My Father Called Me An Addict In Court—Then The Judge Recognized Me-chloe

My father did not ease into the lie.

He stood up in probate court and threw it across the room like something heavy enough to crush me.

The fluorescent lights above the benches made a tired buzzing sound, and the old wood in the courtroom smelled faintly like dust, paper, and floor polish.

Image

I remember those details because I was trying very hard not to remember that the man pointing at me was my father.

Reed Marlowe pushed his chair back from the petitioner’s table, buttoned his navy suit jacket over his stomach, and raised one shaking finger in my direction.

“She’s an addict, Your Honor. She has been since she was nineteen.”

Nobody moved.

The court clerk looked down at her keyboard.

My aunt, who had come because my father told her I had manipulated a dying man, slowly pressed her purse against her lap like it might protect her from whatever came next.

I sat twelve feet away in a gray wool cardigan my grandfather had given me for Christmas three years earlier.

It was too warm for the courtroom, but I wore it anyway because it still smelled faintly of cedar from his hall closet.

The left cuff had a snag from his old cat, a mean little orange thing that acted like it owned the house, and I kept rubbing that snag between my thumb and finger.

It gave my hand something to do besides shake.

My attorney, Dorothea Kessler, did not object.

She did not jump up.

She did not say, “Withdraw that.”

She sat beside me with her pen above her notebook and let my father’s words hang in the court record exactly as he had chosen to say them.

That was the first sign that the morning was not going the way my father believed it was going.

He thought silence meant he was winning.

He had always thought that.

In our house, whoever stayed quiet lost.

When I was a child, my father could fill a kitchen with his voice until the cabinets seemed smaller and the rest of us seemed younger.

My mother used to wipe the same clean counter over and over while he talked.

I learned to study the floor, study my plate, study the steam rising from boxed macaroni, and wait for the storm to move on.

Read More