By the time the second hearing arrived, Rowan’s breathing had grown more fragile, and the doctors spoke plainly about urgency without using fear as a weapon, because they did not need to, not when the numbers on monitors told their own story.
Mira submitted new evidence as well, because Doreen’s ethics complaint had uncovered that Wade Hartman had been closing hundreds of cases without proper follow-up, and there were signs that he had claimed visits that never happened, and when that information entered the record, the courtroom shifted in the way a room shifted when it realized the problem wasn’t one struggling mother, it was a system that had been looking away.
The most powerful testimony came from a video of Juni, sitting with her feet dangling above the floor, holding herself very still like she was afraid movement might ruin her chance to be heard.
“My mom loves us,” she said in the recording, voice small but steady, “and she was so tired she couldn’t hear me, and I tried to help my brother, and I watched videos and I tried and I tried, and Officer Kincaid didn’t go away, and I just want us together, and I want someone to stay.”
When the video ended, the silence in the courtroom felt heavy and human.
Judge Carver looked at Tessa.
“Do you consent to temporary guardianship while you complete treatment and stabilize?”
Tessa stood, tears shining but voice clear.
“Yes, Your Honor,” she said. “He’s been there for them, and I’m going to do the work I need to do so I can be there the right way.”
Judge Carver’s decision came without flourish, because the best decisions rarely needed it.
“Temporary guardianship is granted to Officer Owen Kincaid for ninety days,” she said. “He will have authority to make medical decisions, and Ms. Hale will complete the recommended program, with review scheduled at the end of that period.”
Owen exhaled like he had been holding his breath for weeks.
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