What the Judge Said and What Happened When It Was Over
Cobb County Superior Court. Judge Patricia Wyn presiding.
If you spent enough years in Georgia family law, you learned judges the way farmers learn weather. Judge Wyn had no patience for performance, no taste for practiced sympathy, and a particular attentiveness where children were concerned. She could detect narrative management from thirty feet away.
Anthony came without an attorney.
That told me two things: either he had decided surrender was cleaner than defense, or he had quickly understood that no competent lawyer wanted to stand up and argue these facts.
Josephine sat at our table, composed and precise. Beside her sat Skyla in a purple dress and white shoes, hair finally detangled and braided, hands folded too carefully in her lap.
I had not wanted her there.
But she had asked to come.
“I need to know where I’m going,” she said the night before.
So I let her.
Josephine laid out the case with devastating simplicity. No theatrics. Sequence. Pattern. Evidence. The kind of presentation that lets facts do all the work.
The recordings were entered. The photographs. The documented trips, the unequal celebrations, the neighbor’s affidavit confirming she had been asked to “check in” on Skyla during the Disney trip but had never been designated legal guardian. Email correspondence from Skyla’s teacher showing parental absences at school events. My own affidavit.
Then Anthony testified.
Eleven minutes.
He did not deny anything. He did not attack me or manufacture excuses. In a voice stripped clean of ego, he said he loved his daughter and had failed her in ways he had not fully understood until someone forced him to look at them directly.
Judge Wyn asked, “Do you believe your father can currently provide more consistent emotional and practical care for Skyla than you have?”
Anthony swallowed.
“Yes, Your Honor.”
There is no triumph in hearing your child say something like that. Only grief with a backbone.
When it was my turn, I kept my hands flat on the table.
“I am not here because I wanted to relive family court. I am here because an eight-year-old child should not have to wonder whether she belongs in her own family.”
Judge Wyn looked at Skyla then — not in a way that put pressure on her, just long enough to acknowledge that everything in this room had started with one small person at the center of it.
The order came cleanly.
De facto custody granted to Steven Collins, effective immediately.
Visitation to be reviewed subject to therapeutic recommendation and further compliance.
I exhaled slowly.
Beside me, Skyla was already looking at me.
She didn’t cry.
She gave me a small, serious nod. The same nod she had given me in the kitchen days earlier when I told her she was the whole point.
Receipt acknowledged. Promise understood.
The Drive Home and the Question That Stopped Me Cold
On the drive back, Marietta moved past in warm late-afternoon light. Grocery stores. Gas stations. School buses. The ordinary structure of a world that had just changed forever.
Skyla was quiet.
I didn’t press. Sometimes children need room to feel the ground settle under them.
At a red light, she spoke.
“Grandpa?”
“Yes?”
“Am I your first choice?”
I sat with that question for one full breath because some kinds of love arrive as pain before they arrive as words.
Then I put my hand over hers where it rested on the center console.
“You are not my first choice,” I said softly. “You are my only choice.”
She looked up at me.
“Always were.”
She turned back toward the window, but not before I saw the tears rise.
I drove the rest of the way with one hand on the wheel and the other resting where she could reach it.
In the months that followed, Skyla settled into my house in Decatur in the way that children settle when safety becomes predictable. She had her own room, her drawings on the walls, her books on a shelf she chose herself. She talked more. Laughed more. A little girl who had been left behind was beginning to take up space as if she had a right to it — which, of course, she always had.
Her first birthday in my house was quiet. We went to a small park, had cake, walked a trail through the woods behind the house. Nothing extravagant. Everything she needed.
At the end of the day, she sat beside me on the porch steps in the evening light and said simply: “Grandpa, I’m really glad I’m with you.”
I held her close and said nothing, because there was nothing better to add.
That’s what it comes down to, in the end.
Not the filings, not the evidence, not the courtroom orders — though all of those mattered. What it comes down to is what you are willing to show up for, consistently, when someone small is counting on you to be there in the morning.
Skyla had her home. Her place. Her person.
And in the end, that was the only thing that mattered.
What do you think about Steven and Skyla’s story? Drop a comment on the Facebook video — we want to hear from you. And if this story moved you, please share it with someone who needs to read it today. Sometimes the most important thing a person can do for a child is simply refuse to look away.