The Little Girl Who Exposed Her Mother in a Guardianship Hearing-mdue - Chainityai

The Little Girl Who Exposed Her Mother in a Guardianship Hearing-mdue

The first time I stood up in court, my feet did not touch the floor when I sat back down.

I was seven years old.

My name was Lily Reynolds, and on that morning, Rosa buttoned me into a blue dress with a white collar because she said court was a serious place.

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Serious places, according to Rosa, deserved clean clothes.

The courthouse smelled like floor polish, old paper, and coffee that had been sitting too long in paper cups.

Every shoe sounded louder than it needed to.

Every whisper seemed to travel across the wood-paneled room and settle somewhere near my chest.

My father, Michael Reynolds, sat at the defense table in his wheelchair.

Before multiple sclerosis changed the way strangers looked at him, he had filled boardrooms just by entering them.

He founded Rain Solutions.

Tech writers called him a visionary.

Business magazines called him brilliant.

I called him Daddy.

By then, his hands trembled when he was tired.

His speech slowed after long mornings.

Sometimes his body would not do what he asked it to do, and people who did not know him mistook that for weakness.

But his mind was still sharp.

I knew it before any doctor wrote it down.

I knew it because he helped me sound out the hard words in my science reader at night, even when Rosa had to hold the book for him.

I knew it because he remembered I was allergic to strawberries and always checked birthday cupcakes before I ate one.

I knew it because he could explain black holes, fractions, and why adults said “I’m fine” when they were not fine at all.

His body had become unreliable.

His love had not.

At the other table sat my mother, Rebecca Williams.

She was beautiful in the way people in magazines looked beautiful.

Cream suit.

Perfect hair.

Soft perfume I remembered more from old photographs than from actual hugs.

She had left when I was three.

First it was Europe.

Then modeling.

Then men whose names changed faster than the cities she lived in.

She missed birthdays, Christmas mornings, school plays, piano recitals, and the father-daughter breakfast where Daddy had still set out a third plate.

Just in case.

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