Poging GOUD - Vrij
THE DIVORCE TAPES
New York magazine
|September 09 - 22, 2024
My family knew that my father had been tapping the phone lines. Only later would I discover the secrets the recordings contained.
IT WAS PAST CURFEW. My friend cut his headlights and dropped me off in my driveway. From the little peaked window atop the garage, yellow light filtered.
Someone was in the attic.
I walked up the pebble path that bordered the house, opened the side door, and stepped into the garage.
It was hot. It was dark. The ladder to the attic was folded down, and from the ceiling-access square a faint light glowed. I heard my mother's voice. I took a step closer to catch what she was saying.
"Mom?" I said.
I heard a click. She stopped talking.
"Beth Anne?" my dad said from above.
"Dad? What are you doing?" "I'll be in in a little bit." I walked into the house and down the hallway and peeked into my parents' room. My mother was asleep on her side of the bed.
A FEW YEARS LATER, when I was away at college, I learned that my father had been tapping the phone lines. My mother had been adamant: "I am not cheating.
I am not a cheater. When do I have time to cheat?" But my father's career in car sales had given him a sensitive radar for dishonesty. So starting when I was in high school, in the mid-1990s, he would climb into the attic after she went to bed and situate himself at a makeshift station he had equipped with wires, jacks, and recording devices.
Dad's goal was to gather evidence to use as leverage in the divorce. He also used the recordings to exact revenge.
After he found out that Mom bought a slinky yellow dress-a dress he thought she certainly wasn't planning to wear for him-he cut off her credit cards. On another day, Dad traded in her car. Just before they entered divorce proceedings, in 1997, I remember my father making copies of the tapes, packaging them neatly in brown paper (this is a man I never saw wrap a Christmas present), and sending them to some of our relatives in Ohio.
Dit verhaal komt uit de September 09 - 22, 2024-editie van New York magazine.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN New York magazine
New York magazine
Stranger Things for the Senior Set
An outstanding ensemble cast makes this sci-fi thriller worthwhile.
5 mins
June 1–14, 2026
New York magazine
Where the Guests Sing For Their Supper
At the home of a Gramercy couple, chicken potpie dinners are followed with Cole Porter by the piano.
2 mins
June 1–14, 2026
New York magazine
Regina Hall Is Locked In
The veteran actress is enjoying a mid-career breakthrough, but she's “still grinding and working.”
10 mins
June 1–14, 2026
New York magazine
WATCH THE WORLD CUP WITH THE HUNGRIEST FANS
Fifty places for Paraguayan pilsner, Senegalese spring rolls, Algerian sausage—and yes, even some soccer.
7 mins
June 1–14, 2026
New York magazine
THE GAME BEHIND THE GAME
A Swiss soccer bureaucrat and his secretive transnational organization are bringing the biggest, most profitable, most politically tumultuous sporting event of all time to the U.S. AND DONALD TRUMP LOVES IT.
28 mins
June 1–14, 2026
New York magazine
If Not Ben, Then Who?
The co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s is fighting to free his company from a conglomerate he says is killing its social mission. Maybe he’s the last stalwart of hippie capitalism. Maybe he’s a contrarian who won’t let go.
25 mins
June 1–14, 2026
New York magazine
Found Family
A daughter rekindles her relationship with her stepfather in this tribute to chosen kin.
4 mins
June 1–14, 2026
New York magazine
I Have an Advantage Over Verdi. He's Dead.'
Sting resuscitates his critically divisive Broadway musical at the Met Opera.
3 mins
June 1–14, 2026
New York magazine
King or Fraud?
Drake owns his contradictions, sometimes compellingly, across three albums.
6 mins
June 1–14, 2026
New York magazine
Getting Around: Christopher Bonanos
The mighty, likely unwinnable fight to keep self-driving cars out of the city.
5 mins
June 1–14, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
