The girl froze.
For one second, she looked almost scared of what she had done.
The judge stared down at her own foot like it belonged to someone else.
The gallery gasped softly behind them.
Then the girl whispered, “My dad said you might feel it.”
The judge’s eyes snapped back to her.
“What did you say?”
The girl reached into her green coat with trembling fingers and pulled out a folded hospital bracelet.
Old.
Worn.
Kept like a secret.
The judge took it.
Her hands began shaking before she even read the name.
Because it was hers.
From the night of the accident.
The night she lost the use of her legs.
The girl’s voice broke.
“My dad was the nurse who pulled you from the car.”
The judge stopped breathing.
“He said your legs still remembered. He said you were scared because everyone told you not to hope.”
Tears filled the judge’s eyes.
The courtroom disappeared around her.
All she could see was a younger man in a burning rainstorm, holding her hand through broken glass, telling her, “Stay with me. Keep fighting.”
The judge looked down at the papers on her desk.
The man accused of stealing medicine.
The father this child was begging for.
The girl’s lips trembled.
“He took the medicine because my brother couldn’t breathe. The hospital threw him out. He was going to pay. He wrote it all down.”
The judge looked at the prosecutor.
Then at the silent courtroom.
Then at the child who had offered her a miracle before asking for one.
“Where is your brother now?” she asked.
The girl’s eyes filled.
“At home. Waiting for Dad.”
The judge looked at her own foot again.
It twitched once more.
This time, everyone saw it.
A tear slipped down her cheek.
She lifted the gavel with shaking fingers.
Then she looked at the little girl and whispered,
“Your father saved my life once.”
Her voice broke.
“Today, I’m going to save his.”