The judge looked directly at me. “The therapist notes that while the trauma was severe, the children are showing remarkable progress during their supervised visits. She recommends a gradual shift to unsupervised, shared custody. Yet, you are pushing for maximum restriction. Mr. Mercer, stand up.”
I stood, buttoning my jacket, my heart thudding in my chest.
“Do you believe their mother is a permanent danger to them?” the judge asked bluntly.
I looked across the aisle. Delaney was holding her breath, her hands clasped so tightly in her lap her knuckles were white. She looked like a woman bracing for the executioner’s axe. I thought about the rage I had carried in the hospital. I thought about the power I held right now to legally erase her from our lives.
Then I thought about Micah, handing her a blue Lego brick yesterday, a tiny smile cracking his guarded face.
“No, Your Honor,” I said, and the courtroom went dead silent. Avery hissed my name under her breath, but I ignored her.
“My children needed safety, and I provided it,” I continued, my voice steady. “But they also love their mother. She broke them, yes. But for the last four months, I’ve watched her sit on a dirty floor and try to glue the pieces back together without making excuses. If the professionals say it’s safe for her to have them more, I won’t stand in the way. I don’t want to win a war if the victory means my kids lose their mother entirely.”
Delaney let out a choked gasp, burying her face in her hands.
The judge’s stern expression softened just a fraction. “A wise father,” he murmured. He struck his gavel. He ordered primary physical custody to remain with me, but instituted a progressive schedule for Delaney, stepping up to unsupervised weekends over the next six months.
When we walked out into the bright afternoon glare of the courthouse steps, Delaney approached me. She looked exhausted, but the deadness in her eyes was gone.
“Rowan,” she said, her voice shaking. “Thank you. Thank you for not destroying me when you had every right to.”
I looked at her, seeing the woman I used to love, the woman who had broken my heart, and the woman who was finally trying to be a mother. “This was never about destroying you, Delaney. It was about saving them.”
The transition wasn’t cinematic. It was clunky, awkward, and littered with setbacks. But slowly, the architecture of our lives shifted. Saturday afternoon visits became Wednesday dinners at her apartment. Then, overnight stays.
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