I was standing in that courtroom wearing my leather vest, holding a sixteen-year-old boy in an orange jumpsuit while an entire room stared in disbelief. Marcus clung to me, shaking, his face buried in my chest. The judge looked bewildered, the prosecutor looked outraged, and my wife was crying quietly on the back row.
“Mr. Patterson,” the judge said, choosing his words carefully, “this young man has just pleaded guilty to vehicular manslaughter. He took your daughter’s life. He was intoxicated. He altered your family forever. Would you explain to the court why you are embracing him?”
I did not release Marcus. I just tightened my grip to steady him. “Your Honor,” I said, “before you sentence him, I would like to make a statement.”
The judge nodded. The room fell silent.
Only then did I step back, keeping close enough that Marcus knew he was not alone. My hands trembled as I turned toward the courtroom. For half a year, I had dreaded this moment. Six months since the crash. Six months since we buried my daughter.
“My daughter, Linda, was seventeen when she died,” I began. “She was driving home from a friend’s house late on a Saturday night. It was around eleven. Marcus ran a red light at seventy miles an hour. He was impaired. He hit her driver’s side door. She died on impact.”
Marcus made a broken sound behind me. Somewhere in the gallery, his mother let out a soft cry.
“The police told me Linda never saw the collision coming. That she felt no pain. People said that as though it would ease anything. It didn’t. Nothing eased it. My daughter was gone, and this boy was responsible.”
The prosecutor nodded approvingly, believing my words reinforced his request for a fifteen-year sentence to make Marcus an example.
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