To celebrate my birthday, I invited all my closest friends, but no one showed up: And when I found out why, I was horrified

I never imagined that my 35th birthday would turn into the most heartbreaking day of my life.

I usually didn’t make much of a fuss about birthdays, but this year, I craved something different — warmth, closeness, real connection. I chose to host the celebration at home. I planned everything myself: set a cozy table, prepared my favorite homemade dishes, and invited the friends who had stood by me through everything — late nights, hard times, and unforgettable moments.

We had agreed to meet at six.

I spent the entire day preparing — bought the freshest ingredients, marinated the meat, made soup from scratch, and even baked a pie. I arranged the table just right: soft candlelight, gentle music in the background, polished glasses, folded napkins — every detail was perfect.

As six o’clock neared, I felt that flutter of excitement — like waiting for something beautiful to begin. But then… no one came.

At exactly six o’clock, I stood by the window, eyes scanning the quiet street below.

Nothing. No voices. No cars pulling up.

Just silence.

“They’re just running late,” I reassured myself, pouring a glass of wine to ease the nerves. Some of them were known for being late — it was typical.

So I waited. Thirty minutes passed.

Still no one.

The uneasiness began to creep in, slowly tightening in my chest. I checked my phone — no missed calls, no new messages. I sent a quick note in the group chat:

“Where are you guys?” But the only response was silence.

My thoughts started spiraling.

“Did they forget?”

“Maybe I got the date wrong?”

“Was it something I said… or didn’t say?”

Each sip of wine brought a growing ache to my throat. I couldn’t swallow the lump that had formed.

I tried calling — one friend at a time. No one picked up.

Not one.

An hour passed. Then another. I sat at the beautifully arranged table, surrounded by untouched food and flickering candles, staring at the empty plates like they might explain why I was alone.

The music still played softly, but now it felt cruel — like I’d been cast as the joke in a play I didn’t know I was in.

By ten, I stood up quietly and began clearing the dishes, still holding onto a sliver of hope that the door would burst open, and someone would shout, “Surprise! We were just joking!”

But no one came.

Then, everything changed. Just as I was getting ready for bed, my phone buzzed — a message from my sister:

“Did you see the news?

I’m so sorry, I didn’t know how to tell you… There was an accident.

Their car… they were on their way to you.”

I froze. My hands went numb. I opened the news.

The first headline I saw:

“C.rash on the highway… three d-ead…”

The screen blurred as my heart sank.

It was them. My friends.

All three. In the same car.

They really were coming.

They hadn’t forgotten. That night, I couldn’t cry. I just sat there in the dark, listening to the steady drip of the kitchen tap.

The wine glass sat untouched.

The plates remained on the table — as if waiting for guests who’d never arrive. And I… so caught up in my own pain… never once considered something tragic could have happened.

I thought I’d been abandoned. But the truth was far, far worse.

😢

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