Steam rose from the chipped plastic mug in my hands, but it did nothing to warm me.
I sat in the darkest corner of my tiny Chicago apartment, rocking my three-month-old daughter, Grace, against my chest while the old radiator clanged against the freezing Illinois wind outside.
I had just finished a twelve-hour night shift at Cook County Hospital. My eyes burned, my body ached, and every muscle felt heavy. But when Grace sighed softly in her sleep, I pressed my lips to her little head and whispered to myself, We’re safe.
But safety had always been a fragile lie.
My past had a name: Richard Harrington.
I hadn’t left him for money, no matter what the tabloids claimed. I left because Richard didn’t want a wife. He wanted control. He wanted obedience. He wanted me locked inside his polished North Shore mansion, smiling beside him while he crushed every piece of my independence.
When his insults turned into threats, I walked away with one suitcase and the baby still growing inside me. His final words followed me everywhere:
“I’ll make sure you have nothing left, Audrey. Not even her.”
That morning, a sharp knock split the silence.
Grace startled and cried. My stomach dropped.
When I opened the door, a process server stood there holding a thick envelope.
“Audrey Miller? You’ve been served.”
He shoved the papers into my hands and left.
Inside was a custody petition.
Richard was suing for emergency sole custody.
The affidavit described me as a poor, exhausted, negligent mother living in unsafe conditions. It twisted my night shifts into abandonment and my small apartment into proof that I was unfit. His lawyer, Arthur Pendelton, had turned every struggle into a weapon.
The hearing was in forty-eight hours.
I called every legal aid number I had. One receptionist sighed the moment I mentioned Richard’s name.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “He has half the family law firms in Chicago on retainer. The rest won’t risk crossing him. No one will take this case.”
Then the line went d3ad.
Two days later, I sat alone in family court wearing a faded blazer that felt like paper armor. Across from me, Richard looked calm in a custom suit, surrounded by three expensive attorneys. He didn’t even glance at me.
