My 10-year-old daughter came home with a fractured arm and bruises covering her body. After rushing her to the hospital, I drove straight to the school to confront the bully—only to discover his father was my former partner.
He laughed the moment he saw me.
“Like mother, like kid,” he sneered. “Both losers.”
I ignored him and turned to the boy.
“Did you hurt my daughter?”
The kid shoved me and smirked. “My dad bankrolls this school. I decide what happens here.”
When he proudly admitted it, I made one call.
“We’ve got the proof.”
They picked the wrong child.
They picked the daughter of the State Supreme Court Chief Justice.
Chapter 1: The Hospital
Hospitals always smell the same.
Disinfectant. Cold air. Quiet panic.
Usually that scent meant work for me—interviews, legal reports, victims’ statements.
But today it meant something else.
It meant my daughter was hurt.
“Mom… it hurts.”
The small voice came from the hospital bed where Ava, my eight-year-old daughter, lay curled beneath a blanket. Her arm was wrapped in a brand-new cast.
But the cast wasn’t what broke my heart.
The purple bruise spreading across her cheek did.
“I know, sweetheart,” I whispered, brushing her hair back. “The medicine will help soon.”
Her eyes looked older than they should have.
“I don’t want to go back to school,” she said softly.
“You don’t have to,” I told her. “But I need to know what happened.”
She hesitated.
Then whispered the name.
“Dylan.”
My stomach tightened.
“Did Dylan push you?” I asked gently.
She nodded.
“He wanted my lunch money. I said no. He shoved me down the stairs.”
My hands clenched.
“And the teachers?”
“They didn’t see. Dylan told everyone I tripped.”
I kissed her forehead and stood.
“Rest. Grandma will stay with you.”
Her eyes widened. “Where are you going?”
I smiled faintly.
“To explain something to your school.”
I stepped into the hallway and dialed a number saved under “Judicial Operations – Priority.”
“This is Judge Carter,” I said calmly. “Pull the file on Marcus Hale. And prepare documentation.”
“Yes, Chief Justice,” the clerk replied.
I hung up.
They thought they hurt a little girl.
They had no idea who her mother was.
Chapter 2: Old Enemies
Brookstone Academy looked more like a luxury resort than a school.
Expensive SUVs filled the lot.
And parked across two spaces at the front—
a bright blue Lamborghini.
I recognized the attitude before I even walked inside.
The secretary tried to stop me.
“Ma’am, the principal is in a meeting with a donor—”
I pushed the office door open.
Inside sat Marcus Hale.
My ex.
Ten years had changed nothing.
Still the expensive suits. Still the arrogance.
His son Dylan sat on the couch playing video games.
Marcus leaned back and smirked.
“Well, if it isn’t Victoria Carter,” he said. “I heard your kid took a tumble.”
He laughed.
“Clumsy. Just like her mom.”
