She Laughed At His Suit Until The Court Heard His Father’s Voice-eirian

The clerk pressed the recorder into an evidence bag like it weighed more than all of Celeste Mercer’s lawyers.

I watched the plastic seal close around my father’s last chance to speak.

Until that moment, I had been the broke son in the borrowed suit.

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After that, I was the man who had made a probate court stop and build a chain of custody around a dead man’s voice.

Celeste sat very still.

Her pearls did not move, but one hand kept sliding toward her attorney’s sleeve.

Victor Lockhart did not look at her.

That told me more than any objection he had made.

Men like Lockhart get paid to look calm when their clients are frightened.

When they stop looking at their clients, it usually means the fear has become contagious.

Judge Brennan asked me where the recorder came from.

I told him my father mailed it to my apartment before he died, inside a cardboard box with two fishing reels, his tape measure, and a letter.

Lockhart asked whether I had opened the recorder, copied the file, edited it, or shared it.

I said I had played it once in my kitchen and then put it back in the envelope because I was scared of what would happen if I touched it again.

That was the truth.

I had wanted to be clever, but grief had made me careful instead.

The judge ordered the recorder logged by the clerk and told Lockhart that if he wanted forensic review, he could file a motion before the day ended.

Then he said the sentence that changed the temperature in the room.

“If that recording contains what Mr. Mercer says it contains, this is no longer only a will contest.”

Celeste’s face stayed smooth, but the color left the skin around her mouth.

Court broke for lunch, and I went into the hallway because I could not breathe in the room where my father’s voice was trapped in plastic.

The three men from the shop stood near the vending machines in their work shirts.

Eddie Ramos, who had run duct crews for my father since I was in high school, put one hand on my shoulder and said nothing.

That helped more than a speech would have.

Across the hall, Celeste argued with Lockhart in a whisper that had teeth in it.

Then Lockhart looked over at me with the expression of a man who had found a tool he did not like using but would use anyway.

When court resumed, he did not talk about Cypress Lane Holdings.

He did not talk about the workers’ fund.

He asked the judge to consider whether I was competent to represent myself or testify about anything I claimed to have found.

He produced an affidavit from Dr. Mara Renner, a counselor I had seen for four months after my mother died.

The affidavit said I had a history of paranoid thinking and difficulty separating grief from reality.

My stomach dropped so hard I thought I might be sick on the table.

After my mother died, I had sat in a stranger’s office and said things I was ashamed to say anywhere else.

I had said the house felt hostile without her.

I had said everybody seemed to move on while I stayed stuck.

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