Damaged. Cathy Glass

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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_721dbda8-fbed-5044-8935-5d57cfce1dc5">Chapter Fourteen: The Park

       Chapter Fifteen: Past And Present

       Chapter Sixteen: The Spider’s Web

       Chapter Seventeen: Nosy Cow

       Chapter Eighteen: Fire

       Chapter Nineteen: Special Little Girl

       Chapter Twenty: Christmas

       Chapter Twenty-One: A New Year

       Chapter Twenty-Two: The Fox And The Owl

       Chapter Twenty-Three: Granddad

       Chapter Twenty-Four: Friends

       Chapter Twenty-Five: Denial

       Chapter Twenty-Six: Links In The Chain

       Chapter Twenty-Seven: Silence

       Chapter Twenty-Eight: Assessment

       Chapter Twenty-Nine: Therapy

       Chapter Thirty: Green Grass And Brown Cows

       Chapter Thirty-One: High Oaks

       Chapter Thirty-Two: Overnight Stay

       Chapter Thirty-Three: Goodbye

       Chapter Thirty-Four: Progress

       Epilogue

       Suggested Topics for Reading-group Discussion

       Acknowledgements

       Sample Chapter

       Cathy Glass

       Moving Memoirs eNewsletter

       About the Publisher

       Prologue

      In Britain today, there are over 75,000 children in the care of their local authority. These are the lucky ones. Concealed behind this figure are countless others; defiled, abused and undiscovered by Social Services, often until it’s too late.

      This book tells the true story of my relationship with one of these children, an eight-year-old girl called Jodie. I was her foster carer, and she was the most disturbed child I had ever looked after. I hope my story will provide an insight into the often hidden world of foster care and the Social Services.

      Certain details, including names, places and dates, have been changed to protect the innocent.

      The phone rang. It was Jill, my link worker from the fostering agency.

      ‘Cathy, it’s not two carers, but five,’ she said. ‘Five, since coming into care four months ago.’

      ‘Good heavens.’ I was astonished. ‘And she’s only eight? That must have taken some doing. What’s she been up to?’

      ‘I’m not sure yet. But Social Services want a pre-placement meeting, to be certain she doesn’t have another move. Are you still interested?’

      ‘I don’t know enough not to be. When?’

      ‘Tomorrow at ten.’

      ‘All right, see you there. What’s her name?’

      ‘Jodie. Thanks, Cathy. If you can’t do it, no one can.’

      I warmed to the flattery; it was nice to be appreciated after all this time. Jill and I had been working together now for four years and had established a good relationship. As a link worker for Homefinders Fostering Agency, Jill was the bridge between the foster carers and social workers dealing with a particular case. She coordinated the needs of the Social Services with the foster carers, and provided support and help as it was needed. An inexperienced foster carer often needed a lot of back-up and explanations of the system from their link worker. As Jill and I had been working together for some time, and I was an experienced foster carer, we were used to each other and got on well. If Jill thought I was up to the task, then I was sure she meant it.

      But a pre-placement meeting? It had to be bad. Usually the children just arrived, with a brief introduction if they’d come from another carer, or with only the clothes they stood in if they’d come from home. I’d had plenty of experience of both, but none at all of a pre-placement meeting. Usually there was a meeting between everyone involved in the case as soon as the child had been placed in foster care, but I’d never been to one held beforehand.

      It was my first inkling of how unusual this case was.

      The following morning, we went about our normal, quiet routine of everyone getting up and dressed and having breakfast, and then the children made their way off to school. I had two children of my own, Adrian who was seventeen, and Paula, the youngest at thirteen. Lucy, who had joined the family as

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