
Whale Song Lost in the Fog
Chapter 4
The gallery was packed, the air pulsing with camera flashes.
I knew they weren’t here for truth. They’d come to see a “poisonous woman” stand trial.
In the front row, my in-laws sat with eyes fixed on me, their gazes full of venom.
My own parents were there too, huddled in a corner, heads bowed, unable to look my way.
On the plaintiff’s side sat Nicholas, the star witness. Today he wore a crisp, tailored suit, his hair perfectly styled. Only the lingering pallor of his face and the shadow of exhaustion lent him a fragile, pitiable air.
Then the trial began.
After the prosecutor finished reading the indictment, Nicholas took the stand as the first witness.
He began his testimony in that rich, gravelly voice of his, heavy with supposed grief.
He started with our love story, then our marriage, then Grant’s birth. He spoke of my so-called “postpartum depression,” how I’d grown “increasingly withdrawn,” how I’d been “neglectful” of our son—even “frequently abusive.”
He painted himself as the very picture of a tolerant, long-suffering, devoted husband and father.
His performance was masterful. Voice trembling, choked with emotion, he drew sighs of sympathy from the gallery.
“The day it happened, I was on duty at the station. We got the call. The address… it was my own home. My heart just froze.”
“I rushed into the hallway. And there was my wife, Quinn… she… she was like a stranger. Blocking Grant’s door, muttering nonsense…”
“She said… she said Grant was too noisy. That it would be better if he burned. That we could… start over…”
“I begged her. Got down on my knees and begged her to open the door. But she wouldn’t listen. She even pushed a sofa against it… I watched smoke pour from under that door. I…”
He covered his face, unable to continue.
His stifled sobs echoed through the silent courtroom.
Everyone was moved. Every pair of eyes that turned to me held fresh contempt, fresh fury.
The judge rapped his gavel. “Witness, please compose yourself. Defendant, do you have any objections to this testimony?”
I lifted my head and met the collective gaze. Slowly, I shook my head.
“No objections.”
A shock rippled through the room.
My lawyer closed his eyes in despair.
At the corner of Nicholas’s mouth flickered a barely perceptible, triumphant smile.
He thought he’d won.
“I have no objections,” I said, my voice calm. “But I have one question for the witness.”
The judge looked surprised but nodded.
I fixed Nicholas with a searing stare. “Nicholas, you said I had postpartum depression, that I hated Grant, that I beat him. Then tell me this—what was Grant’s favorite toy?”
The question left everyone bewildered.
Nicholas froze, clearly unprepared.
Frowning, he struggled to recall. “It was… Legos? Or Ultraman? Don’t all boys like that stuff?”
I smiled.
“Wrong. Try again.”
His expression tightened. “Quinn, this is a courtroom, not a guessing game!”
“Your Honor,” I turned to the bench. “The witness cannot answer the question. Because he never cared about Grant. Everything he has said is a lie.”
“Order!” The judge’s gavel cracked down.
“I request to call my next witness. My son, Grant.”
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