Then another.
Then went back to the first.
Three minutes in a courtroom is forever.
The vents hummed overhead. Sweat appeared at Caleb’s hairline. His lawyer leaned toward him and whispered something. Caleb never looked away from the bench.
Then Judge Holloway lowered the pages, removed her glasses, and laughed.
Not politely.
Not socially.
It was the sharp, incredulous laugh of a woman who had just encountered a level of male overconfidence so reckless it had crossed into comedy.
The sound cracked through the courtroom.
Caleb went pale.
Judge Holloway leaned toward the microphone. All the amusement vanished from her face and left only authority behind.
“Attorney Caleb,” she said, lingering just enough on the title to make it sting, “do you truly wish to maintain this financial disclosure under penalty of perjury?”
Perjury.
The word landed in the room like steel.
By then it had already been living in my mind for months, ever since Thanksgiving. Ever since the day my disappointing marriage revealed itself as something darker—a criminal scheme wrapped in cologne and legal jargon.
My mind moved backward to that Thursday in November, the exact day I stopped being prey.