The Missing February Statement Turned a Divorce Hearing Into a Financial Trap-QuynhTranJP

Evan’s hand stayed suspended above the water glass.

For three seconds, nobody moved.

The courtroom had the kind of quiet that made small sounds turn sharp. The judge’s pen touched the bench once. A fluorescent light clicked overhead. Somewhere behind me, someone inhaled through their teeth and then held it.

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Dana kept the black flash drive raised between two fingers.

Not dramatic. Not triumphant.

Just steady.

“Mrs. Hale,” the judge said, looking over his glasses at me, “what is on that drive?”

I could feel Evan staring at the side of my face. For twelve years, I had learned the weight of that stare. At dinner parties, it meant smile. In front of his partners, it meant be quiet. In our kitchen, after the credit card bills came, it meant don’t ask questions.

That morning, it meant don’t you dare.

I turned my eyes toward Dana instead.

“My client received the drive this morning at 6:03 a.m.,” Dana said. “It appears to contain bank metadata, email records, and a document index connected to the Riverside account.”

Evan’s lawyer stood too quickly.

“Your Honor, this is highly irregular.”

Dana did not blink.

“What’s irregular,” she said, “is that the opposing party produced January and March records for an account they claim was inactive in February, while omitting the exact closing disclosure requested in discovery.”

The judge leaned back.

Evan’s lawyer touched the cream file box on her table, but she didn’t open it.

I noticed that.

A month earlier, I might have missed it. I would have been watching Evan’s mouth, trying to measure how angry he was. I would have been bracing for the car ride home, even though there was no home left to ride to together.

But divorce had sharpened me in ugly little ways.

Now I watched hands.

Evan’s hand had gone flat against the table.

His lawyer’s hand hovered over the file box, then withdrew.

Marissa’s hand disappeared under the bench, searching for the beige handbag that had fallen open at her feet. A lipstick had rolled toward the aisle. A hotel key card sat half-visible beside it.

Dana saw it too.

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