My Father Built A Fake Consulting Firm With My Name On It — The Cease-and-Desist Reached Him Before Dinner-QuynhTranJP

Dad’s breath hit the receiver first, warm and scratchy, followed by the clink of ice against glass and the muffled bark of a sports announcer somewhere behind him. For half a second neither of us spoke. On my laptop, the fake profile still glowed against the dark windows of my living room — my headshot from a cybersecurity panel in Chicago, my real promotions, my real employers, and three invented CEO titles stacked on top like cheap costume jewelry. The website beside it listed Matthew Kalman as founder, me as silent partner, and a Midtown mailing address that belonged to a UPS Store. Dad cleared his throat. “Emma?” he said, like I had called to ask about weather.

The strange thing was not the fraud. Not really. It was the familiarity of it. Dad had spent my childhood treating anything I built as something the family could lean on without asking. When I was twelve, he handed me a dead radio from the garage because he didn’t want to pay to replace it. Dust coated the back panel. One screw rolled into the sugar bowl on Grandma’s counter. I sat there in socks, knees tucked under me, and made it crackle back to life while Brooke practiced smiling in the microwave door before a school dance. Dad ruffled my hair once, called me his little mechanic, then spent dinner telling everyone Brooke looked like a movie star in blue satin. That was the pattern. My hands made the thing work. Brooke got the story.

By high school, he had upgraded from casual dismissal to using me as household infrastructure. Printer jammed, call Emma. Wi-Fi down, call Emma. Grandma’s laptop locked up, send it with Emma. At 16, I spent a Saturday on the floor under Dad’s desk untangling cables while he stood over me on the phone bragging to his golf buddy about Brooke’s cheerleading scholarship prospects. The carpet left red ridges across my kneecaps. Dust crawled into my throat. A brass desk lamp warmed the side of my face until sweat ran down behind my ear. When the monitor flickered back on, Dad slapped the wood once, said, “See? Knew she’d figure it out,” and went right back to talking about Brooke.

Image

College only changed the size of the room. Family dinners turned into holiday drop-ins, then shorter holiday drop-ins, then mostly texts from Mom asking if I could look at something technical while Brooke posted maternity photos in coordinated beige. Underneath all that silence, something primitive kept trying anyway. Every promotion, every bonus, every new line on my résumé went unannounced not because I was humble, but because somewhere in the ribcage there was still a small, embarrassing hope that one day they would notice without being told. Grandma was the only one who ever did. She would squint over her glasses, ask what exactly I was building now, and wait for the answer.

That was why the fake profile made my skin go cold in a different way. It wasn’t just theft. It was the final version of the family logic I had been living inside for years: if Emma is useful, then Emma is available. If she built something, then it can be borrowed. If her name opens doors, then the door belongs to everyone standing behind her.

My hand stayed on the mouse while Dad started talking too fast. “This isn’t what it looks like,” he said. “Nobody’s stealing anything. It’s just a vehicle. A family venture. We were trying to create something that benefits everybody.” Ice clicked again. In the background, a woman laughed — not Mom’s laugh. Brooke’s. Thin, bright, already defensive.

“You used my photo,” I said.

“Public photo.”

“My work history.”

“That part’s true.”

“My name.”

A pause. Then the line that made something inside me go flat and clean.

“Emma, your name belongs to this family too.”

The room around me sharpened all at once. The hum of the refrigerator. The hiss from my radiator. The tiny blue blink on my modem. My thumb pressed so hard into the edge of my phone that the nail bed blanched white.

“That was a bad sentence,” I said.

Dad exhaled through his nose like I was being difficult at one of Brooke’s baby showers. “Don’t make this ugly. Brooke and Tyler are upside down on the SUV. The startup market is dead. Your mother’s kitchen contractor wants another deposit. Everybody’s trying to stay afloat. We thought this was one smart thing we could do together.”

From somewhere off to the side, Brooke said, loud enough to carry, “She’s acting like we stole nuclear codes.”

I ended the call before my voice had a chance to do anything reckless.

The next forty minutes smelled like printer heat and black coffee. Screens multiplied across my dining table. State incorporation records. Domain registration. Archived copies of the site. The investor intake form. A downloadable PDF brochure that used my career history nearly word for word from an old conference bio. At the bottom of page three, in a serif font trying very hard to look expensive, sat a line that turned my stomach harder than the fake titles had: Strategic access through Emma Whitaker’s private industry relationships and elite financial-sector leadership. They weren’t just borrowing my name. They were selling proximity to me.

The hidden layer showed up one click later. The brochure metadata had an author name attached. Brooke Tyler Mason. Not Brooke’s husband. Brooke herself. She had built the deck on her laptop, exported it to PDF, and emailed it to at least six people. The forwarding chain sat in the cached preview like muddy footprints across a white floor. Mom had contributed too. There was a glossy founder bio for Dad built from fragments she had clearly fed him — “raised a daughter who now leads major cybersecurity operations,” “deep family values,” “trusted, discreet, relationship-driven.” Even her version of me was a credential she could pin to someone else’s lapel.

One investor had already replied asking for availability on Thursday. Another had requested a proposal for a regional bank in Connecticut. A third message, shorter and nastier, wanted proof I was personally advising the firm before discussing numbers. Dad had been pushing this for weeks, maybe longer. The Christmas performance, the soft voices, the extra hugs — all of it now looked less like guilt and more like customer service.

By 10:06 a.m., my lawyer was on speaker. Mara Cohen had a dry voice, silver reading glasses, and the kind of calm that made men in bad suits sit straighter without knowing why. She listened to six minutes of facts, asked three questions, then said, “Do not reply to anyone in the family. Save every page. Send me the domain, the LLC filing, the cached deck, and your father’s number.”

At 10:14, I forwarded the brochure.

At 10:19, she called back.

“Page three,” she said.

Read More