He sat there in his three-thousand-dollar suit, laughing with his high-priced shark of a lawyer, pointing a manicured finger at the empty chair beside me. Keith Simmons thought the divorce was already over. He thought that by stripping me of my bank accounts, canceling my credit cards, and isolating me from our friends, I would crumble into dust. He had even told the judge during the deposition that I was too incompetent to hire counsel.
But Keith forgot one crucial detail about my past. Specifically, he forgot whose blood runs through my veins.
When the courtroom doors eventually swung open, the smirk didn’t just vanish from Keith’s face. The color drained from his entire existence, leaving him looking like a man who had just realized he was standing on a trapdoor.You are about to witness the most brutal courtroom takedown in the history of the Manhattan Civil Division. But before the gavel fell, there was only the smell of stale floor wax, old paper, and my own suffocating fear.
Chapter 1: The Arena
Courtroom 304 of the Manhattan Civil Courthouse was a windowless box designed to crush dreams. The air was recycled and cold, carrying the accumulated despair of a thousand broken marriages. The fluorescent lights hummed overhead with the persistence of mosquitoes, casting everything in a sickly yellow glow that made even the healthiest person look jaundiced.
For Keith, however, the atmosphere smelled like victory.
I watched him adjust the cuffs of his bespoke navy jacket—Brioni, probably, purchased during one of his “business trips” to Milan. He leaned back in the leather chair at the plaintiff’s table, checking his watch—a vintage Patek Philippe that he’d bought with our joint savings “for investment purposes”—and let out a sharp, derisive exhale through his nose.“She’s late,” I heard him whisper to the man beside him. “Or maybe she finally realized it’s cheaper to just give up and go live in a shelter.”
Beside him sat Garrison Ford, and if Keith was a predator, Garrison was the apex hunter. Garrison wasn’t just a lawyer; he was a blunt instrument wrapped in silk. A senior partner at Ford, Miller & O’Connell, he was known in New York legal circles as the “Butcher of Broadway.” He didn’t just win divorce cases; he incinerated the opposition until there was nothing left but ash and a settlement that favored his client down to the last teaspoon.
Garrison smoothed his silver tie, his eyes scanning the docket with predatory boredom. He was a man in his late fifties, with perfectly styled gray hair and the kind of tan that came from winter weekends in the Bahamas. His suit probably cost more than most people’s monthly rent.“It doesn’t matter if she shows up, Keith,” Garrison murmured, his voice like gravel grinding on glass. He didn’t bother whispering; he wanted me to hear. “We filed the emergency motion to freeze the joint assets on Monday. She has no access to liquidity. No retainer means no representation. No representation against me means she walks away with whatever scraps we decide to toss her.”
Keith smirked, looking across the aisle at me with the expression of a man who’d already won.
