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‘What difference will what I wear make?’ Jo asked. Of course she knew she had to wear something serious — it’s not like she’d turn up in her jeans and t-shirt, or some little frivolous party dress. She understood the importance of looking respectful.

‘It’s hard to measure the difference clothes make — more when there is a jury, but even with a judge, it could have an influence. People think the law is set down, that it’s all about the facts, measureable and solid, and that’s true, but the law is also like anything else. There’s the human factor.’

The talk of clothes and the judge brought the court case closer, and Jo floundered for the words to express what she was feeling, a sudden rush of emotion sweeping her up as if she were a twig in the path of a flooding torrent.

‘What should she wear?’ Mandy asked.

‘A suit. A blazer and a skirt, dark blue, and a plain top underneath the jacket — something subdued, grey or smoky blue.’

Jo heard them talking about the suit and the shoes and where best to buy them as if she were drowning and their voices were faint murmurs from a distant shore. Those voices plunged her into the past, to the afternoon four months earlier when Ash was sitting on the same wooden step, talking to Kevin, her legs stretched out across the small gravel path that led down to the garden. Back to the afternoon she read Ash’s journal. The smooth red cover. And the pages filled with Ash’s writing, pages and pages about Kevin, about school, about Ash’s dreams… If only she hadn’t read the journal. Was reading it the act that changed the course of her life, of Ash’s life? Or does every act, every moment, have the power to shift and change the course of life? She recalled a movie, Run Lola Run, that she and Ash went to see at ACMI one night during their ‘arthouse film phase’. Lola has to take 100,000 deutschemarks to her loser boyfriend — Ash said the most unbelievable part of the film was that Lola would hang out with such a loser and want to save his life. Lola leaves the money behind on the train, where it’s picked up by a homeless man. Desperate, Lola goes to the bank to borrow the money from her father. The film has three scenarios, beginning each time from the same starting point. However, each scenario develops in different ways and has different outcomes — for Lola and for her boyfriend and for all the people she bumps into along the way. If only Jo could rerun her life from that point when her hand moved across the table and picked up the journal. If only Jo could rerun her life from the moment she stepped into the car on the night of the accident.

The shriek of brakes and a loud car horn, followed by a man shouting, ‘Fucking look where you’re going!’ comes through the front door, down the hall, to reach them on the verandah. An accident avoided.

‘We can go shopping on my day off,’ Mandy was saying. ‘There won’t be so many people around. What do you think, Jo?’

‘I don’t know what the point is. I don’t care how long they lock me up for, so anything will do.’

‘Don’t say that, Jo,’ Mandy said. ‘Don’t say that.’

‘You have to find something,’ Sarah said. ‘Something you can do in the world, something that makes it better for other people. If I didn’t have my work, if I spent my whole time thinking about myself, I would’ve slashed my wrists a long time ago.’

‘I’m not good at much,’ Jo said.

‘When I was a child, when I fought with my mother, I’d run to my nan. She used to say to me, if you want to be happy, don’t think about yourself all the time. Think about leaving the world a little better than you found it. She didn’t mean big things — for her it was looking after her family, keeping an on eye on the older people in her street, helping out at the refugee centre once a week. She used to like to help the people there with their English.’

‘Is she still alive?’ Mandy asked.

‘Yes, but she has dementia,’ Sarah said. ‘Last time I went to visit, she didn’t recognise me, didn’t know my name. Sometimes there’s a little spark, and I think she remembers bits of the past, from when I was a child. My mother says I’m imagining it and that Nan has no memories left at all. I don’t trust her perspective on Nan. They never got on.’

What would it be like to lose your memory and forget everything? Would it be a relief? Would the weight lift off your shoulders?

‘When things aren’t going well, when I’m worried about stupid things, like not fitting into size twelve jeans, I think about what Nan would say: Pick yourself up, girl, and get on with it. You’ll have to get on with it, Jo, with life. There’ll be a life after all of this is over, and you should plan for it.’

‘I guess.’ Jo shrugged. ‘I’ll see you later, Sarah. Thanks for the advice.’ Jo left her mother and Sarah talking, put on her runners, and headed for the bridge. She hadn’t been back for weeks, since the night she returned from Portarlington. Standing on the boardwalk under the eye of the bridge, she watched the birds — seagulls, sparrows, several cormorants, and other birds she didn’t know the names of — as they flew in and out of the mangroves that were part of the Stony Creek Backwash, oblivious to the West Gate Bridge overhead, to the trucks and cars on the Hyde Street. ‘Pick yourself up, girl, and get on with it,’ was Sarah’s advice. As if she’d fallen over during a game of netball, scraped her knee, and was overreacting. Jo had no idea how to pick herself up, or even if it was possible.

When she turned back towards the road, she was confronted by the barricade that had risen out of the darkness that night, the barricade that had smashed into her spinning car. There it was, the spot where metal crushed and glass shattered. Memories surfaced, and she couldn’t stop them. The loud, unbearable screams — all four of them screaming. Ash screaming. In the moment between her loss of control of the car, between the skidding and spinning and the final crash, Ash was alive, Ash was sitting next to her, alive, and Ash was screaming, her hand reaching for the steering wheel.

After the impact, silence. And then sobbing and crying, and the calling out of names. Voices and names. Ash. Mani. Laura. Jo. A round robin. Each one calling out. All except for Ash.

Jo crouched on the ground, against the rail of the boardwalk.

She heard the horns and sirens, and the voices of strangers — so many voices, are you hurt, I think she’s dead, this one is breathing, get these girls out… And now it was coming back to her, her arm reaching out for Ash, and Ash slumped onto the dashboard, a long tear of blood running from her temple, down her neck, dripping onto the floor. She reached for Ash, to catch the blood, to stop the blood. Her hand on Ash’s skin. Ash still. Ash not breathing.

‘This one is dead.’

Eyes shut tight.

Knees to chest, the feel of the rail pressing into her back.

She had reached out for Ash. All these weeks, these months, she had blocked out the image of Ash dead, of the blood, of her hand on Ash’s arm. The horror of seeing, the horror of knowing. Ash, gone.

A ship’s horn roused Jo, and she uncurled herself and stood up. Tears rolled down her cheeks.

There was no glass or metal debris in the gutter. The bent pole had been repaired. The only reminder of the accident was the small memorial to Ash: a white wooden cross, a couple of bouquets of flowers, and the faded remnants of the cards. She bent down to touch the cross. ‘Ash,’ she whispered. ‘Oh, Ash. I miss you.’