The judge’s face drained of color so suddenly I thought he might collapse right there on the bench. Judge Morrison had presided over countless hearings with the same measured composure—silver hair perfectly combed, reading glasses perched just so, the faint impatience of a man perpetually running behind schedule. But as he flipped through the manila folder in front of him, something shifted.
His knuckles whitened around the edges of the file. His eyes, sharp and practiced from decades of catching liars in their tracks, snapped up to meet mine for just a fraction of a second. What I saw wasn’t confusion.
It was recognition. Then something else entirely. Fear.
Across the courtroom aisle, my sister Ashley sat in a tailored black suit that probably cost more than my monthly rent, chin lifted in that familiar pose of righteous certainty. Her lawyer, Malcolm Patterson, leaned close to whisper something that made the corner of his mouth twitch with confidence. Ashley didn’t look at me.
She hadn’t looked at me properly in three months—not since the certified letter arrived at my apartment, the one that turned my world inside out with a single phrase: formal complaint to the State Bar. She thought she knew how this story ended. I could see it in the set of her jaw, the carefully neutral expression that barely concealed her anticipation.
In her mind, I was already finished—disbarred, humiliated, stripped of the career I’d bled for while she walked away clean, vindicated, the wronged sister who’d finally put her arrogant sibling in her place. Judge Morrison flipped another page, and if possible, his complexion went even paler. He closed the file with a sharp crack that echoed through the quiet courtroom like a gunshot.
Then he stood so abruptly his chair scraped across the floor with an ugly screech. “I need to see counsel in chambers,” he announced, his voice tight and strained. “Immediately.”
Patterson stood, startled.
“Your Honor, I don’t think—”
“Now, Mr. Patterson.” The judge’s tone left no room for argument. As Judge Morrison disappeared through the heavy wooden door behind the bench, the atmosphere in the courtroom shifted like the barometric pressure before a storm.
Ashley’s carefully maintained composure cracked just enough for a small, satisfied smile to appear. She thought the judge’s reaction meant her plan had worked. She thought I was done.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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