“Take your brat and go to hell,” my husband snarled at my seven-year-old in the middle of our 10 a.m. divorce hearing. “The ruling is final. I get everything,” his attorney smirked. I didn’t cry. I didn’t protest. I simply passed the judge a sealed black folder. The room fell into a suffocating silence. As the judge began reading the concealed financial records aloud, my ex’s smug expression drained of all color…
At 10:03 a.m., my husband told my seven-year-old son to go to hell.
By 10:17, everyone in that courtroom understood why I hadn’t shed a single tear.
“Take your brat and go to hell,” Daniel hissed across the table, quiet enough to feign privacy, sharp enough for every ear to catch. “The ruling is final. I get everything.”
My son, Noah, sat beside me in his small navy blazer, his fingers knotted into the sleeve of my coat. His face didn’t move, but his breathing shifted—too shallow, too careful. The kind of breathing children learn when adults become dangerous.
I covered his hand with mine.
Daniel’s lawyer, Malcolm Voss, rose with practiced composure. “Your Honor, my client has submitted full financial disclosures. The assets in question were built through his medical investment group before and during the marriage. Mrs. Hale made no meaningful contribution.”
Daniel smiled.
Behind him, Elise crossed her legs.
Elise—my former best friend. Elise, who used to sit on my kitchen floor with a glass of wine and call my son her nephew. Elise, who now wore Daniel’s hand on her shoulder like a prize.
Judge Marlowe looked exhausted. Divorce court had a way of draining the air out of every room. “Mrs. Hale, your attorney withdrew last week. You understand you may request a continuance.”