ur regular sat alone at a table covered in birthday decorations, waiting for a family that never came.
What started as a heartbreaking moment turned into something none of us at the café would ever forget.
I walked into the café like I did every morning—keys in one hand, apron in the other.
The air smelled like fresh cinnamon buns and dark roast coffee. It was early. Only two tables were taken. Quiet.
Then I saw her.
Miss Helen sat at the big round table by the window.
The one we usually saved for birthdays or group meetings.
Pink streamers hung from the edges. A box of cake sat unopened beside her purse.
A little vase held fake daisies. The decorations looked like they’d been there a while.
And she was alone.
Miss Helen had been coming to this café almost every day since I started here.
Eight years. I was fresh out of high school back then, still learning how to steam milk right.
She always sat at the same booth.
Most days, Miss Helen came in with her two grandkids—Aiden and Bella.
They were sweet enough. Loud, messy, always fighting over muffins.
Miss Helen never seemed to mind. She always had tissues in her purse, little toys in her bag, extra napkins on hand.
They didn’t mean to be cold. They were just… kids. But her daughter?
I never liked the way she rushed in and out. Didn’t even sit down.
Just dropped the kids off with a quick “Thanks, Mom” and vanished.
We saw it all the time. Every week. Sometimes more.
“Morning, Miss Helen,” I said, walking over slowly. “Happy birthday.”