Chapter Sixteen

The plane ride is quiet and wistful.

I sit between Sam and my mother, trying not to think about the

upcoming days. The prosecutor, Lauren Counter wants to put Sam on

the stand first, then me. Depending on how our testimonies go,

particularly Sam's cross-examination, she may ask Tucker to fly

down for Thursday. She also told me that Robin plans to testify.

And that terrifies me. Because I can only imagine the lies he will

tell, and who might believe them.

It all comes down to the

judge. He will either believe Sam and me, or he will believe Robin,

and I have no way of knowing how much of the Forbes' influence has

reached his jurisdiction. I suspect it's just enough to get Robin a

slap on the wrist and not much more. Particularly if his motion is

successful and the violation of my restraining order is

dismissed.

Sam holds my hand, but he

doesn't say much. I'm sure he knows every thought in my head. My

mother reads through files she's long memorized, barely stifling a

smile as she notices Sam's and my threaded fingers.

We check into the hotel

around nine. Sam got us the same rooms as our last trip and my

mother's room is next to mine, but not connecting. Which means Sam

and I can access each other's rooms easily. Under any other

circumstances I would be excited about it, but right now, it barely

even registers.

We haven't had a chance to

do anything more than kiss since we got back together only

yesterday, and the upcoming court dates have clouded any real

celebration of our reunion. I try desperately to break out of my

melancholic state, particularly since I know there isn't much I can

do—that there's no worse outcome than the one I'm already prepared

for, but I can't help but feel completely hopeless.

We have a quick, equally

quiet dinner in the hotel restaurant and each head back to our

respective rooms to shower and get ready for bed. We don't discuss

sleeping arrangements, but I make my way to Sam's room after my

shower and climb wordlessly into bed with him. His arms open

automatically, and though I don't have nightmares, I don't really

sleep either.

I don't really wake up the

next morning so much as I'm still awake. Sam is too, looking tired,

but still handsome beyond reason.

I return to my room to

dress for court and Sam finds me after he's ready. He looks

gorgeous in his suit, and I can't help but think of how ironic it

is—the reason for my first time seeing him in one. My charcoal-grey

jersey shift dress is demure and professional, and I pull my hair

into a loose braid to keep it out of my face. I take a pill to calm

my nerves, tucking the bottle into my purse along with my cell

phone and lip-gloss.

Sam's behind me in the

mirror as I put in my pearl earrings. I try to offer him a smile,

but fail. His arms come around my waist and he plants a soft kiss

on the crown of my head.

"You look beautiful, you

know. I know it's probably not the right thing to say right now,

but it's true," he murmurs.

I do smile then, and turn

in his arms, pressing my face to the lapels of his blazer. "You're

not so bad yourself."

"You know, one day, you'll

be getting dressed like this every day, going to court, getting

justice for people. Helping girls just like you."

I pull away and meet his

eyes. His words strike me. They give me hope.

"Do you really think

that?" My voice comes out weak, nothing like the powerful woman he

described.

"I know it, Rory," he says

intently. "First, we have to get through today. And then tomorrow.

And then one day, this whole experience will help other girls. And

they'll be better off for it."

I hug him again. I don't

know how he always knows the perfect thing to say to me, but he

does.

We walk out of my hotel

room hand in hand. My mother is outside her room waiting for us and

it vaguely occurs to me that I should have had him walk out of his

own door. At least put on a show for her. But she doesn't seem to

care.

"Ready?" she

asks.

We both nod. I'm not, of

course. But Sam's words stay with me, and I think to myself that

whatever happens, whatever the injustice, one day I will make it

all worth it.

****

We meet with the prosecutor briefly

before the hearing and then she and my mother continue in private

while Sam and I wait outside the courtroom. The prosecutor told us

the Forbeses and their two lawyers, not including my father and

Robin's, are already inside, so Sam and I will wait until the last

minute to go in ourselves.

I hoped to avoid any kind

of confrontation, but I should have known better than to think my

luck ran that way.

My father exits the

courtroom while my mother is still busy with the prosecutor. Sam

steps in front of me and I squeeze his hand, not sure if I'm

seeking comfort or if I mean to call him off. My father barely

glances at Sam, but the brief look he does spare him makes it clear

that he see's him as little more than scum.

"Aurora," he greets

me.

I study my

shoes.

"I hope you're happy," he

accuses. That gets my attention, and I meet his accusing

gaze.

Sam steps forward and

opens his mouth, but I pull him back, this time clearly calling him

off.

"Do I look happy?" I

retort.

"You are destroying a

family, does that mean nothing to you?"

"You destroyed ours," I

remind him, but he ignores me.

"What did you say to Lacey

in New York? How did you even know she would be there?"

"That—" Sam begins but I

squeeze his hand again.

"Don't you think you're

putting Robbie through enough? Now his own kid sister won't speak

to him! How do you think Bobby and Cindy feel—their own daughter

refusing to support her brother!"

This stuns me into

silence. Did Sam actually get through to

Lacey?

I look up at him, but he's

still glaring at my father murderously. But he squeezes my hand

again to let me know he knows what I'm thinking.

"What do you think you're

doing?" My mother's furious voice calls from down the

hall.

My father startles,

turning toward my mother and Prosecutor Counter.

"Amy—" my father sounds

almost remorseful, but anything he feels is lingering emotions for

my mother, not me. He just hates me.

"Mr. Reed you are a

potential witness in this case, I'll ask that you refrain from

communicating with Miss Reed for the duration of the motion

hearing," Prosecutor Counter says pointedly. He isn’t really, but

he technically could be called to the witness stand, so I suppose

that's enough.

My father says nothing

more, he simply walks away and heads to the men's room without even

looking at me again.

****

I sit stoically through the defense's opening statement while

Sam cringes and nearly growls at every other word. Every other lie.

It's nothing new. Just Robin's statement retold in dramatic

fashion, describing the crazy ex-girlfriend he ran into on spring

break, our hooking up in an alley outside a bar, and my turning on

him when I supposedly questioned him about his love life since our

breakup. Apparently I was jealous and I attacked him. Then come the

details of Sam and Tucker's beat-down. I can't help but wonder how

much of them are true. They don't even make Sam sound like a bad

guy. They make him sound like another one of my victims. Like I'm

some manipulative, sociopathic witch who tricked him into believing

my stories about Robin just like I'm trying to trick the

court.

Outside, I'm an ice queen,

but inside, I'm hyperventilating. I feel the shape of my pill

bottle through the soft leather of my purse, trying to count the

hours since I took the last one, and wondering how soon I should

take another.

Sam doesn't hold my hand.

The prosecutor told him not to. That he should do his best to

appear unbiased or it may affect the judge's perception of his

testimony.

His testimony comes next.

It sounds much like his statement, just longer, and he shows less

emotion than that night in Miami. His cross-examination runs

significantly longer than his initial testimony. The defense tries

to paint him as my puppet. They try to get him to admit that he

couldn't possibly have known for sure if it was Robin or me who

started the altercation, and that when he came upon us in the alley

it was possible Robin was holding me against the wall to keep me

from assaulting him more.

He doesn't.

Sam just keeps saying that

it was clear what was going on and that the defense's story isn't

remotely plausible. But they keep at it.

Eventually Sam loses his

patience. Despite his best performance, his detailing of the exact

sight he first saw in that alley gets to him. It gets to me, too. I

hate seeing him so affected by it. But he's effective. After all,

it's hard to defend holding a girl by her throat, cutting off her

air, and shoving your hand under her skirt as self-defense. But it

will only be effective if they believe Sam, because that's about

the time the defense changes tact and starts questioning Sam about

our relationship and his devotion to me—specifically how far he

would go to back me up.

They question him over and

over about the supposed beating he delivered to Robin after I was

safely removed from the alley—after Robin was already subdued. Sam

denies it. He swears he did what he had to do to keep Robin down,

to keep him from coming after me, nothing more, nothing

less.

Photos of Robin from the

hospital are entered into evidence. They're pretty damning. Photos

of Sam also taken that night show some bruising and swelling, but

there's no comparison. It doesn't prove anything, but it doesn't

support the story of a fair fight either.

The questioning continues,

now asking details about Sam's and my relationship. He's truthful

but evasive at the same time. I haven't looked at Robin since I

walked into the courtroom, trying to pretend he isn't even here,

but I glance at him now. He holds his face carefully without

expression, but his hands are curled into fists, so tight his

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