My Ex Claimed to the Judge That Our Son Wanted to Live With Him. Then My Son Pulled Out His Phone…
In that courtroom, with Damian’s lies echoing through the air and the judge staring down at us like he was weighing the future on a scale, I sat there praying. Not for the court to believe me, not even for justice.
I prayed for my son to feel safe enough to speak his truth. And somehow, even at eight years old, he did more than speak it; he proved it.
The day Damian’s lawyer served me with the custody papers, I dropped them in the kitchen sink and threw up. My hands were shaking so badly I could barely grip the edge of the counter.
Zaden was at school. I had four hours to pull myself together before picking him up.
Four hours to figure out how I was going to survive another war with the man I had barely escaped. I called my mom first.
She came over with chamomile tea and her old file folder full of legal notes from when she went through her own divorce. She sat me down, took my hand, and said,
“This is going to be hard, but it’s not impossible.” “You have the truth on your side, and you have Zaden.”
Zaden—that’s what terrified me the most. He was only eight.
He didn’t understand courtrooms or custody. He just wanted to play soccer after school and eat chocolate chip waffles on Saturday mornings.
I didn’t want to drag him through this, but I didn’t have a choice. At first Damian was calm—too calm.
He showed up to pick Zaden up for his weekend visit wearing new clothes and bringing toys I couldn’t afford. He smiled wide, told me he wanted what was best for our son, and then whispered when Zaden wasn’t looking,
“You really think they’re going to give him to someone working part-time and living in a shoe box?”
I didn’t answer. I closed the door and sat on the couch for two hours, staring at the front door like it might not open again.
But it did. Zaden came back quiet.
He went straight to his room. Didn’t say much.
Over the next few weekends, the silence grew. He stopped talking about what he and Damian did.
He flinched when I asked how it went. One night I heard him crying into his pillow.
I sat at the edge of his bed and asked what was wrong.
“Is it bad to not want to live with someone if they’re your dad?”
I froze.
“No,” I said, “it’s not bad to want to feel safe.”
He rolled over and looked at me.
“What if he gets mad if I say that?”
I wanted to tell him not to worry, that the judge would listen, that everything would be okay. But I couldn’t lie to him.
I just held his hand and said,
“No matter what happens, I will never stop fighting for you.”
Two weeks before the hearing, Zaden started asking questions. What did a judge do? Who got to talk?
Would he have to speak? I explained it as gently as I could, telling him the judge just wanted to understand what was best for him.
He nodded like he understood, but he was scared. I could see it in his eyes.
Then came the last weekend visit before court. Damian arrived in his SUV too early, like he was trying to catch us off guard.
Zaden didn’t want to go. He clung to my side and said he had a stomach ache.
I almost kept him home, but Damian stood there on the porch, arms crossed, staring at me like he dared me to say no. Zaden walked out slowly.
I watched from the window. They didn’t know I could see them.
Damian leaned down, his face inches from Zaden’s, and spoke low and fast. Zaden didn’t say a word.
He just got into the car. When he came back Sunday night, he wasn’t the same.
He was quiet, withdrawn, too calm for an 8-year-old. He didn’t eat dinner.
He just sat on the floor in the living room messing with that old phone I gave him. I asked if everything was okay.
He nodded, said he was tired, and went to bed early. That was the night before court.
I didn’t sleep. I lay in bed staring at the ceiling, wondering what Damian had said to him, wondering if he had threatened him.
I had no proof, just a feeling—a sick one I couldn’t shake. The next morning Zaden put on his jacket and asked for the phone again.
I asked him why. He shrugged and said,
“I might want to listen to music.”
We drove to the courthouse in silence. My hands were white-knuckled on the steering wheel.
Zaden sat in the back staring out the window. I glanced at him through the mirror.
His face was blank, but his fingers were tight around that phone. When we walked into the courtroom, Damian was already seated with his lawyer.
He turned and smiled at me like we were old friends. My stomach tightened.
The judge entered. The bailiff called the room to order.
Papers shuffled. Lawyers murmured.
And then Damian stood up and said it.
“Zaden told me he wants to live with me.” “He said he doesn’t feel safe with his mother.”
I stopped breathing. My hands curled into fists in my lap.
I didn’t dare look at Zaden. Then the judge turned to my son and asked him,
“Is that true?”
Zaden stood up slowly, quietly. He reached into his jacket pocket, pulled out that old phone, and held it out.
“May I play the recording from last night?”
