They Called Her Penniless Until Agents Entered The Courtroom-ngyen

The courtroom doors shut behind Emily Carter with a heavy crack that travelled through the brass handles and seemed to settle into every polished bench.

The air smelt of floor wax, stale paper, and coffee left too long on a warmer somewhere beyond the clerk’s desk.

Morning light came through the high windows in pale blocks, too clean for a room built to hold ugly truths.

Image

Her father was already sitting on the other side.

Her mother sat beside him with her handbag in her lap, both hands resting on the clasp as if she could hold the family together by gripping leather.

Jason, Emily’s older brother, stood near their attorney, Arthur Vance, wearing a smile that had once taught her to keep her shoulders low and her voice lower.

Seven years had passed since Emily had been close enough to smell his cheap mint gum.

Seven years had passed since she had walked out of the family house with one duffel bag, a split lip, and the papers her grandmother had told her never to lose.

It amazed her how quickly the body remembered.

A room could change, the clothes could improve, the years could pass, and still one look from the wrong person could place you back on the hallway floor.

Arthur Vance stood before the judge had even settled fully into the file.

“Your Honour,” he began, smooth and confident, “the plaintiff has not retained counsel. She plainly cannot afford representation, and she has provided no evidence that she can maintain the estate in question. We ask for immediate summary judgment to force the sale.”

Emily heard the words land exactly where he meant them to land.

No counsel.

No money.

No standing.

No chance.

Her father leaned back, folding his arms across his chest.

He did not lower his voice.

“Let her sink, Vance. Emily was always a lost cause. She’s got nothing.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *