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Chapter 25 - I Just Wanted to Celebrate My Best Friend’s Birthday, Not Accidentally Become the Party Planner of Time

Three days.

I had successfully gone three full days in a row without stopping time.

I hadn't glitched through gym class, hadn't fixed my falling chopsticks mid-blink, and hadn't reflex-paused time to stop my math test from snowballing into a mistake spiral.

This was my Earth World Streak, and I was proud of it.

Which is why, when my best friend Naomi invited me to her birthday party, I told myself:

"No powers. No weirdness. Just cake, candles, and chaos you didn't cause."

Spoiler: It didn't go that way.

---

The Setup

Naomi's family had rented the rooftop terrace of a café, complete with lanterns, a snack bar, and a karaoke machine of ancient and slightly cursed vintage.

We were fifteen teenagers, hyped on soda, sugar, and way too much free time.

Naomi greeted me in a party hat, hugged me tight, and handed me a glowstick scepter.

"Tonight, we are magical girls. No exceptions."

"But I'm not—"

"Magical." She winked.

I laughed nervously and prayed no one tried to summon anything.

The Party Begins

Everything was going great:

We ate way too many shrimp chips

Someone started a dance circle that turned into a three-person conga line

Kento tried to freestyle rap over "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star"

And I managed not to stop time when someone spilled cola on my shoe

We even did a group photo where nobody blinked—an actual miracle not caused by time magic, I swear.

I was almost starting to feel... normal.

---

The Cake Incident

Then came the cake.

Naomi's parents rolled it out—three layers, strawberries on top, a tiny edible crown in the middle.

Candles were lit. Everyone gathered around.

Naomi smiled, took a deep breath, and leaned in to blow—

—and her little brother tripped. Right into the table.

The cake wobbled. The candles flared. The whole thing tipped forward in slow-motion horror.

Without thinking, I snapped.

Not mentally—time-wise.

In the space between seconds, I dashed forward, caught the cake stand, gently nudged Naomi's brother back into balance, and used a paper plate to fix the sliding strawberries.

Time resumed.

The cake landed safely. Naomi's brother didn't faceplant. Everyone cheered.

Except me. I froze, holding my soda, trying not to look suspicious.

"Whoa," someone said. "That was close."

Naomi turned to me. "Did you move?"

"Nope," I said. "Just… stood here. Totally normal cake physics."

She squinted at me. "You didn't stop time or something?"

I laughed too hard. "What? What even is time? What a concept!"

She stared.

Then handed me a slice of cake. "Thanks anyway."

---

The Karaoke Twist

After the cake, we did karaoke.

I was hoping to fade into the background—but no, the birthday girl demanded a duet.

Naomi grabbed the mic. "Reika and I are singing 'Sparkle in My Tea' from that magical girl show we binged."

I didn't even know all the lyrics.

But somehow, we nailed it. Perfect rhythm. No stuttering. Harmonized ending.

Everyone clapped like we'd summoned moonlight.

"See?" Naomi said, nudging me. "You are magical."

I just smiled.

Not from another world.

Not a spellcaster.

Just a girl with a party hat, a secret power, and the best best friend on Earth.

---

Later That Night

We lay on the rooftop after most of the guests had gone, lanterns flickering gently overhead.

"Thanks for coming," Naomi whispered. "I know you've been tired lately. I can tell."

"Yeah…" I sighed. "Been a long week."

"You're always helping everyone," she added. "Even when they don't know it."

I turned to look at her.

She wasn't asking. She wasn't prying.

She just… knew, in that best-friend way that transcends explanations.

So I said, "I'm glad I was here."

And I meant it.

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