In Eastern China's Anhui Province, hundreds of driverless delivery vans navigate their way through the suburban streets of Hefei - a city with an official population of eight million - as human-driven scooters and cars whizz around them.
"[I thought] 'if my mother doesn't love me, who the hell is going to love me?'"Now a mother herself to a two-month-old boy, she said she saw the betrayal on a new level.
"I came home [after court] on Monday and I was feeding my son. I was looking at him, and I was like, I could not go 10 days, not even 10 hours really, without knowing how he was or what was going on in his life. Never mind the past 10 years."It doesn't make any sense, she's missing out on all of that."Jessica was still living and working in the same area as her mum brought her anxiety and she lived with a tic, which a doctor told her had been triggered by trauma.
"The whole thing has just had a massive effect on me, mentally and physically."She added she did not know how they would have coped without each other, or their father, who supported them emotionally and financially through the long legal process.
Now, with the result they wanted, they hope they will eventually see the money and "let go of this part of our lives".
They say they want to forget their mother, and the end of court proceedings has brought a kind of closure, allowing them to "finally breathe".Djokovic tried a variety of tactics – baseline duels, drop-shots, serve and volley – but Sinner was virtually impossible to break down.
The constant pressure forced Djokovic into loose groundstrokes and badly-executed drop-shots in an opening set which swung Sinner's way when he broke serve in the fifth game.Djokovic's level improved in the early part of the second set, with two holds to love followed by scrutiny on Sinner's serve, but he could not find a way through.
An animated Djokovic roared at the crowd after saving a break point in the fifth game and looked up to the heavens in frustration when another poor return handed over the break in his next service game.You can never completely count Djokovic out, though. He managed to break back for 5-5 before losing serve again as Sinner sealed a two-set lead at the second opportunity.