Daughter Pressed Charges After Dad Attacked Her Over Her Brother-heuh

The first thing I remember after my father hit me was the sound of my own heartbeat.

Not in the poetic way people say after something frightening happens.

I mean I could hear it, thick and heavy, beating in my ears so loudly it pushed every other sound away.

Image

The siren was there somewhere.

So were the voices.

A paramedic was beside me, asking me to keep the ice pack pressed against my cheek.

Another one was saying something about my ribs and my breathing.

But all of it seemed to come from the far side of a wall.

I was sitting in the back of an ambulance in the work car park, my knees together, my hands shaking in my lap, my blouse stained at the collar where blood had run from the corner of my mouth.

One of my shoes had slipped half off.

My keys were on the floor beneath the bench, still on the little ring I had bought myself when I first moved into my flat.

It had seemed silly at the time, buying a new key ring as if I were some proper adult with a proper home.

Now I could not stop looking at it.

Outside the open ambulance doors, my father was being put into a police car.

William Brennan was fifty-eight years old, broad across the shoulders, neat in the way men are neat when other people do the worrying for them.

He had the sort of face strangers trusted.

Neighbours liked him because he took bins out early and spoke politely over hedges.

Old family friends called him solid.

I had grown up learning that solid did not always mean safe.

His wrists were cuffed behind his back, but he was still trying to turn towards me.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *