Chapter One Secretive ‘Could you look after a baby?' Jill asked. ‘A baby!' I said, astonished. ‘Yes, you know. You feed one end and change the other and they keep you up all night.' ‘Very funny, Jill,' I said. Jill was my support social worker from Homefinders, the agency I fostered for. We enjoyed a good working relationship. ‘Actually, it's not funny, Cathy,' she said, her voice growing serious. ‘As we speak a baby is being born in the City Hospital. The social services have known for months that it would be coming into care but they haven't anyone to look after it.' ‘But Jill,' I exclaimed, ‘it's years since I've looked after a baby, let alone a newborn. Not since Paula was a baby, and she's five now. I think I might have my pram and cot in the loft but I haven't any bottles, baby clothes or cot bedding.' ‘You could buy what you need and we'll reimburse you. Cathy, I know you don't normally look after babies – we save you for the more challenging children – and I wouldn't have asked you, but all our baby carers are full. The social worker is desperate.' I paused and thought. ‘How soon will the baby be leaving hospital?' I asked, my heart aching at the thought of the mother and baby who were about to be separated. ‘Tomorrow.' ‘Tomorrow!' ‘Yes. Assuming it's a normal birth, the social worker wants the baby collected as soon as the doctor has given it the OK.' I paused and thought some more. I knew my children, Paula (five) and Adrian (nine), would love to foster a baby, but I felt a wave of panic. Babies are very tiny and fragile, and it seemed so long since I'd held a baby, let alone looked after one. Would I instinctively remember what to do: how to hold the baby, sterilize bottles, make up feeds, wind and bath it, etc.? ‘It's not rocket science,' Jill said, as though reading my thoughts. ‘Just read the label on the packet.' ‘Babies don't come with labels, do they?' Jill laughed. ‘No, I meant on the packet of formula.' ‘Why is the baby coming into care?' I asked after a moment. ‘I don't know. I'll find out more from Cheryl, the social worker, when I call her back to say you can take the baby. Can I do that? Please, Cathy – pretty please if necessary.' ‘All right. But Jill, I'm going to need a lot of advice and …' ‘Thanks. Terrific. I'll phone Cheryl now and then get back to you. Thanks, Cathy. Speak to you soon.' And so I found myself standing in my sitting room with the phone in my hand expecting a baby in twenty-four hours. Panic took hold. What should I do first? I had to go into the loft, find the cot and pram and whatever other baby equipment might be up there, and then make a list of what I needed to buy and go shopping. It was 10.30 a.m. Adrian and Paula were at school. There's plenty of time to get organized and go shopping, I told myself, so calm down. First, I went to the cupboard under the stairs and took out the pole to open the loft hatch; then I went upstairs and on to the landing. Extending the pole, I released the loft hatch and slowly lowered the loft ladders. I don't like going into the loft because I hate spiders and I was sure the loft was a breeding ground for them. I gingerly climbed to the top of the ladders and then tentatively reached in and switched on the light. I scanned the loft for spiders before going in completely. I spotted the cot and pram straightaway. They were both collapsed and covered with polythene sheeting to protect them from dust; I intended to sell them one day. I also spotted a bouncing cradle. All of these Adrian and Paula had used as babies. Carefully stepping around the other stored items in the loft and ducking to avoid the overhead beams, I kept a watchful eye out for any scurrying in the shadows and crossed to the baby equipment. Removing the polythene I saw they were in good condition and I carried them in their sections to the loft hatch opening and down the ladders; then I stacked them on the landing, to be a**embled later. I returned up the ladders and switched off the loft light, and then closed the hatch and took the pole downstairs, where I returned it to the cupboard. Perching on a breakfast stool in the kitchen I took a pen and paper and began making a list of the essential items I'd need to buy: cot mattress, cot and pram bedding, baby bath, changing mat, bottles and formula milk, first-size clothes, nappies, nappy wipes, baby bath cream, etc. As my list grew, so too did my anticipation and I began to feel a little surge of excitement at the thought of looking after a baby – although I was acutely aware that my gain would be another woman's loss, as it meant that a mother would shortly be parted from her baby, which is always very very sad. When the shopping list of baby equipment appeared to be complete and I couldn't think of anything else, I tucked the list into my handbag, locked the back door and, slipping on my sandals, left the house to drive into town. It was a lovely summer's day and as I drove my thoughts returned to the mother who was now in labour and whose baby I would shortly be looking after. I knew that taking her baby straight into care from hospital wasn't a decision the social services would have taken lightly, as families are kept together wherever possible. The social services, therefore, must have had serious concerns for the baby's safety. Possibly the mother had a history of abuse or neglect towards other children she'd had; maybe she was drink and or drug dependent; possibly she had mental health problems; or maybe she was a teenage mother who was unable to care for her infant. Whatever the reason, I hoped, as I always did with the children I fostered, that the mother would eventually recover and be able to look after her child, or if she was a teenage mother that the necessary support could be put in place to allow mother and child to be reunited. When you think of the months of planning and the preparation that parents make when they find out they are expecting a baby, it was incredible that an hour after entering Mothercare I was pushing the trolley towards the checkout with all the essential items I would need, plus a few extras: I couldn't resist the cuddly soft-toy elephant from the ‘baby's first toys' display, nor the bibs embroidered with Disney characters and the days of the week, nor the Froggy rattle set. I'd pay for these from my own money while the agency had said they would fund the essentials. It was 1.15 as I paid at the till and then wheeled the trolley from the store and to the lift in the multistorey car park. I was expecting Jill to phone any time with more details and I had my mobile in my handbag with the volume on loud. Sure enough, as I closed the car boot and was about to get into the car my phone went off. Jill's office number flashed up and when I answered she said, ‘It's a boy. He's called Harrison, and he's healthy.' ‘Excellent,' I said. ‘And his mother is well too?' ‘I believe so. Cheryl didn't say much other than you should be ready to collect him tomorrow afternoon. She will telephone again tomorrow morning with the exact time to collect him.' ‘All right, Jill. I'll be ready. I've just been shopping and I think I've got everything.' ‘Good. And Cathy, just to confirm the baby is healthy. There are no issues of him suffering withdrawal from drink or d**. His mother is not an addict.' ‘Thank goodness,' I said. ‘That's a relief.' For I was aware of the dreadful suffering endured by babies who are born addicted to their mother's d**. Once the umbilical cord is cut and the drug is no longer filtering into the baby's blood they go ‘cold turkey', just like adults withdrawing from a drug. Only it's worse for babies because they don't understand what's happening to them. They scream in pain from agonizing cramps for hours and can't be comforted by their carer. They shiver, shake, vomit and even fit, just as an adult addict does. It's frightening and pitiful to watch, and it often takes many months before the baby is free from withdrawal. ‘Thank goodness,' I said again. ‘And, Cathy,' Jill said, her voice growing serious, ‘you need to prepare yourself for the possibility that you might meet Harrison's mother at the hospital tomorrow. A nurse will be with you, but I thought I should warn you.' ‘Oh, yes, thank you. I hadn't thought of that. That will be upsetting – poor woman. Do you know anything more about her?' ‘No. I asked Cheryl but she seemed a bit evasive. Secretive almost. I'll be speaking to her again tomorrow to clarify arrangements for collecting the baby, so I hope I'll find out more then.' And that was the first indication of just how unusual this case would be. Jill was right when she said the social worker was being secretive, but it was not for any reason she or I could have possibly guessed.