My husband files for divorce and my seven-year-old daughter asks the judge, “May I show you something that Mom doesn’t know about, Your Honor?” The judge nodded. When the video started, the entire courtroom froze in silence.
On doomsday, my husband, Tummaine, sued me for divorce, accusing me of being a failed mother and wife. He even demanded all the properties and custody of my daughter. However, inside the courtroom, I heard a shocking sentence. It was the voice of my seven-year-old daughter, Zarya, asking the judge, “Your Honor, can I show you something my Mommy doesn’t know?”
The judge nodded his head. My daughter stepped forward, raised her tablet, and pressed the play button. When the video started, everyone in the room froze in stunned silence.
That morning began like any other in their home. Nala, dressed in simple clothes, had been toiling in the kitchen since dawn. The faint aroma of a hot breakfast mixed with the scent of detergent from the washing machine spinning in the laundry nook.
Nala moved quickly but silently, making almost no noise. Over the years, she had learned to move like a shadow in her own home, an effort not to disturb the peace of her husband, Tummaine.
At six in the morning, Tummaine came down from the second floor. He looked immaculate. As soon as he appeared in his freshly pressed shirt, Nala immediately placed a mug of hot black coffee and a steaming breakfast plate on the table.
Tummaine sat down and took the mug without even looking at her.
“The coffee is a little bitter today,” he said dryly, his eyes fixed on his cell phone screen.
“I’m sorry, honey. I thought I measured it right this time,” Nala replied in a low voice.
Tummaine did not respond. He simply pushed the breakfast a little away from his plate and ate a few spoonfuls in silence.
Nala stood near the table, awkwardly waiting for any other order. There were none. The silence between them was so dense and cold that it seemed to freeze the hot steam rising from the coffee on the table.
Nala had forgotten the last time they shared a breakfast filled with laughter. It was probably two or three years ago, when Tummaine started working late and his business trips became longer.
“Is Zarya up?” he asked without lifting his face.
“Yes, honey. She is showering. She will be down for breakfast soon,” Nala said.
Sure enough, shortly after, the small sound of footsteps came down the stairs.
Zarya, their seven-year-old daughter, ran toward them in her neat private school uniform. Her smile was bright, a stark contrast to the atmosphere of the morning.
“Good morning, Mommy and Daddy!”
Zarya kissed Nala on the cheek and headed toward Tummaine. He finally put down the phone and forced a slight smile toward his daughter.
“Good morning, princess. Finish your food. Daddy will take you to school.”
“Wow, I’m going with Daddy!” Zarya exclaimed with joy.
Nala exhaled a sigh of relief. At least in front of Zarya, Tummaine made an effort to act with warmth. This brief breakfast hour was the only family time they had.
As soon as Zarya finished eating, Tummaine stood up immediately, grabbed his briefcase, kissed Zarya on the forehead, and headed to the front door. As always, he walked past Nala as if she were not there. Not a goodbye, not a kiss, not even a glance. Only the roar of his luxury car driving away left Nala alone in the vastness of her large house.
Nala spent the rest of the morning with her routine: clearing the table, washing the dishes, doing the laundry, and tidying the rooms. She did it all with efficiency. She always strove to keep the house perfect. She thought that if the house was clean enough, if the food was delicious enough, if she was quiet enough, maybe the old Tummaine would return.
But the old Tummaine seemed to have left a long time ago.
At noon, Nala went to pick Zarya up from school. This was her favorite time of the day. She loved listening to Zarya chatter about her friends, her art class, or her lunchbox.
“Mommy, today I got five gold stars from the teacher. I answered the question right!” Zarya chirped happily, holding her mother’s hand.
“Wow, my daughter is so smart,” Nala congratulated sincerely, pinching her little nose.
When they arrived home, while Nala was helping Zarya take off her shoes, she heard the sound of a motorcycle pulling up in front of the main door. A uniformed courier shouted her name.
“Nala, a package for you!”
Nala frowned. She had not ordered anything. She walked to the front door and received a large thick brown envelope. There was no sender name, only the logo of a law firm in the upper right corner.
Nala’s heart began to beat uncomfortably.
“Who is it, Mommy?” asked Zarya, who had followed her.
“I don’t know, princess. It’s probably just junk mail. Go change and then we’ll have lunch,” Nala said, trying to keep her voice steady.
After Zarya ran to her room, Nala sat on the sofa in the living room. Her hands trembled slightly as she ripped open the envelope.
Inside was a thick stack of papers. The first sentence on the top page made Nala gasp for air.
PETITION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE.
Nala’s world seemed to stop. Her ears were ringing. She reread the words, hoping her eyes had deceived her.
Plaintiff: Tummaine.
Defendant: Nala.
Reason for the suit: The wife has totally failed in the fulfillment of her marital duties.
Nala felt nauseous.
Failed.
She had dedicated her entire life to this house. She had given up her career at Tummaine’s request. She had taken care of Zarya. She made sure Tummaine’s shirts were spotless every morning. What did he mean by failed?
She continued reading the following chapters. Her eyes went out of focus at the demands Tummaine was presenting.
The demands were cruel. He was not only asking for a divorce, but he was also requesting full custody of Zarya, alleging that Nala was emotionally unstable and incapable of raising the child properly. And most devastating of all, he demanded the totality of the marital assets, including the house they lived in, with the argument that Nala had not contributed financially and that all assets were solely the result of his efforts.
Nala collapsed weakly onto the cold hardwood floor, the papers scattered around her.
So that was why he had been so cold for months. This had been a plan hatched in secret behind her back.
The front door opened. Tummaine had returned from work unusually early. He stood in the doorway looking at Nala, slumped on the floor, and then at the scattered papers. His expression was cold and without a shred of guilt.
“Honey, what… what does this mean?” Nala’s voice trembled and tears began to well up.
He took off his shoes in silence. He walked over, loosening his tie. He did not deny it or explain. He simply said coldly:
“It is exactly what you read. I don’t want to live with you anymore, Nala. You have failed. You have failed as a wife and as a mother.”
“Failed?” Nala moaned in disbelief. “I have taken care of this house and raised Zarya—”
“Taking care of the house?” he scoffed with disdain. “The only thing you have done is spend my money. Zarya needs a better mother, a competent one. Not someone who only knows how to cry and complain like you.”
“But all the property, this house, and Zarya… Honey, you can’t take them from me!” Nala began to scream hysterically.
Tummaine crouched down and looked at her with a sharp look filled with hatred that Nala had never seen before.
“I can and I will. My lawyer has all the evidence gathered. You won’t get anything, Nala. You will leave this house without a single dollar.”
He stood up and smoothed his suit. He looked toward the stairs, making sure Zarya couldn’t hear.
“And get ready,” he grinned a chilling smile that froze Nala’s blood. “My lawyer says that even your own daughter will testify in court about how incompetent you are as a mother.”
Nala froze in terror and her heart shattered into pieces. He not only wanted to divorce her, but he wanted to destroy her completely.
Nala did not sleep that night. After the cruel confrontation, he had retired to the guest room and locked the door as if Nala were a threat. She spent the night in her daughter’s room, sitting in the chair by the bed, watching Zarya’s peaceful face as she slept. Her tears did not stop falling.
How could he say that Zarya would testify against her? Zarya was everything to her. What would they have told her little girl? That thought tormented her more than any other accusation.
The next morning, he acted as if nothing had happened. He woke Zarya up, prepared her uniform, and took her to school. He did not speak a word to Nala. When Zarya asked why her mother had puffy eyes, he answered with indifference:
“Mommy isn’t feeling very well, princess.”
After they left, true terror took hold of Nala. She had to fight. She couldn’t give up on Zarya so easily.
She grabbed her phone and looked for the names of renowned divorce lawyers in the city. But the harsh reality hit her soon. Lawyers needed money: a retainer, a consultation fee.
Nala realized she had no money. For all these years, he had only given her a monthly allowance, budgeted exactly for groceries and Zarya’s school expenses. There was no room to save anything.
Her only hope was their joint account—the one she believed was their family emergency fund. With trembling hands, Nala opened the banking app on her phone. She entered the password with her heart hammering.
When the balance appeared on the screen, Nala felt her legs fail.
Zero.
The account was at $0.
It couldn’t be. There should be hundreds of thousands of dollars in there.
Nala refreshed repeatedly, hoping for a system error, but the number zero stared back at her. She opened the transaction history and her eyes widened with horror.
Over the last six months, he had been systematically withdrawing large amounts of money, transferring them to another account Nala didn’t know. The last withdrawal had been made just three days ago, emptying the rest of the account.
He had planned this. He wasn’t just leaving. He had deliberately crippled her financially so she couldn’t fight back.
Nala cried in despair. How was she going to hire a lawyer without a single dollar?
She remembered her wedding jewelry. She ran to her room and opened her jewelry box.
It was empty. Only a few imitation trinkets remained.
He had taken even her heirlooms.
In her desperation, Nala remembered an old friend who worked at a legal aid agency. She called her and told her the situation between sobs.
Her friend felt pity but couldn’t do much except give her a name.
“His name is attorney Abernathy,” her friend said. “He has a small office on the second floor of an old strip mall. He isn’t an expensive lawyer, but he is honest and dedicated. Go see him. Explain your situation. Maybe he can help you.”
Nala had no other choice. With the little cash she had left in her purse, she hailed a cab and went to the address her friend gave her.
Attorney Abernathy’s office was exactly as her friend had described: small, modest, and located on the second floor of an old building with peeling paint.
Attorney Abernathy was a middle-aged black man with thick glasses and a calm demeanor. He listened patiently to Nala’s story without interrupting, only nodding occasionally and taking notes.
When Nala finished, attorney Abernathy exhaled a long sigh.
“Nala, this is going to be an uphill battle,” he said in a low voice. “Your husband has prepared all of this very thoroughly. He doesn’t just want a divorce. He wants to destroy you.”
“I know, attorney. But I don’t care about the properties. I just want Zarya. Please help me. I don’t have money now, but I will pay you. I will pay you in installments. I will do anything,” Nala pleaded desperately.
Attorney Abernathy looked at her for a moment.
“Let’s leave the money issue for later, Nala. What is important now is that we have to move fast. This lawsuit has already been filed. We have to prepare a response immediately.”
He asked her to wait. He left the room and returned a few minutes later with a folder full of photocopies. They were the lawsuit documents filed by Tummaine’s side.
“Your husband’s lawyer is attorney Cromwell,” Abernathy said firmly. “He is known for being sharp and not hesitating to use dirty tactics. Let’s see what evidence they have presented.”
Nala nodded. Her heart was beating hard.
He opened the folder. The first page was photographs. Nala went into shock seeing photos of the interior of her house: photos of dirty dishes piled in the kitchen, photos of the living room cluttered with toys, photos of dirty clothes piled in the laundry basket.
“But this is unfair,” Nala protested. “These are photos he took when I was sick. I had a high fever for three days and he didn’t want to help at all. He took them on purpose.”
“Nala, I’m afraid this is manipulated to make it look like you are a lazy person who doesn’t maintain the house,” Abernathy said with a bitter expression.
They turned to the following pages. They were credit card statements. Nala saw a list of charges for luxury handbags, jewelry, and dinners at expensive restaurants she had never bought.
“That’s not me. I didn’t buy these things.”
“Was it an additional card in your name?” asked Abernathy.
“Yes. An additional one. He managed it. He told me to use it if I needed to, but he took it often, saying his main card had exceeded the limit. Oh my God, he set me up.”
Nala felt the world spinning. She realized that every small kindness from him was actually part of his evil plan.
And then Abernathy stopped at a thick document toward the end.
“And this is the most damaging thing, Nala.”
“What is it, attorney?”
“It is the testimony of an expert witness. A child psychologist.”
He handed the report to her. She read it.
The report was written in cold, clinical terms. It said that the psychologist had conducted covert observations of Nala’s interactions with Zarya. The conclusion was that Nala was emotionally unstable, neglected her daughter’s needs, and was a detrimental mother to Zarya’s psychological development. The report recommended full custody for Tummaine for the mental health of the child.
“This makes no sense. When… when was this observation done? I never met a psychologist,” Nala’s voice shook violently.
“According to this report, the observation was conducted in public places: at the park, at the mall, and when you picked up your daughter from school,” Abernathy explained, staring at her.
“That’s crazy. Zarya always seemed happy with me. This is defamation. Who is this psychologist?”
He flipped the cover of the report.
“Her name is Valencia. A lady named Dr. Valencia,” he said. “Here are all her credentials. She seems very professional and convincing.”
He looked at Nala seriously.
“Nala, do you know this woman?”
“Valencia?” Nala shook her head, bewildered. Her tears began to fall again.
“No, attorney. I don’t know her. I have never seen her in my life.”
The reality of living under the same roof with the man who planned to destroy her was a silent hell.
He had not left the house. He had simply moved into the guest room. The once warm house now felt like a frozen battlefield with emotional landmines hidden in every corner.
Nala had to live with her enemy, see him every morning, and pretend everything was normal in front of Zarya.
He executed his strategy perfectly. In front of the child, he was the best father in the world. He used to come back from work earlier than usual—something he hadn’t done in months. He brought expensive gifts.
One night, he came back with a big box featuring a cartoon princess.
“This is your new tablet, Zarya,” he exclaimed, hugging the girl. “This is much better than the old one. It has a better camera, and Daddy installed lots of games for you.”
Zarya’s eyes shone.
“Wow! Thanks, Daddy!”
Nala, who was folding laundry in the living room, could only swallow hard. Her heart ached. She knew what he was doing. He was buying their daughter’s loyalty.
Nala couldn’t compete. She didn’t have a dollar to buy Zarya anything.
“You see, princess,” he said, looking at Nala with a sneer while turning on the new tablet. “When you live with Daddy later, you’ll be able to buy a new toy every week. Unlike someone who only knows how to fold clothes.”
Nala stopped the movement of her hands. She had a knot in her chest. She wanted to scream. She wanted to insult him. But she couldn’t in front of Zarya. If she got angry, it would only prove his accusation that she was emotionally unstable.
So Nala just continued folding the clothes in silence, head bowed, letting his poison fill the room.
The terror continued daily. He systematically undermined Nala’s authority as a mother.
If Nala prepared dinner, he came into the kitchen, tasted the food, and said in front of Zarya, “Honey, the soup is a little salty again. It’s okay. Tomorrow, we’ll order takeout.”
If Nala got ready to help Zarya with her homework, he interrupted her.
“Let me do it. The way Mommy teaches you is too complicated. You’re going to get confused.”
Nala felt smaller and smaller, more and more invisible in her own home. She began to doubt herself. Did she really cook badly? Was she really incapable of teaching her daughter?
He played his role too well, making Nala seem like an inept woman.
Zarya, trapped in the middle, began to show signs of confusion. It was clear she loved her mother, but she also enjoyed all the attention and gifts from her father. Sometimes Zarya clung to Nala as if seeking protection, but other times she seemed uncomfortable, especially after he whispered something to her.
One night, Nala couldn’t sleep. She walked silently to Zarya’s room to make sure her daughter was okay. She opened the door slightly.
Zarya was sleeping deeply. On her desk was the new tablet he had bought her. But as Nala got closer to tuck Zarya in, she saw something strange.
Zarya’s small hand was clutching something under the pillow. It wasn’t her favorite teddy bear.
Nala looked very carefully. Her heart skipped a beat.
It was Zarya’s old tablet. The cheap one with the screen cracked in several places—the one Nala always told her not to play with for fear the pieces of glass might hurt her.
Nala frowned. Why did Zarya still keep this broken tablet? Why hide it under the pillow when the newer tablet was on the desk?
Nala didn’t understand. She thought it was just a child’s emotional attachment to an old toy. She didn’t know that broken tablet held a secret that was going to change everything.
She returned to her room, her mind even more confused.
The climax happened a few days later.
Nala was waiting for Zarya to return from school. She had promised Zarya she would bake her favorite chocolate cake. But an hour passed after dismissal time, and Zarya didn’t arrive.
Nala called the school. They told her Zarya had been picked up by Tummaine.
Her heart sank. He hadn’t told her anything. She called him several times, but he didn’t answer.
Two hours passed. Three hours. Nala was almost crazy with worry, pacing back and forth in the living room with tears in her eyes.
It wasn’t until nine at night that she heard his car.
Zarya entered laughing, carrying a large bag full of things from an amusement park. Behind her, he walked calmly with a smirk.
“Where have you been, honey? Why did you take Zarya without telling me? I was dying of worry!” Nala shouted, her voice containing tears and rage.
“Daddy took me to Wonderland Park, Mommy! It was so much fun!” Zarya exclaimed happily.
He looked at Nala coldly.
“So what? I’m her father. I have the right to take my own daughter. Besides, you aren’t doing anything at home.”
“But you should have told me—”
“Why? So you could ruin our fun with your drama?”
It was then that Nala smelled it.
It was a woman’s perfume. A soft but unfamiliar scent permeating his shirt. It wasn’t Nala’s perfume, nor was it the cologne he usually wore.
“Honey, you…”
He followed the direction of Nala’s gaze. He knew she had smelled it. He didn’t flinch. Instead, he smiled.
He waited for Zarya to run to her room to put away her new toys. Alone, he approached Nala. His face was very close and his voice hissed low, full of venom.
“Did you notice? Did you really think I was going to live forever with a woman as boring as you? You are nothing compared to her.”
Nala took a step back, gasping for air. There was another woman. All of this, all the accusations, were nothing more than an attempt to get rid of her, to be with someone else.
“Who is she?” Nala whispered.
“None of your business. She is a successful, intelligent woman who knows how to please a man, unlike you.”
That night, Zarya came to Nala’s room.
“Mommy, why are you crying?”
Nala wiped her tears immediately.
“I’m okay, princess. My head just hurts a little.”
Zarya looked at her mother with a look hard to decipher.
“Are you really sick, Mommy? Daddy says that since you are sick, you are often sad and angry. Daddy said that if I go live with him later, Mommy will be able to rest and get better.”
Nala’s heart shattered. He had been injecting poison into her little daughter’s mind. He had manipulated Zarya into believing it was an act of kindness to leave her side because her mother was sick.
Nala hugged Zarya tight.
“Zarya, listen to me. I am not sick. I just love you so much. I promise I won’t get angry anymore.”
But the damage was already done. Nala saw hesitation in her daughter’s eyes.
He, who was listening to the conversation from the doorway, only sneered in the darkness. He walked past Nala, who was still stunned, and gave a little tap on his wife’s shoulder, feigning sympathy.
“Enjoy your time,” he mocked in a low voice in Nala’s ear. “Soon she won’t even want to call you Mom.”
The mediation hearing was a cruel joke.
They were seated in a small, stuffy room. The court-appointed mediator tried to find middle ground.
Attorney Abernathy began with a calm voice.
“Tummaine, Nala doesn’t ask for much. She only wants custody of Zarya, or at least shared custody. Regarding property, we can talk about it—”
Before he could finish, attorney Cromwell, well-dressed and expensive, interrupted him quickly.
“There is nothing to talk about,” Cromwell said harshly. He slammed the file he had in his hands onto the table. “Our client’s position is clear. Nala is the failed party in this marriage. It has been proven that she has failed in maintaining the home and raising the child. Our client demands full custody for Zarya’s future.”
He sat beside him with a blank face, as if he were the victim.
“I only want the best for my daughter,” he said with a tone of fake sadness. “Taking her mother away is the best for her.”
Nala trembled.
Cromwell chuckled.
“Nala, if you keep insisting, we will take this to trial. And I assure you that all the evidence we have will humiliate you. The photos, the credit card statements, the expert testimony. You had better sign this agreement. Our client is being benevolent by allowing you to leave the house without any countersuit.”
“Leave my house with nothing and without Zarya? Are you crazy?” Nala screamed.
The mediator tried to intervene, but he and his lawyer were inflexible. The mediation broke down completely.
Abernathy patted Nala on the shoulder as they left.
“Stay strong, Nala. The real fight begins now.”
The first day of trial approached. Nala had a knot in her stomach since morning. Abernathy reminded her to keep calm at all costs.
The courtroom was cold and intimidating, with high wooden walls, heavy chairs, and the judge’s gavel looking very authoritative.
He was sitting on the opposite side, looking very confident with attorney Cromwell.
The trial began.
Attorney Cromwell was first. He spoke fluently and his voice was loud and sure. He presented his version of the facts. He showed the photos of the messy house, accusing Nala of being a lazy and dirty housewife. He showed the credit card statements, accusing her of being wasteful and financially irresponsible.
“Your Honor,” Cromwell said dramatically, “while my client, Tummaine, worked hard to earn money, his wife was at home wasting it and neglecting her daughter and her home.”
Nala wanted to scream that it was all a lie—that he had set her up, that he had used the card, that he had taken the photos on purpose when she was sick—but the only thing she could do was clasp her hands under the table.
Abernathy stopped her with a reassuring look.
When it was Abernathy’s turn, he tried to refute. He explained that the photos were taken out of context. He explained that the credit card statements had been used by him himself. But his argument sounded weak. It was Nala’s word against the physical evidence.
The judge took notes, but his expression was unreadable.
And then came the moment Nala feared most.
“The plaintiff calls his expert witness,” Cromwell said. “Dr. Valencia, child psychologist.”
The courtroom door opened. A woman entered.
Nala held her breath.
The woman was beautiful, very elegant. She had her hair pulled back neatly, wore a professional blazer, and walked with a confident stride. She didn’t look like an evil woman at all. She looked convincing.
As the woman took her oath, Nala smelled it—the same perfume, the same fragrance that permeated his shirt that night.
Nala’s heart stopped.
It was her. His mistress. And she was posing as a child psychologist.
Valencia sat in the witness box. She spoke calmly, her diction clear, using psychological terms that sounded very professional and impressive.
“Yes, Your Honor,” Valencia began to testify, answering Cromwell’s question. “I conducted observations of the natural behavior of Mrs. Nala and her daughter Zarya over the last three months.”
“And what were your findings, Doctor?” asked Cromwell.
Valencia opened her notes.
“My findings were very concerning. I found a pattern of behavior in Mrs. Nala that tends to be inconsistent and emotionally volatile. There are signs of significant emotional distress.”
Valencia began to detail the lies one by one, turning facts into deadly weapons.
“First observation: at a shopping mall, Mrs. Nala pulled Zarya forcefully, speaking to her loudly, which made Zarya cry in fear in front of people. This shows a low capacity for emotional regulation.”
Nala closed her eyes. She remembered that day. Zarya had almost thrown herself toward the wrong escalator, and Nala had shouted and pulled Zarya back in shock.
“Zarya, be careful!”
She wasn’t angry. She was terrified that Zarya would get hurt. But Valencia had turned it into verbal abuse.
“Second observation: in a park,” Valencia continued, “Mrs. Nala seemed to be more absorbed in her phone, ignoring Zarya, who was playing alone. When Zarya fell, Mrs. Nala didn’t notice immediately. When she did, her reaction was exaggerated and tended toward hysteria, which further traumatized Zarya about the fall.”
Another lie.
Nala remembered she was texting about the grocery list he had asked for. Zarya tripped and Nala got genuinely scared. She ran immediately, hugged, and consoled Zarya. Her reaction was that of a concerned mother, not a hysterical one.
“My conclusion,” said Valencia, staring at the judge with a steady voice, “is that Mrs. Nala does not have the stable emotional capacity to raise a seven-year-old girl. There are strong signs of parentification syndrome, where Mrs. Nala subconsciously projects her own unhappiness and emotional problems onto the child. For Zarya’s mental health, I strongly recommend full custody for the father, Mr. Tummaine, who is the more stable figure.”
The room fell silent. Valencia’s testimony was very powerful, very scientific, very destructive.
Nala cried silently.
“It’s a lie,” she whispered to Abernathy. “It’s all a lie. She is his mistress. It’s her.”
“Calm down, Nala,” Abernathy replied tensely. “Don’t react. That’s what they want.”
He stood up for cross-examination. He tried.
“Dr. Valencia, are you sure you can make such a serious diagnosis based solely on distant observations?”
Valencia smiled slightly.
“On the contrary, counselor, natural observations without the subject being aware are the most accurate. There is no manipulation. It is pure, real behavior.”
“You were paid by Mr. Tummaine for this testimony, isn’t that right?”
“I was paid for my professional services, counselor, not for my conclusions. My conclusions are objective and based on data from the field,” she retorted cleverly.
Abernathy was at a dead end. Valencia had dodged too well. She had covered all the holes.
The trial adjourned for the day.
Nala left the room with her legs shaking. She felt destroyed. She saw him smiling slightly, nodding to Valencia with a look of satisfaction.
In the lobby, Nala leaned against the wall and sobbed.
“We lost, attorney. We lost. They have everything.”
Abernathy remained silent for a moment. Then he stared at him and Valencia, who were walking together in the distance, discreetly separated, but not entirely far apart.
“Not yet, Nala,” he said in a low voice, eyes narrowed. “I know something is wrong. The way she looks at him when she thinks no one sees her is not the way a professional psychologist looks at a client.”
He turned to Nala.
“We have to find out who she really is.”
A few days before the next hearing, Abernathy called Nala to his office. His face looked tired. The stack of papers on the desk looked thicker than before.
“Nala, I tried to trace the woman’s background,” Abernathy said bluntly. “The result is different from what we expected.”
Nala’s heart raced.
“What do you mean, attorney?”
“Her credentials are clean. Too clean,” Abernathy said, rubbing the bridge of his nose. “She is registered with the psychological association. She has a registered practice clinic. All the documentation is perfect. Either she is a real psychologist that your husband hired to lie for money, or he forged this entire identity very cleanly. The truth is, we cannot attack her by accusing her of being a fake psychologist. The court would dismiss our claim immediately.”
The brief hope Nala had held vanished instantly.
“So we can’t prove she’s lying?”
“No. We simply can’t prove she isn’t a psychologist. The only way is to refute her testimony. And that means you have to testify, Nala.”
He looked at her seriously.
“You have to tell your whole side of the story—about the photos, about the credit cards, about his behavior. And most importantly, you must not get emotionally upset. Cromwell will definitely try to provoke you. He will want you to look hysterical in front of the judge exactly as Valencia described you.”
Nala nodded silently.
“I will do it, attorney. I will try.”
The day arrived. It was Nala’s turn to sit on the witness stand.
After being sworn in, Abernathy began with gentle questions, guiding Nala to tell of her life as a housewife. Nala explained in a voice attempting to remain as calm as possible. She spoke of how she left her job to focus on caring for Zarya, explained her routine from dawn until late at night.
“About the photos of the messy house, Nala, can you explain the context?” asked Abernathy.
“Yes, attorney. Those photos were taken by my husband about two months ago. I was severely ill with a high fever for three days. At that time, I could barely get out of bed. I asked him to take care of the household, but he said he was too busy with work, so the house got very messy. I didn’t have the energy to clean,” Nala explained.
“And about the credit card statements?”
“It was an additional card in my name, but he had it more frequently. He said his main card often reached the limit with business matters. I believed him. I never bought those luxury bags nor that jewelry. I didn’t know about those charges until I saw them in the lawsuit documents,” Nala said.
She spoke with honesty. She saw some in the gallery begin to whisper. Some looked at her with sympathy. But the judge remained silent, his face unreadable.
Then came Cromwell’s turn.
The cunning lawyer stood up, smoothed his tie, and walked toward the witness stand with a sneer.
“Nala,” he began in a sickly sweet tone, “so you mean to say that your husband, Mr. Tummaine, who works hard and brings money home, set you up on purpose. Is that it?”
Nala stammered.
“I didn’t say that. I just said what happened.”
“But that’s how it sounds. The husband takes photos of the dirty house. The husband uses the credit card. Everything is the husband’s fault. It seems that you are not to blame for anything. Are you perfect?”
“Of course not. I’m not perfect. But I’m not a failure.”
“Not a failure?” Cromwell scoffed with disdain.
“Nala, you said you were sick when those photos were taken. Do you have any medical report proving you were gravely ill for three days?”
Nala remained silent.
“I didn’t go to the hospital. I just took medicine from the pharmacy. I thought I would recover.”
“So there is no proof,” Cromwell attacked quickly. “It’s just your word against real photographic evidence. Interesting.”
He moved to another topic.
“About the credit cards. You say your husband used them, but the card is in your name. Did you ever inform the bank that the card was being misused?”
“No.”
“Did you ever reprimand your husband?”
“No.”
“You said nothing. Doesn’t this prove you are negligent and financially irresponsible? Or does it mean you approved all the purchases?”
“I trusted him. He was my husband,” Nala’s voice rose.
“Blind trust,” snapped Cromwell. “A trust that ruined the family finances. And now you blame your husband.”
“I am not blaming—”
“Enough,” Cromwell raised his hand, returned to his table, and picked up a large printed photo. He held it up for the judge and everyone to see.
“Your Honor, I request permission to present Exhibit P12.”
Nala’s eyes widened with horror. It was a photo of her. Her in her bedroom a few weeks before the divorce papers arrived, hair disheveled, crying and screaming.
“Mrs. Nala, can you explain this photo?” asked Cromwell with a triumphant tone.
Nala trembled violently. Tears began to well up again.
“Isn’t this real proof of what Dr. Valencia said? Volatile emotions? Hysteria? Is this the face of a competent mother?”
“You don’t understand,” Nala wailed. Her tears were now pouring down. “That night… that night, my husband had just come home. He called me a useless wife. He said I was a burden. He insulted me. He said I didn’t deserve to be Zarya’s mother. He provoked me.”
“So, you admit it?” Cromwell attacked without giving her a breath. “You admit you screamed hysterically. You admit you lost control. You are emotionally volatile. Exactly as Dr. Valencia described, right?”
“No!” shouted Nala. She stood up from her chair. “He set me up! He took the photo of me in secret after hurting me. He is a devil. He is—”
“Enough!” The judge’s gavel struck hard.
“Witness, calm down. Sit down.”
Nala sobbed. Her shoulders shook. She slumped back into her chair.
Destroyed. Everything destroyed.
She had behaved exactly as they wanted. She looked hysterical. She looked unstable. She looked the image of the failed mother they had fabricated.
She looked toward his side. The man had his head bowed, making a fake grimace of sadness, as if he were hurt by his wife’s instability.
Cromwell smiled smugly. The judge shook his head slowly. His expression was clear. He had already taken a side.
That day’s trial ended with total destruction for Nala’s side. Abernathy tried to console her as they left, but Nala felt numb.
“It’s over, attorney,” she whispered weakly.
That night was the longest of her life.
The sentencing hearing was going to be the next day. Nala knew she was going to lose. She was going to lose Zarya.
She went into Zarya’s room. Her daughter was already asleep. He was not home, probably celebrating his victory with Valencia in advance.
Nala sat at the foot of the bed, stroking her daughter’s hair. Her tears fell silently onto Zarya’s cheek, and the girl stirred a little.
“Mommy,” Zarya opened her eyes half-asleep.
“Shh, go back to sleep, princess,” whispered Nala, her voice hoarse from crying. She hugged her daughter tight. “Maybe the last hug as a full mother. I want you to know, whatever happens tomorrow, Mommy loves you very much. Always.”
Sensing her mother’s sadness, Zarya hugged her back tightly.
“I love you too, Mommy.”
Nala undid the hug slowly. It was then she saw it again. The corner of the old cracked tablet was sticking out from under Zarya’s pillow. Zarya was clutching it tightly, even while sleeping.
Nala couldn’t understand why Zarya was so obsessed with that broken object. But that night she was too destroyed to think deeper about it. She simply kissed her daughter on the forehead and left to face the end of her world.
The courtroom was colder than usual. The morning air was heavy and suffocating.
Nala sat rigidly in her chair, eyes puffy and empty. She hadn’t slept all night.
Beside her, Abernathy stared ahead with a somber expression. He knew he had done everything possible, but like Nala, they faced a giant wall.
The atmosphere on the opposite side of the room was very different. He looked fresh and confident in a new suit. He smiled occasionally and exchanged quiet jokes with Cromwell. Victory was before his eyes.
In the gallery, Nala saw Valencia. The woman was seated elegantly dressed in a cream-colored dress, looking at Nala with a barely visible smile—the smile of the victor.
The judge entered. The room fell silent instantly.
Nala’s heart beat so hard it hurt.
“In the matter of the divorce petition, registry number, family court case number…” The judge began formally. “Today’s subject is the reading of the verdict, but before that, I request both parties present their closing arguments.”
Cromwell stood up first. He summarized his victory skillfully.
“Your Honor,” he said loudly, “during this trial, we have seen irrefutable evidence. The photographic proof showing Mrs. Nala’s neglect of household tasks. The financial proof showing her irresponsibility. And most importantly, the testimony of the eminent child psychologist, Dr. Valencia, who objectively and scientifically presented the defendant’s emotional instability.”
He pointed to Nala.
“We even witnessed Mrs. Nala’s hysterical conduct in this courtroom during the last trial, which supports Dr. Valencia’s diagnosis and is clearly recorded.”
He turned toward Tummaine.
“On the other hand, we have Mr. Tummaine—a capable father, financially successful, and above all, emotionally stable and genuinely concerned for his daughter’s future. Your Honor, the choice here is very clear. It is not about punishing the wife, but about saving the child. For Zarya’s best interest, I beg you to grant full custody to our client, Mr. Tummaine, and approve his request for division of assets.”
Cromwell sat down with a smug smile.
Now it was Abernathy’s turn. He stood up slowly, looked around the room without looking at the judge.
“Your Honor,” began Abernathy with a soft but firm voice, “what we have witnessed here is not proof. It is character assassination, a very well-planned defamation. Photos can lie. One can take a photo of the best chef’s kitchen in the world at the wrong moment and make it look dirty. Statements can be manipulated, especially when one party has total financial control and the trust of the other. And the expert testimony? The testimony of an expert who only observed from a distance and drew radical conclusions from a few fragments of incidents out of context—is that stronger than the deep maternal love a mother has accumulated over seven years?”
He looked directly at Tummaine.
“Your Honor, we are not saving a girl. We are witnessing a greedy husband try to get rid of his wife, steal her assets, and cruelly take away the only thing that is most precious to her—her daughter.
“Nala is a good mother,” his voice trembled slightly with emotion. “She is not perfect. No mother is. But she has dedicated her life to Zarya. Do not allow this well-woven defamation to destroy that bond. I beg you to judge with conscience.”
Abernathy sat down.
The room was silent. His argument had been excellent, emotional. But Nala knew it wasn’t enough. His argument was based on belief. Cromwell’s argument was based on physical evidence and expert testimony.
In the eyes of the law, the winner was already obvious.
The judge cleared his throat, put on his glasses, and opened a thick file in front of him. This was the moment.
“Having reviewed all documents from both parties, heard all testimonies, and considered all evidence presented,” the judge began with an expressionless tone.
Nala’s heart shrank.
“The court notes that the plaintiff, Mr. Tummaine, has been successful in presenting significant evidence,” the judge continued.
She lowered her head and closed her eyes.
“First, the visual evidence, that is, the photographs, demonstrated the negligence of the defendant, Mrs. Nala, in household management. Second, the financial evidence demonstrated a considerable spending imbalance on the credit card in the defendant’s name.”
Every sentence was a knife cut.
“And most damaging,” said the judge, his voice sounding definitive, “is the testimony of the expert witness, Dr. Valencia. Regarding Mrs. Nala’s emotional state. This testimony was unfortunately reinforced by the defendant’s own conduct in the last trial, providing the court with a very troubling image of the psychological environment for the child’s growth.”
Nala began to cry silently. It was over.
He looked at her and a slight cruel smile of victory appeared at the corner of his mouth. Behind him, Valencia sat up straighter in her seat, ready to applaud.
“With all considerations mentioned above, and especially for the best interest and mental health of the minor Zarya, the court rules—”
“Stop.”
The voice was small, but it cut through the silence of the courtroom. It was sharp and clear.
Everyone turned their heads in unison toward the source of the voice.
In the slightly open door at the back of the room stood Zarya.
She was alone, still in her school uniform. Obviously, she had snuck in.
His face went from arrogance to shock and horror.
“Zarya, what are you doing here? Get out of here!” he shouted in panic.
“Guard! Zarya! Sit down, princess!” he tried again with a tense voice.
But Zarya didn’t move. She walked into the courtroom. The sound of her small steps echoed on the marble floor.
“Zarya,” Daddy said, “turn around and sit down!” he shouted again, now half-standing.
His lawyer, Cromwell, was also bewildered. He stood up and shouted at the judge.
“Your Honor, this is a procedural outrage. This trial is confidential. A minor should not be here and should not interrupt the proceeding. Order your staff to remove the child!”
Nala was still frozen. She was confused. A part of her mind was shattering over the fact that Zarya was in this horrible place. The other part trembled with fear.
What was Zarya going to say? Had he succeeded in poisoning her completely? Would Zarya tell the judge she preferred her father?
The thought made Nala nauseous.
“Your Honor, out of consideration…” Abernathy’s voice rang out suddenly, stopping Cromwell. “This child has come with an obvious purpose. This is about her future. We cannot ignore her.”
The judge raised his hand. His face was grave.
“Silence, everyone.” His voice echoed.
He stared at Tummaine and Cromwell, silencing their protests. Then his gaze turned to Zarya. His expression softened.
Zarya approached slowly, her small steps echoing loudly on the silent marble. She stopped in the center between the tables of the two lawyers. She looked directly at the judge sitting on his high throne.
“Your Honor,” Zarya said with a trembling voice but clear to the whole room, “I’m sorry to interrupt.”
“It’s okay, princess,” said the judge with a more paternal tone. “Why are you here? Who brought you?”
“I came alone. My auntie brought me, but I snuck in. I heard my Daddy say my Mommy is bad.”
His eyes went wide.
“Zarya, watch your words!”
“Silence, Mr. Tummaine,” shouted the judge. “Let the child speak.”
Nala covered her mouth. Tears began to flow.
Zarya swallowed as if gathering courage. She looked at the judge again. Her pure, clear eyes showed sincerity.
“Daddy said my Mommy is bad. Daddy said my Mommy gets very angry. Daddy said my Mommy can’t take care of me,” she continued, her voice shaking slightly.
Nala_closed her eyes. This was the end. Zarya was going to repeat all of his lies.
But the next sentence made Nala open her eyes.
“But… can I show you something?” Zarya looked at the judge with pleading eyes. “Something my Mommy doesn’t know.”
That phrase hung in the air.
Something my Mommy doesn’t know.
Nala frowned. What did she mean?
Zarya turned and reached into her school backpack. From inside, she pulled out the old cracked tablet—the same one Nala had seen under the pillow.
“I recorded something. I want to show you, Your Honor.”
“This is absurd,” Cromwell jumped up again. “A recording from a child cannot be used as evidence. This is an invasion of privacy, recorded without permission.”
“That recording proves the lies of your expert witness, attorney Cromwell,” retorted Abernathy sharply. “This is very intriguing.”
“Enough arguing.” The judge banged his gavel. His eyes, previously paternal, now shone intensely. He sensed there was a big lie.
“Clerk, help this child. Connect that device to the court monitors right now.”
“No!” screamed Tummaine desperately. He gripped the edge of the table with white knuckles.
“I object, Your Honor. This is a setup!”
“Your objection is noted, Mr. Tummaine. Now, sit down,” ordered the judge.
A clerk approached Zarya quickly and carefully took the cracked tablet. He looked for a cable, and moments later, the large monitor screens on the courtroom wall went black and then showed Zarya’s tablet home screen.
He covered his face. Valencia behind him seemed to shake violently.
Zarya, now standing next to the clerk, looked at the screen. She didn’t look at Nala or her father. She was focused on her mission.
“This one,” she pointed to a video file in the gallery.
The clerk clicked on it. A video thumbnail appeared.
“Go ahead, princess,” said the judge. “Play the video.”
Zarya stretched out her small index finger. She pressed the play button on the screen.
The video started.
The large monitor screen flickered. The shot was slightly shaky and tilted. The angle was low, as if recorded from behind something. A quiet laugh was heard.
“It’s our living room,” whispered Nala, recognizing the sofa and the large plant pot in the corner of the room.
The video seemed to have been taken from behind that pot where Zarya often hid while playing hide-and-seek.
And then two figures entered the recorded shot.
Tummaine and Valencia.
Not Valencia in the professional blazer like in court, but Valencia in fine, comfortable loungewear. Her hair was down.
He entered laughing and immediately hugged Valencia from behind, kissing her on the neck.
“Oh my god,” a muffled exclamation was heard throughout the room in unison.
Nala froze with her breath caught in her throat.
So the perfume, her suspicions, everything was true. The woman who gave false testimony to ruin her was the same one sleeping with her husband in her house.
On the other side, Cromwell stared at the monitor with his mouth open. He turned to his client with a look of horror—as if saying, “You never told me this.”
In the gallery, Valencia lowered her head, trying to hide her face.
And then the voices of the figures in the video were heard clearly in the silence of the courtroom.
Valencia’s voice:
“Are you sure your plan will work? Your wife is so stupid.”
His voice laughed with certainty.
“Stupid and submissive. She won’t suspect anything. All the money has already been transferred to your account, baby.”
“Are you sure?”
Nala felt her legs fail. Her money, her joint account, had been transferred to Valencia’s account.
“Oh, God,” murmured Abernathy beside her, his eyes fixed on the screen.
The video continued. He sat on the sofa and pulled Valencia onto his lap.
His voice:
“Once the verdict comes out tomorrow, I will officially get custody of Zarya. We will sell this house from hell immediately and move to Switzerland, far away from her.”
Valencia’s voice, coquettish:
“And Zarya seems very attached to her mother.”
This was the part that hurt Nala the most. She held her breath waiting for his answer.
His voice, disdainful:
“Oh, the kid is easy to handle. Just give her a new tablet and she’ll forget her mother. You will be her new mother. A smarter, more successful, and much sexier mother.”
He kissed Valencia passionately in the video.
“Enough! Turn it off!” screamed Tummaine in rage.
He jumped from his chair, trying to run toward the clerk’s table to stop the video.
“Officers, restrain him!” shouted the judge with anger.
The two security guards guarding the door moved immediately. They overpowered him before he could advance, bending his arms behind his back.
He twisted like an animal in a trap.
“Let me go! It’s not true! It’s manipulated!” he screamed desperately.
“Silence him,” ordered the judge. “Continue the video. I want to see it to the end.”
The video continued playing, oblivious to the chaos in the room.
Now it was Valencia’s turn to speak.
Valencia’s voice:
“I’m still a little worried. What about my testimony as a psychologist? What if Nala’s lawyer refutes it with his observations?”
His voice, laughing again:
“I already prepared. I recorded her last week when she cried hysterically. Remember? I will provoke her again at the trial. I will insult her until she explodes. She will scream and cry in front of the judge.”
Nala sobbed. She remembered her testimony, the photo, her screams.
He had set her up.
His voice:
“Once she gets hysterical, your testimony will seem perfect. The judge will see for himself that she is an unstable, crazy woman. No one will believe her. They will believe Dr. Valencia—the professional.”
The video finally showed the two of them toasting with wine glasses, laughing.
The video ended.
The screen went black.
The room remained silent for a few seconds. The only thing heard was Nala sobbing and his panting breath under the guards’ control.
Everyone in the room—the judge, the clerks, the gallery, and even Cromwell—stared at the black screen with horror.
They had just witnessed a very well-planned evil conspiracy. Fraud, perjury, money laundering, and manipulation of the court.
In the gallery, some people began to turn their heads looking for Valencia.
“There she is! It’s the woman!” someone shouted.
Valencia realized she was completely exposed. In panic, she jumped from her seat and ran toward the back exit.
Zarya, the little heroine who had been watching the video that just played, turned her head. She didn’t look at her father, who was subdued. She looked at her mother. Her pure eyes met Nala’s, which were filled with tears.
The judge, face red with rage, raised his gavel high. He didn’t drop it in silence. He banged it hard on the desk.
“Silence, everyone! The court resumes. Officers, close all exits. No one leaves. Arrest that woman, Dr. Valencia, immediately.”
The room fell into controlled chaos. The bang of the furious judge’s gavel was both an order and a release of the tension that had frozen everyone.
The two security guards who had just subdued him now dragged him to a chair. He wasn’t screaming anymore. He was simply gasping. His eyes were frantic and his expensive suit was soaked in sweat.
He knew it was over.
At the back door, another commotion occurred. Valencia, in panic, couldn’t open the large door the judge had just ordered closed. She pulled the handle and pushed in vain. A female officer intercepted her quickly.
Valencia collapsed on the floor. Her professional mask had completely fallen. She was no longer the calm and convincing psychologist. She was just a scared woman, crying hysterically—exactly the image she had used in the photos to frame Nala.
Karma had arrived too fast and with cruelty.
“Bring her here,” ordered the judge with a cold and unforgiving voice.
The officers dragged the sobbing Valencia to the front and sat her in the witness stand, which now felt like the defendant’s bench.
Across the room, Cromwell looked like a melting wax doll. His face was pale and his tie was crooked. He no longer looked at the judge. He looked at the stack of papers piled in front of him without an answer. His career and reputation had been destroyed in an instant by a video from a child’s broken tablet.
He knew he was implicated. He might not have known about the affair, but he knew about the manipulated photo evidence and the testimony prepared to frame Nala.
Nala herself was still sitting. She watched the scene before her eyes like it was a movie. Her sobs had calmed down, replaced by a frozen shock.
Beside her, Abernathy gave her a gentle pat on the back, but his eyes stared fixated on the judge, ready for the final blow.
Zarya stood silently next to the clerk. She was the center of calm in the storm. She only watched her mother, as if making sure she was okay.
The judge took a deep breath and smoothed his robe. He looked at Tummaine, at Valencia, and then at Cromwell.
“Mr. Tummaine,” began the judge with a quiet but terrifying voice, “that video is the property of your daughter and was recorded in your own home. Do you still want to insist that it is manipulated?”
He raised his head, his face empty.
“She… she set me up,” he muttered.
It was a last pathetic attempt.
Valencia screamed immediately.
“Liar! You told me to do it! You told me you would marry me! You told me you would transfer all the money to my account! I did all this for you!”
“Silence!” The judge banged his gavel again. “Both are the same. Your confessions have already been recorded in the court record.”
The judge turned to Valencia.
“Miss Valencia, you sat on this stand under oath and gave false testimony. You used your professional credentials to destroy a mother’s life and aid in a crime. You not only violated your code of ethics, but you committed perjury before this court.”
The judge looked at Cromwell.
“And attorney Cromwell—did you know or should you have suspected that the evidence you presented, including this testimony, was false? You tried to provoke the witness in the last trial to fit your client’s false narrative. You have disgraced this profession. I will have the ethics committee revoke your law license.”
Cromwell bowed his head, unable to say anything.
Finally, the judge looked at Tummaine. His gaze was so piercing it seemed to flay the man alive.
“Mr. Tummaine, you entered this courtroom demanding justice. You accused your wife of failure, accused her of instability, demanded her assets, and, most heinous of all, demanded to separate a child from her mother.”
The judge lifted his lawsuit file and held it up.
“Let’s review your lawsuit.
“First, the accusation that the wife failed and neglected the home? Proven false. The video just demonstrated that you conspired to defame her.” The judge threw a sheet from the file to the floor.
“Second, the accusation that the wife was financially irresponsible and wasteful? Proven false. The video is a confession that you stole money from your joint account and transferred it to your mistress’s account. This isn’t just defamation; it is theft.” He threw the second sheet.
“Third, the accusation that the wife was emotionally unstable, backed by false expert testimony? Proven as a blatant scheme. The video proves you conspired to provoke your wife, record her in secret, and use it to deceive this court.” He threw the third sheet.
“Your entire lawsuit,” the judge’s voice rose, “is a pile of garbage based on lies, greed, and adultery.”
“The court dismisses entirely the divorce petition presented by Mr. Tummaine.”
The gavel struck hard, but the judge wasn’t finished.
He looked at Abernathy and Nala.
“The court will not stop here. Based on this new irrefutable evidence, the court rules to protect the victim.
“One,” the judge raised a finger, “full custody of the minor Zarya is granted unconditionally to her biological mother, Mrs. Nala.”
Nala gasped. The tears now flowing were of relief. She looked at Zarya.
“Two,” continued the judge, “Mr. Tummaine’s divorce suit has been dismissed. However, the court suggests that Mrs. Nala file a countersuit right now. Mrs. Nala, do you wish to divorce your husband?”
Abernathy whispered.
Nala, with a trembling but firm voice, looked directly at her now-defeated husband.
“Yes, Your Honor. I demand a divorce right now.”
“Good,” exclaimed the judge. “The court grants the divorce to Mrs. Nala on the grounds of adultery and fraud by the husband. Full custody to Mrs. Nala.
“Three,” the judge stood up. “Now, all assets in the name of Mr. Tummaine and Miss Valencia will be frozen immediately. The court orders a full investigation to trace all funds stolen from Mrs. Nala. The house currently occupied is declared total property of Mrs. Nala and Zarya.
“And four,” the judge’s voice now resonated throughout the room, “based on the video evidence and the confessions in this room, I order the immediate arrest of Mr. Tummaine and Miss Valencia for multiple criminal offenses, including conspiracy to commit fraud, perjury, domestic theft, and tampering with evidence in a court of law. Take them away.”
The security guards immediately handcuffed him. The man who had entered that morning with arrogance was now taken out with his head bowed. He walked past Nala. He didn’t dare look his wife in the eye.
Valencia was also handcuffed. Her screams dried up, leaving only a puffy and messy face. She was dragged away. Her career and her freedom were gone.
Nala was still sitting, trembling. Abernathy smiled from ear to ear.
“We won, Nala. We won.”
Nala couldn’t speak. She simply stood up and walked slowly toward the center of the room.
Zarya ran toward her. Nala knelt and hugged her daughter tightly as if hugging her savior. She cried on her small shoulders. Not tears of sadness, but tears of a mother saved by her little heroine.
The aftermath of judgment day spread like wildfire. The story of the broken tablet made headlines everywhere. The story of the greedy husband, the fake psychologist, and the seven-year-old heroine dominated local news for weeks.
The first few weeks were a blur for Nala and Zarya. Abernathy took care of everything. By order of the judge, all of his and Valencia’s assets were frozen. The investigation proved that he had transferred nearly a million dollars to Valencia’s account over the last year. All the money was seized and returned to Nala’s new account.
The big cold house was now officially Nala’s.
But she couldn’t stay there anymore. Too many bad memories. Too many shadows of him and Valencia in every corner.
With Abernathy’s consent, Nala sold the house. The proceeds from the sale were more than enough to start a new life.
The punishment for the villains was swift and severe. Given the overwhelming evidence, he was sentenced to twelve years in prison for fraud, theft, and perjury. Valencia, whose psychologist credentials turned out to be real but criminally used, was sentenced to eight years, and her license to practice was permanently revoked.
The cunning attorney Cromwell was immediately disbarred by the ethics committee and faced criminal charges for his participation in the conspiracy.
Karma had been paid in full.
Three months after that judgment day, the laughter of children was heard in a small green park. Nala, with the weight of worry gone from her face, smiled as she watched Zarya on the swing.
They had moved not to a big house, but to a modest and cozy three-bedroom apartment. It was full of photos of the two of them and smelled of cookies Nala had baked.
Nala had started a small catering business from home. Her culinary skills, which her ex-husband always belittled, were now praised by many. Orders were coming in. She was busy and tired, but happy. She was independent.
“Mommy, look!” Zarya ran toward Nala, who was sitting on a park bench. Her hands were dirty with soil. “The flowers are going to bloom soon!”
Nala smiled, stroking Zarya’s short hair.
“Wow, my daughter is very good at planting things.”
They sat side by side for a while, enjoying the afternoon sun. There was a question Nala hadn’t had the chance to ask calmly.
“Princess,” began Nala softly, “can I ask you something?”
“What, Mommy?” Zarya looked at her with clear eyes.
“The video on the old tablet. Why? Why did you record it?”
Zarya was silent for a moment, as if remembering.
“Because I didn’t like Auntie Valencia.”
“Why didn’t you like her?”
“Auntie Valencia pretended to be nice. Smiled at Mommy and talked to you at the mall. But when Mommy went to the bathroom, she told Daddy, ‘Your wife takes too long.’ And in the park, too. She saw me, but she told Daddy that Mommy wasn’t watching me. But Mommy was watching me.”
Nala was amazed. Her little daughter was a sharp observer.
“And that night,” continued Zarya, “Daddy said he was working late, but I heard his car come back. I wanted to show Daddy my new drawing. But when I went down, I saw Daddy come in with Auntie Valencia. Daddy hugged her right away. I got scared, so I hid behind the flower pot. So I recorded there. Yes, I used the old tablet to record. I remembered Mommy said that if there are bad people, there must be proof. And I had the old tablet with me.”
Nala’s heart warmed. She had forgotten she had said that.
“But, princess,” asked Nala again. This was the most important question. “Why didn’t you tell Mommy? Why did you keep it a secret?”
Zarya interrupted herself in a low voice.
“Daddy said Mommy shouldn’t know.”
Nala frowned.
“Daddy told you that?”
“Yes. In the video, Daddy told Auntie Valencia, ‘My wife is stupid. She won’t know.’ I thought it was a big secret because Daddy said Mommy shouldn’t know, so I kept it. I didn’t want Daddy to get mad if Mommy found out.”
It was the pure logic of a child. She had aggravated her father’s crime, but she had kept it secret because her own father had told her her mother shouldn’t know.
“So why did you show it in court?”
“Because the judge was going to take Zarya away from Mommy. Daddy said Mommy was bad. And Auntie Valencia also said Mommy was bad. And that’s not true.”
Zarya had tears in her eyes.
“I don’t want to be separated from Mommy. Mommy isn’t bad. Mommy is the best mom. So I had to show the judge that Daddy and Auntie Valencia are the bad ones.”
Nala couldn’t hold back anymore. She hugged Zarya tightly. She cried tears of joy.
For all this time, she had suffered his accusations that she was a failed mother. She had doubted herself, felt destroyed.
But before her was the strongest proof that she hadn’t failed. She had raised an incredible daughter, a pure, sharp girl who could distinguish truth from falsehood. A brave girl with the courage to act alone to protect her mother. A girl with a pure sense of justice.
“Thank you, princess,” whispered Nala into her daughter’s hair. “Thank you for saving me.”
Zarya hugged her.
“I love you, Mommy.”
“I love you too, Zarya.”
Nala undid the hug and looked at her daughter’s bright face. Finally, she understood. She had never failed.
She had just been raising a heroine. And now both were free for a new beginning.