Lawyer Father Defends My Attacker

Lawyer Father Defends My Attacker

I was beaten into a permanent disability by the school bully. Yet, my father, a star attorney, took the case as the defense lawyer for the main attacker.

In court, his words were sharp and flawless as he successfully argued for a verdict of not guilty. He saved the girl who had nearly taken my life.

All because the girl's mother was the benefactor who had sponsored his college education decades ago.

When I confronted him, my father stood tall, entirely self-righteous.

"Everyone is equal before the law, Tessa," he said. "I cannot abandon my professional ethics just because my daughter was the victim. Brenda was just impulsive. I couldn't bear to see her entire life ruined over one mistake."

As I watched the girl walk out of the courthouse, a free woman, a smile stretched across my face.

I pulled the disownment papers from my bagthe ones I had prepared days agoand threw them directly at his face.

"Since you value your professional ethics so highly, and since you love repaying favors so much," I said, "I hope you do a good job defending the rest of your life."

My father didn't even look at the document. To him, this was just another dramatic tantrum from his teenage daughter.

"Have you had enough, Tessa?" He picked up the sheets of paper, crumpling them into a ball without reading a single line, and tossed them into the trash bin. "Tonight, Glenda is hosting a dinner at The Gilded Fork to celebrate. You're coming with me."

"Brenda will be there too. I'll have her offer you a proper apology, and we can put this entire mess behind us."

I stared at him, unable to believe what I was hearing.

Put it behind us?

I was still confined to a wheelchair, and the girl who had shattered my knee had just walked free. And he wanted me to attend her victory dinner?

"I'm not going," I said quietly, turning my wheelchair toward the exit.

Behind me, my fathers voice rose, thick with suppressed anger. "Tessa! Can you stop being so incredibly petty? Glendas family isn't wealthy. She spent half her monthly wages on this dinner. If you don't show up, you're disrespecting me, and you're disrespecting her!"

I didn't look back. I wheeled myself forward as fast as my arms could manage, desperate to escape the suffocating weight of his voice.

When I rolled past the courthouse doors, the blinding afternoon sun made my head spin.

My mothers sedan was parked at the curb. Seeing me emerge, she scrambled out of the driver's seat, her face pale and anxious.

"Tessa! How did it go? What was the verdict?"

Looking at this woman, who had lived her entire life as a quiet shadow in our household, a wave of profound exhaustion washed over me.

"Not guilty," I said.

My mother froze, her mouth slightly open. "But... how? Your father said the trial was just a formality. He said he was going to negotiate a suspended sentence. How could she be acquitted?"

I let out a dry laugh. "Mom, your husband is a star lawyer. If he wants someone to walk free, they walk free. Even if that person broke his own daughter's leg."

My mother wrung her hands, her eyes darting away in sheer discomfort. "Well... your father must have had his reasons. Glenda did help him back in the day..."

"Save it," I interrupted, cutting her off. "Take me to the hospital. I'm not going home."

She hesitated, glancing back at the courthouse steps. "Actually... your father texted me. He wants us to head straight to The Gilded Fork. He said if we don't show up, he'll freeze my credit cards."

I stared at her. Fifty years old, and she lived like a dog on a leash, entirely dependent on my father's money, never daring to raise her voice.

"Then you should go," I said, pulling out my phone to hail an accessible rideshare. "I'll go by myself."

"Tessa, please don't be like this"

She reached out to grab my arm, but I yanked it away.

"Mom, if you still want to be my mother, do not go to that dinner. If you go, don't ever bother coming to see me again."

My ride pulled up to the curb. The driver quickly got out, gently helping me into the passenger seat.

Through the glass window, I saw my mother standing on the pavement, her face twisted in agonizing conflict. But in the end, she let out a quiet sigh, turned back to her sedan, and drove off.

She headed toward the restaurant.

I closed my eyes, letting the tears fall in the silence of the car. This was my family. A self-righteous saint for a father, and a weak, submissive coward for a mother.

And I was nothing but an inconvenient casualty in their lives.

Shortly after I was settled into my hospital bed, my phone began to buzz incessantly.

I opened social media. Brenda had posted a photo album of her celebration dinner.

In the pictures, she was raising a champagne glass, her face flushed red with joy. My father sat at the head of the table, offering his signature warm, distinguished smile.

Her caption read: Thank you, Uncle Victor! Justice may be delayed, but it is never denied! Cheers!

Justice?

What a joke.

I opened the comments. They were filled with congratulations from her friends.

Brenda is queen!

Attorney Victor is legendary!

Where's the cripple? Didn't she come to pour the drinks?

Brenda had replied: Probably crying in her bedroom, haha.

My fingers shook against the screen. Suddenly, a notification popped up.

A bank transfer of two thousand dollars from my father.

His note read: Stop throwing tantrums. Use this to buy yourself something nice. I told Glenda she doesn't have to worry about your medical expenses. Their family is struggling, and we need to show some compassion.

I stared at the words, a wave of intense nausea rising in my throat.

I hurled my phone against the brick wall.

I stayed in the hospital for three days. During that time, my father never visited once.

Instead, Glenda showed up, clutching a plastic basket filled with bruised, rotting apples. She wore her dusty work uniform, standing awkwardly at the entrance of my room.

"Tessa," she said, placing the basket on my nightstand. She rubbed her calloused hands together. "Brenda is just a kid. Sometimes she gets rough and doesn't know her own strength. I've already scolded her."

"Look, your father got her off, so let's call it even, okay?"

Even?

I stared at the decaying apples she had likely picked up from a bargain bin. A dry laugh caught in my throat. "My leg is worth a basket of rotten garbage?"

Glenda's face hardened, but she quickly forced her polite smile back on. "Oh, Tessa, you shouldn't talk like that. When your father was in college, I scraped together every penny to keep him fed. People need to show some gratitude. Look at how reasonable your father is."

"Besides, your family has plenty of money. You don't need us to pay for your hospital bills. My Brenda still needs to get married, she can't be carrying a debt."

In that moment, I understood the depths of human shamelessness. This family was a nest of leeches, and my father was the idiot who kept offering them his veins.

"Get out," I said, pointing at the door. "Take your garbage and get the hell out of my room."

Glenda's smile vanished. "What an insolent, disrespectful brat. No wonder Brenda had to teach you a lesson."

She snatched her basket, muttering curses under her breath, and spat on the linoleum floor before slamming the door behind her.

I pressed the call button, asking the nurse to come in and disinfect the room.

It was repulsive.

That afternoon, the head nurse came in, a worried look on her face as she held an invoice. "Tessa... your account is overdrawn. If we don't receive a payment soon, we'll have to stop your medications."

I blinked. "Overdrawn? Did my father... did Victor not pay the deposit?"

The nurse shook her head. "He came by yesterday and withdrew the fifty-thousand-dollar pre-payment. He said... he said the other family was facing financial difficulties, so he was lending them the money to help them get by. He told us you could cover the hospital bills with your own savings."

A loud ringing filled my ears. The last thread of my patience snapped.

He had taken my medical funds and handed them to the girl who had crippled me.

Was this the act of a biological father?

With trembling hands, I borrowed the nurse's phone and dialed his number. It rang for a long time before connecting. In the background, I could hear the clatter of tiles and my father's booming laughter.

"Hello? Who is this?"

"It's me."

The line went quiet for a second, and then his voice turned sharp and impatient. "Tessa? Where is your phone? Why are you calling from an unknown number?"

"Victor, did you withdraw my surgery deposit?" I asked, using his name.

"Is that how you speak to your father?" he barked. "Glendas family is trying to buy an apartment in the city, and they were short on the down payment. I figured your hospital expenses weren't that urgent, so I lent them the funds. Don't you have your own savings? Use that first. Don't be so incredibly selfish, Tessa. Learn to help those in need."

Help those in need.

He was stripping my bones to keep them warm.

"That was my surgery money!" I screamed into the receiver. "The surgeon said I need my second reconstructive procedure next week, or I'll be permanently disabled! You gave my medical funds to Brenda's family for an apartment? Are you out of your mind?!"

Through the line, I heard Glenda's voice in the background. "Oh, Victor, if Tessa needs it for her leg, we can wait on the apartment..."

Then came my father's firm, reassuring tone. "Don't listen to her, Glenda. Doctors always exaggerate. It's not that serious."

"Tessa, figure it out yourself. Stop bothering me."

The line went dead.

I stared at the black screen, my body freezing. The nurse cast a look of deep pity in my direction. "Tessa... is there anyone else? Can you call your mother?"

My mother? The woman who couldn't even buy personal items without begging for his permission?

I shook my head. "No. Please prepare my discharge papers."

"But your leg"

"I'm done treating it."

Since the world was rotten to the core, I had no reason to play the good daughter anymore.

I went back to our house while they were out. I packed up everything that belonged to me, leaving only the signed disownment papers on his desk.

My vintage sneaker collection, my limited-edition collectibles, and the small gold bars I had accumulated over the yearsI posted them all on online marketplace apps, selling them at a fraction of their value. I only accepted cash.

With the money, I rented a small, accessible apartment in a neighboring town and checked myself into a private orthopedic clinic.

Though I had missed the optimal window for treatment, the surgeon assured me that with enough therapy, I could walk again, though running or any intense physical activity was out of the question.

I had been the captain of my varsity basketball team. Now, I was a cripple.

But I didn't shed a single tear. My tears had run dry that afternoon in the hospital.

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