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Read book online «Family Law by Gin Phillips (phonics reading books .txt) 📕».   Author   -   Gin Phillips



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felt a rush of affection for this woman who had lived so long but could still be shocked by a curse word. She had no idea about real hate, something Letson didn’t have. The balding man sitting in the row of chairs behind Letson, though—every line of him was rigid. Now, as Letson rested a hand on his table and faced the witness, the balding man lunged forward, clamping a hand on the lawyer’s shoulder.

Letson twisted away. The two men exchanged a handful of words.

“Do you know him?” Lucia asked softly.

“An uncle, I think,” Netta said.

As Judge Mitchell slapped his palms against solid oak, the man settled back in his chair. Soon the father was giving smooth answers again, and Netta was back to adding her asides: Does he even know her birthday? Does he know her shoe size? Never even runs a brush through her hair. How’s he gonna teach a girl how to be a girl?

In another hour, they were finished for the day. The Petersons wanted to hash through every exchange, word for word, and Lucia knew it mattered to them, so she didn’t rush. When she was finally free, she turned down a hallway and ran into the lawyer for the Cox case, and they circled around each other for a bit. She passed four men who had already heard the zipper story from Rob Letson.

By the time she pushed through the glass doors of the courthouse, the sun was dipping behind First Baptist Church and the Montgomery skyline was turning to shadows. She was later than she’d intended. She pressed her purse to her hip and tightened her grip on her briefcase. She could set a fast pace, even in heels, and the stoplights were in her favor. Soon enough she was turning onto South Perry Street, the steep roof of her office building showing stark against the sky. She cut across the lawn to the parking lot in back, grabbing for her keys.

Her car was the only one left in the lot. A couple of yards away from it, she skidded on a gravelly patch of asphalt, jerking to a stop. The trees overhanging the lot deepened the shadows, but there was no mistaking what she saw.

A smashed windshield, cracks spidering out.

The strong smell of urine, the wet shine of it running down her front tire, pooling underneath.

She spun, certain she heard footsteps, but no one was there.

II.

Lucia was not sure if she liked this woman. Not that it mattered, necessarily.

“He’s a manipulator,” the woman said, her red-blond hair curling over her forehead in stiff waves. She was built like a dancer. “It might seem like I should have known that from the beginning, but it took me awhile to figure it out. It works like that, doesn’t it? You look back and you can see how obvious it was, but it’s not that clear in the beginning, is it?”

Lucia lifted her pen a few inches above her notepad. The clock on the wall read 5:10, and the woman’s every statement was a question.

“Of course,” Lucia said. “How do you think he manipulated you?”

“He never loved me. Not really.”

“Margaret,” said Lucia. That was the woman’s name. Margaret Morris. “Tell me what you’re hoping will happen next. What do you want?”

The typed summary on her desk told Lucia that the husband was already out of the house and that the woman hoped for child support for one daughter.

“He told me over breakfast that he thought maybe we shouldn’t have gotten married,” said Margaret, shifting in her seat. “We were so young when we did it. We’d only known each other three months. He wanted counseling, he said. He wasn’t happy, he said. He’d never mentioned any of that. It’s crazy, isn’t it? To suddenly say something like that? We were happy. There was nothing wrong except in his head.”

Lucia nodded. People wanted to talk. They sometimes embellished or omitted or outright lied, but if she sat long enough, they would tell her everything. They would tell even the parts they were sure they had not told her.

“What was your response to him?” she asked.

“I told him to get out of the house. I told him I wanted a divorce.”

“So he told you he wanted to go to counseling and you told him you wanted a divorce?”

Margaret slid one hand along the edge of the desk. One pale peach nail tapped the wood.

“No,” she said, scuttling away from her own words. “I went along with what he wanted. I didn’t make him do anything.”

“And you yourself want a divorce?” Lucia asked.

“I should, shouldn’t I? After he said those things to me?”

“I can’t tell you what you want.”

Lucia thought she had kept her tone gentle, but Margaret straightened. She took a couple of silent breaths, and when she spoke again, her voice was smoother. Professional.

“This isn’t about me,” she said. “Men can afford to think only about themselves, but we women understand, don’t we, that it’s never that simple. I’m a mother. That’s the most important thing, isn’t it? I can take care of my daughter with or without him. But what’s best for her?”

It was the first mention she’d made of her daughter, and now Lucia recognized her. She eventually recognized every manipulator and martyr, every achiever and survivor and logic-obsessed Vulcan and child who refused to grow up. This woman, with her fresh lipstick and her jittery hands, was a paper doll. If you didn’t like the self she’d chosen, she could strip it off and fold on a different one. She’d be whoever you wanted her to be. For a while.

“You’re a concerned mother,” agreed Lucia. “Do you want a divorce?”

“He asked me to dinner for next week,” said Margaret.

She had begun talking about the difficult left turn into the Steak and Ale parking lot when a rap sounded on the office door. Lucia’s secretary, Marissa, slipped inside. Short hair, tiny waist, no hips—she was efficiency manifest.

“I’m sorry to

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