The Courtroom Witness Who Kept the Envelope My Ex-Husband Thought Had Disappeared-QuynhTranJP

The clerk picked up the flash drive with two fingers, like it might leave fingerprints on him.

No one spoke.

The courtroom air had gone thin and sharp. The old coffee smell still clung near the back row. The air-conditioning hummed above us. Mark sat so still that only the pulse in his neck moved.

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Judge Marisol Crane looked at the small black drive in the clerk’s hand, then at Eleanor Whitcomb.

“Mrs. Whitcomb,” she said, “how did this come into your possession?”

Eleanor tightened both hands around her purse strap. Her knuckles were swollen, pale at the edges.

“The title office kept a backup camera for the front counter,” she said. “The company closed three years ago. When the records were boxed, I copied anything attached to files I had concerns about.”

Mark’s attorney, Mr. Harlan, rose again. This time he moved more slowly.

“Your Honor, I object to admission of unauthenticated digital material.”

The judge did not look surprised.

“Noted,” she said. “You may sit down.”

Harlan’s mouth opened, then closed.

The clerk carried the flash drive to the small evidence monitor beside the bench. A court technician stepped forward from the side door. He wore a gray suit, a county badge, and the expression of a man who had watched too many people lie badly.

Diane sat beside me without blinking.

Under the table, her shoe tapped once against mine.

One signal.

Stay still.

I folded my hands in my lap. My palms were damp now. The pale mark from my wedding ring faced upward, a thin white circle on my skin.

Mark leaned toward Harlan and whispered something through his teeth.

Harlan did not lean back.

That was the first crack.

The technician plugged in the flash drive. The monitor blinked blue, then black, then opened to a single folder.

Inside were three video files.

Each one was named by date and time.

7:41 PM.

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