Father Called Her An Impostor In Court — Then The Sealed Letter Arrived-heuh

“She’s an impostor,” my father shouted in court, demanding everything I had.

Then my lawyer handed the judge a sealed letter from the Pentagon.

The judge slowly removed his glasses and said, “All rise.”

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My father’s face went pale.

“Wait… what?”

I had spent most of my life learning not to react when Thomas Bennett raised his voice.

That morning, in court, he raised it for strangers.

He stood across the aisle in a dark suit that looked too tight at the shoulders, his face red with the confidence of a man who believed volume could become truth if he used enough of it.

“That woman is an impostor,” he said.

His finger pointed at me, not wavering.

“A shadow hiding behind a stolen uniform.”

The room smelt of damp wool, burnt coffee, and floor polish.

Rain had followed everyone inside, clinging to coats and umbrellas, leaving dark marks on the tile near the doorway.

Somewhere behind me, a radio crackled once, then fell silent.

My hands were on the table.

Steady hands had saved my life more than once, though no one in that room was allowed to know how.

The judge paused with one hand near his glasses.

The stenographer stopped typing.

My solicitor looked at me, just briefly, and I gave him nothing but the smallest nod.

Thomas had waited years for a room where he could make me smaller in front of witnesses.

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