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Cathy Glass - Will You Love Me?: The story of my adopted daughter Lucy

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Cathy Glass Will You Love Me?: The story of my adopted daughter Lucy
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Will You Love Me?: The story of my adopted daughter Lucy: summary, description and annotation

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The eleventh memoir and latest title from the internationally bestselling author and foster carer Cathy Glass. This book tells the true story of Cathys adopted daughter Lucy.

Lucy was born to a single mother who had been abused and neglected for most of her own childhood. Right from the beginning Lucys mother couldnt cope, but it wasnt until Lucy reached eight years old that she was finally taken into permanent foster care.

By the time Lucy is brought to live with Cathy she is eleven years old and severely distressed after being moved from one foster home to another. Withdrawn, refusing to eat and three years behind in her schooling, it is thought that the damage Lucy has suffered is irreversible.

But Cathy and her two children bond with Lucy quickly, and break through to Lucy in a way no-one else has been able to, finally showing her the loving home she never believed existed. Cathy and Lucy believe they were always destined to be mother and daughter it just took them a little while to find each other.

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Also by Cathy Glass Damaged Hidden Cut The Saddest Girl in the World Happy Kids - photo 1

Also by Cathy Glass

Damaged

Hidden

Cut

The Saddest Girl in the World

Happy Kids

The Girl in the Mirror

I Miss Mummy

Mummy Told Me Not to Tell

My Dads a Policeman (a Quick Reads novel)

Run, Mummy, Run

The Night the Angels Came

Happy Adults

A Babys Cry

Happy Mealtimes For Kids

Another Forgotten Child

Please Dont Take My Baby

Contents

A big thank-you to my editor, Holly; my literary agent Andrew; and Carole, Vicky, Laura and all the team at HarperCollins.

Every time I hear a newborn baby cry

Then I know why,

I believe.

I Believe by Ervin Drake

I heard Pat, Lucys carer, knock on Lucys bedroom door, and then a slight creak as the door opened, followed by: Your new carer, Cathy, is on the phone for you. Can you come and talk to her?

There was silence and then I heard the bedroom door close. A few moments later Pats voice came on the phone again. I told her, but shes still refusing to even look at me. Shes just sitting there on the bed staring into space.

My worries for Lucy rose.

What should I do now? Pat asked, anxiously. Shall I ask my husband to talk to her?

Does Lucy have a better relationship with him? I asked.

No, not really, Pat said. She wont speak to him, either. We might have to leave her here until Monday, when her social worker is back at work.

Then Lucy will have the whole weekend to brood over this, I said. It will be worse. Lets try again to get her to the phone. Im sure it will help if she hears Im not an ogre.

Pat gave a little snort of laughter. Jill said you were very good with older children, referring to my support social worker.

That was sweet of her, I said. Now, is your phone fixed or cordless?

Cordless.

Excellent. Take the handset up with you, knock on Lucys bedroom door, go in and tell her again I would like to talk to her, please. But this time, leave the phone on her bed facing up, so she can hear me, and then come out. I might end up talking to myself, but Im used to that.

Pat gave another snort of nervous laughter. Fingers crossed, she said.

I heard Pats footsteps going up the stairs again, followed by the knock on Lucys bedroom door and the slight creak as it opened. Pats voice trembled a little as she said: Cathys still on the phone and shed like to talk to you.

There was a little muffled sound, presumably as Pat put the phone on Lucys bed, and then I heard the bedroom door close. I was alone with Lucy.

Lucy and I believe we were destined to be mother and daughter; it just took us a while to find each other. Lucy was eleven years old when she came to me. I desperately wish it could have been sooner. It breaks my heart when I think of what happened to her, as Im sure it will break yours. To tell Lucys story our story properly, we need to go back to when she was a baby, before I knew her. With the help of records weve been able to piece together Lucys early life, so here is her story, right from the start

Chapter One

It was dark outside and, at nine oclock on a February evening in England, bitterly cold. A cruel northeasterly wind whipped around the small parade of downbeat shops: a newsagents, a small grocers, a bric-a-brac shop selling everything from bags of nails to out-of-date packets of sweets and biscuits, and at the end a launderette. Four shops with flats above forming a dismal end to a rundown street of terraced houses, which had once been part of the councils regeneration project, until its budget had been cut.

Three of the four shops were in darkness and shuttered against the gangs of marauding yobs who roamed this part of town after dark. But the launderette, although closed to the public, wasnt shuttered. It was lit, and the machines were working. Fluorescent lighting flickered against a stained grey ceiling as steam from the machines condensed on the windows. The largest window over the dryers ran with rivulets of water that puddled on the sill.

Inside, Bonnie, Lucys mother, worked alone. She was in her mid-twenties, thin, and had her fair hair pulled back into a ponytail. She was busy heaving the damp clothes from the washing machines and piling them into the dryers, then reloading the machines. She barely faltered in her work, and the background noise of the machines, clicking through their programmes of washing, rinsing, spinning and drying, provided a rhythm; it was like a well-orchestrated dance. While all the machines were occupied and in mid-cycle, Bonnie went to the ironing board at the end of the room and ironed as many shirts as she could before a machine buzzed to sound the end of its cycle and needed her attention.

Bonnie now stood at the ironing board meticulously pressing the shirts of divorced businessmen who didnt know how to iron, had no inclination to learn and drove past the launderette from the better end of town on their way to and from work. Usually they gave her a tip, which was just as well, for the money her boss, Ivan, gave her wasnt enough to keep her and her baby. Nowhere near.

With her earphones in and the volume turned up high on her Discman, plus the noise coming from the machines, Bonnie didnt hear the man tapping on the window and then rattling the shop door. With her concentrating on the ironing and her back turned away from him, he could have stood there indefinitely trying to attract her attention. The door was Chubb locked and double bolted, as it was every evening when Bonnie worked alone. It was lucky, therefore, that after a few moments Bonnie set down the iron to adjust the volume on her Discman, because as she did so she caught a glimpse of movement out of the corner of her eye. Turning, she peered from the brightness of the shop into the darkness outside and was a little startled to see the silhouette of a man at the door. Then, with relief, she recognized the silhouette as that of Vince.

Bonnie crossed the shop floor, taking out her earphones and switching off her Discman as she went. She was expecting Vince; he was the reason the shutters werent down. Hed phoned earlier and said he needed to see her urgently as he was leaving for good. Bonnie hadnt been shocked to hear that the father of her baby was leaving. Vince (not his real name, which hed told her was unpronounceable to English people) had come over from Thailand on a student visa four years previously, although as far as Bonnie knew hed never been a student. His visa had long since run out, and in the fourteen months Bonnie had known Vince hed said many times that immigration were after him and he would have to leave. But after the first few times, as with many of the other things Vince had told her like his age and where his money came from Bonnie had begun to doubt that it was true, and suspected it was just an excuse to come and go from her life as he pleased. However, as Bonnie now slid the bolts aside and opened the door, letting the cold night air rush in, she could see from his expression that something was different tonight. Vinces usually smooth manner was ruffled and he appeared to be sweating, despite it being cold outside.

My sister phoned, he said, slightly out of breath, as he stepped in and locked the door behind him. My mother is ill. I have to go to her.

Bonnie looked at him. He was the same height as her about five foot eight inches with pale olive skin and jet-black hair; she saw his charm and appeal now as she always had, despite the way he treated her. Her mother had said it was her fault that she allowed men to treat her like a doormat, but at least Vince didnt hit her, as some men had.

Your mother is always ill, Bonnie said, not unkindly, but stating a fact. You told me your sister looks after her.

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