They took my statement. I told them everything. I told them about Ryan’s history of unchecked aggression. I detailed Carla’s smirking apathy. I described my father ignoring the screams to watch golf. And I explicitly detailed how my mother physically assaulted me to steal my phone, prioritizing her nephew’s athletic reputation over her grandson’s life.
The officers wrote furiously in their notepads. The social worker looked sickened.
As they turned to leave, the lead officer paused with his hand on the doorknob. He looked back at me, his expression grave but sympathetic.
“Ma’am,” the officer said, “we’ve got everything we need here. We are dispatching two units to your parents’ address right now to interview the nephew, seize the stolen phone, and interrogate the adults present. Are you absolutely sure you don’t want to attempt contact with them first? To give them a heads up?”
I looked at my son lying in the hospital bed, his fragile body wrapped in bandages.
“I’m sure,” I replied, my voice steady. “Let them be surprised.”
I found out later, through the agonizingly detailed police reports and the hysterical voicemails I eventually received, exactly how the raid on my parents’ house went down.
After I had carried Leo out the door, my family had simply gone back to their Thanksgiving dinner. My mother had placed my stolen, locked iPhone on the kitchen counter next to the gravy boat. Carla had poured herself another glass of expensive red wine. My father had turned the volume up on the golf game.
They had congratulated themselves on “handling” my “hysteria.” They assumed I had just driven Leo home to sulk, and that by tomorrow, I would come crawling back to apologize for making a scene, just like I had always done in the past. They believed they were untouchable.
Then, at 7:45 PM, the heavy, authoritative knock rattled their front door.
When my father opened the door, annoyed by the interruption to his pie, he didn’t find me standing there crying for forgiveness.
He found four heavily armed police officers and a stern-faced CPS social worker standing on his porch.