Pregnant Wife Was Mocked In Court Until The Wire Played For Everyone-hamyt - Chainityai

Pregnant Wife Was Mocked In Court Until The Wire Played For Everyone-hamyt

The first thing I remember is the sound of David laughing.

Not loud enough to look reckless.

Just loud enough to punish me.

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I was seven months pregnant, sitting in a New York family courtroom with both hands over my stomach, while the man I married asked a judge to take my son from me at birth.

David Cross sat across from me in a navy suit, clean-shaven, rested, and calm in the way only a person with a script can be calm.

I had not slept more than two hours a night in weeks.

My ankles were swollen, my throat hurt from holding back tears, and my baby kept kicking as if he knew the room was deciding his life before he had even taken his first breath.

David’s lawyer stood beside him with a folder of medical records I had never seen.

She said I was unstable.

She said I was dangerous.

She said I had refused treatment, missed appointments, threatened to vanish with the baby, and shown paranoid delusions about David’s money and his affair.

Then she slid an emergency custody waiver across the table, one that would give David our son when he was born because I was “a danger to our baby.”

David leaned close enough for the microphones to catch him.

“Sign it, or I will have you locked in psych before delivery.”

I felt my son move under my palms, and that was the only reason I did not break.

The judge warned him, but he still smiled.

When I started crying, he whispered, “Look at that performance.”

For a second I saw what he had been building for months.

Every forgotten conversation, every morning I woke up foggy, every bank statement he said I had misread, every friend he told me was jealous, every appointment note that made me sound unstable.

He had not been reacting to my collapse.

He had been arranging it.

The judge said she was inclined to grant temporary custody to David pending a full evaluation.

I tried to speak, but my throat closed.

Then the courtroom doors opened.

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