She Faced Her Father Alone In Court Until The Federal File Opened-habe

“She has no money and no lawyer,” my arrogant father sneered, ready to steal millions. My abusive brother even tried to beat me up in the courthouse. They thought I was a helpless victim. They had no idea I was an elite military prosecutor, and I brought the FBI with me to the hearing…

The heavy oak doors of Courtroom 302 closed behind me with a sound that made the hallway disappear.

I stood there for half a second with my briefcase in my hand, breathing through the smell of old wood, floor polish, damp coats, and burned courthouse coffee.

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The room was colder than I expected.

Not winter cold.

Government-building cold.

The kind that settles into your fingers while everyone pretends procedure is the same thing as justice.

My father sat at the defense table like a man waiting for a check to clear.

My mother sat beside him, spine straight, purse clamped to her knees, eyes avoiding mine so hard it became its own confession.

My older brother, Jason, stood behind them.

He had gotten broader since I last saw him.

His face had not changed.

Same hard mouth.

Same restless hands.

Same look he used to give me when I had something he wanted and he did not feel like asking twice.

Their attorney, Arthur Vance, looked me up and down once.

Not like a person.

Like a problem he had already billed for solving.

He had a tailored navy suit, polished shoes, a silver watch, and the relaxed cruelty of someone used to being paid to make smaller people feel foolish.

I set my briefcase on the plaintiff table.

The latch clicked louder than it should have.

My father smiled.

That smile was the first thing I remembered about him from childhood, because it was never warm.

It came out when he was about to win.

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