Authors: Andrea Goldsmith
It is empty. The folder labelled SW is empty. Like the mobile phone, it is blatantly and significantly empty. But the erased emails will have left traces and Harry will track them down. He'll find this SW. This SW will not escape.
1.
On the thirty-eighth day after Ava's death, Jack was seated at his computer dressed in pyjamas. He had been at his desk since dawn, finishing the introduction to Ava's first novel. He scrolled down the screen reading the fresh sentences. What a godsend this work had turned out to be.
It was the day of the funeral when Ava's Australian publisher had first approached him. Hundreds of people had crammed into a Carlton bar after the service; hushed, stunned and sombre they huddled close over their drinks. Death is always short on supporters but this death seemed particularly wrongful. The publisher â âCall me Victor' â had cornered Jack. He had plans for Ava's work, he said. âNew editions of all her novels. Small format, like Penguin classics but much more hip, each with its own introduction.' Victor's face all doleful sympathy a moment before had perked up. âAnd who better than you to write an introduction to her first novel.'
âBut we've only just buried her!' Jack's voice was shrill in the muted air and several people glanced in his direction. âWe've only just buried her,' Jack said again more quietly.
The publisher took him by the arm and guided him through the throng to an alcove at the end of the room; Jack, with insufficient energy to resist, allowed himself to be led. The publisher sat him in a chair, put a drink in his hand and settled beside him.
âGiven this tragedy,' he said, âwhat would Ava want?'
In her various workrooms over the years, Ava had pinned to her noticeboard quotes in her own handwriting. Eliot, Shakespeare, Rilke, Woolf, all her favourites, and some lines from Milton:
A good book is the precious life-blood of a master spirit, embalmed and treasured up on purpose to a life beyond life
. Ava would want what all writers want, and had said as much to Jack not so long ago. Victor's timing might be crass, but his plan was right.
Victor had already spoken with Harry. âHe's well aware of Ava's views and he's right behind our proposal. But we need to act now.' Victor looked concerned. âWe need to bring out all her novels quickly before the public has moved on.'
Jack wanted to protest. The unseemly haste. The bereft heart. But Victor spoke first. âI know the reading public, and believe me, the window of opportunity is very small.'
Again Jack tried to speak, and again Victor prevailed. âWe propose to market the new editions in such a way as to remind her usual readers how much they've always enjoyed her work while simultaneously attracting a new and younger audience. By the time we publish her last novel â our aim is to release it on the first anniversary of her death â we hope to have a bestseller on our hands.' Only now did Victor pause, and with a nonchalant cocking of his head, âHave you read it?' And when Jack failed to respond, âHave you read her new novel?'
Choking on a cocktail of the publisher's opportunism and the fact there would be nothing new from Ava ever again, Jack could not speak.
Victor was not deterred. âWe have one opening in our current publishing schedule for the reissue of the old novels,' he continued. âIf we miss the spot then the whole Bryant project is finished.'
Jack was desperate to get away. He said he would think about the introduction â although he knew he had no choice â and before Victor could stop him, plunged back into the crowd. The mourners, fortified by alcohol and an avalanche of memories, were gaining voice. Jack found Helen and the two of them got drunk together.
Victor contacted him a few days later and after discussion with Harry, Jack agreed to write introductions to Ava's first and sixth novels. Connie would do the second and fifth, although exactly when was anyone's guess given Connie had embarked on a full-time campaign to persuade his wife to take him back. Each of the other two novels had been given to âthe best in the business', according to Victor.
With the first of the introductions finished, it was a relief to know there was another, and possibly more given Connie's parlous state. It was the only work Jack wanted at the moment, for as long as he was focused on Ava, she was not so adamantly gone. There would come a time, so he had been told, when she would fade, and while he longed for the terrible ache to subside he dreaded any diminishing of Ava herself. He struggled to erase her absence â deny her death â by keeping her close. At the same time the very fact of his efforts reminded him she was gone forever. Not departed. Not absent. Not passed away nor passed on. But the unpoetic, unlovely, defiantly unchallengeable gone.
He worked, he spent time with Helen, he visited Harry and he ran. Penned in by grief there was hope in movement. He
ran during the day and in the early morning, he ran at night. He ran through the streets near his place and those near hers, and although you can't trample down pain the movement made time pass. But it was touch, physical comfort, he most wanted. Helen understood, perhaps because she needed the same herself, and the two of them would hold each other, not saying a word, just holding on while the evenings drifted away.
Then Helen left. Two weeks after Ava's death, she flew back to America and Jack missed her ferociously. He found himself in an absurd searching of passers-by for anyone familiar from whom he might engineer an embrace. He would admire dogs on leads, admire them in order to have an excuse to touch them. In truth he wanted to gather the animals in his arms and bury his face in their fur. He considered a visit to his parents in Tasmania, but the comfort of family was not the raw comfort he craved.
One evening the previous week as he was leaving Harry's place, Minnie, Ava's friend from next door, called out to him. She was watering pot-plants on her front verandah.
âThese were hers â Ava's,' she said, indicating the plants. âHarry couldn't be bothered with them and I couldn't bear to watch them die.'
Jack heard tears in her voice. What right did this woman have to be so upset, as if grief had a pecking order. She met him at the gate and rested her hand on his shoulder. âI've only known Ava three years and I miss her terribly. I can't imagine how bad it is for you.'
And he burst into tears. He had cried over Ava's photo, he had cried into a scarf she had sent him from India, he had cried over a fox and hedgehog figurine she had given him one birthday. As for the box containing her cards and letters, just looking at it started the tears. And now with a woman he
hardly knew he cried uncontrollably, they both did, holding on to each other as if they were not strangers. And Jack found himself sinking into a sweet quilted state in which grief had shut down for a moment and his mind was soothed and silent.
He went inside with her. The dog settled on a rug in the living room and fell asleep. They talked about Ava until it was very late, then they moved to the bedroom. They took off their clothes, little was said, they had perfunctory sex and fell asleep in each other's arms; they did not lose hold of each other all night long. The following morning there was neither embarrassment nor explanation. Jack showered and dressed, he declined Minnie's offer of breakfast, he took a last embrace, he drove home. And for the first time he understood why a man or woman who has lost a beloved spouse often remarries so quickly and disastrously. Comfort, that's what you want when you're grieving, and whoever supplies it is the person you need most. Hard sometimes to tease out gratitude from love, impossible when you are clogged with grief.
Jack had not contacted Minnie since that night. Now he wrote a note to slip into her letterbox when he went around to Harry's for dinner. The action energised him and he showered and dressed. At midday he made a sandwich and took it into the lounge. He opened the doors to the balcony, a breeze floated in from the bay. It was cool for a summer's day, Ava would have approved. Any warmer than twenty-five degrees she considered uncivilised: âYou can't think, you can't work, and you certainly can't be kind to others,' she would say. She firmly believed in heat rage, a meteorological version of road rage. She used to joke she had been born at the wrong latitude and proposed a particular recycling of the soul (it was an atheist's prerogative, she said, to play around with an afterlife),
which would have her again enter the world as a human being, but one born and raised in Iceland. And no, she had never been there, but she had checked its weather patterns and they were entirely to her liking.
Jack gazed up at the sky. âHere's to you in Iceland.'
2.
It was early evening when Jack arrived at Harry's place. The traffic had been unusually light and he had made good time across the city. He parked outside Minnie's house and was about to slip the note into her letterbox when she appeared at her front door. She was dressed all in red as she had been the first time they met. Her black hair stretched straight and smooth past her shoulders and, as she stepped on to the verandah, her face relaxed into a smile. He walked up the garden path, she met him halfway; they stood there facing each other, both smiling, before she leaned forward and kissed him lightly on the cheek. He gave her the note.
She read it quickly and laughed. âI was worried you might have had the wrong idea about the other night. While I,' and she paused a moment, âI was more concerned about the right ideas â
all
the possible outcomes, some of them very beneficial, very satisfying and very short term.'
He laughed too, more from relief than anything else. âYou mean you don't want me to move in with you?'
âNot just yet. But dinner,' she said, indicating his note, âwould be lovely.' She suggested the following weekend. âThe children can stay at my parents' place.' And anticipating his
next question, âYou'll meet them in good time â if you're still visiting. And if you're not, then they're saved any unnecessary emotional rides.'
It was the hour before dusk and the evening gently cool. The two of them sat on the edge of Minnie's verandah their feet propped on the steps. The shadows in the street were long and soft-edged, the muted shouts of children playing in the park floated on the air. Jack was struggling to think of something to say when Minnie broke the silence.
âAva and I spent hours in exactly this spot. When she and Harry moved in, I wasn't at my best. My husband had tossed me over for a woman half my age, I was under assault from toddlers being toddlers, and reeling from knock-backs by advertising executives who've perfected the art of the knock-back. It was a difficult time for Ava too. Harry was establishing NOGA seven days a week,' â Ava had never told him she was spending so much time alone â âand she would come over here with a plate of home-baked biscuits,' â Ava baking? Never in Jack's experience â âand we'd sit here on the verandah and talk. If the children were at kindergarten it would just be the two of us, otherwise we'd sit up here while the children played in the garden.' Minnie had that glazed concentration of someone who was seeing exactly what she was describing. âAva liked children. She never talked down to them and children always respond to that.' Jack realised he had never seen Ava with children. âWe'd talk for hours,' Minnie continued. âAva talked about Harry, she talked about their return to Melbourne, she talked about her childhood in the suburbs,' â with this stranger she had talked about her mysterious, untouchable past? â âshe talked about you,' she smiled at Jack, âand of course she talked about Fleur.'
Jack was aware of a weird sensation as a result of this almost incidental information about Ava, as if he were being jemmied from his long-time relationship. Or perhaps the relationship itself was being moved. He picked at a splinter of wood on the step, it came away in his fingers; the timber beneath was pale and fresh, like new skin under a wound.
âDid she talk about being ill?'
There was a long silence before Minnie answered. âNot much. I assumed she was talking with you and Helen.'
Jack shook his head.
âI know how much she hated what was happening to her.' Minnie twisted around to look into his face. âShe really hated it. I was sure she'd never stay the distance.'
It took a moment for Jack to realise what Minnie was implying. âAva died of heart failure,' he said.
Minnie let out a disbelieving snort. âI think that's highly unlikely. Whenever we went out walking, I struggled to keep up with her. Heart failure? I don't think so.'
âYou're wrong,' he spoke louder than he intended. âAva loved life.'
Minnie shook her head. â“It won't be me,” she kept saying.'
Jack's brain was shovelling loose ends. âWhat you're suggesting doesn't help any of us.'
But it helped Ava, Minnie was thinking, and perhaps it helped the stranger too. Ever since Ava's death, Minnie had wondered about the elderly man who had appeared in those last days, wondered if his presence was known to any of the friends. Given Jack's response now she was sure it was not.
The man had appeared a week before Ava died. A hire car had pulled up in the street, the name of the company scrawled across the rear window. Ava was in the passenger seat, the
stranger was driving. They had entered the house together and about thirty minutes later they reappeared and drove away. Early in the afternoon they had returned. The man had changed out of his suit, and perhaps it was the more casual clothes, but he and Ava seemed easier together, in fact so comfortable he might have been a close relative. As it turned out, he was an old friend on a visit to Melbourne, or so Ava had said when they met Minnie in the street a short time later.
He stood erect and tall, taller than Minnie herself, a man who clearly looked after himself. His face was kind, with leisurely smile lines about the eyes. His jaw and neck were firm, and about him wafted a pleasant eau de cologne.
As they shook hands she had remarked how fortunate Ava was in her friends.
âStephen was the first,' Ava said, smiling up at him.