A CEO’s Alibi Collapsed When A Garage Camera Matched The Watch He Forgot-QuynhTranJP

Mason Vale’s hand stayed frozen halfway to his tie.

For the first time in six months, no one in that courtroom looked at me like I was the problem.

The marshal stepped away from the side wall. His shoes made two heavy clicks against the tile, and Mason’s wife gripped the pearl strap of her handbag until the skin around her knuckles went white.

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Judge Whitaker did not raise his voice.

“Mr. Vale,” he said, “you will remain seated.”

Mason lowered his hand slowly. The smile had not fully left his face, but it had changed shape. It looked like something painted on a cracked wall.

His attorney, Patricia Rowan, walked to the bench with her folder clutched to her chest. My attorney, Caleb Shaw, took the brown evidence sleeve with him. I watched the sleeve more than I watched Mason.

That envelope had spent weeks moving through offices that smelled like toner, rubber stamps, and stale coffee. A garage security vendor in Aurora had copied it. A records clerk had certified it. Caleb had tracked the subpoena number across three departments while I sat at my kitchen table counting quarters for gas.

Now it lay open under the judge’s hands.

Mason leaned toward Patricia, but the marshal shifted closer.

“Don’t,” the marshal said.

One word. Flat. Clean.

Mason sat back.

Behind him, the gallery had changed. The reporters who had ignored me during lunch now had phones angled low against their knees. The two former coworkers who testified that I looked “nervous” the week of the missing transfer stared at the floor. One of them, Ainsley, pressed a tissue against her mouth, though no tears came.

The jury foreman kept looking from the screen to Mason’s wrist.

That watch had become louder than any testimony.

A brushed steel face. Blue dial. Brown leather band. Mason wore it in the charity photo, smiling under a banner that said he had raised $300,000 for a children’s hospital. He wore it in the garage still, his arm lifted toward the private elevator scanner. He wore it now, above a cuff with silver monogrammed initials.

M.V.

The judge returned to his chair.

“Ladies and gentlemen of the jury,” Judge Whitaker said, “you are instructed not to discuss this matter during the recess. Do not speak to counsel. Do not speak to anyone in the gallery. Do not use your phones.”

A juror in a green cardigan nodded once.

The bailiff led them out through the side door. The room did not relax after they left. It tightened.

Patricia turned toward Mason.

“Mason,” she whispered.

He did not look at her.

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