Too Scared to Tell: Part 2 of 3. Cathy Glass

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then asked me how Oskar was settling in, about his routine and what he liked to do in his spare time as she made some notes. She gave me her business card listing her phone number and email address and said if Oskar or I had any questions I should contact her. She said she would see us at least once again before the final court hearing, which was set for October. She thanked me for my time and, having said goodbye to both of us, she left. Between now and October she would be gathering the information she needed to make a recommendation to the judge on whether Oskar could return to live with his mother.

      It was now after five o’clock, so, setting the phone to speaker, I told Oskar it was time to call his mother. I said hello to Roksana and then passed the phone to him. ‘How are you?’ she asked.

      ‘Who?’ she asked anxiously. Oskar looked at me.

      ‘It was the Guardian ad Litem,’ I said into the speaker.

      ‘What did she want?’ she asked suspiciously. ‘She’s seeing me next week.’

      ‘It’s normal for the Guardian to see the child,’ I said, which I was sure would have been explained to her.

      ‘What did Oskar tell her?’

      ‘That he liked school and understood why he was in care. Try not to worry.’ I appreciated that parents with children in care must feel that a lot of meetings go on without them, which is true. I’m not the only one who would like to see more transparency in child-care proceedings. ‘I’ll let you and Oskar carry on chatting,’ I said. ‘Probably best not to quiz him about the Guardian’s visit, though.’

      ‘Have you been to school?’ she asked him.

      ‘Yes.’

      ‘Have you got homework?’

      ‘Yes.’

      ‘Make sure you do it.’

      ‘I will, I’m going to do it now,’ he said. ‘Bye.’

      ‘Bye, I’ll see you tomorrow.’

      And that was that.

      Of course I noted all this in my log as I was supposed to, while omitting my feeling that there was as much unsaid in these exchanges between Roksana and her son as there was said.

      I completed my review form that morning – it took almost an hour. It asked questions about Oskar’s health, education, hobbies and interests, contact with family and friends, emotional well-being, and if the child’s cultural and religious needs were being met. Oskar’s form was a much shorter, child-friendly booklet designed to encourage the child to give their views on being in care. I’d help him complete it when we had the time and then post both forms to the reviewing officer, ready for the review on the following week.

      That Tuesday afternoon, when Oskar and I arrived at the Family Centre, Roksana must have gone in just ahead of us. She was in reception signing the Visitors’ Book.

      ‘Hello,’ I said. She turned.

      At this point most parents and children would fall into each other’s arms, but not Roksana and Oskar. Oskar dropped my hand but then looked at his mother carefully. Roksana declared, ‘I’m so stressed! Luka is ill again and I can’t afford to go back there now.’

      ‘I am sorry to hear that,’ I sympathized. ‘What a worry for you.’

      ‘It is!’ she said. ‘If it’s not one thing, it’s another!’

      ‘I’m sure Luka will be better soon,’ I told him, feeling he needed some reassurance.

      ‘I’m not,’ Roksana declared. ‘He keeps falling ill. As if I didn’t have enough to cope with already – with Oskar being in care.’ While I had every sympathy for her, I was concerned that Oskar could assume that being in care and all the worry it was causing his mother was his fault.

      ‘Shall we go to the room?’ I suggested, throwing Oskar a reassuring smile. I signed the Visitors’ Book.

      ‘You’re in Green Room again,’ the receptionist said, having heard our exchange. ‘You can go through. The contact supervisor is there.’

      I thanked her and we went through the double doors and began down the corridor towards the room.

      ‘I know where it is,’ Roksana said curtly to me. ‘You don’t have to come with us.’

      ‘I’m supposed to see you into the room,’ I replied.

      ‘Don’t they trust me?’

      ‘It’s policy,’ I said diplomatically. But of course, had Roksana wanted to threaten Oskar not to tell, she could have done so in the short distance from reception to the room. There have been instances of a parent intimidating their child when they’ve gone to the toilet or to the kitchen for a glass of water. If the contact supervisor was doing her job properly, she wouldn’t let Roksana or Oskar out of her sight for a second.

      ‘Yes. I’ve been on the phone to my sister and Luka has stopped being sick,’ she said. ‘It seems it was just a stomach upset. He’s prone to getting them.’

      ‘That’s a relief,’ I said. But I looked at Oskar sitting passively on the sofa and wondered how much of the hour’s contact had been dedicated to him and how much to Luka. I appreciated what a worry it must be for Roksana, but I felt sorry for Oskar, who seemed to take second place – to his mother’s work and Luka.

      It’s usual for the foster carer to leave the Family Centre with the child first to avoid any emotional or difficult situations developing outside, so I said goodbye to Roksana and that we’d phone her tomorrow.

      ‘Goodbye,’ Oskar said, standing, and he came straight to me.

      ‘Are you going to give your mother a kiss goodbye?’ I asked him.

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