Birthday Candles, Then Gunfire

The decorations stayed up longer than anyone expected.

Not because people forgot.
Because no one knew how to take them down.

The balloons had lost their shine, sagging into odd shapes, brushing gently against strips of police tape like they were confused about where they belonged.

Joy had been here.
That was the problem.

Paper plates curled at the edges, stuck to the sidewalk where frosting had dried.
Someone must’ve dropped them in a hurry.

No one had the heart to throw them away.

At first, people walked around the area quickly.

Heads down.
Steps fast.

Like if they moved fast enough, the scene wouldn’t settle into memory.

But memory doesn’t work like that.

It waits.

Chalk drawings appeared quietly.

One name.
Then another.

A crooked heart.
A stick figure with a halo that didn’t quite connect.

The chalk faded faster than anyone wanted.

Scuffed by shoes.
Smudged by strollers.

Each blur felt like another small goodbye.

Inside nearby houses, voices dropped an octave.

Parents leaned against kitchen counters late at night, phones glowing softly in their hands.

They talked about schools.

Neighborhoods.

Commutes that suddenly felt worth it.

No one said the real reason out loud.

They didn’t have to.

“I heard that place is safer,” someone whispered.

“Better ratings,” another replied.

As if numbers could protect you from randomness.

Detectives came and went.

They rewound footage.
Lined up timelines.

Asked questions that felt necessary but hollow.

Answers arrived slowly.

Too slowly.

And even when they did, they didn’t land the way people expect closure to land.

Because closure doesn’t show up at the dinner table.

It doesn’t fill the chair that stays empty.

Nights were the hardest.

That’s when the noise of the day disappeared and the questions got louder.

The what-ifs.
The if-onlys.

Parents checked on sleeping kids more often.

Pulled blankets higher.

Stood in doorways longer than usual.

Outside, the makeshift memorial kept growing.

Flowers wrapped in grocery bags.
Candles burned down to stubs.

Stuffed animals placed carefully, like they might feel cold.

Someone added a note that just said, “I’m so sorry.”

No name.

No explanation.

It was then—quietly, without announcement—that people realized this wasn’t just about one day.

It was about how the days after were going to work.

How do you plan another party?

How do you hang decorations again without flinching?

The first time someone mentioned another birthday, the room went silent.

Not because it was wrong.

Because it felt impossible.

Eventually, they gathered again.

Not everyone.
Not easily.

Some stood near exits.
Some kept scanning the street.

The cake was smaller this time.

The laughter came late.

When it was time to sing, voices wobbled.

Someone started too high.
Someone else forgot the words.

They sang anyway.

Soft at first.

Then a little louder.

It wasn’t brave in the movie sense.

It was shaky.

Human.

Determined in a way that doesn’t make headlines.

Outside, the chalk had nearly vanished.

Only faint colors remained, barely visible unless you knew where to look.

But people still slowed down when they passed that spot.

Still glanced at the ground.

Still remembered.

Because ordinary days don’t feel ordinary anymore once you know how quickly they can change.

And yet, tomorrow was coming anyway.

Whether they were ready or not.

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