His expression shifted at the word police.
I pulled the slip from my phone case and slid it across the counter. He read it, then looked back at his screen with a different seriousness.
“I can see the caller ID,” he said. “It’s logged in the notes. Caller identified himself as Grant Holloway.”
There it was again—my father’s name typed neatly in a field that made it look official.
“Did he say why he canceled?” I asked.
The agent scrolled. “He said you’re not well and you’re not safe to travel alone. He asked us to stop you from getting on the plane.”
Same language. Different institution.
Threat at the airport. Not safe to travel. Unstable.
My father was building a version of me that could be waved around like a warning sign.
“I need you to reverse it,” I said. “And I need those notes printed.”
He nodded, fingers moving faster now. “Reversing depends on availability.”
“I’ll pay for a new ticket,” I said. “I just need to get there.”
He clicked, the screen refreshed.
Then he said, “There’s one seat still open.”
“Print it,” I said.
He printed the new boarding pass and slid it over, then printed the internal notes—one thin sheet with a timestamp, the caller ID, and my father’s name.
“Keep this,” he said quietly. “If he tries again, tell them to flag your profile for in-person verification only.”
“I will,” I said.
I didn’t linger. I walked fast toward the gate with my new boarding pass in one hand and my father’s paper trail in the other.
Boarding had already started. The scanner beeped when I handed my pass over.
Green.
I stepped onto the jet bridge and didn’t look back.
Once I was in my seat, I finally allowed myself one private second of shaking—just in my fingers. Then I forced them still. I opened my folder and checked that the packet I’d been carrying all morning was still there: the CAD printout and dispatch summary from the night Grandpa died.
The paper looked ordinary. That was the point. Ordinary paper is harder to argue with than emotional stories.
My phone buzzed.
A text from my mother: We know you’re trying to stir things up. Turn around. You’ll regret it.
I didn’t respond.
Another buzz.
A court notification I hadn’t subscribed to: Notice of hearing update.
My stomach tightened as I opened it.
The hearing time had been moved earlier by two hours.
Two hours.
They weren’t trying to keep me off the plane anymore. They were trying to make sure that even if I landed, I’d land too late.
The plane pushed back. As the engines rolled up, I stared at the notice and did the only thing left inside my control.
I called the probate clerk’s office.
It rang twice. A woman answered, brisk and tired. “Rio Arriba County Probate.”
“My name is Nina Holloway,” I said, voice steady. “I’m a beneficiary in today’s hearing. I just received a notice the hearing was moved earlier. I’m in transit due to interference, and I need to confirm whether the court will allow remote appearance or continue until I arrive.”
Keys tapped. A pause. Then her tone shifted slightly—less routine.
“Miss Holloway,” she said carefully, “the time change was requested this morning as an emergency accommodation.”
“By who?” I asked.
Another pause. “By counsel for Grant and Linda Holloway.”
My chest went cold.
“Has the court granted anything yet?” I asked.
The clerk hesitated. “Your parents’ attorney filed a motion to proceed without you based on a claim you were detained by airport police for threat-related behavior.”
I stared out the window as the runway blurred into motion.
They were writing me out in real time.
I bought the in-flight Wi-Fi before the seatbelt sign even turned off, then called the clerk back.
“I need an address for emergency exhibits,” I said. “Your motion contains a factual misrepresentation being used to deprive me of my right to appear. I have documentation that contradicts it.”
“We don’t accept filings by email,” she said automatically.
“I’m not asking you to file it,” I replied. “I’m asking where I can send supporting documents for the judge to review, because the motion is false.”
A beat. Then: “Are you represented?”
“Yes. Elliot Lane.”
Keys tapped again. “Mr. Lane is in the building.”
“Please note this,” I said, controlled. “I was stopped at airport security because my father filed a report. Airport police identified him via call log and audio. I was cleared. And my flight was canceled by my father calling the airline and claiming I’m not safe to travel.”
The clerk went quiet for a moment, then gave me an address for a secure exhibit inbox.
I built an email like a brick wall—no emotion, no adjectives. Attached the incident slip. Attached the airline notes. Attached screenshots of my mother’s threats. Five sentences. Timeline. Request.
Then I called Elliot Lane.
He answered on the first ring, voice low like he was already standing in a courthouse hallway. “Nina. Where are you?”
“On the plane,” I said. “They moved the hearing earlier and filed a motion claiming I was detained for threats.”
“I saw it,” he said, and his voice sharpened. “No police report attached. Just their declaration.”
“Because there isn’t one,” I said.
“I know,” he replied. “Send me the emergency call log too. Now.”
I pulled the packet from my folder, flattened it on the tray table, and photographed each page. Then I emailed it to the clerk’s secure inbox and copied Lane.
Two minutes later, the clerk replied: The judge has reviewed your exhibits and is considering the motion at the start of the hearing. Please remain available by phone.
My phone buzzed again—Lane.
“Your father just told the judge you were removed in handcuffs,” he said softly. “And the judge just asked the clerk to read your incident number into the record.”
I closed my eyes once, steadying my breath.
Let the record speak, I thought.
Let them drown in their own lies.
Part 3
I stayed on the phone while the courtroom came to order. I couldn’t hear everything, but I could hear enough to recognize when the air changed—murmurs settling, chairs stilling, that quiet that falls when a judge stops being patient.
Then I heard the judge’s voice clearly, older and flat.
“Counsel,” he said, “I’m looking at a supplemental exhibit containing an airport incident number. I’m also looking at airline notes identifying the caller as Grant Holloway.”
A beat of silence. Then my father’s voice rose too quickly, too defensive, like a man trying to outtalk paper. “That’s what she wants you to believe, Your Honor. She’s manipulative.”
The judge didn’t take the bait. “Mr. Holloway,” he said evenly, “you are in a court of record. Choose your words carefully.”
Lane whispered into the phone, “He’s irritated.”
“Good,” I murmured, not for spite, but because irritation is the first crack in arrogance.
The judge continued. “I have an airport police slip indicating the party was stopped, identified, and cleared. No arrest. No handcuffs. No detention for threats.”
My father tried again, “Your Honor, she—”
“You do not get to diagnose your daughter as a strategy,” the judge snapped, still not loud, just final.
Then the judge said the sentence my parents had spent weeks trying to prevent: “Ms. Holloway, are you present by phone?”
Lane angled the phone closer. My mouth went dry.
“Yes, Your Honor,” I said. “I’m on an aircraft in transit due to the interference described in my exhibits. I’m available to be heard.”
A pause. Then: “You are heard,” the judge said.
My chest tightened—not victory, not relief, something closer to dignity finally being recognized in a room that mattered.
The judge addressed the courtroom. “Given the credible evidence of interference, I am denying the motion to proceed without Ms. Holloway. I am also denying any request for temporary appointment as personal representative today. I will not reward obstruction.”
Lane exhaled quietly. “Thank you,” he whispered.
But the judge wasn’t finished. “Counsel,” he continued, “I am continuing this hearing to tomorrow morning at nine to allow Ms. Holloway to appear in person. Additionally, I am directing production of communications related to the airport report and airline cancellation. Failure to comply may result in sanctions. I am also referring the conduct described to the appropriate authorities for review.”
Referral. Sanctions.
Consequences had entered the record.
When the call ended, I sat back in my seat and stared at the folder on my tray table. My parents had tried to stop me with uniforms and cancellations and motions. Instead, the court had slowed down and written their names into official ink.
I landed after dark, exhausted in that deep way that comes from fighting a battle nobody can see.
Lane met me outside baggage claim under harsh lights where everything looks more real and less forgiving. He didn’t hug me. He didn’t ask if I was okay.
He handed me a slim binder. “These are the documents everyone’s been fighting over,” he said.
Inside were my exhibits—the airline notes with my father’s name typed neatly, the airport incident slip, screenshots of my mother’s threat about guardianship. And behind all of that, protected in a clear sleeve like evidence, was the emergency call log from the night Grandpa died.
Lane kept walking beside me toward the parking garage. “Your parents are claiming your grandfather wasn’t lucid when he updated the will,” he said. “They’re also claiming you pressured him.”
I didn’t give a speech. I just opened the sleeve and looked at the line that had been burning a hole through my brain since I first read it.
Caller reports male subject attempting to obtain signature. Patient states, “Do not let him take papers.”
I shut the binder. Lane watched my face change. “You didn’t tell me that part,” he said quietly.
“I didn’t want it said out loud on a phone,” I replied.
He nodded once, like he understood the instinct.
At the hotel, I barely slept—not because I was scared of the judge, but because I knew my parents would show up smiling.
They always smiled when they thought the system belonged to them.
In the morning, we walked into probate early enough to smell coffee before we heard voices. My mother was already there—perfect hair, soft cardigan, hands clasped like prayer. The Concerned Parent costume.
My father stood in an expensive suit, speaking in low tones to their attorney. When he saw me walk in beside Lane, his smile didn’t drop.
It sharpened.
We didn’t greet them. We didn’t give the hallway a show. Lane guided me into the courtroom and into the front row aisle seat—visible to the bench, not hiding, not shrinking.
When the judge entered, the room rose.
He didn’t start with the will.
He started with my parents.
“I reviewed the supplemental exhibits,” he said, voice flat. “And I reviewed the motion to proceed without Ms. Holloway based on an alleged detention for threat-related behavior.”
My father’s attorney stood quickly. “Your Honor—”
The judge held up one hand. “No. I have questions. I want answers without theater.”
The courtroom went so quiet I could hear a pen click behind me.
The judge looked directly at my father. “Mr. Holloway. Did you contact airport police and report your daughter as a threat?”
My father’s smile tried to hold.
“Your Honor, I was worried,” he said. “She’s unstable. She said things—”
“Did you make the call?” the judge asked, sharper. “Yes or no.”
My father inhaled like he wanted to perform innocence.
Then he realized the judge wasn’t a stage.
“Yes,” he admitted.
My mother’s eyes snapped to him, furious, because that admission shifted everything. A lie whispered is one thing. A lie sworn is another.
The judge nodded once. “All right. Then we’re going to address motive.”
Lane stood. “Your Honor, we have the CAD report and the dispatch narrative, and we’ve requested the audio.”
The judge looked at me. Not pity. Not sympathy. Attention.
“Ms. Holloway,” he said, “is the log in your possession?”