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"All rise."
The bailiff's voice echoed in the cavernous silence of the courtroom. Rory Conway's heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage of bone. She rose with the rest of the room, her movements stiff, her cheap heels unsteady on the polished marble floor.
"The court calls Rory Conway to the stand."
Every head turned. Every eye felt like a physical weight on her skin. She forced her legs to move, one step in front of the other, each one a small, shattering impact. The path to the witness stand felt a mile long, paved with broken glass.
Her gaze lifted, sweeping past the jury's impassive faces, past the prosecutor's predatory stillness, until it found him.
Corbin Vance.
He sat at the defendant's table, his shoulders straight in the ill-fitting suit his lawyer had provided. He wasn't looking at the judge or his attorney. He was looking only at her. And in his eyes, she saw no fear, no doubt. Only a deep, unwavering trust that was more painful than any accusation. That trust was a knife, and with every step she took, she was walking herself onto its blade.
She reached the stand, the wood cool and solid beneath her trembling hand. She swore the oath, the words tasting like ash in her mouth.
The prosecutor, a man with a face like a clenched fist, approached. "Miss Conway, please state your relationship to the defendant, Mr. Vance."
"He's... he's my boyfriend," she managed, her voice a dry whisper.
"Your boyfriend," the prosecutor repeated, letting the words hang in the air. "And were you with him on the night of October twelfth?"
"Yes." The word was a betrayal.
"Miss Conway," he said, his voice dropping, becoming sharp and precise. "Please tell the court, who was driving the Ford Mustang when it struck and killed Maria Sanchez?"
The air left her lungs. The room swam. She could feel her father's stare from the second row, a cold, heavy pressure on the back of her neck. A warning.
The courtroom faded, replaced by the flickering fluorescent light of their kitchen last night. The greasy takeout containers were still on the table. Her brother, Cody, sat with his head in his hands, his shoulders shaking with silent sobs. Her father, Gus, stood over them, his face a mask of cold fury.
He'd thrown a stack of papers onto the table. Helen Conway's medical bills. A sea of red ink. Next to them, a power of attorney document.
"It was your brother behind the wheel," Gus had snarled, his voice low and venomous. "A stupid, drunk kid who's going to rot in a cell for the rest of his life. But Corbin... Corbin has the best lawyers money can buy. He can handle this. Our family can't take another hit."
Rory had stared at him, horrified. "You want me to lie? You want me to send an innocent man to prison?"
"I want you to save your family," he'd countered, his finger tapping the medical authorization form. "These bills don't pay themselves. The experimental treatment keeping your mother stable? I control that funding. If you don't do this, I pull the plug on the payments, and we see how long she lasts in a state-run hospice. You choose. Him, or her."
A cold dread had washed over her, so absolute it felt like drowning.
Now, back in the witness stand, that same cold was seeping into her bones. Her hands were clenched in her lap, nails digging so hard into her palms she thought the skin might break.
She risked a glance at Corbin again. His lawyer gave her a small, encouraging nod, confident in his star witness.
Corbin's lips moved, forming two silent words she could read from across the room.
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