The Locket on the Table

Part I — The Child at the Rail

The girl stood alone in the center of the courtroom, dripping rain onto the polished floor, while half the county whispered that she had broken into David Whitman’s mansion and stolen from a dead woman’s bedroom.

She was nine years old.

Her jacket was too large for her shoulders, army-green and shiny with rain. Mud had dried along one knee. Her brown hair hung in tangled ropes around a pale face that looked younger whenever she tried not to cry.

No one sat beside her.

Not a parent. Not a foster worker. Not even the tired public advocate who had brought her in and then stepped back as if distance could protect him from the embarrassment of the case.

Judge Margaret Hale looked down from the bench.

She had presided over custody fights, neglect petitions, bitter divorces, inheritance disputes that wore the faces of children. She knew how to keep a room still. She knew how to cut through hysteria with one cold sentence.

But this child made the room feel wrong.

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