BREAKING: At least 4 dead, 10 injured after mass shooting at child…See more

The laughter ended with the sound of gunfire. In moments, a child’s birthday party in Stockton turned from celebration to chaos as parents screamed and guests scattered across the yard.

What had been music, balloons, and cake became confusion and fear. Four people were killed, and ten others were rushed to hospitals, leaving families shattered by a night meant for joy.

Shoes and party favors lay abandoned, small reminders of how suddenly everything changed. Neighbors and relatives struggled to comprehend how a family gathering became the scene of unimaginable loss.

As the noise faded, shock took its place. Parents who shielded children replayed those seconds again and again, questioning whether they could have done anything differently.

The decorations will be removed and the home cleaned, but the memories will remain. A birthday cake, once the symbol of happiness, became a silent marker of tragedy.

Investigators now study surveillance footage and follow leads, including reports of a suspicious vehicle. Answers may come slowly, but the pain is immediate and lasting.

For those who were there, this was not a headline or statistic. It was a dividing line between life before the shooting and life after it.

As Stockton mourns, the community is left facing a haunting question: how does a city recover when even the most innocent celebrations no longer feel safe?