Stories

PART 2: MY FATHER HAD NO IDEA HE WAS BEING RECORDED

PART 2: MY FATHER DIDN’T KNOW HE’D BEEN RECORDED
When I refused to let my spoiled brother move into my apartment, my dad decided to wait for me outside my work to remind me, with his fists, who was still in charge of the family. My mom didn’t run to defend me; she ran to tell the police that I was exaggerating.

The first thing I remember wasn’t his fist, but my own heartbeat.

It pounded so hard in my ears that the parking garage at Morrison & Associates felt like it was underwater. The white basement lights flickered over the concrete, over my purse tossed next to a tire, over my ID badge snapped in half with my name dangling from a twisted clip.

I was sitting on the edge of an ambulance, my legs trembling and my light blouse stained with blood. A paramedic held a cold compress to my cheekbone and said something about stitches. I nodded, even though I could barely hear him.

Then I saw my dad.

William Brennan. Fifty-eight years old, broad shoulders, square jaw, the kind of man neighbors called “strong-willed” as if that were a virtue. Two police officers were walking him in handcuffs toward the cruiser. He was struggling—not out of fear, but out of anger, as if he still couldn’t understand that his orders were no longer enough.

A few steps away was my mom.

She wasn’t crying. She wasn’t asking if I could breathe. She didn’t cover her mouth the way a mother does when she sees her daughter bleeding.

She was pointing at me.

“She provoked him,” I managed to read on her lips.

A receptionist from my building, still holding her thermos, looked down. A security guard who, minutes earlier, had tried to pull him off me stood motionless next to the parking booth, clutching his radio to his chest. No one knew where to look.

My phone buzzed in my lap. The cracked screen was still lit up with the last message from my dad, sent at 12:17 PM:

“We need to talk. Trevor needs family.”

Trevor.

My younger brother. Twenty-eight years old. The golden boy. The one who could lose jobs, break leases, live on loans, and still show up for Christmas as if the world owed him another chance. I was the daughter who paid on time, who didn’t make noise, who was just expected to understand.

That morning, Trevor had called to tell me he needed “a few months” in my apartment.

“Just until I get on my feet,” he said, with the calm voice of someone who has never had to carry the weight of their own consequences.

I told him no.

I didn’t yell. I didn’t insult him. I just said my apartment was a one-bedroom, that I had worked for years to pay for it, and that I wasn’t going to turn my home into the next waiting room for his failures.

At five o’clock, when I walked out to the parking garage, my dad was standing next to my car.

He didn’t say hello.

He snatched the keys out of my hand and threw them on the ground. The metal hit with a sharp clatter, like a broken little bell.

“You’re going to do what I say,” he spat at me, “or you’re dead to this family.”

I looked toward the elevator entrance. My coworker Julia froze, clutching a binder to her chest. The security guard took a step forward, then stopped when my mom appeared from behind my dad and said, with a calmness that still hurts more than the blow itself:

“Don’t make a scene, Andrea. Just give the keys to your brother.”

That was what broke me inside.

Not the first punch. Not the metallic taste in my mouth. But hearing her ask for silence as if my dignity was just bad manners.

Now, in front of the ambulance, a woman in plain clothes approached. She wore a badge on her belt and had eyes that didn’t waste time.

“I’m Detective Morris,” she said. “I need you to tell me what happened while it’s still fresh.”

I took a breath. My ribs burned.

My hand found something inside my jacket pocket: the blue USB drive I used to keep work backups. The same one I had left plugged into the car that morning, recording audio for a meeting that never happened.

I squeezed it slowly between my fingers.

Then I looked up at the detective and said:

“Before I answer, there’s something you need to hear.”

Detective Morris didn’t immediately lean toward the flash drive. First, she looked at my hands, then at my face, and then turned toward where my mom was still arguing with a police officer as if she were complaining about a bad check at a restaurant.

“What’s on it?” she asked.

“Audio,” I said. “From the parking garage.”

The paramedic stopped adjusting the gauze. He didn’t say anything, but his fingers went still on the medical tape.

The detective reached out carefully.

“Did you record it on purpose?”

I barely shook my head. My neck hurt.

“I work with clients who sometimes deny giving instructions. I record voice notes in the car when I leave meetings. Today, it was left on.”

The detective placed the USB drive into an evidence bag. Her expression didn’t change, but something in the atmosphere did. The police officer by the cruiser looked our way. My mom stopped talking for a second.

My dad noticed it too.

“Andrea!” he yelled from the cruiser. “Don’t be ridiculous! We settle this in the family!”

That phrase made me close my eyes.

Because in my house, “in the family” never meant taking care of each other. It meant keeping my mouth shut so Trevor wouldn’t feel bad. It meant lending money without asking when he would pay it back. It meant taking him out to lunch after he yelled at me, because my mom said he was “more sensitive.”

Detective Morris stood up.

“Mr. Brennan, keep quiet.”

He let out a short, dry laugh.

“You have no idea who you’re talking to.”

My mom approached the ambulance with quick steps. She clutched her purse tightly against her body, her lips painted a flawless red, as if that alone could hold the scene together.

“Andrea,” she said quietly, without looking at my wound. “Think carefully about what you’re going to do.”

The detective stepped between us slightly—not theatrically, just enough.

“Ma’am, you need to give her some space.”

My mom gave her a small smile, the kind she used at dinner parties with the neighbors to pretend everything was under control.

“I’m her mother.”

“Then act like it,” the detective replied.

No one yelled. No one clapped. But Julia, who was still near the elevator, finally looked up. The security guard dropped his hand from his radio as if it weighed a ton.

My mom blinked, offended.

“My husband only came to talk to her. Andrea always exaggerates. She’s been dramatic since she was a little girl.”

There it was.

The usual word.

Dramatic when I cried because Trevor broke my laptop in high school and my parents told me I should have put it away better. Dramatic when I refused to pay off his credit card debt. Dramatic when I said I didn’t want him bringing his friends over to my apartment while I was at work.

Dramatic was the label they slapped on me every time a truth made them uncomfortable.

“Mrs. Brennan,” the detective said, “there are cameras in the garage, and I have the recording right here. Your daughter doesn’t need to exaggerate anything.”

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