“You had an email from my office at six-fifteen,” Catherine said without turning her head. “It confirmed my appearance, requested a brief courtesy delay, and attached notice that multiple emergency motions were being filed in response to your opportunistic attempt to secure a default posture. If you failed to read it, that is not an ambush. It is negligence.”
Garrison actually flushed.
Judge Henderson looked from him to her.
“Mr. Ford?”
Garrison said nothing.
Interesting, I thought.
Very interesting.
My mother stood and approached the bench with a thick stack of papers.
“Your Honor, we are filing the following: notice of appearance, motion to strike the plaintiff’s emergency asset freeze based on fraudulent financial disclosures, motion for sanctions against opposing counsel pending a hearing on professional conduct, motion to preserve all electronic evidence, and a request that the court immediately consider testimonial and documentary evidence related to coercion, asset concealment, and probable perjury.”
The judge accepted the papers from the bailiff and began leafing through them with increasing speed.
“Ms. Bennett,” he said, not looking up, “this is… substantial.”
“I do not travel for hypotheticals.”
A few people in the gallery shifted, already composing the version of the story they would tell over drinks later.
Catherine turned back toward the plaintiff’s table.
“Mr. Simmons,” she said. “I would advise you, before saying another word in this room, to understand that I know far more about your finances than you appear to know about them yourself.”
Keith found a laugh somewhere in his throat, but it came out cracked.
“This is insane. Grace, what is this? Some kind of stunt?”
“No,” my mother said. “This is family.”
That made me close my eyes for a second.
Not because it was tender.
Because it was devastating.
Judge Henderson adjusted his glasses and looked at me again, but now the pity was gone. In its place was something much more useful.
Respect, perhaps. Or simply judicial attention properly awakened.
“Mrs. Simmons,” he said. “You are now represented?”
“Yes, Your Honor.”
“Very well.” He looked back at Catherine. “How would you like to proceed?”
My mother didn’t hesitate.
“By placing the plaintiff under oath as a hostile witness.”
Keith jerked upright. “What?”
“You filed this action,” Catherine said. “You invited the scrutiny. Congratulations.”