Marcus made a broken sound behind me. Somewhere in the gallery, his mother let out a soft cry.
“The police told me Linda never saw the collision coming. That she felt no pain. People said that as though it would ease anything. It didn’t. Nothing eased it. My daughter was gone, and this boy was responsible.”
The prosecutor nodded approvingly, believing my words reinforced his request for a fifteen-year sentence to make Marcus an example.
“But three months ago,” I continued, “something changed. Marcus’s mother delivered a letter to our home. She stood on my porch in tears, begging me to read what her son had written.”
I withdrew a worn envelope from my vest. I had unfolded and refolded it enough times to crease every edge. “This letter explained something the authorities never told me. Something I did not know until I read his words.”
The judge leaned forward. “What did the letter say?”
I unfolded it slowly. “It said Marcus was never meant to be driving that night. He was supposed to be home. But he received a call from his closest friend, who was drunk at a party and preparing to drive. Marcus went there to stop him. He ordered an Uber for his friend. Paid for it with money he had saved for a school trip. Watched him get into the car.”
I turned toward Marcus. He was staring at the floor, tears dripping silently.
“What Marcus did not know,” I continued, “was that someone at the party slipped a drug into his drink. He thought he was drinking soda. Toxicology confirmed it—he had rohypnol in his system. He was drugged without his knowledge.”
A quiet shock filled the courtroom.
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