A Pharmacy Camera, Red Work Boots, And The Brother Who Walked Out Of My Alibi-QuynhTranJP

Kevin stood up so fast the wooden bench cracked against the wall.

For one second, nobody moved.

The courtroom held him in that ugly half-rise, knees bent, hands open, red work boots planted under the pew like they had grown out of the floor. The air vent clicked twice above the jury box. A bailiff near the side door shifted his weight, leather belt creaking, one hand already lowering toward his radio.

Image

My attorney did not look at Kevin.

She looked at the judge.

“Your Honor,” she said, calm enough to make my skin prickle, “I ask that the court instruct the gallery to remain seated.”

The judge’s glasses sat low on his nose. He was still holding the printed still frame from the pharmacy’s rear camera. His thumb covered the timestamp, but I knew what it said. 7:43:12 p.m.

My Honda.

My gray sweater.

Kevin’s boots.

“Mr. Hanley,” the judge said, using Kevin’s last name because I had taken my husband’s name years ago and Kevin had not, “sit down.”

Kevin’s mouth moved before sound came out.

“That’s not—”

“Sit down.”

The second order landed harder. Not loud. Worse than loud. Final.

Kevin sat. His shoulder hit the back of the pew. His face had gone the color of wet paper.

Behind the prosecutor’s table, the victim stopped looking wounded.

That was the first real crack.

Until then, David Mercer had played pain beautifully. The careful sling. The slow breaths. The wife touching his elbow at the exact right moments. The thin, brave smile whenever the jury looked his way.

Now his hand slipped off the sling and hung there, loose and useless, like he had forgotten which arm was supposed to hurt.

My attorney noticed.

So did Juror Four.

She was a woman with silver hair and a navy cardigan, and she had been watching David like a church member watching a confession. Now her eyes moved from his sling to Kevin’s boots, then to me.

Not soft anymore.

Sharp.

The judge placed the still frame on the bench.

“Counsel, approach.”

The prosecutor rose too quickly. Her chair made a hard scraping sound against the floor. My attorney stood with only her yellow pad and one sheet of paper. No drama. No stack of folders. No performance.

Just the one page she had waited all morning to use.

At the sidebar, their voices dropped into a low murmur. I could not make out every word, but I heard enough.

“Authenticated.”

“Subpoena return.”

“Business records exception.”

“Potential third-party culpability.”

The prosecutor’s neck flushed above her collar.

Read More