The White Sox prepared the party for Manny Machado, including his family and friends on the guest list.

He didn’t show.

On Tuesday, Machado rejected the contract offer from the team that had signed his brother-in-law, Yonder Alonso, and close friend Jon Jay for 10 years and $300 million from the Padres.

“I’m wearing my shades so you can’t see the shock in my eyes,” said Chicago executive vice president Kenny Williams, whose wit didn’t leave him when Machado did.

The White Sox’s final offer, according to The Athletic, was eight years for $250 million — more per year, but significantly less guaranteed money. Williams suggested the deal had incentives that gave it the potential to beat San Diego’s.

“If the offer that I’m seeing or the acceptance of the offer that I’m seeing is true, then actually our offer had the opportunity for Manny to surpass that,” Williams told reporters.

“Obviously, extremely disappointed,” GM Rick Hahn told reporters. “… From the rawness and selfish standpoint, or my individual standpoint, trying really hard and failing is not sufficient. I will not begrudge a player for exercising the rights they have to choose to go elsewhere. I can be disappointed, I can be frustrated. And when I say frustrated, I say frustrated for myself only. Because again, this organization from top to bottom did an excellent job of putting us in a position to convert and to make [Machado and his camp] have a very difficult decision.”

The White Sox had gone all-in for the perennial All-Star, even leaving a spring-training locker available between Jay and Alonso, who had seemed confident his family would be joining him.

“I think that’s all going to get taken care of,” Alonso said last week. “We’ll just see when it happens.”

Instead, the White Sox can either pivot to Bryce Harper, who has been most strongly linked to the Phillies, or accept an offseason without a superstar. Chicago has a very strong prospect base but is coming off a 62-100 season.