I had counted quarters on the kitchen table until the numbers blurred, but the bakery sticker never changed: $42. The cakeâthree layers, rainbow sprinkles, a sugar rocket on topâsat in the window like a party I couldnât afford. My sonâs fifth birthday deserved fireworks; I could barely strike a match.
I walked in anyway, hoping for a day-old discount, maybe a missing slice. No luck. I thanked the clerk, swallowed hard, and pushed open the doorâstraight into Officer Ramirez, mid-beat patrol, coffee in hand.
One look at my wet eyes and he simply asked, âWhich one is his?â I pointed through the glass. He disappeared inside. Flour floated in the sunlight; the cash register dinged. He emerged with the box cradled like evidence of something good.
âTell him itâs from a friend who likes rockets too,â he said, tipping his cap.
That night candles flickered, sprinkles flew, and a little boy believed wishes work. I cut the first piece, set it aside, and promised the universe Iâd pay it forwardâone rainbow cake at a time.