She Faced Him Alone In Court, Then Removed Her Coat-Teptep

Preston Grant arrived at the divorce hearing as if it were a meeting he had already won.

He wore the same dark suit he chose for boardrooms, funerals and apologies he never meant.

His solicitor sat beside him with a tidy pile of documents and a fountain pen placed squarely across the top page.

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Behind him, Vivian sat in her pearls.

She did not need to say anything.

Vivian had spent years perfecting the kind of silence that made other people feel small.

I sat across the courtroom in a navy dress and a thick coat fastened to my throat.

The room was too warm for it.

The heating clicked somewhere beneath the wooden panels, and the air carried the dry smell of paper, old polish and damp wool from coats left drying on chair backs.

Outside, rain pressed softly against the windows.

Inside, every sound felt too close.

Preston looked at me, leaned back, and smiled.

“Couldn’t afford a lawyer anymore?”

He said it loudly enough for the people nearest us to hear.

Not too loudly, of course.

Preston understood performance.

He knew how to wound someone while leaving just enough room to claim he had only been joking.

A woman in the gallery lowered her eyes.

A man near the door cleared his throat.

The clerk kept writing, but her pen slowed.

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