They Mocked My Uniform, Then The Judge Whispered Nightfall-heuh

My parents laughed when I entered the courtroom in my military uniform.

They had not laughed loudly, because even they understood that a courtroom had rules, but it was there all the same.

It was in my father’s tilted mouth.

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It was in my mother’s sigh.

It was in the way my brother looked down at his cuffs, as if my presence were a social inconvenience he was too well dressed to acknowledge.

I had known that laugh for most of my life.

It had followed me through school reports, training applications, promotions, long absences, and every quiet achievement that did not fit the version of me they preferred.

To them, I was still Victoria Hayes, the awkward second child who never quite shone at the right dinner table.

I was the daughter who worked too hard.

The daughter who took things too seriously.

The daughter who had joined the military and, in their minds, disappeared into paperwork, orders, and ceremonies they could not be bothered to understand.

That morning, the air outside the courtroom was cold enough to make people keep their coats buttoned indoors.

Rain had followed everyone in from the street, darkening hems, dampening collars, and leaving a faint mineral smell against the polished floors.

I remember the notice board by the doors, the court list clipped under clear plastic, the ordinary black lettering that reduced years of danger and silence to one neat line on a page.

I remember the weight of my folder under my arm.

It was not large.

Three documents, one sealed note, one authorisation sheet, and a copy of evidence that had travelled through more hands than my family would ever imagine.

I remember straightening my cuff before I went in, not because it needed straightening, but because discipline gives the hand something to do when memory is trying to climb up your throat.

My service dress uniform was immaculate.

Every ribbon sat where it should.

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