In court, his attorney argued the ticket was purchased during marriage.
Tara presented evidence: personal funds, receipt, and Mark’s coercive behavior.
The judge asked Mark directly, “Did you access her location without permission?”
“Yes,” he admitted.
“Temporary injunction denied,” the judge ruled. “Ticket may be processed.”
Outside the courthouse, Mark caught up to me.
“You owe me,” he said.
“For what?” I asked.
“For standing by you.”
“You stood next to me,” I replied. “You didn’t stand with me.”
The payout cleared two weeks later.
No confetti. Just a notification.
Deposit completed.
Mom called for a “family meeting.”
We met at a restaurant.
“This is a blessing for all of us,” she began.
“For all of us?” I asked.
“You don’t need that much,” Lauren said carefully.
Kyle added, “You can at least fix Mom’s roof.”
I folded my hands.
“When I said I was in trouble,” I asked, “why didn’t anyone ask if I was okay?”
Silence.
“You’re always fine,” Mom said finally.
“And now?” I asked.
“Now we’re family.”
“Family doesn’t activate when there’s money,” I said.
“So we get nothing?” Kyle demanded.
“You get exactly what you offered,” I replied.
“Which is what?” Lauren asked.
“Distance.”
Mom stared at me. “You’ve changed.”