The Franklin County courtroom was dead quiet, save for the low, annoying buzz of old fluorescent lights overhead.
Standing next to her attorney, Emma Caldwell placed her palm on the bulge of her pregnant belly. She looked tired—exhausted to the core, with her pale face and dark rings under her eyes. Opposite her was her husband Daniel, impeccably dressed in a suit made of navy material that was probably more expensive than her monthly mortgage payments. He was already without his wedding ring. Beside him was Vanessa Price, who bent towards him every other minute to whisper something into his ear.
“Mrs. Caldwell,” Judge Margaret Whitaker put on her reading glasses and looked down at her, “as per the document, you wish to get a divorce immediately and waive your rights over the house, savings accounts, cars, and business assets. Is that correct?”
Emma’s defense attorney made a move to speak. “Your honor, my client feels…”
“I am talking to Mrs. Caldwell,” the judge said sharply.
Emma raised her chin. “Yes, Your Honor. I don’t want anything that belongs to him.”
A high-pitched laughter of triumph came from Vanessa. Judge Whitaker sent a glare in her direction. “You interrupt my courtroom once more, and you’ll wait out in the hallway.” Turning his attention back to Emma, she began to speak steadily. “I don’t want the house he brought her into when I was at my doctor’s appointments. I don’t want the cash for the lies he told; I simply want to have my child away from him.”
Daniel pulled back his chair forcefully, rising to his feet. “This is absurd! My wife is mentally unstable at the moment. Emotional. She is trying to paint me as a monster due to spite!”
“Take your seat, Mr. Caldwell,” the judge said smoothly. Daniel slumped back into the chair, turning an angry shade of red.
Judge Whitaker put the folder on her desk. “Before we proceed further, there is an issue that needs to be settled first. Not long ago, I met a little girl sobbing near the vending machines. She had some disturbing information to reveal about her father and some other woman.”
Daniel’s complexion turned pale. Vanessa tensed up.
“Bailiff, please get her in!”
The thick, heavy double doors opened to reveal a little six-year-old girl, dressed in a thin yellow cardigan and holding on to an old stuffed rabbit.
“Lily?” Emma said.
But hadn’t Daniel told Emma that Lily was in school and that she wasn’t tough enough to be at court? Here she was staring at her father with clear terror.
“Lily, honey, you haven’t done anything wrong,” Judge Whitaker consoled her.
Daniel once again stood, but this time with a strained voice. “This is absolutely inappropriate! My daughter should have nothing to do with a property dispute!”
“That is until your daughter decided to go to the judge because she was upset!” Judge Whitaker said.
Lily moved slowly up the aisle and stood next to Emma. “I’m sorry, Mommy Emma, for not telling you sooner,” she said with teary eyes.
Daniel’s lawyer sprang to his feet. “Your Honor, may we have a recess?”
“Denied!” the judge snapped.
Lily twisted her rabbit’s ear. “She told me Daddy was going to make me leave if I said anything,” pointing to Vanessa.
Vanessa shot upright. “I never threatened Lily like that…”
“Don’t argue!” Judge Whitaker shouted, pounding her gavel again. “Stop talking to the child!”
Lily managed to meet Emma’s eyes. “Daddy and Vanessa were in your bedroom when you went to the doctor. Vanessa said your baby should get nothing since you won’t be around for long.”
The collective shock resonated within the gallery. Gone, soon. The phrase rang in Emma’s head, and she instantly made sense of the strange occurrences from the last few months.
Daniel making her tea every night and telling her she was being forgetful due to the pregnancy. Changing all their passwords “in order to spare her from any kind of stress.” Losing her keys and papers and pretending to be really worried about her sanity. It had nothing to do with her being pregnant. Daniel was setting her up.
“Daddy put some papers in mommy’s tea canister,” sobbed Lily. “Vanessa told me that Mommy Emma would sign whatever they wanted after she gave birth because she’d be too tired to read the papers.”
It was clear that Daniel was physically ill from fear. His rage had turned into pure terror. Emma recalled all the paperwork about finances and insurance that he had insisted she sign, saying that it was simply standard pre-admission paper work for hospitals. This was his way of presenting her mentally unfit.
The eyes of Judge Whitaker grew cold. “This court has decided that all marital assets are hereby frozen pending further investigation.”
Some two hours later, Emma was sitting at a cold wooden bench in the courthouse’s freezing hallway, holding Lily’s hand tightly. Then her lawyer came to her, carrying a manila envelope, and squatted down in front of them.
“I found it all,” he said. “Judge ordered the search of Daniel’s car. Found a folder he was keeping hidden under his spare tire inside the trunk. There are quitclaim deeds, property transfers, and even custody agreements that would make you ‘incompetent’ if anything went wrong while delivering the baby.”
Emma could not remember how to breathe. “Incompetent?”
“Yes, he was even maintaining a list of your ‘unstable and erratic behavior’ by logging it down. He deliberately canceled your scheduled appointments behind your back just to act concerned when you missed them. He was cutting you off from everyone.”
Lily was leaning into Emma’s side. “I don’t know what all that paper meant, Mommy.”
“You saved us, Lily,” Emma whispered fiercely, wrapping her arm securely around Lily. “You have no idea.”
Vanessa and Daniel were stepping out of a side door down the hallway, but any hint of poise had been stripped away. Daniel stormed over to Lily. “Come on over here, Lily,” he demanded.
Lily shrunk away from him. Emma’s lawyer got up in front of him. “Stay away. Don’t you dare touch her.”
“Mr. Caldwell,” Judge Whitaker’s voice could be heard from down the hall as she was coming out of her office. “Emergency protective orders are being filed right now. Until this matter is sorted out, there will be no unsupervised contact whatsoever between you and Mrs. Caldwell and Lily.”
“She’s my daughter!”
“She’s a child. Not a bargaining chip.”
Daniel looked angrily at Emma. “It’s all your fault. You destroyed this.”
Lily rose from the bench. “Mommy Emma didn’t send me here. I just came by on my own. I heard what you were saying inside the garage. You told Vanessa that nobody would believe Mommy Emma, no matter what she said, since she always cries too much.”
Daniel was completely silent.
Emma felt tears sting her eyes. Even though she was not Lily’s birth mother, she had raised her from the age of three. She had been the one making lunch for her, combing her hair, and hugging her in bed when she had nightmares. Daniel had always been able to manipulate the situation, using their lack of biological relation to force Emma to do what he wanted, threatening to cut her out of Lily’s life if she didn’t cooperate.
Three months later, the final hearing came. Daniel appeared older by ten years. Vanessa wasn’t even present, having fled the scene weeks earlier. Everything had come out in the forensic audit: offshore bank accounts, fraudulent signatures on property titles, and text messages between Daniel and Vanessa that detailed the entire conspiracy.
Emma was dressed in an unadorned black dress. Noah, her infant son, slept quietly in his car seat on the floor, and Lily sat by her side with pride.
Judge Whitaker wasted no time; she revoked Daniel’s right to any property from the marriage, awarding the house solely to Emma, and ordering that any visitation of Lily in the future was to be under strict supervision of court social workers. The fraud charges against him would take place separately.
The judge’s eyes fell on both Emma and Lily. “Considering the timeline and the presented information, this court acknowledges the psychological and maternal attachment of Mrs. Caldwell to the child, awarding her total custody rights.”
Emma put her hands to her face and sobbed uncontrollably from sheer happiness. Lily held her in an embrace.
From across the courtroom, Daniel glared at them with hate. “You stripped everything from me.”
Emma glanced at her sleeping infant and then at Lily and then her eyes met Daniel’s.
“No. I just stopped letting you take everything from us.”
And with that, the judge brought down the gavel one final time.
Outside, the cold air was a relief. Emma swapped the heavy car seat to her other arm, her fingers stiff. Lily walked right at her hip, a tight grip on Emma’s coat sleeve.
At the car, Lily stopped and looked up. “Are we going home now?”
She faltered on the word home, thinking of the kitchen in which Daniel would brew that tea and the bedroom in which he had spent months deceiving her. Daniel’s smell would still be there.
But seeing Lily’s messy braids and hearing the baby breathe from his carrier, she knew they could scrub the smell right out of there. They could paint the walls and open the windows and finally sit down for breakfast without tiptoeing through.
Her chest no longer felt tight.
“Sure thing, sweetheart,” Emma said, unlocking the car door. “Let’s go home.”
