She looked at the second page again, then the fourth, then a certified filing clipped near the back.

The silence lengthened.

Three minutes in a courtroom is a lifetime.

The air conditioning hummed in the ceiling vents, but sweat gathered anyway along Julian’s hairline. He tugged once at his collar. His attorney whispered something to him, but Julian’s eyes were fixed on the judge.

Then Judge Mercer lowered the papers, removed her glasses, and laughed.

It was not a social laugh. It was not polite. It was the sharp, incredulous sound of a woman encountering a degree of male overconfidence so reckless it crossed over into comedy.

The sound cracked through the courtroom.

Julian went pale.

Judge Mercer leaned toward the microphone on her desk, amusement draining out of her face and leaving only cold authority behind.

“Attorney Julian,” she said, drawing out his title just enough to make it sting, “do you truly wish to maintain this financial disclosure under penalty of perjury?”

That word landed in the room like a dropped blade.

Perjury.