Every year, for 12 years straight, Martha placed three plates on the table ā one for herself, one for her husband, and one for her daughter, Karen. That seat stayed empty every single time.
Karen hadnāt spoken to her mother since the divorce.
āShe blamed me,ā Martha whispered. āIn her eyes, I was the one who tore the family apart.ā
But this year, when she turned 47, something inside her broke.
āI couldnāt take it anymore,ā she said. āI needed to see her ā even if she slammed the door in my face.ā
So, she drove to her ex-husbandās house unannounced.
When he opened the door, Martha barely recognized him ā pale, tired, hollow-eyed.
āWhereās Karen?ā she asked, trembling.
He froze. His eyes darted to the floor.
āMartha⦠you donāt know?ā
Her voice cracked. āKnow what?ā
He took a deep breath.
āKaren⦠passed away two years ago.ā
Marthaās knees gave out. She dropped to the floor.
Her husbandās voice was shaking as he added,
āShe was in an accident on her way to your house. She was coming to surprise you for your birthday. But she never made it.ā
Martha said the world went silent.
Sheād been setting that third plate every year, waiting for a daughter who would never walk through the door again.
Now, every year since that moment, she still sets the same three plates ā but this time, she lights a candle by the third one.
And when she blows it out, she whispers,
āHappy birthday, Karen. You finally came home.ā