She Carried Her Newborn Into Court With the Proof Her Husband Feared-nga9999 - Chainityai

She Carried Her Newborn Into Court With the Proof Her Husband Feared-nga9999

The courtroom smelled like floor polish, paper, and the kind of coffee people drink only because they have nowhere else to go.

Lily Reed stood just inside the door with her newborn son sleeping against her chest, his cheek warm through the soft cotton wrap, his breath tiny and uneven beneath her chin.

Six days old.

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Six days in the world, and already his father had tried to turn him into a legal weapon.

Lily wore a cream cardigan because it was soft enough not to scrape her skin too badly.

It also covered the bruises across her shoulder.

Every time she shifted the baby higher, the ache spread under the fabric, reminding her exactly why she was there and exactly why Evan Reed had expected her to lose.

At the front table, Evan sat in a navy suit with his hands folded like a man waiting for an employee to finish wasting his time.

Lily recognized that suit.

She had pressed it herself before board meetings, charity breakfasts, and the kind of dinners where Evan smiled at strangers while squeezing her knee under the table hard enough to leave marks.

Beside him sat his attorney, Marcus Vail, a man whose smile was built for rooms where frightened people did not know how to fight back.

Marcus leaned toward Evan and murmured, “She brought the baby to get sympathy.”

He did not whisper softly enough.

He meant her to hear it.

Evan smirked.

Behind them sat Claudia Reed, Evan’s mother, with pearls at her throat and one hand resting over her purse as though Lily might try to steal something from the family she had once been expected to serve.

Next to Claudia sat Vanessa.

Vanessa wore Lily’s wedding bracelet.

The bracelet was small, thin, and diamond-clasped, the kind of piece Lily had never bought for herself because money had always been something Evan explained back to her.

It had been a gift on their second anniversary, back when Evan still called control protection and Lily still wanted to believe him.

Now Vanessa lifted that wrist just enough for the courtroom light to catch the clasp.

That was the thing about cruelty in public.

It rarely shouted.

It adjusted its jewelry and waited for you to break first.

The bailiff called the matter, and Lily walked forward.

Her son slept through it, one fist curled near his mouth.

The judge looked over the file in front of him, then lifted his eyes.

“Mrs. Reed,” he said. “Do you have counsel?”

Marcus’s smile widened.

“No, Your Honor,” Lily said. “Not today.”

Evan laughed quietly.

“Of course not,” he said.

Lily felt the sound hit her in the chest.

A year earlier, that laugh would have made her explain herself before anyone asked.

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