changed.

One hundred and fifty people turned toward her.

Friends from church looked up from their salads.

Women from her charity committee folded their hands in their laps.

Ryan’s cousins, aunts, uncles, old neighbors, and people Linda called “basically family” all shifted toward the front of the room as if a curtain had risen.

The birthday cake sat on a side table beneath a dome of golden light, five tiers high, covered in sugar flowers that looked too perfect to touch.

White roses spilled from tall glass vases.

Candlelight floated over ivory tablecloths.

Linda stood in the center of it all in a champagne-colored dress, her hair blown out so smoothly that even the air seemed afraid to move it.

She loved being watched.

That was one of the first things I learned about her.

Some people want love.

Linda wanted an audience.

Her youngest son, Derek, stood near her shoulder with his phone in one hand and boredom written all over his face, even though the dinner, the flowers, the printed menus, the cake, and the private room had somehow happened without him contributing a single useful thing.

My husband, Ryan, squeezed my hand under the table.

“She looks happy,” he whispered.

I looked at Linda’s smile.

No, I thought.

She looks hungry.

“My sweet friends,” Linda began, one manicured hand pressed to her chest. “Fifty years. Can you believe it?”

Everyone laughed politely.

Everyone also knew Linda had been saying “fifty” for at least three years, but nobody in that room had come for honesty.

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