I thought I’d planned the perfect 13th birthday party for my daughter. The decorations were beautiful, the cake was everything she’d dreamed of, and all her friends were excited to celebrate. Then one uninvited guest showed up and destroyed everything in seconds.
Being a single mom wasn’t the life I’d planned, but it was the life I’d learned to love. My daughter, Lily, was 13 now, and she was the center of my world. She was the brightest girl I’d ever known.
Even as a little child, she carried this rare compassion for everyone and everything around her. Unfortunately, that gentle heart often made her an easy target for kids who didn’t share her kindness. I still remember how she’d come home from kindergarten with stories of how a classmate had snatched her cookie, or how the other girls teased her about her bag.
I always reminded her not to let anyone dim her light. I told her to keep being kind, no matter what, because the world needs people like her more than ever. When Lily was five, her father, Mark, and I parted ways.
It happened after I discovered he had a wandering eye and a complete inability to stay faithful to one woman. The divorce had been messy and painful, but we’d managed to work out a decent arrangement for Lily’s sake. Mark still visited regularly, took her every other weekend, and genuinely seemed to love being her dad.
He just didn’t seem to love being anyone’s husband. Despite everything that had happened between Mark and me, I had to admit he was a good father. He never missed a birthday or school event, always paid his child support on time, and Lily adored him.
That was what mattered most to me, that she felt loved and supported by both her parents, even if we couldn’t be together as a family. As Lily’s 13th birthday approached, she was bouncing with excitement. This was a big one because she was officially becoming a teenager.
She’d been planning her party for months. “Mom, can we have it at home?” she asked one evening while we were doing homework at the kitchen table. “I don’t want some fancy venue.
I just want my friends here, where it feels comfortable.”
I smiled at her. “Of course, sweetheart. Whatever you want.
Who should we invite?”
She rattled off a list of names. Her best friend Sarah, her lab partner Jessica, the girl from her art class named Emma, and several others. All lovely kids that I’d met before and genuinely liked.
But I noticed one omission from her list. “What about Amelia?” I asked. “You two have been in the same class for three years now.”
Lily’s face immediately changed.
The excitement dimmed from her eyes, and she shook her head firmly. “No, Mom. Please don’t make me invite her.”
“Why not, honey?
Did you two have a fight?”
“It’s not that,” Lily said, choosing her words carefully. “Amelia just… she ruins everything. Every time there’s a group project, she takes over and makes it about her.
When we had the class party last month, she complained about the decorations and made Madison cry. She always finds something wrong with everything, and then she makes everyone else feel bad about it.”
I frowned. That didn’t sound like typical teenage drama.
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