3 juillet 2026

My Stepmother Claimed I Was Not Stable In Court Until The Judge Removed His Glasses

My stepmother said it without blinking, looking directly at the judge while she dabbed her eyes with a tissue she had pre-crumpled in her purse for effect.

“She doesn’t even know what day it is, Your Honor. She can barely dress herself.”

I kept my hands folded in my lap. I counted silently to fourteen, which was the number of days she had left before she lost everything she had ever stolen from my family, and I let the words hang in the air of courtroom 4B of the Harris County Probate Court in Houston, Texas, where I was surrounded by people who shared my last name and not one of them was on my side.

My stepmother Diane had been in my life since I was eleven years old. She arrived eight months after my mother died of pancreatic cancer, moving into the space my mother left behind with the efficiency of someone who had been watching for the vacancy. She had blonde highlights and a real estate license she never used and a smile that could charm the skin off a snake, and my father, who was a genuinely good man drowning in the particular grief that comes from losing the person who made sense of everything, grabbed the rope she threw him without noticing it was a leash.

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