And he went far.
Both of them went far.
Jennifer with her mansion and her rich husband and her elegant parties. Christopher with his law firm and his $2,000 suit and his perfect life.
They went so far they left me behind as if I were roadkill—something that had served its purpose and was now no longer necessary.
I watched them both move among their guests, and I felt something new besides pain.
Rage.
A cold, clear rage beginning to wake up after twenty years of sleeping under layers of sadness and denial.
I had spent two decades begging for their attention, pleading for crumbs of love, sending gifts as if I could buy a place in their hearts.
And all that time, they had been ignoring me deliberately—consciously—cruelly.
A waiter passed by and left a tray of canapés on my table. I looked at them without appetite—expensive food served on elegant plates for people who probably would not appreciate it because they were accustomed to this level of luxury.
I thought of my almost empty refrigerator at home, of how I had to calculate every grocery purchase so my pension would last the whole month. I thought of the $500 I spent on that bicycle that probably ended up given away or in a basement gathering dust.
I thought of all the dollars I had spent in gifts over the course of twenty years—money I should have used for myself, to make my life more comfortable, so I would not have to worry every time the monthly household charges arrived.
The rage kept growing.
It was not explosive. It was not the kind that makes you scream or break things.
It was cold. Calculating.
The rage of someone finally seeing the truth with total clarity.
My children had not forgotten me accidentally. They were not too busy without realizing it. They had actively chosen to erase me from their lives. They had chosen not to answer my calls. They had chosen not to reply to my messages. They had chosen to keep their children away from me. They had chosen to close the door in my face—literally and figuratively.
And I—like a fool—had kept insisting, begging, sending smoke signals, hoping that someday they would remember I existed.
But that night, sitting at this party where I did not belong, where I did not even know why I had been invited after so long, something changed inside me.
Something broke definitively—not in the painful way from before.
It broke in a liberating way.
I realized I no longer wanted to keep begging. I no longer wanted to keep being invisible to the two people who were supposed to love me more than anyone in the world. I no longer wanted to keep living in this agony of constant hope and guaranteed disappointment.
I was still lost in my thoughts when I saw Robert—Jennifer’s husband—walk toward a small stage they had set up in the center of the garden.
He was a tall man, about fifty, with that air of authority that money and power give. He took a glass of champagne and tapped the crystal lightly with a spoon.
The sound resonated throughout the garden, and little by little, the conversations died down. All the guests turned toward him.
I stayed where I was—in my distant corner—feeling my heart start to beat faster without knowing exactly why.
“Good evening, everyone,” Robert began, with that voice trained for public speaking. “Thank you for joining us on this very special day to celebrate my wonderful wife.”
The guests applauded. Jennifer went up to the stage next to him, radiant in her champagne-colored dress that probably cost more than I earned in three months. They kissed while everyone applauded, and I felt something twist in my stomach.
Robert continued talking about how lucky he was to have Jennifer in his life, about everything they had built together, about their plans for the future. I listened halfway, still trying to understand why they had invited me after so long.
Then Robert said something that made me pay complete attention.
“I also want to take this moment to make an important announcement,” he said, looking at the crowd.
He paused dramatically, and I saw Christopher approach the stage with a smile.
My son went up the steps and stood next to his sister and brother-in-law. The three of them looked perfect up there, like a magazine photograph of successful, happy people.
“We are excited to announce,” Robert continued, “that we have acquired a beautiful piece of land on the coast—with an ocean view—where we will build a beach house for the whole family. A house where we can gather, create memories, strengthen our family bonds.”
The guests applauded enthusiastically.
I sat paralyzed in my chair.
Family.
He had said family.
But I did not even know about this project. No one had mentioned anything to me, obviously, because I was not part of the family they were talking about.
Christopher took the microphone.
He continued with that professional tone he used.
“I have been coordinating all the legal aspects of this acquisition,” he said. “And I want to tell you that this beach house is not just a property. It is a legacy we will leave for our children and our children’s children. A place where the Stone family will gather for generations.”
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