Her Sister Tried To Steal One House. The Judge Found Eleven More.-Lian

The first thing I noticed in the courtroom was the smell of old wood polish.

Not justice.

Not fear.

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Not the stale coffee sitting in a paper cup two seats away from me.

Just wood polish, wet wool coats, and rainwater drying on a courthouse floor that had probably watched better families pretend to be decent.

It had stormed that morning.

The rain came sideways, slapping the courthouse windows and dripping from umbrellas beneath the wooden benches like quiet little clocks.

I sat at the respondent’s table with my hands folded over a folder I had checked so many times the corners had softened.

Across from me, my sister Nicole sat in a cream suit that probably cost more than my first car.

Her blond hair was pinned low.

Her pearl earrings were small enough to seem tasteful and expensive enough to make the point anyway.

She looked calm, gentle, and almost prayerful.

Nicole had always known how to look soft when she wanted something hard.

Beside her, her husband Chris Irving leaned back as if the courtroom had been rented for his convenience.

He wore a charcoal suit, a pale tie, and the expression of a man who believed confidence could substitute for honesty.

Before the hearing began, he brushed past my shoulder and whispered, “Your little real estate game ends here.”

I smelled cedar in his cologne.

Something sharp under it too.

I did not answer.

There are moments when silence is not weakness.

Sometimes silence is a locked front door.

The bailiff called the room to order, and Judge Eleanor Brown entered in a black robe that moved quietly around her ankles.

Everyone rose.

Behind me, my mother’s bracelet jingled.

My father cleared his throat too loudly.

I did not turn around.

I did not have to.

I could picture them perfectly.

Richard Manning, square jaw tight with righteousness.

Susan Manning, chin lifted, handbag clutched in both hands like morality might fall out if she loosened her grip.

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