Deliver Me From Evil: A Sadistic Foster Mother, A Childhood Torn Apart
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About this ebook
Evan Waller is a monster. He has built a fortune from his willingness to buy and sell anything . . . and anyone. In search of new opportunities, Waller has just begun a new business venture: one that could lead to millions of deaths all over the globe.
On Waller's trail is Shaw, the mysterious operative from The Whole Truth, who must prevent Waller from closing his latest deal. Shaw's one chance to bring him down will come in the most unlikely of places: a serene, bucolic village in Provence.
But Waller's depravity and ruthlessness go deeper than Shaw knows. And now, there is someone else pursuing Waller in Provence – Reggie Campion, an agent for a secret vigilante group headquartered in a musty old English estate – and she has an agenda of her own.
Hunting the same man and unaware of each other's mission, Shaw and Reggie will be caught in a deadly duel of nerve and wits.
Deliver Us From Evil is Hitchcockian in its intimate build-up of suspense and filled with the remarkable characters, breathtaking plot turns, and blockbuster finale that are David Baldacci's hallmarks.
Alloma Gilbert
Alloma Gilbert is twenty-two years old and is studying to be a veterinary nurse. She lives in Bristol with her partner and daughter.
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Reviews for Deliver Me From Evil
410 ratings36 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Jul 11, 2024
Deliver us from Evil is a thriller from beginning to end. Four stars were given to this book. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5
May 31, 2016
This story contains several extremely detailed scenes of torture and violence. It is not for the squeamish or individuals with a weak stomach or vivid imagination. The focus of this story is the battle between good and evil. If the prospective reader has not read "The Whole Truth"", I recommend that be read first to get the detailed back story of Shaw; in addition, one of the key incidents in that book which changed Shaw's life irrevocably is an integral part of this story and thus reading this book would destroy much of the emotional impact of that story if read later. Shaw and Frank develop a plan to capture Evan Waller, a totally immoral Canadian businessman who is both a trafficker in human beings and has a new sideline of selling nuclear material to terrorists. They plan to neutralize his omnipresent bodyguards and kidnap him while he is on a rare holiday in Provence. Meanwhile, a parallel operation is planned by a secret unofficial rogue vigilante group operating out of England who hunt down and execute unapprehended war criminals, and which knows that Waller is actually a deep cover identity for a Ukranian war criminal who faked his own death and disappeared decades ago. This group includes several members with various talents; however, the point person for this op will be Regina "Reggie" Campion, a young woman of steely determination the reason for which is only gradually revealed. Of course, the plans and motives of each operative are unknown to the other. Thus, there are three intertwined stories within the one novel. First, the backstory of Reggie and her team and their attempt to capture and execute Waller in a certain prescribed manner which will make him aware of the reason for his death while maintaining the invisibility of their organization. Second, the parallel efforts of Shaw and his group to capture Waller and achieve their goal of diverting the nuclear material and neutralizing the terrorists' plan. Third, and equally intriguing, the gradual realization on the part of both Shaw and Reggie that the carefully constructed covers of each are just that and that they both have some relationship to Waller's activities and how they attempt to carefully work around each other despite a mutual attraction.
I was not a fan of this book although I do like many of David Baldacci's books. The two star rating is a matter of personal opinion and no reflection on the writing. I am sure there are many people that will throughly enjoy this book, I was just not one of them. I think I will stick with the King & Maxwell series and the John Puller series. Those are excellent. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Jan 17, 2016
This book brings back A. Shaw, Katie James and Frank Wells from The Whole Truth plus adds a new set of characters. The agency Shaw works for and the group that Reggie works for are both going after the same man but for different reasons. Shaw's op gets pulled when the nuclear angle disappears. Reggie and her cohorts attempt their plan but almost get killed for their trouble. Shaw forces them to team up with him to take down the bad guy. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5
May 26, 2015
I expected this to be a meatier book. While well written the plot twists are awkward if somewhat predictable. The characters, while artfully described right down to their attire, lack substance. I kept reading with the hope it would get better. Portions that were meant to startle or shock lacked impact and simply moved the story along without making a great impression. When I reached the end all I thought was "That's it? Really? Are you serious??" - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Nov 27, 2014
Should have read The Whole Truth first; however, starting it next. Waller a Canadian businessman (horrible man who sells children into prostitution, plus many other things) with many enemies. Shaw is out to track him down and at the same time Reggie is out to find him as well. Waller is on vacation in Provence and pursues Reggie. Reggie (not one of my favorite characters) and Shaw team up (among other things) to bring him down. In the meantime Shaw is dealing with his past and two women which he cannot completely forget (Annie and Katie). A weird ending. Seems Shaw always winds up sleeping with someone. As usual, Ron McLarty does an excellent job with the audio. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Aug 15, 2014
Gave up at Chapter 67. Don't care how it turns out.
That will teach me to stick to non-ficton.
At least it is well written as opposed to some books I've suffered through. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jul 6, 2014
Two organizational trying to exterminate the same man bring Reggie and Bill together in this fast moving international chase. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Apr 18, 2014
Invincible spy/assassin Shaw returns for more "wet work" except this time he gets more than he bargained for when if turns out another team of killers for hire has targeted the same person he has. A good easy to read thriller. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Jul 25, 2013
Great story, as usual for Mr. Baldacci. However, this one had some seriously sick, graphic violence. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Jun 26, 2013
Evan Waller, alais "Fedir Kuchin" a monster, WW-11 Nazis war criminal, who killed thousands of people during the war, but escaped before he could be prosecuded for his crimes. Shaw, a mysterious operative and Regina Campion, an agent for a secret vigilante group will hunt the same man, becoming caught in a deadly duel of nerves and wits to put an end too this evil criminal. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5
Jun 17, 2013
Way too gory for my taste - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
May 13, 2013
Enjoyable Read! - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
May 3, 2013
This book makes you think of good and evil. Are some people basically evil? - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Nov 12, 2012
This was an awesome book to listen to and it had me hooked from the opening scene. McClarty does a great job of narrating this action packed story that takes us through another of Shaw's assignments. Little does Shaw know that another organization is tracking the same villain, but for a totally different purpose.
I enjoyed this audio so much that I went to see if I missed any other books that are part of the series. At this time, the only other book with Shaw is The Whole Truth, which I also listened too, but enjoyed Deliver Us From Evil much more. You can also read my review of The Whole Truth here if you are interested.
Shaw and his men are tracking down Waller, hoping to put an end to his part in a human trafficking ring. During his assignment he crosses paths with Reggie and her crew who are tracking a man named Kuchen, for war crimes he was never convicted for. Reggie has made a career of this, and cannot anticipate the monster that Kuchen really is.
I feel I should warn you that Kuchen truly is a monster. There are torture scenes in this novel unlike any I have read previously. And maybe that is because I don't usually read this genre, but they were very graphic, leaving me gripping my steering wheel and screaming down the highway like a nutjob.
Without giving too much away I will tell you Shaw and Reggie join forces to get their villain. This book not only contains plenty of action, but even a little bit of romance. And I think I also have to admit I developed quite a crush on Shaw. I mean who wouldn't, with a 6'6" package of muscled man that also has a soft side? I don't hesitate in recommending the audioversion of this novel. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Oct 11, 2012
I was nervous to try this book since I didn't care for the first in the Shaw series, but I this one completely changed my mind. I really liked the characters, much more depth and believable. The storyline was engaging, and the thrills kept coming. Oh and a completely heinous villian, all made for a good entertaining story. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Jul 25, 2012
“Why do you need that?”
“Because I want to make sure I stop the pain before I kill you, of course.”
Abdul-Majeed tensed and began to chant under his breath.
“So your god is great, Abdul-Majeed?” said Waller, translating the words. “We will see how great he is to you.”
The mysterious super-operative known as Shaw is back to face an even more deadly foe in Deliver Us From Evil. Fresh off of Baldacci’s The Whole Truth (4.0 stars, Recommended) he finds himself tasked with bringing in monstrous Evan Waller, a businessman who’s dealing in sexual slavery and nuclear material has him in the crosshairs of Shaw’s organization. But there is far more to Evan Waller than Shaw knows. Shaw also doesn’t realize that he is not the only one targeting Waller and not everyone has the same agenda that he does. They all come together in the quiet French town of Provence, as everything quickly falls apart.
As always, Baldacci sets his scenes beautifully and provides his trademark sharp dialog. The action is intense at times, but the story lacks the punch of a great thriller relying on dramatic scenes instead of building the tension continuously. There is a feel of inevitability to the first half of the book, with a culmination that is quite predictable. The second half of the book is disjointed and at times feels likes some of the story that should have been there had been cut out of the book. And while the characters are interesting, they often feel too one-dimensional and I didn’t really feel any emotional tie to them.
The ending had some interesting twists, but it really didn’t engage me in the way The Whole Truth did. The characters seemed more clichéd on the second trip around and I’m not nearly as courteous about what happens to them next as I feel I should. That said, the book is very readable and I never felt bored. It’s a good story, but not a great one. I’m hoping for much better from Baldacci with this series the next time. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
May 25, 2012
Excellent read. Short chapters in case you want to put the book down after a short read ... unlikely - Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5
Oct 23, 2011
Looking forward to seeing Shaw and Reggie again. Action and suspense right to the last page. I did guess the inside source near the end. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5
Sep 19, 2011
Macabre theme, and slow action without much suspense. I'm not sure why I read it. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Aug 2, 2011
#2 in the Shaw and Katie James series -- although you gotta wonder why Katie gets her name in the title for the little she's here -- is more violent and darker than I generally enjoy reading. This could have been better; the idea of two semi-legit groups tracking the same psychopath unknown to each other should have been fertile ground for a more interesting, more varied plot. Since you know Shaw and Katie aren't going to end up dead, there's really no surprise. Unless it is that they only survive with help from a totally unexpected ally rather than Shaw's strength and quick thinking. I'm willing to read thrillers with unbelievably bad "bad guys" and unimaginably resourceful "good guys" but I want some joy in the book, some warmth between characters, some reason to feel good about the people. It's missing. On the other hand, the first half of the book did make me want to take a trip to Provence some day. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
May 21, 2011
now this was teh david baldacci i liked. this book is about Evan Waller iwho's a monster. He has built a fortune from his willingness to buy and sell anything… and anyone. In search of new opportunities, Waller has just begun a new business venture: one that could lead to millions of deaths all over the globe. On Waller’s trail is Shaw, the mysterious operative from The Whole Truth, who must prevent Waller from closing his latest deal. Shaw’s one chance to bring him down will come in the most unlikely of places: a serene, bucolic village in Provence.
this book was greate and keep you interested through out. i really liked it and this is similar to the earlier reads i've read by this author and loved. so glad he's back, i wasn't overly impressed with the last few. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
May 9, 2011
"A sharp wind smacked against the window, apparently trying to force its way inside"
Normally I'm a big Baldacci fan (see True Blue - I read pretty much all his other works before I started blogging) and this had all the makings of an excellent plot: vigilantes hunting down war criminals at large, a recurring agent Shaw coming into conflict with the vigilantes and the war criminals, settings in the US, UK and Provence...
But it just got too violent for me. I'm used to the investigators/agents/heroes finding people who have been brutally tortured and murdered - I'm not using to reading along as the bad guy does the torturing and killing. Baldacci just went one or two notches further to the gruesome side and it was too much for me, so I had to give up at page 230 (out of 596).
Normally Baldacci et al get 7/10 but the book loses a few points because:
- the Englishness of the UK characters was hugely overdone, they all talked in stereotypical phrases: "Well, bloody paper can be nicked pretty easily too" "Smashing" "Eh, Reg, you shoulda rung up... Almost shot you. Be in a funk for weeks if I did that"
- the blurb alludes to a third storyline, and yet by page 230 we've only been introduced to the lead character in that plotline... bit slow to get going there I think.
Ah well. Can't win them all. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Apr 5, 2011
I thought this was better than "True Blue" but not up to the quality of his earlier novels. It took me longer to read than it would usually take me to read a Baldacci story because it just wasn't that "fresh" or different. I really didn't care much about the characters and the plot was just not that compelling. - Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5
Feb 23, 2011
If I had been reading this rather than listening to it, after a few chapters I would have skipped to the last chapter and been done with it. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Feb 5, 2011
Another thrill a minute book from David Baldacci. His attention to detail and quick paced writing makes this book hard to put down. LIked the romantic tension between characters. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Jan 25, 2011
Wow. My first Baldacci. What a ride! I love the James Bond like feel without the over-the-top James Bond world. Definitely worth the sleepless night to finish it. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jan 15, 2011
Enjoyed listening to this suspense by Baldacci. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Dec 4, 2010
A fast-paced tale which made me consider that evil has no gradations, while good has many shades and variations.......Hmmmm. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Nov 12, 2010
Shaw meets Reggie when both trying to apprehend/kill evil murderer from Ukraine. Good - Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5
Oct 17, 2010
This worst ending. Hardly believeable
Book preview
Deliver Me From Evil - Alloma Gilbert
CHAPTER 1:
It’s her eyes. I can’t bear to see her eyes. A hard, dead grey they will bore into me, into my very soul, and then I’ll be lost. I know I’ll buckle. I’ll believe her vile words as she spits them at me, stabbing me through the heart with every accusation.
‘You are evil scum. You’re the Devil’s child. You have to be taught a lesson that you’ll never, ever forget.’
I’ve stopped breathing. I gulp in air and everything suddenly comes into focus. The black shiny car I’m trying desperately to disappear into the back of pulls into Avis Car Hire. Thank goodness for the tinted windows. Although it’s dim in the garage forecourt, I see a couple of people I recognize waiting for us. Then the door opens slowly. I’m relieved when a warm, friendly face appears and Detective Constable (DC) Victoria Martell slides in beside me, while a male officer gets in the front.
The DC is dressed in a smart black suit and shoes – she always looks very professional, but glamorous. There’s a waft of perfume as she turns her attractive face, framed by long, dark hair, and touches my hand lightly. ‘How’re you doing, Alloma?’
I’m so glad she’s there. I’m beginning to breathe more easily again. I swallow hard and try to speak, but I can’t get the words out. My tongue feels like it’s a large sponge and my stomach starts churning. I awoke at dawn after a restless night of fitful, nightmare-filled sleep and couldn’t eat breakfast. Now my stomach gurgles – I’m not hungry, but I somehow feel sick and empty at the same time.
To distract myself I start fiddling with my pretty bead bracelet as feelings of panic begin to bubble up through my body I like the feel of the smooth chunks of coloured glass as they roll between my nervous fingers. I don’t know if I can go through with this. I steal a glance at DC Martell’s face as the car’s engine purrs into life and we glide into Bristol’s busy morning traffic. She looks very determined, while I feel extremely wobbly inside.
Pink blossom hangs in heavy clusters on the trees and there are masses of fresh green leaves: spring has come early. I love to see nature coming into its own, bursting with new life. This time of year really thrills me; I’d like to be out in my back garden now, enjoying the fresh air and the pretty spring flowers. More than anything I’d like to be holding my beautiful little daughter, Ivy, in my arms and spinning her around in the park, or listening to her delighted giggles as she strokes one of our six cats.
In fact, I’d rather be anywhere, doing anything, right now, other than heading for a grim day in court.
‘You look nice, Alloma, very smart.’ DC Martell is smiling encouragingly, as the car nudges through heavy traffic. ‘Glad you were able to borrow some cash and get to the shops.’
I look down to my legs, clad in unfamiliar smart brown trousers. I see the edges of my crisp fawn jacket and clean white shirt cuffs. A formal style, so unlike my usual casual jeans and glittery T-shirts, the only concession to the ‘real me’ being my long, sparkly ‘gypsy’ earrings. My curly black hair is tamed into a half ponytail and I fiddle with the hairband. I try to breathe more deeply, as I learned to when I had Ivy, but I just can’t keep still.
Although DC Martell’s is a reassuring presence beside me, I can still remember scrawny hands around my throat, trying to stop me from speaking out, squeezing the life out of me to ‘teach me a lesson’. Remembering that my foster mother, Eunice Spry – the owner of those terrifying hands – is safely in police custody, I finally find my voice, even though it’s a bit croaky and dry. ‘Thanks, Victoria. But are you really sure there’ll be a screen?’
DC Martell’s face softens. ‘I’m sure, Alloma. She’ll be brought into court after you’ve arrived, so you really won’t see her face. I promise.’
I nod slowly, trying to take this in. God I hope you’re right, I think, because if she can see me, she can get me. The minute I’m skewered by her gaze I’ll think I’m bad. Dirty. Evil. It happens in an instant. I can’t hold onto myself in her presence. The minute she’s anywhere near I feel I’m a terrible person.
‘Don’t forget, you gave evidence to me for your statement on video, so you won’t have to go through all that painful detail again, ’ the DC says.
How could I forget? But she’ll be there, I think She’ll know. She’ll be staring at me with hatred, through the screen, trying to psych me out. She’s very good at that. And when she hears me speak, she’ll call me a liar, she’ll throw everything back at me. She’ll never, ever forgive me, that’s for sure. I imagine those steely eyes coming towards me, bearing down on me with calculating malice. Like they have a thousand times since I was small. I feel myself shudder.
‘Are you sure you’re OK, Alloma? You’re white as a sheet.’
DC Martell leans towards me, concerned. My careful make-up job clearly doesn’t conceal everything. I can’t speak I’m so terrified. Words often fail me when I’m scared, especially as I’ve been forcefully taught to be quiet and not speak, most of the time.
Then suddenly we are gliding through a gate and drawing up to the back entrance of an imposing Regency-style building: Bristol Crown Court. DC Martell has already told me that we need to avoid the crowds of photographers and reporters gathered at the front, but the officer in the front seat turns and explains they’re being extra careful because my case is big – as big as the Fred West case was, in nearby Gloucester.
This freaks me out. I didn’t die, I think. It wasn’t that bad. No one actually died because of Eunices treatment, although we often thought we would.
The car comes to a halt and the door swings open. DC Martell hops out and shepherds me towards some steps where we’re swept up by officials in uniform. Once inside, I’m frisked by security (I set the beepers off with my metal buckle and jewellery) then ushered into a little box room where I have to read through my long statement again. I’m very nervous about being cross-examined and, although the statement is all my own words, I fear I’ll forget to say something, or maybe even keel over and die with fright.
The brusque court official tells me that I mustn’t discuss my statement with anyone. Then she brings me a cup of tea and I ask for loads of sugar – I need the energy as I have not eaten yet. I’m warned bluntly that I might have to wait all morning for my turn. To be honest, I don’t care if it never comes as I dread being questioned and having to talk in front of so many strange and official-looking people. But I don’t like being shut in this little box room either, so it needs to start soon.
After so many years of suffering in silence – since I was six and a half, when Eunice first took me over – I suppose another few hours won’t make a huge difference. I just feel as though I am on a precipice, looking down into an abyss. There’s absolutely no way back and only one way forward, but I don’t know yet if I’m brave enough to take it. What’s more, now that I’m in the middle of this huge legal process, everything is out of my control.
All I can do is try to keep going, stay calm and tell the truth. At least, that’s the theory; that’s what I’ve been told to do by DC Martell and others who believe me. And there are more witnesses. In particular, two young adults who suffered as I did and who are telling their stories, too. The real issue is whether or not other people – in this case, a jury of twelve complete strangers – will believe our extraordinary story.
Reading through the pages of my statement I begin to feel extremely sad. The wording is childlike even though I was nineteen when I wrote it. I realize, for the first time, just how naive I was compared to other teenagers. The events my statement describes truly feel like a lifetime ago now, as I sit in my nice new clothes, twenty-one years of age – and a mother of a youngster myself – about to give evidence at a major trial, like a proper grown-up.
The door opens. ‘It’s time,’ says the court official. I straighten my clothes and hair nervously as I try to stand up, but my legs have suddenly turned to jelly. A witness support officer leads me along the corridor to the lift that will take me up to the courtroom. In the lift I fiddle with my bracelet while my heart hammers in my chest so loudly that I’m sure everyone will hear it.
The doors open. I take a deep breath. This is it.
CHAPTER 2:
As a little girl I knew absolutely that my parents loved me. That security is the greatest gift you can give a child and is something most of us are lucky enough to take for granted. I don’t. I am grateful to my mum and dad for showing me warmth and affection, for every hug and kiss and kind word, for giving me six years free from fear – because I know what it is like when all of that is taken away and replaced by extreme cruelty. Without the memory of being loved once, I think I might not have survived my years with Eunice Spry.
It was only during the writing of this book that I really started to understand how Eunice managed to take over my life so completely. I look back at the moments – each one small in itself – that brought her closer to my family and wish passionately that I could go back in time and change them. I am sure my parents wish the same. One thing I do know is that my parents always tried to do their best for me. In the end, they too were Eunices victims.
I was born on 14 May 1985 in Cheltenham, a genteel market town in the south-west of England. I was named Alloma Lesley Gilbert – Alloma was a name from a book my mum had loved, about mythical people and fairies; she was into anything mystical. Her family had Romany heritage, hailing originally from Ireland. I’m told they had even lived in a gypsy caravan at one time, which sounds romantic and colourful, but nothing like the reality of my mums life. She grew up in Bolton, Lancashire, and had a violent upbringing, being abused by her own mother. She ran away as a teenager and gradually lost touch with everyone and everything she had known. Her mum is now dead and I never met any other members of her family, except for a distant cousin. The rest, I suppose, live all over the place; I’d love to be able to trace them one day.
My dad had a more settled childhood, living with his parents in their council bungalow on the outskirts of Cheltenham. But he had a rebellious streak and, like many teenagers, experimented with drugs, much to the disapproval of his parents.
Mum and Dad met when they were both fifteen at a club in London in the early psychedelic seventies and fell wildly in love. Mum was pretty, with cascades of curly dark hair and blue eyes. She was extremely artistic, a free spirit, a seeker, looking to start a new life away from her painful home experiences.
Dad was an attractive young man, with his dark hair and brown eyes, and also something of a wild child. I suppose when they met they must have felt like kindred spirits. Although they were very young to start a relationship, their feelings for each other didn’t change and my dad soon brought my mum to Cheltenham to live with him and his parents.
This is where I come in. Mum had a stillborn child before I was born, which affected her deeply. It took another five years from then for my parents to conceive, so I can only imagine that I was a wanted child. We all lived with Nan in her bungalow until my granddad died when I was just a year old. Although I cant remember him, my granddad left me one important legacy: the name ‘Bright Eyes’ which everyone used to call me at home.
The first year of my life was quite difficult for my parents. My mum was poorly after my birth, and she and my dad had to get used to the responsibility of a new baby who cried, needed feeding, dressing and generally looking after. Losing my granddad put further strain on all of the adults.
To make matters worse, I was born with a cleft palate – a small hole in the roof of my mouth, near the back, which meant food went up my nose and was hard to swallow. Luckily, I didn’t have a harelip, which so often occurs with a cleft palate, but I still had to have an operation when I was about eighteen months old. I don’t remember going to hospital, but the surgery must have been complicated as I’m told it took me about a month to get over it.
Around the same time, my mum had to have a gall-bladder operation; the authorities believed my dad and elderly nan would not be able to cope with my particular needs, especially with Mum recovering from her own surgery. Gloucestershire Social Services decided, therefore, that foster care was needed for me. They had a carer on their books who seemed perfect for the job: Eunice Spry.
When I think of my mum and dad at this time it’s as a kind of grown-up Hansel and Gretel, lost in the dark and bewildering woods of parenthood, unable to find their way. Along comes Eunice, then about forty-two years old, no doubt looking kindly and respectable in sensible clothes, a mother of two and seemingly full of common sense. Maybe her strait-laced religious nature – she was a devout Jehovah’s Witness at the time – made her seem particularly reassuring.
Eunice always seemed to have time for babies and treated them fairly well, so as I was a poor mite with ‘bright eyes’ and a cleft palate, maybe I moved her heart at that first, fateful meeting? Had my parents known then what they know now, I am sure they would have slammed the door firmly shut and bolted it hard against the apparently caring woman who would go on to perpetrate the most unthinkable harm.
I have no memory of that first stay with Eunice Spry. I know that I moved into her house at 24 George Dowty Drive in Tewkesbury, a forty-minute drive from Cheltenham, for a month. At around one and a half I would have been toddling about and ‘into everything’ like any young, intelligent child. My parents and nan missed out on my recovery from surgery and some of my first exploratory moves towards independence in the world.
Eunice had two daughters of her own living with her at that time – the youngest was in her late teens, the oldest, Judith, was in her early twenties – and she was still married to her first husband, who apparently adored her. They must have seemed like a nice, normal family. Indeed, Eunice had already been allowed by Gloucestershire Social Services to adopt her first girl, Charlotte, when she was a baby. She was just three when I went to stay.
After a month I was returned to my parents. I wonder now what Eunice thought of our little family: whether we were just one of many she encountered as a foster mother, or whether, looking at my vulnerable parents, she had some inkling she would see us again.
She did contact my parents six months later for a reference to give to Gloucestershire Social Services so she could foster, and later adopt, another little girl called Sarah.
Once I was back in the bungalow my parents and nan decided they needed more space. After all, although Mum and Dad had never married we were a family. They applied to the council for a bigger place and, when I was about two and a half, we all moved into a three-bedroom semi-detached terraced house in a quiet, leafy road in Cheltenham. It was a typical fifties-style pebble-dashed council house, with a side entrance and a strip of scrubby garden at the back.
My first memory of our new house was my third birthday party. It had a clown theme, with balloons and clown faces decorating the dining room. I distinctly remember hanging onto the edges of a dark mahogany table and looking up with wonder at my fabulous clown cake.
Our living room looked onto the street and had a small TV in one corner. I’d sit on the floor in front of it and watch Sesame Street and Finger Mouse, totally absorbed in their worlds of fantasy and make-believe. I loved the songs and larger-than-life characters and would happily watch for hours on end. My mum would lie or sit on the sofa that ran along the back wall and across double doors which led to the largely unused dining room. Two armchairs were squashed in quite close together – one nearer the door, which my dad sat in, the other near the window, which I often used.
In the hall, which ran from the front door, past the stairs and on to the kitchen, there was a large, threadbare green sofa. I think it was a cast-off that no one had got around to moving out of the house. It blocked the bottom of the stairs and when I was little I couldn’t get past it, so I had to be lifted over. In fact, at one time there was a mouse’s nest in it and at night you could hear the sound of chewing on the stairs, a hollow, grating sound, which I found quite scary. I’d lie awake at night, listening, as all sorts of strange images ran through my mind. It was very spooky, knowing that a little animal was gnawing away downstairs, just a short distance away.
There was a picture on the wall at the bottom of the stairs – it was of the coast and had an old brown frame and as it was one of the few pictures in the house, I would sit on the stairs or play on the sofa and gaze at it. The hall sofa blocked the front door, too, so we could never use it. Instead, we had to go down a side passage with a corrugated plastic roof outside the house and come in through the back door. I took it for granted that we would always come in round the back and through the kitchen.
I have random memories of my parents from those early days in our new family home. My dad would pick me up and lift me above his head and zoom me around, calling me ‘his little aeroplane’. I loved it and would giggle madly as he did so. He was quite physically playful back then – moments like that were great. I really felt he loved me, as did my mum – although she was less demonstrative.
Dad would sometimes read me bedtime stories, bringing the books to life. But once he’d tucked me in and gone downstairs, I’d often find I wasn’t sleepy and would get back out of bed, pretending to be a cat, a dog or a fox, scooting around on all fours in the dark. After several trips upstairs to try and settle me, Dad would eventually get annoyed and shout, ‘Get back in bed and stay there’. But before long I’d be meowing my way around the room again, as though sniffing at flowers or chasing butterflies. My imagination would take over as it always did.
I also have a vague memory of cooking with my mum one day in the kitchen, making something like spaghetti Bolognese, using a jar of sauce. I was stirring something and, for a laugh, my dad gave me a chilli pepper to see my reaction. I can still remember the unbearably searing hot sensation and my dad scooping me up and rushing me to the bathroom for water to cool my burning mouth.
I can see Mum hanging out washing on
