Her Sister Called Her Legally Stupid, Then the Judge Opened the Folder-mdue - Chainityai

Her Sister Called Her Legally Stupid, Then the Judge Opened the Folder-mdue

“YOU’RE LEGALLY STUPID,” my sister laughed in the courthouse hallway. “I’ll destroy you.”

Her lawyer gave her a smug little nod, like the hearing was already a formality.

I smiled, reached into my portfolio, and said, “Then I should probably hand this to the judge first.”

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My name is Evelyn Harper.

For most of my life, my family used soft words for me.

Sweet.

Sensitive.

Quiet.

Fragile.

Those words sounded kind if you were not the one living underneath them.

Inside my family, they meant something else.

They meant manageable.

They meant easy to move.

They meant the daughter who would swallow the sharp thing because everyone else had decided it was more convenient that way.

The hearing was scheduled for 9:00 a.m. in Courtroom 4B.

By 8:30, the hallway already smelled like burned coffee, old paper, and floor polish.

Lawyers moved in clusters, their voices low and clipped.

A clerk pushed a cart stacked with case folders toward the double doors.

Somewhere near the vending machines, a printer jammed and started beeping with the exhausted persistence of something no one wanted to fix.

I stood beside Daniel Brooks, my attorney, with my portfolio tucked against my ribs.

The leather was warm from my hands.

I had been holding it too tightly since the parking lot.

Across the hall stood my older sister, Vanessa.

She looked perfect, because Vanessa always looked perfect when she believed other people were about to suffer.

She wore a cream sheath dress under a tailored coat, her hair pinned back in a smooth twist that looked effortless in the way expensive things pretend to be effortless.

My mother stood beside her, smoothing a wrinkle that did not exist from Vanessa’s sleeve.

My father kept both hands in his pockets.

He looked grim and distant, like a man attending something unfortunate but unavoidable.

No one said hello to me.

Years earlier, that would have gutted me.

That morning, it only confirmed the seating chart.

Vanessa crossed the hallway first.

Her heels clicked against the tile with the neat rhythm of someone walking into a room she already believed she owned.

“Evelyn,” she said, her smile polite and empty. “You actually came.”

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