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Innocent: Part 3 of 3. Cathy GlassЧитать онлайн книгу.

Innocent: Part 3 of 3 - Cathy Glass


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Family Centre. Can you tell the children, please?’

      ‘Yes, but what shall I say?’

      ‘Blame it on me,’ Tess said decisively. ‘Say I have made the decision to suspend contact for now. I’ll leave the exact wording to you. But don’t tell them one or both of their parents has been making them sick.’

      ‘No, I won’t.’ I was still struggling to take it all in.

      ‘I’ll need to come and see them next week. I’m not sure which day yet. I’ll let you know. You haven’t got any other food or drink from contact still there? The police asked.’

      ‘No. I threw it all away when I thought it could be responsible for making the children ill. I was thinking it must have gone off, never in a million years …’ My voice trailed away. ‘So Aneta added this linctus to the juice?’ I asked, still unable to believe it.

      ‘Yes. I’ve given the food diary to the police. They may want to speak to you about it.’

      ‘They don’t think I had anything to do with making the children sick?’ I asked, horrified.

      ‘No, but they may need to clarify some of your entries. Your writing isn’t that clear in places and the diary may be used in evidence.’

      ‘Sorry, I scribbled down notes as I went, never thinking it would lead to this.’

      ‘Also, can you confirm that Molly and Kit haven’t been ill since food and drink was banned from contact.’

      ‘That’s right, they haven’t,’ I said. ‘But the rash and breathing difficulties that Kit developed – when I had to take him to hospital – how does that fit in?’

      I went cold as I remembered how I’d given Kit the juice drink the day he’d been very ill, lots of it. He’d wanted juice and, unaware it contained the poison, I’d given him as much as he wanted, unwittingly making him worse. My anger flared. Aneta had been using me as a tool to continue her evil actions, but why had she done it at all?

      ‘Why would anyone want to make their children ill?’ I asked. ‘I don’t understand.’

      ‘FDIA is a mental illness,’ Tess said. ‘The care-giver exaggerates the child’s illness or intentionally makes them sick in order to gain attention and sympathy. The victim is usually a child. FDIA is relatively rare but difficult to identify, so cases can easily be missed. It is most commonly found in parents of small children. One in ten victims dies as a result.’

      I shuddered. ‘Good grief. It could have killed Molly and Kit.’ I felt weak at the knees. Then my thoughts turned to the miserable childhoods they’d endured – always being sick. ‘Those poor children,’ I said. ‘They’ve been ill for most of their lives and needn’t have been. I can’t believe this.’

      ‘I know. We’re struggling here too. Kit and Molly will be staying with you for now.’

      ‘You’ve decided that?’

      ‘Yes, I’ve spoken to my manager. In view of what’s come to light, the probability is that Aneta made up the allegations about you to deflect attention away from herself. The police are of the same opinion.’

      ‘That’s a relief. My family and I were very upset at the suggestion we could have intentionally harmed the children.’

      ‘She’s due here soon,’ I said. ‘Shall I tell her?’

      ‘Yes, please. She can phone me if she has any questions. But I can only tell her what I’ve told you. I’ll know more once both parents have been interviewed by the police. Thank you, Cathy.’

      ‘For what?’

      ‘Keeping a very detailed food diary and making the connection.’

      ‘It was you who suggested the food diary,’ I pointed out. ‘I was logging everything, thinking I was going to be able to identify a food allergy. It would never have occurred to me it could be this.’

      ‘No. The doctors might have eventually made a connection, but by then it might have been too late. The social services became involved because of Kit’s broken arm and other suspected non-accidental injuries. None of us considered FDIA, although personally I thought there was more going on with Aneta than met the eye. But that was a hunch, no more. Thankfully, Filip brought in the bottle of linctus.’

      ‘How did he know what it was? Did he just find it?’

      ‘So you don’t think he was involved?’

      ‘It’s unlikely. He was very upset and remorseful when he came in, and is blaming himself for not spotting sooner that something was wrong. But that’s for the police investigation to determine. I’ll be in touch with a date to visit you and the children next week.’

      ‘All right. Thank you.’

      Stunned from what I’d heard, I returned to the living room and, replacing the handset in its cradle, sat heavily on the sofa.

      ‘Look what we’ve made!’ Molly cried, proudly showing me a construction from building bricks.

      ‘Very nice.’

      ‘Kit helped.’

      ‘Good.’

      I remembered Tess telling me when she’d first placed Molly and Kit that Aneta had taken the children to the doctor and hospital dozens and dozens of times. It was horrendous to think what they had been through. All those unnecessary tests, some of which had been very uncomfortable, when the doctors had tried to establish the cause of their illness. It would be upsetting enough to have to put a child through all of that if it was necessary and they were genuinely ill, but it was monstrous if they were not and it was avoidable. Molly’s and Kit’s young lives had been blighted by sickness, and it was their mother’s fault!


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