The protective order hearing was scheduled for a Thursday morning in county court. I wore a navy suit that hung a little looser because stress had stolen my appetite for weeks. Tasha sat behind me in the gallery. My lawyer, Andrea Bennett, organized the evidence into neat tabs: urgent care records, photos timestamped thirty-seven minutes after the incident, the police report, screenshots of Ryan’s messages, credit card statements showing previous “loans” to Nicole that Ryan had pressured me into covering, and security footage from our neighbor’s porch camera showing the movers, the officer, and Ryan storming up the walkway that afternoon.

Ryan arrived in a charcoal suit with a wounded expression. Nicole sat behind him, dressed like she was attending a brunch she didn’t want to miss.

Under oath, Ryan tried calm first. He said he had been under stress. He said the coffee slipped during an argument. He said I had overreacted because our marriage had already been strained. But then Andrea displayed the photo of my face—red and blistered along the cheekbone and jaw—and asked him to explain how a “slip” traveled across a six-foot kitchen with enough force to shatter a mug by the sink.