“You have come before this court asking to strip your sister of her property and accounts.”
Meanwhile, the record shows you initiated a restriction on her real estate using your own corporate signature, and you attempted to access her safe deposit box using a notorized authorization tied to your identity and your company. He paused. I’m letting the words settle where everyone could feel them. I am issuing an immediate protective order, he continued. No contact directly or indirectly between Mr. Hail and Mrs. Lane pending further hearing. I am also ordering preservation of all Hail holdings, electronic records related to these filings and authorizations, including IP logs, email headers, internal notary journals, and any communications with your parents regarding this petition. Evans attorney’s face tightened. Your honor, Judge Merritt’s eyes snapped to him. Do you want sanctions today, council? The attorney closed his mouth. Judge Merritt turned to the court officer. Officer, I want Mr. Hail’s phone secured for preservation until council can provide a forensically sound extraction. If he refuses, I will address it with contempt. Evan stood up so fast his chair scraped loud in the quiet room.
“You can’t take my phone,” he said, voice cracking.
“This is insane.”
Judge Merritt didn’t move. Sit down. Evan didn’t. The court officer stepped closer, one hand out, firm. Sir. Evan’s eyes flashed to my parents again, desperate. My father finally stood, speaking for the first time. Your honor, this is this is going too far. We’re only trying to help our son. Judge Merritt’s gaze cut to him. Sit down, he said. then quieter. You are not a party who gets to control this proceeding. My father sat. Evan’s hands shook as he pulled his phone from his pocket. And for the first time, he looked less like a well-off winner and more like a man realizing the room had stopped believing his performance. Honey handed the phone to the court officer like it burned. The court officer placed it in an evidence bag, sealed it, and wrote a label. And that’s when Evan did the one thing I’d been waiting for all day. He looked at me with pure hatred and whispered,
“You planned this.”
I didn’t whisper back. I didn’t smile. I spoke clearly, softly for the record.
“No,” I said.
“You did.”
Judge Merritt’s pen tapped once. Baleiff, he said.
“Return to the petitioner’s inventory list. Continue reading from item four.”
The baleiff lifted the list again, and I watched his eyes scanned downward until they stopped on the next line. His face went still. He looked up at Evan, then at Judge Merritt, and his voice dropped into a tone I hadn’t heard yet, one that sounded less like court and more like warning.
“Your honor,” he said. “I item four is not a bank account or a property. It’s a document and it’s listed as an asset to be transferred.”
Judge Merritt’s brow tightened. What document? The baiff swallowed once. It’s listed as original will and trust amendment signed by Harold Caldwell, he said, and the margin note says, retrieve from box once accessed. My brother’s head snapped up, eyes wide. Judge Merritt’s gaze hardened into something like steel. And in the sudden silence, I realized Evan hadn’t come for my possessions because he wanted me to have nothing. He’d come because he needed that document to exist nowhere but in his hands. Judge Merritt didn’t move for a moment. He stared at the inventory list in the baiff’s hands as if the paper had just confessed to something in plain language. Then he lifted his eyes to my brother.
“Mister, our hail,” he said, “Slow! You listed an original will and trust amendment as an asset to be transferred.”
Evans attorney stood so fast his chair tipped backward with a harsh clack. Your honor, this is a misunderstanding, he began. Judge Merritt raised a hand. Sit. The attorney didn’t sit. Judge Merritt’s eyes sharpened. Counsel. The attorney sat. The baleiff kept the list steady, but his voice had changed. The flat recital tone was gone. This was now official concern. The margin note reads, he said,
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