The Evidence Box Opened In Court — And Marcus Finally Saw Which Lie Had His Name On It-QuynhTranJP

The red seal split with a dry little snap.

Nobody moved.

The silver blade stayed in the clerk’s hand for half a second longer than it needed to, catching the fluorescent light above the bench. The gray evidence box sat between us like it had been waiting all morning to breathe.

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Marcus stared at it.

His attorney stopped touching her pen.

His mother’s pearls rested perfectly against her throat, but her chin had dropped just enough to show the loose skin beneath it.

The judge looked at the deputy.

“Proceed.”

The deputy lifted the lid.

Inside were three folders, one flash drive in a plastic sleeve, and a small black digital recorder with a cracked corner. There was also a child’s blue hair clip, sealed in its own bag.

That clip was Lily’s.

My fingers curled once under the table. Not into a fist. Just enough to keep my hands still.

Marcus saw it too.

His lips parted.

“Why is that in there?” he asked.

The judge’s eyes did not leave him.

“You may speak through counsel, Mr. Hale.”

His attorney leaned toward him, whispering fast. He shook his head once, almost like a boy refusing medicine.

“No,” he said. “No, this is private family material.”

The bank compliance officer stepped forward. She was a small woman with gray hair cut at her jaw and reading glasses hanging from a black cord. Her badge said Denise Alvarez. I remembered her from the first meeting at the downtown branch, when she had slid a tissue box toward me without saying anything about the way my hands kept missing the paper.

“Your Honor,” she said, “the bank opened an internal review after a minor presented documents that matched a flagged notarization sequence from January ninth.”

Marcus laughed once.

It was not loud.

It was worse than loud.

It was neat.

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