A Pink Tablet Exposed The Lie That Almost Took My Daughter Forever-kieutrinh

The courtroom felt too cold for a place where lives were supposed to be handled carefully.

I sat beside my attorney with both hands folded in my lap, because if I let them move, everyone would see they were shaking.

Across the aisle, my ex-husband Caleb looked calm enough to be bored.

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He had always been good at that.

That morning, he wore a dark suit and the careful expression of a father who had been forced into court by concern.

I wore the only blazer I owned and tried not to look at my daughter.

Arya was sitting behind me with the court-appointed guardian, her yellow cardigan buttoned wrong at the bottom because she had dressed herself while I was searching for my keys.

She had her pink tablet pressed against her chest.

It was covered in peeling stickers, little stars and cartoon cats and one glittery moon she refused to remove even after half of it came off.

I thought she had brought it because court would be boring.

I did not know she had carried my life into that room.

Caleb’s petition had arrived in a thick envelope three weeks earlier.

The papers said he was seeking full legal and physical custody of Arya Rost.

The papers said I was emotionally unstable.

The papers said Arya was afraid of me.

The papers said my behavior had escalated to physical harm.

I read the words while my coffee went cold beside my elbow.

After the divorce, we had lived quietly.

Our apartment outside Tacoma had peeling paint in the stairwell, fairy lights over Arya’s bed, and one tomato plant that survived mostly out of pity.

I worked full-time at a dental office and picked up extra shifts when bills got tight.

Caleb saw Arya on weekends when he remembered to show up.

For the first year, he did not ask for more time.

Then I stopped letting him come inside whenever he wanted.

I stopped answering insults after midnight.

I told the school he was not allowed to pull Arya out early without notifying me.

That was when he began telling people I was turning her against him.

The petition was not parenting.

It was punishment.

My attorney Lisa Freeman did not promise me a miracle.

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