I never told my parents I was a high court judge

The gavel felt heavy in my hand, a solid weight of authority that grounded me in a world of chaos.

“In the matter of The People vs. Kogan,” my voice rang out, amplified by the courtroom acoustics, steady and devoid of hesitation. “I find the defendant’s lack of remorse chilling. The sentence is twenty years, no possibility of parole.”

The defendant, a racketeer who had terrorized small business owners for a decade, slumped in his chair. His high-priced defense attorney wouldn’t meet my eyes. The bailiff, a burly man named Officer Miller, gave me a subtle nod of respect as he led the prisoner away. In this room, under the seal of the Superior Court, I was the Honorable Alexandria Vance. I was feared. I was respected. I was the final word.

Six hours later, I was on my knees, scrubbing red wine out of a cream-colored Persian rug.

The transformation was absolute and sickeningly familiar. I had traded my black silk robes for a stained grey sweatshirt. I had traded the heavy oak bench for the cold hardwood floor of my parents’ foyer.

“Missed a spot,” my father’s voice drifted down from above.

I looked up. Robert Vance stood there, swirling a glass of scotch, tapping the toe of his polished Italian loafer against my shin. It wasn’t a hard kick—just enough to remind me of my place.

“Honestly, Alex,” he sneered, looking at my messy bun and red, scrubbed-raw hands. “Look at you. Thirty-two years old, wearing rags, still scrubbing floors like a maid. It’s embarrassing. Bella is upstairs getting her beauty sleep for the party. Try not to wake her with your incompetence.”As I listened to the opening arguments, I caught my reflection in the plexiglass shield. I saw the scars, yes. But I also saw the eyes of a woman who had walked through hell and come out holding the keys to the devil’s cage.

I wasn’t just a Judge. I was the one verdict they couldn’t escape.

VA

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