"The Forgotten Lawyer" Chapter 8
This time with his eyes wide open.
His phone buzzed.
A text from Nina.
Dad, I know you're working, but remember to sleep.
Also, I left a sandwich in the fridge for you.
Also, also... you've got this.
Lucas smiled.
Some of the tension melted from his shoulders.
This was different from before.
Back then, he had buried himself in work because he didn't know how else to carry grief.
Now he had Nina.
Older.
Smarter.
His anchor.
The constant reminder of what actually mattered.
He drove home through nearly empty streets.
Nina was already asleep.
Just as she promised, there was a turkey-and-cheese sandwich waiting for him in the refrigerator—his favorite.
He ate quietly at the kitchen table while flipping through his notes.
Legal questions.
Technical questions.
A growing list of research topics.
Tomorrow would be the real battle.
Tonight...
He simply needed to remember how to think like a lawyer again.
People always said it was like riding a bicycle.
Lucas wasn't so sure.
This bicycle had been sitting in storage for six years.
And tomorrow, he would be racing against someone who had never stopped pedaling.
He finally went to bed close to midnight.
Set his alarm for five.
Then lay awake staring at the ceiling.
In the darkness, he could almost hear Ellen's voice.
She had always been the practical one.
The person who could cut through his overthinking with a single sentence.
"You're doing the right thing."
"Now stop worrying about whether you can do it... and just do it."
She had always believed in him.
Even during the moments he doubted himself.
Lucas closed his eyes.
He thought about Evelyn sitting alone in that courtroom.
About corporations destroying lives while insisting it was simply business.
About technology capable of bringing clean water to millions of people being buried because it threatened someone else's profit margin.
He thought about Nina.
Only twelve years old.
Already understanding that sometimes doing the right thing meant choosing the harder path.
He thought about the witness stand he had repaired that morning.
About cracks.
About broken things that could become stronger with the right tools and enough care.
Eventually...
Sleep came.
Deep and dreamless.
When the alarm rang at five the next morning, he was ready.
The next seven days would test him in ways he hadn't experienced for years.
But that was all right.
He hadn't accepted the case because it was easy.
Or because victory was guaranteed.
He accepted it because it was right.
Sometimes...
That had to be enough.
The week disappeared like water slipping through clenched fingers.
Too fast.
Never enough.
Lucas arrived at AquaVerde before sunrise every morning and left long after dark.
His truck's headlights cut through empty streets while Nina stayed with her best friend's family, insisting he needed the time to focus.
That quiet act of maturity both broke his heart and filled it with pride.
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By the third day, his dining room table had vanished beneath stacks of legal files.
His coffee consumption had tripled.
The calluses earned through years of carpentry were now joined by a different kind of ache—the soreness that came from endless writing, typing, reading, and thinking.
His mind felt like a marathon runner returning after years away.
Every mental muscle protested.
Every page demanded effort.
But slowly...
The instincts returned.
And with them, the outline of a defense.
Sarah had built a timeline so detailed and visually clear that even someone with no legal background could follow it.
Lab notebooks from five years earlier.
Thesis drafts completed four years earlier.
Patent applications filed three years earlier.
Every major milestone predating Evelyn's consulting work with Meridian.
The story practically told itself.
Evelyn Moore had developed her technology independently.
Methodically.
With documentation supporting every step.
Meanwhile, Evelyn had completed the technical summary Lucas requested.
Somehow she managed to make extraordinarily complex engineering concepts understandable without sacrificing precision.
Lucas read it once.
Then twice.
Then four times.
He asked dozens of questions until he understood not only what she had built...
...but why it mattered.
The innovation wasn't hidden inside a single component.
It lived in the elegance of the entire design.
The optimization of flow rates.
The pressure gradients.
The manufacturing process that made affordability possible without sacrificing performance.
The more Lucas learned...
The more convinced he became that Meridian's lawsuit was exactly what Evelyn claimed.
A sophisticated attempt to steal an invention while disguising the theft as intellectual property protection.
On the fifth day...
Lucas found something that changed everything.
It was two o'clock in the morning.
His eyes burned from exhaustion.
He was reading deposition transcripts when he reached testimony from Dr. Marcus Webb, Meridian's former Director of Research.
Webb had left the company six months before the lawsuit was filed.
Brighton had deposed him.
But Lucas quickly realized Brighton had completely missed the significance of what Webb was saying.
According to the testimony, Meridian's water filtration research during Evelyn's consulting period was still preliminary.
Far from production-ready.
Internal prototypes remained plagued by serious technical problems.
Even more damaging...
Webb testified that Meridian executives had openly discussed how Evelyn's published academic research had influenced their own development efforts.
In other words...
They had learned from her.
Not the other way around.
Brighton asked only a handful of follow-up questions before moving on.
He never recognized what the testimony actually meant.
Lucas leaned back in his chair.
The pieces finally clicked together.
This wasn't merely a defense anymore.
It could become a counterattack.
If Meridian's own former research director admitted their technology had been influenced by Evelyn's published work...
Then the entire narrative flipped upside down.
Meridian wasn't accusing Evelyn of stealing their ideas.
They were accusing her of stealing ideas that had originated with her.
Lucas grabbed his phone and called Sarah despite the late hour.
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She answered on the second ring.
Wide awake.
"Please tell me you found something."
"Webb's deposition."
"Pages forty-seven through sixty-three."
"Did you read this?"
"I did."
"But Brighton didn't think it mattered."
"He was focused on proving Evelyn's work was independent."
"He never considered proving Meridian's work was derivative."
Lucas stood up.
"We need Webb at the hearing."
"Is he still willing to testify?"
"I don't know."
"Brighton never contacted him after the deposition."
"But I still have his information."
"I can reach out."
"Do it first thing tomorrow morning."
"We need him."
There was a brief silence.
Then Lucas added quietly,
"Sarah..."
"You've been incredible through all of this."
"You know that, right?"
"You didn't have to help us."
Her answer came immediately.
"Yes, I did."
"I became a paralegal because I believed the law should help people."
"Watching Brighton throw this case while Evelyn fought for something that actually mattered..."
"I couldn't be part of that."
"Even if it costs me my job."
Lucas smiled.
"If we win..."
"You'll have better job offers than you'll know what to do with."
"And if we lose?"
Sarah answered without hesitation.
"Then at least we'll lose honestly."
"That's worth something."
After another pause, Sarah spoke again.
"Lucas..."
"Can I ask you something?"
"Of course."
"Why did you really take this case?"
"I know what you said in court."
"About standing up for someone who needed help."
"But I can tell that's not the whole story."
Lucas looked across the dining table covered in files.
Then answered honestly.
"Seven years ago..."
"I helped defend a pharmaceutical company."
"They concealed dangerous side effects."
"People died."
"We didn't know at first."
"But eventually..."
"We knew."
"And we won anyway."
"We were that good."
"When it ended, I had a corner office."
"A partnership track."
"And I couldn't sleep."
"A few months later my wife died."
"And I realized life was too short to spend defending people who hurt others for profit."
"So I walked away."
"But leaving didn't erase what I'd done."
"It only meant I stopped making it worse."
He looked down at the papers spread before him.
"And now..."
"I have a chance to use everything I learned against the kind of people I used to help."
"Maybe that's redemption."
"Or maybe it's just trying to balance the scales."
"I honestly don't know."
"But it feels right."
Sarah's voice softened.
"It is right."
"Now get some sleep."
"We only have two days left."
Lucas never did go to bed.
Instead, he kept reading.
Kept writing.
Kept building the case inside his mind.
By the time sunlight crept through the kitchen windows...
He had a strategy.
Risky.
Aggressive.
Requiring flawless execution.
But for the first time all week...
He believed it might actually work.
On the sixth morning, Lucas met Evelyn and Sarah in the conference room that had long since become their war room.
Standing before the whiteboard, he uncapped a marker.
"Meridian's motion for summary judgment rests on three pillars."
He drew three vertical lines.
"First..."
"They claim Evelyn had access to their research."
"Second..."
"They argue similarities between the systems prove theft."
"Third..."
"They rely on their expert witness to validate that conclusion."
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