The Deposit Slip Named His Mother, And The Courtroom Turned Before He Could Stop Me-QuynhTranJP

The judge’s hand closed around the folded deposit slip, and Grant’s face changed before the paper even reached the bench.

Not panic. Not yet.

Calculation.

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His eyes moved from the judge, to Ms. Alvarez, to me, then to his mother. Diane was still standing behind the rail with one hand gripping the bench in front of her, her pearl bracelet twisted sideways against her wrist. The white handkerchief she had been using like a prop hung limp from her fingers.

The courtroom deputy took the deposit slip from me and carried it forward in a clear evidence sleeve. Plastic whispered against paper. The fluorescent lights caught the creases where I had folded and refolded that slip for six months, hiding it in coat linings, then in a cookbook, then finally inside the black coat I wore to court.

Grant’s attorney stood again. “Your Honor, we object to admission without foundation.”

Ms. Alvarez did not look at him. “Foundation is the witness’s direct knowledge of the transfer, the receiving institution, and the account number. We can authenticate through the bank custodian already under subpoena.”

The judge slipped on his reading glasses.

Grant’s knee started bouncing under the table.

I noticed because I had spent eight years noticing his small tells. The twitch near his thumb when he lied to a client. The slow blink when he wanted me to stop talking. The little cough before he asked me to carry blame for something he had already done.

At 10:26 a.m., the judge looked up.

“Marked as Exhibit 18 for identification. I’ll allow limited questioning.”

Diane sat down as if someone had cut the string at the back of her neck.

Ms. Alvarez turned toward me, holding the evidence sleeve in both hands. “Mrs. Calloway, do you recognize this document?”

“Yes.”

“What is it?”

“A deposit confirmation from Westbridge Federal Credit Union.”

“And whose name appears as the recipient?”

I pressed my feet flat against the courtroom floor. The carpet felt thin under my heels.

“Harbor Finch Consulting.”

“And whose signature appears on the receiving account paperwork?”

Grant’s attorney said, “Objection.”

The judge lifted one hand. “Counsel, sit down.”

A cough moved through the gallery. Someone’s bracelet jingled. Grant’s mother kept her chin high, but a red patch had climbed from her collarbone to the base of her throat.

Ms. Alvarez waited.

I answered.

“Diane Calloway.”

The prosecutor walked to the evidence monitor. A large screen near the jury box blinked from black to white. There it was: the transfer date, the amount, the routing number partially hidden, the company name sharp in black print.

$42,700.

Harbor Finch Consulting.

The number looked uglier enlarged.

Grant leaned toward his lawyer and whispered so fast the words blurred. His lawyer’s face did not move, but his ears went pink.

Ms. Alvarez clicked a small remote. The screen changed to the bank’s business filing summary.

Diane Calloway, Registered Agent.

The handkerchief slipped from Diane’s lap to the floor.

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