My phone vibrated in my hand. It was a text message from Julian. “Hey Dad, Mrs. Gable texted me that your car was in the driveway. Please don’t overreact. Maya only had a slight fever. Just give her the medicine and let her sleep. We spent $20k on this trip for Leo and I’m not letting her dramatic tendencies ruin it. We’ll be back Sunday afternoon.” I stared at the screen, the absolute audacity of the message turning my blood to ice. I didn’t reply. I just forwarded it to my lawyer. The trap was set.

Sunday arrived with the heavy, humid promise of a summer storm. I did not take Maya back to that suburban prison. I kept her at my house in Decatur, watched over by my neighbor Thomas, who treated her to endless cartoons and homemade soup.

I, however, drove back to Marietta. I parked in Julian’s driveway, unlocked the front door, and sat in the center of their perfectly curated living room. On the coffee table in front of me sat a neat stack of documents: the emergency custody order signed by a superior court judge, the hospital intake records, the pharmacy bills, and a printed copy of the Gilded Seas premium cruise brochure.

At 4:15 PM, a luxury town car pulled up to the curb.