The Birthday Party by Katherine Brush
They were a
couple in their late thirties, and they looked unmistakably married. They sat
on the banquette opposite us in a little narrow restaurant, having dinner. The
man had a round, self-satisfied face, with glasses on it; the woman was
fadingly pretty, in a big hat. There was nothing conspicuous about them,
nothing particularly noticeable, until the end of their meal, when it suddenly
became obvious that this was an occasion—in fact, the husband’s birthday. And
the wife had planned a little surprise for him.
It arrived,
in the form of a small but glossy birthday cake, with one pink candle burning
in the center. The headwaiter brought it in and placed it before the husband,
and meanwhile the violin-and-piano orchestra played "Happy Birthday to
You" and the wife beamed with shy pride over her little surprise, and such
few people as there were in the restaurant tried to help out with a pattering
of applause. It became clear at once that help was needed, because the husband
was not pleased. Instead he was hotly embarrassed, and indignant at his wife
for embarrassing him.
You looked
at him and you saw this and you thought, "Oh, now don’t be like
that!" But he was like that, and as soon as the little cake had been
deposited on the table, and the orchestra had finished the birthday piece, and
the general attention had shifted from the man and the woman, I saw him say
something to her under his breath—some punishing thing, quick and curt and
unkind. I couldn’t bear to look at the woman then, so I stared at my plate and
waited for quite a long time. Not long enough, though. She was still crying
when I finally glanced over there again. Crying quietly and heartbrokenly and
hopelessly, all to herself, under the gay big brim of her best hat.