The Courtroom Video Played Once — Then My Husband’s Lawyer Slowly Moved Away From Him-QuynhTranJP

The USB bag was smaller than my thumb, but Daniel looked at it as if someone had placed a loaded weapon on the table.

The clerk set it beside the printed notary log at 9:51 a.m. The plastic made a tiny crackling sound against the polished wood. Judge Harlan did not touch it right away. He looked first at Daniel, then at Daniel’s lawyer, then at me.

Daniel’s hand was still resting over his chest.

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A second earlier, he had been performing concern for the room. Patient husband. Worried spouse. Man forced to protect himself from a confused wife.

Now his fingers curled into his jacket like he needed something to hold.

His lawyer, Mr. Evers, leaned toward him and whispered something I could not hear. Daniel did not answer. Paige sat behind him with her cream coat buttoned to her throat, both hands flat on her knees. Her lipstick had settled into the fine lines around her mouth.

Judge Harlan opened the evidence bag himself.

The courtroom went so quiet I could hear the ancient wall clock clicking above the clerk’s desk. The air smelled like dust, floor polish, and the faint burnt coffee from the hallway machine. My handbag sat in my lap, heavy with the phone I had turned face down.

The judge plugged the USB into the court monitor.

Daniel finally spoke.

“Your Honor, I object to surprise material being introduced without authentication.”

His voice was still polite.

That was his talent. Daniel could peel skin with a butter knife and make it sound like medical care.

Judge Harlan looked at the clerk.

“This came directly from the subpoenaed notary office?”

“Yes, Your Honor,” she said. “Certified copy. Time-stamped. Chain of custody attached.”

Mr. Evers shifted in his chair.

That was the first time I saw him look at Daniel instead of me.

The screen lit up blue, then gray, then showed a waiting room with cheap framed landscapes and a fake plant by the door. The time stamp in the corner read March 14, 2025 — 10:06 a.m.

My lungs moved once, shallow.

I knew where I had been at 10:06 a.m. that day.

Not in a notary office.

I had been at St. Anne’s Imaging Center, drinking chalky contrast fluid from a paper cup because Daniel had insisted my “memory episodes” might be neurological. He had driven me there himself. He had signed the intake form as my emergency contact. He had kissed my forehead in front of the nurse.

On the courtroom screen, a woman entered the notary office wearing my black winter coat.

Paige made a small sound behind her teeth.

Not loud. Not dramatic. Just one thin intake of air.

The woman on the video kept her chin tucked. She wore oversized sunglasses and a gray scarf wrapped high around her neck. Her hair was tucked under a dark knit cap.

But her hands were wrong.

I stared at them.

Long acrylic nails. Pale pink. A thick diamond ring on the right hand.

Paige lowered both hands from her knees and slid them into her coat pockets.

Judge Harlan paused the video.

“Mrs. Whitmore,” he said, “are those your hands?”

“No, Your Honor.”

My voice came out flat.

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