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Beyond Fear
Beyond Fear
Beyond Fear
Ebook428 pages7 hours

Beyond Fear

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Winner of two Davitt Awards for Australian Women Crime Writers. Described by Sisters in Crime as 'deliciously scary'.

 

When four women set out for their annual weekend getaway, all they have in mind is a few laughs and a break from routine. But simmering dark secrets could stop them from ever returning home.

Jodie chose the secluded cabin for this year's event, unaware it was once the focus of a police investigation – and that it, like her, nurtures a violent past.

The isolation triggers frightening flashbacks to a crime Jodie almost didn't survive as a teenager. Shaken by memories she thought were buried deep, she is worried when she finds evidence of trespassers. But her suspicion infects the mood of the weekend, starting an argument makes Jodie begin to doubt herself.

Paranoia, though, doesn't mean you're wrong and when the cabin's terrifying history resurfaces, Jodie's fear might be the only thing that will her and her friends ... or get them killed.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherJaye Ford
Release dateApr 20, 2020
ISBN9780648753209
Author

Jaye Ford

Jaye Ford is a bestselling Australian author of five chilling suspense novels. Her first thriller, Beyond Fear, won two Davitt Awards for Australian women crime writers (Best Debut and Readers’ Choice) and was the highest selling debut crime novel in Australia in 2011. When she needs a break from the dark stuff, she writes romantic comedy under the name Janette Paul. Her novels have been translated into numerous languages and recorded as audio books. Before writing fiction, she was a news and sport journalist, the first woman to host a live national sport show on Australian TV and ran her own public relations consultancy. She now writes fiction fulltime from her home in Newcastle, NSW, Australia where she loves to turn places she knows and loves into crime scenes. To sign up for Jaye's newsletter, visit her website at www.jayefordauthor.com Email Jaye at: jaye@jayefordauthor.com Or connect on social media: www.facebook.com/JayeFordauthor instagram.com/jayeford50

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    Beyond Fear - Jaye Ford

    1

    They were going north this year, just the four of them heading out again on a cold, winter’s Friday night. Jodie smiled as she drove, watching the lights of a small town disappear in her rear-view mirror.

    There was a hint of mist in the bush on either side of the road and her headlights cut an eerie passage in the darkness. Like a tunnel guiding her safely through the night.

    Or straight to hell.

    Jodie knew about taking the wrong tunnel – and the ugly places it could lead you. But that wasn’t going to happen, she told herself. Not now. Not with these friends.

    ‘Here, have some chocolate.’ Louise held out the broken-up block of fruit-and-nut next to Jodie. ‘Ray’ll be on his way to swim club about now. I’m eating chocolate and he’s running around after both sets of twins. It’s great.’

    Jodie checked the clock on the dashboard. ‘James should be picking up Adam and Isabelle from the birthday party right about now. There was a heap of red cordial and lollies when I dropped them off. He’ll be begging them to go to bed in a couple of hours.’ She grinned at the thought of the two ramped-up kids her ex would have to deal with and tossed a square of chocolate in her mouth. ‘Mmm. Good choice, Hannah.’

    ‘Ta,’ Hannah said, leaning over the back of Louise’s seat to take a piece. ‘Pete’s on car pool duty for basketball tonight. That means he gets to cart around stinky kids, shout Macca’s on the way home and have dinner with Mum, who’s looking after Chelsea. He loves our weekends away, I tell you.’

    ‘Bailey and Zoe are staying with the outlaws. Is it too early to crack the champers?’

    Jodie lifted her eyes to the rear-view mirror again and grinned at Corrine and the champagne bottle she was holding aloft.

    ‘I brought plastic flutes in case of an emergency,’ Corrine offered.

    ‘What kind of emergency would that be?’ Jodie said.

    ‘I’d say no alcohol at six-fifteen on Day One is definitely an emergency.’

    Jodie laughed but as she rounded the next bend the sound died in her throat.

    A car was in the centre of the two-lane road, lights on high beam, maybe a hundred metres away. Coming at them fast. Its movement was loose and uncontrolled, lurching one way then the other. Jodie’s heart banged in her chest. At the speed they were going, if she didn’t do something quickly . . .

    She took a solid grip on the wheel, remembered her defensive driver training and resisted an urge to slam the brake through the floor. She touched her foot to the pedal, swerved left. The tyres on that side skipped off the road and a hailstorm of stones sprayed the doors. Someone in the back screamed. Beside her, Louise braced herself against the dashboard. The other car roared past so close Jodie could have reached out and touched it. The rush of wind that followed pushed her car further onto the dirt. The tyres couldn’t get traction. The rear end fishtailed violently. The front lurched sideways in the start of a fast, wide arc.

    Her headlights swept across dark scrub. Then the dirt at the edge of the road. Then the two-lane strip of bitumen. Jodie pulled against the steering wheel, desperate to drag it off its circular course. Minutes, hours, probably only micro-seconds later, the car tilted out of its spin, reversed direction. The lights swept back across the road. Across the dirt. Then Jodie saw what was going to stop them. The reflective dot on top of the white marker post glowed like a beacon in the headlights for about half a second before it slammed into the grille.

    Jodie was thrown hard against her seatbelt as the car thumped to a stop. Her foot was locked on the brake, her fingers held their death grip on the steering wheel. For a long moment, no one said a word. The engine gurgled, the white post was somewhere underneath it and the sound of breathing seemed to fill the car.

    ‘Is everyone okay?’ she finally said.

    ‘Oh my God.’

    ‘What the hell?’

    ‘Fuck.’

    Jodie rubbed her chest where the seatbelt had cut in. ‘Is that a yes from everyone?’ She turned off the ignition and looked over each friend to make sure. Louise’s mass of curly hair had fallen over her face and she had one hand on her chest, the other on a knee, rubbing gently. Hannah still gripped the back of Louise’s seat but she smiled grimly at Jodie. Corrine held the champagne bottle with both hands like she was clutching a lamppost in a hurricane.

    ‘Thank God the champers is safe. We’re really going to need it now,’ Corrine said without a hint of humour.

    Jodie felt a wave of relief before anger charged in behind it. ‘What a bastard. What the hell was he doing? He could have killed us.’ She pushed her door open, slammed it behind her, stomped around to inspect the damage. ‘Bastard! Look at my car.’

    It had come to a stop on rough gravel about a metre off the road. Dense scrub was no more than a giant step from the passenger side doors and the glow from the one headlamp still working was the only light on what looked to be a very dark, isolated stretch of road. The car itself was a mess. The front looked as though it’d been hit by a battering ram. A deep cleft was gouged into the left half of the grille, the hood on that side was crushed and the mangled end of the bumper was lying on the dirt.

    Jodie looked up as the light came on inside the car. Louise had opened the door, was speaking to Corrine and Hannah. She couldn’t hear what Lou was saying but she kept flashing her hand across her face, as though she was reliving the moment the car sped past. Corrine was leaning into the centre of the car, hugging the champagne bottle to her chest and Hannah looked white under the dim overhead light.

    Jodie’s stomach tightened. She’d almost killed her best friends. Almost destroyed four families. She put a hand to her mouth, swallowed hard against nausea rising in her throat. Her hand started to shake, trembled all the way back to her shoulder and rattled down her spine. Oh God, she didn’t want blood on her hands.

    Not again.

    Her knees buckled and she landed on her butt in the dirt. Someone squatted beside her, put an arm around her shoulders.

    ‘Hey, it’s okay.’ It was Louise.

    She felt Hannah’s firm nurse’s hand between her shoulderblades. ‘Head between your knees, Jode. Suck in big breaths. In and out. That’s it.’

    Jodie kept her eyes open, her mind in the present. They are alive, Jodie. All of them.

    The cold hit her then. Suddenly, as though her brain had just got around to processing her physical state. An icy breeze sliced through her sweater, made the nearby scrub shush. She looked up, saw a huge, black, moonless sky. Off to her right, a champagne cork popped.

    ‘I think we all need a stiff drink,’ Corrine said. ‘The plastic flutes got squashed when we were bouncing around so we’ll have to drink straight from the bottle.’

    Jodie watched as Corrine, lit up by the headlight in her high-heels and long coat, tossed her blonde hair over her shoulders, tipped her head back and swung the champagne bottle up in one fluid movement for a slug. Only Corrine could stand in the rubble at the side of a dark road after a near-death experience and do that with style. Jodie grinned and held out her hand.

    ‘Pass that thing over here,’ she said and wondered for the hundredth time how she ended up with a friend like Corrine. Jodie couldn’t do glamour. She was a high school PE teacher and a single mother of two sports-mad kids – what was the point of even trying?

    ‘So where are we?’ Corrine asked, handing the bottle over.

    Jodie took a mouthful and screwed up her face. Too bubbly, too cold, too much adrenaline already making her head spin. ‘Good question,’ she said. She stood up, brushed off her jeans and looked in the direction they’d come, to where double yellow lines disappeared around a bend, then the other way to the crest of a hill. ‘Somewhere outside Bald Hill, I guess. We can’t be too far away. The agent said it’d take about an hour and a half from Newcastle, and we left an hour ago.’

    ‘So what do we do now?’ Corrine asked.

    Jodie gripped the twisted end of the bumper and pulled on the cold metal. It groaned but held fast. ‘Well, we’re not going anywhere in my car. We’ll have to get a tow.’

    ‘I’ll get my phone,’ Louise said, starting around to the passenger door. ‘I put the NRMA on speed dial the last time my car broke down.’

    While Louise walked in circles with her arm up in a looking-for-reception pose, Jodie checked over the damage again. It was going to be a major pain without a car for the weekend, not to mention for the couple of weeks while it was being repaired. At least her insurance would cover the cost of a tow truck.

    ‘I can’t get reception,’ Louise called from the edge of the road. A minute later, all four of them were wandering around in the dark, mobiles held high.

    ‘I’ve got one bar,’ Hannah called. She was across the road on the edge of the bush, one side of her face lit blue from her screen. ‘What’s the number?’

    The champagne was passed around again while Hannah handled the rescue operation.

    ‘I hope this place you booked has decent heating, Jodie. It’s freezing out here,’ Corrine said, pulling her coat tighter.

    ‘And a toilet. I need to pee,’ Louise said.

    ‘And lights, ’cause it’s really dark tonight,’ Hannah called.

    Jodie handed the bottle to Lou. ‘It’s got an open fire and two loos and if it doesn’t have lights, I’m pretty sure we could ask for our money back.’ It had been Jodie’s turn to book the accommodation this year and she knew only too well the success of the weekend could turn on the lodgings. Four years ago she booked a houseboat – a leaky houseboat – and it had rained and rained and no amount of red wine and chocolate could make up for an overflowing loo. She was feeling more than a little pressure to come up with something fabulous. ‘No, seriously, it looked great on the website. A hundred-year-old barn.’

    ‘Tell me we’re not staying in a barn,’ Corrine said.

    ‘It’s not a barn now. It was renovated six months ago. The pictures are lovely.’ Corrine took the bottle from Louise and pointed it at Jodie. ‘Okay, but let me just make this clear. I don’t care what state your car is in, you’re driving me straight back home if I see anything that looks even remotely like a farm animal.’

    Their laughter echoed into the cold night as Corrine swung the bottle up for another slug. Jodie shook the tension out of her shoulders as the terror of the last few minutes dissipated. Nice to know a brush with death hadn’t ruined the mood of the weekend.

    ‘Okay,’ Hannah said, coming back across the road. ‘Road service got onto a local service station and they’re sending a tow truck out. I hope you’ve all got your thermal undies on ’cause it’s going to take half an hour.’

    Matt Wiseman checked out the Mazda as he swung the tow truck in a wide U-turn across the road. Nice job hitting the post, he thought. As he backed up the truck, he saw through the rear-view mirror a driver and three passengers get out. He pulled the handbrake, checked the clipboard, shook his head. Looked like the new kid his dad had employed needed some lessons in asking questions. He’d obviously missed the one about how many people were stranded with the broken-down car. Hope this lot had some other transport or the job wasn’t going to be as easy as he’d banked on.

    I’ll get this one, Dad, Matt had said after the call came in. I’ve been back two months. I know what to do. Go shoot a bullseye. The psychologist was wrong. Covering for his dad so the old man could play in the Bald Hill darts final did not symbolise an innate desire to save others. It just proved he was a sentimental idiot.

    He stretched his bad leg as got he out of the cab and looked across the truck bed at four women standing in the glow of his floodlight. Well, that was something you didn’t see every day. Not out here on a cold Friday night. He checked the paperwork for a name, looked up again when they laughed. Stranded on a deserted road in the dark for almost an hour and still laughing – that was even more unexpected.

    ‘Evening, ladies. Everyone okay here?’ Matt watched them as he walked around the truck. They were good-looking women. All four of them. Mid to late thirties, probably. One of them was all done up like she was on her way to dinner. The short one on her right had a mop of dark curly hair. The one on the other side had a pretty face and was a little fleshy around the middle, like she’d had a couple of kids and never managed to firm everything back up. The one on the end had funky, short-cropped hair, huge dark eyes and the legs under her short coat looked like sculpted denim.

    ‘So which one of you is Mrs De Crane?’ The four of them giggled.

    ‘Jo De Crane?’ he tried. More laughing. Then he saw the champagne bottle the dressed-up one was holding. ‘You ladies been drinking tonight?’ He used a neutral voice – not an accusation, just an inquiry.

    ‘Absolutely,’ the one with the bottle said, swinging it back and forth by the neck.

    ‘Purely for medicinal purposes. We didn’t want Jodie passing out from shock.’

    The one with the sculpted-denim legs stepped forward and laughed. A low, confident roll of sound. ‘Hi. It’s my car. I’m Jodie Cramer. You were close. You know, with the name.’

    She didn’t look drunk and she didn’t look stupid enough to drink and drive but you never could tell. ‘A breathalyser wouldn’t be able to detect whether you had the drink before or after the accident.’

    She lifted her chin, held the smile. ‘I doubt a breathalyser would even register the single mouthful of champagne I had after the accident. But seeing as the police aren’t here and you are, it’d be great if we could start with the towing before we all freeze.’

    Matt watched her a moment. It was said nicely but firmly. She was practised at giving direction, that much was clear. At another time and place, he would have pressed her further, breathalysed her for sure. But no one was hurt, they weren’t doing any more driving in that car and it wasn’t his job anymore. At least that’s the way he felt about it tonight.

    He made a show of looking at the damage. ‘What happened?’

    Jodie told him about the driver who’d pushed her off the road and pointed out the post that was lodged under the engine block. She was really cheesed off. It was impressive to watch. He looked under the car, couldn’t help checking out her legs as he stood up. They were lean, toned. Maybe she was a runner.

    ‘Where are you ladies heading?’ he asked.

    ‘We’re staying the weekend at a house just outside Bald Hill,’ Jodie said.

    Well, they weren’t going to be walking then. ‘Anyone there to pick you up?’

    The dressed-up one answered. ‘It’s just the four of us. A girls’ weekend away.’

    ‘Not such a great start, huh? Well, hate to break it to you but I can only take two of you in the truck.’

    There was some muttering and someone said, ‘Fuck it all’. He agreed. It was definitely a fuck-it-all situation.

    Jodie ran a hand through her funky hair. ‘So how far out of Bald Hill are we?’

    ‘About forty k’s. Half an hour in the truck.’

    ‘Can we get a taxi this far out of town? On a Friday night?’

    Matt raised an eyebrow. ‘Bald Hill isn’t exactly rocking on a Friday night. I’ll radio our one and only cabbie on the two-way. He should be here by the time the car’s up on the hoist.’ He wouldn’t leave them in the dark on their own, anyway. It wasn’t a place to leave anyone.

    Matt went back to the truck, radioed Dougie and told him not to take his sweet time about it. Told him there were four nice city women pissed at being run off the road and waiting in the cold so he should get his arse out here quick. That guy needed a bomb under him sometimes.

    Matt took as long as he could to get the Mazda ready for towing but there was still no sign of Dougie when he was done. As he radioed again, the women huddled together in the cold, the luggage they’d taken from the car in a heap beside them.

    ‘The cabbie said he’s about five minutes away. I’ll wait till he gets here. You can get in the truck to keep warm, if you want,’ Matt said.

    Jodie stepped forward. ‘We’re a bit worried about the time, actually. We have to pick up a key at a shop in town by eight and it’s almost seven-thirty already. If you left with two of us now, we might get there before it closes.’

    Matt looked up and down the dark road. ‘Which shop is it?’

    She unfolded a piece of paper. ‘Smith’s Food Mart.’

    That made sense. It was next door to the real estate agent. He didn’t know the Smiths well – they hadn’t owned the place when he’d lived in Bald Hill as a kid – but everyone knew they liked to close on time. It was a fair drive to their property out of town.

    Matt shook his head slowly. ‘It’s not a great place to be waiting at night.’

    Jodie checked her watch. ‘Look, you said yourself the cab’s only five minutes away. It’s probably just around the corner. And a couple of minutes might be the difference between getting our key and finding someplace else that can put up four people at short notice.’

    Matt scanned the road again, took his phone out of his pocket. No bars. Reliable reception was a figment of the imagination out here. He looked at Jodie. He didn’t like the idea but he could see her point. He could spend ten minutes trying to hunt down reception to find a number for the shop or getting through to the pub to get someone to make the call for him – or he could hit the road and save them a lot of stuffing around.

    Jodie watched the tow truck driver think it through. He seemed like a nice guy, despite the breathalyser crack. Not bad looking, either. Tall, muscled without being beefy. Excellent smile. But he wasn’t smiling about leaving them.

    She wasn’t too happy about the idea either. It was damn dark out here. There was no question she’d stay behind. It was her car. Her fault, really. It was the risk she always took as the self-appointed designated driver wherever she went. Her life was in her own hands that way, with her own overblown sense of caution. But the flip side was that if anything went wrong, it was her responsibility. Staying behind wasn’t the problem, though. If they didn’t get the key, she’d be guilty of another ‘houseboat’ weekend and in a year’s time they’d be discussing leaking loos versus no roof over their heads.

    She smiled encouragingly at the driver, watched him juggle the phone in his palm for a moment. He closed his hand around it, dropped it back in his pocket and looked down at her.

    ‘Okay, let’s get rolling,’ he said.

    Jodie chaired a brief meeting over who was going in the truck.

    ‘We could all stay,’ Hannah suggested.

    ‘Don’t be ridiculous,’ Jodie said. ‘A cab won’t fit all of us and the luggage. Look, I’m staying. Lou needs to pee so unless she wants to duck behind a dark, creepy bush to relieve herself, she should go into town.’

    Lou made a face, a mixture of apology and relief. Jodie turned to Corrine and Hannah. No one was volunteering now – to stay or go. ‘Hannah is freezing in that thin jacket so Corrine either gives Hannah her coat or stays with me.’

    Corrine bordered on skinny while Hannah was carrying a couple of extra kilos. It was unlikely Corrine’s figure-hugging jacket would meet around Hannah’s middle.

    Hannah looked Corrine up and down, tugged the hem of her sweater over her belly and tucked her short, brown bob behind her ears. ‘Well, I wouldn’t mind but . . .’

    Corrine shrugged and sighed, then stood with her hands in her pockets, looking unimpressed, as Jodie passed luggage up to Hannah and Louise in the truck. When Jodie closed the door, more than half the cases were still on the dirt at her feet and everyone, including the driver, looked unhappy about the arrangement.

    Brilliant bloody start to the weekend, Jodie.

    ‘Don’t worry. We’re fine,’ she said. ‘See you in Bald Hill.’ She shooed them off, waving about the torch the driver had given her and smiling like she and Corrine were already having a ball.

    She stood in the centre of the road and watched the truck’s headlights flare into the night sky as it crested the hill, then disappear as it dropped over the other side. She thought of the tunnel her own lights had carved in the darkness not so long ago and felt a chill at the black and lonely place she was now standing in.

    2

    ‘B etter save the batteries,’ Jodie said and flipped off the torch. Night wrapped itself around them like a black shroud.

    ‘Bloody hell, it’s freezing.’ Corrine’s voice sounded deeper than usual in the silence of the wide-open space.

    Jodie turned away from the road, strained her eyes in the darkness, thought she could see the faint glow of Corrine’s blonde hair. ‘And dark. It’s bloody dark.’

    ‘The cold’s worse.’

    ‘No way. Dark like this gives me the creeps.’ She stepped cautiously in the direction of Corrine’s voice, not wanting to stumble into the luggage, willing herself not to flinch at the feeling that the night was breathing down her neck. ‘We should have borrowed the fluoro vest the tow truck driver was wearing.’

    ‘Are you kidding? That colour would look terrible on you.’ Corrine’s face suddenly appeared, lit in blue by the screen of Hannah’s phone – it was the only one that had found reception. ‘Okay, it’s seven-thirty-two. If the taxi isn’t here in ten minutes, I’m calling the tow truck driver back.’

    Jodie grinned as Corrine looked up at her. ‘You look like something out of a ghost story. A decapitation victim whose head haunts the highway, terrifying drivers, causing unexplained accidents.’

    Corrine moved the phone under her chin so the light made her look like a glowing blue skull. ‘Could this face do anything but inspire a lifelong trust in good skin care?’

    Jodie laughed, heard Corrine’s husky chuckle and was glad her friend had decided not to stick with the huffy silence over having to wait behind. ‘Thanks for staying with me.’

    The light slid downwards and disappeared as Corrine dropped the mobile into her pocket. ‘I guess that’s what I get for having a strong bladder and a warm coat.’

    She said it laughingly but Jodie got the message – it was the short straw, not a good deed. ‘Sorry about all this.’

    ‘It’s not your fault that driver tried to run us off the road.’

    ‘Did you get a look at the car?’

    ‘Briefly. I was opening the champagne.’

    ‘I thought it was one of those big, chunky utes. Black or something dark. With lights mounted on top. Floodlights or something.’

    ‘I think it had a sort of frame over the tray section,’ Corrine said. ‘Fat, silver posts. Or maybe they were white. I only got a glimpse.’

    Jodie flicked the torch on, walked the five paces to the edge of the road, looked right to the crest of the hill then left to the bend.

    ‘What are you doing?’ Corrine asked.

    ‘I don’t know. Just looking.’

    ‘The view’s the same from here, you know.’

    Jodie swung the torch around, lit up the bags and Corrine and the bush at her back.

    ‘Yeah, I know. But walking and looking feels better than standing still.’ She left the light on as she made her way around the luggage, flicked it off, folded her arms tight across her chest. Beside her, Corrine’s boots shuffled about on the roadside gravel. She could smell Corrine’s perfume. Something far off made a birdlike sound. The light from the phone appeared at waist-height, briefly lit Corrine’s manicured hand, then disappeared again.

    The sound of an engine began like a whisper in the silent night, grew to a rumble then the bush beyond the bend glowed.

    ‘Thank God,’ Corrine said.

    Headlights speared the darkness and a moment later a car careered around the bend. It was going the wrong way to be coming from Bald Hill but maybe the cab hadn’t started there. Corrine slung her handbag over a shoulder, picked up a suitcase and stood like she was waiting for the bus. Jodie walked towards the road, moving the torch from side to side in a wide arc, letting the cabbie know he’d found them.

    The car was almost on her before she realised it wasn’t the cab. No telltale taxi light on top, no attempt to slow down. She squinted in the glare of the headlights, glanced a shadowy, lone driver at the wheel as it rushed past, then watched until its red tail-lights disappeared over the hill.

    ‘Shit,’ Corrine said. Something hit the gravel. Jodie guessed it was the bag, hoped Corrine hadn’t slumped to the ground in a sulk.

    Jodie stepped onto the smooth surface of the road and stood in the centre, torch still pointed at the corner. ‘Shit.’ After the blaze of light, the dark seemed even more oppressive. She didn’t like it. Or the way it made her heart hammer inside her chest. ‘What time is it?’

    The blue light appeared. ‘Seven-forty.’

    ‘I’m going to call.’ Jodie walked back, took Hannah’s mobile, crossed the road and had a shoulder pressed into the bush on the other side before one reception bar lit up. ‘What’s Hannah’s passcode?’ She tapped them in as Corrine shouted the digits, then the number the tow truck driver had given her and watched the torchlight dim a little as she listened to the ringtone switch to the cabbie’s message bank. She left a polite message – we’re here, we’re waiting, be great to see you soon. She phoned Louise then the truck driver. No answer on both counts.

    By the time she reached Corrine, the torch beam looked like it’d been connected to a dimmer and turned to low. She flicked it off, sucking in a breath at the sudden blackness. ‘I can’t see a thing.’

    Corrine was silent for a moment. ‘I can make out the top of the trees against the sky.’

    Jodie lifted her eyes, saw shadows materialise as her vision adjusted to the dark – the ragged edge of treetops silhouetted against a starless dome of sky, the looming, solid mass of a gum tree, the white roadside markers. She sensed again the darkness at her back, wanted to turn around, check they were alone. Don’t be paranoid, Jodie. You’re past that. She pushed her hands into her pockets. ‘I can see the white lines on the road, too.’

    ‘I can see you. Your face but not your hair.’

    ‘Your hair looks like a puff of steam.’

    ‘Thanks for that.’

    ‘Any time.’

    ‘Christ, it’s cold.’

    Corrine shuffled her feet again. Jodie repositioned her weight from one frozen foot to the other, blew on her hands, hitched at the collar of her jacket. It was so quiet, she could hear her pulse thud softly inside her head. Icy tentacles of wind played across her face, rustled the bush behind her – a gentle, shushing sound that was amplified in the eerie, dark silence and made her feel suddenly, irrationally alone.

    ‘Adam said you went all the way back to school for his model plane today,’ Jodie said loudly, a little too cheerily. She notched it down a tad. ‘He’s so forgetful. Hope it wasn’t too much of a rush to get packed.’

    ‘No problem. My bags were already waiting by the door. Besides, he looked like his little heart would break if I didn’t.’

    Jodie smiled, relieved to hear Corrine’s voice. ‘He really wanted his dad to see it,’ she said, wishing she could tell Corrine how thankful she was.

    Corrine had banned her from saying thank you two and a half years ago. That was a week after Jodie had gone back to full-time work, still angry and reeling from James’ decision to give up on their rocky marriage. She’d gotten stuck in traffic, had been late to pick up Adam and Isabelle from after-school care. The kids were upset, Jodie felt sick with guilt and it’d cost her a fortune in late fees. Then Corrine dropped by to see how the new job was going. She was the most unlikely candidate for childminding – the woman was so perfectly groomed and styled, it was hard to believe she had children of her own – but it was Corrine’s idea. Jodie had to stay behind to teach a senior sport class on Wednesdays and Fridays, and Corrine was at the primary school anyway, to collect Zoe, her youngest. So after that, Corrine picked up all three kids two days a week, took them home, fed them afternoon tea and let them play until Jodie arrived. No need for thank yous, Corrine had said. She enjoyed their laughing and shouting and running around. Her late husband Roland had loved a raucous house.

    More often than not, Corrine had a chilled bottle of champagne waiting for Jodie’s arrival on Fridays. Hannah or Lou might drop by and all the kids would be shooed down to Corrine’s huge rumpus room or out to the pool. Sometimes, after Hannah or Lou had gone home to their husbands, Jodie and Corrine would order takeaway or make something easy like cheese on toast, sit around the table with their four children and conjure up some of that relaxed, end-of-the-week family time they both missed about being married.

    ‘Just don’t let James think I did it for him,’ Corrine said.

    Jodie knew she’d have that piqued tilt to her chin now. Corrine had never forgiven James for walking away from his family – not when he’d seen how Corrine’s had been torn apart by Roland’s heart attack only months earlier. If ever Jodie needed company for a bit of liberating ex-husband ranting, Corrine was her girl. ‘Won’t even mention it.’ Jodie heard the scuffle of Corrine’s feet, saw her bend over the luggage.

    ‘What happened to the champagne?’ Corrine asked.

    ‘Champagne? Are you kidding? It’s too cold.’

    ‘Honey, it’s never too cold for champagne. I saw it with the bags. Here it . . . what . . . oh, bugger. It got knocked over.’ More scuffling. ‘Oh. Oh, fuck it all.’ Gravel skittered across the ground. ‘I’ve been squatting in a big puddle of champagne. The hem of my coat is soaked!’

    Jodie heard the muted sounds of Corrine slapping at her coat, the scrunch of gravel as she flailed about. ‘Where the hell is that cab? Give me the phone. I’m going to call.’

    Jodie handed her the mobile and the torch. She heard a couple of sighs then Corrine said, ‘How do you work this thing? Oh, got it.’ The torch came to life and Jodie screwed up her eyes as the beam shone straight into her face. ‘Let’s see what this cab driver’s got to say for himself,’ Corrine said.

    The cabbie would get a mouthful. Jodie grinned to herself as Corrine lit a path around the bags but as she stalked across the road, the smile on Jodie’s face dropped away. The torch beam had wiped out her night vision and the further away Corrine got, the blacker everything became. The jagged edge of sky was gone, so was the looming tree. She thought about running over to her – they could huddle together in the light, make defamatory comments about the cabbie while they waited for him to answer – but she couldn’t see her own feet, thought she’d probably do an ankle tripping over the luggage. She pulled her coat tighter, tried to keep her eyes on Corrine, felt her chest tighten, her heart beat faster. Where was the damn cab? And what happened to five minutes away? They’d been waiting fifteen already, freezing their butts . . .

    A snap. In the

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