*****
   Opening
   Julie is asleep, rather dishevelled, at the table. Karen enters very quietly.
   KAREN  Julie?
   JULIE  Uh? (Struggling awake) Karen! You startled me.
   KAREN  Sorry. The door was ajar so I just came in.
   JULIE  Was it? But I'm glad you did. I don't usually nod off like that. 
   KAREN  Well, it was a late night. Though you left before I did. First time I've known you to!
   JULIE  Yes, I thought I'd told everyone. I had to go to Dad's leaving party.
   KAREN  Must have been when I was getting a round. Any good?
   JULIE  Not really my scene. Might have been better if Joe had come with me. But I'd promised - had to show willing.
   KAREN  From the state you're in this morning, I'd say very willing.
   JULIE  People kept pressing drinks on me, and I couldn't very well offend them by refusing every time.
   KAREN  You could have asked for a Coke or something.
   JULIE  Not when they'd actually thrust a glass into my hand.
   KAREN  Did Joe say why he wasn't coming?
   JULIE  No need. He's never got on with Dad. And Dad has no time for him at all - calls him a spoilt brat, a waster.
   KAREN  To his face?
   JULIE  No, of course not. But he's never made much effort to be more than barely civil.
   KAREN  I sometimes think your father is too straightforward for his own good.
   JULIE  Funny, that's exactly what Mum says.
   KAREN  What does she think of Joe?
   JULIE  She rather likes him. He does go out of his way to be specially charming with her.
   KAREN  Yes, he can turn it on when he wants, can't he? Anyway, what time did you eventually get in?
   JULIE  Must have been about two. Then I couldn't get to sleep for ages. I can't have had more than a couple of hours before Mum and Dad went out and the door slamming woke me up.
   KAREN  What time was that?
   JULIE  About eight. They had to go and make some arrangements about the move.
   KAREN  How come the door was open, then?
   JULIE  I had to get in some supplies. And I thought the walk might clear my head a bit. But I must still have been really dopey to leave the door like that. Though I was loaded up a bit when I came in, and then something on the radio drove everything else out of my mind.
   KAREN  What was that?
   JULIE  The crash on your street last night.
   KAREN  Yes, it was bad - a real mess.
   JULIE  What actually happened? The report was a bit vague.
   KAREN  Some maniac jumped the lights - looked as though the cops were after him - when traffic was coming across too fast to avoid him. Then a truck driver tried to dodge the pile-up, skidded and ploughed into the bar over the way. 
   JULIE  Nasty.
   KAREN  They're still arguing over whether they can pull the wreck out without bringing half the building down. Probably have to prop it up first.
   JULIE  At least that's only property. The report said dozens of people were hurt, some of them quite badly, and seven or eight killed outright.
   KAREN  Yes, there was a party just coming out of the bar at the time. You don't win an argument with a thirty-ton truck. And the people in the cars didn't stand a chance.
   JULIE  That's the third crash at that junction this year. I'm beginning to think Dad's right moving out of the area. You never know who's going to be next.
   KAREN  That isn't the reason, is it?
   JULIE  No, not really. He's been after a promotion for years. And there's no chance of getting it here.
   KAREN  So Joe said. That's why he was planning to leave, too.
   JULIE  (affronted) He never told me.
   KAREN  Must have slipped his mind.
   JULIE  (getting suspicious) You don't let a thing like that just slip your mind. How long have you known?
   KAREN  About a month, I suppose. 
   JULIE  No one else has mentioned it.
   KAREN  I think he was hoping to keep it quiet. There were some loose ends that might have been a bit awkward to tie up.
   JULIE  (simmering) Loose ends, eh? And I suppose I was one of them.
   KAREN  Now Julie, don't get upset. I'm sure he'd have got round to telling you before he went.
   JULIE  But he told you a month ago. That seems to say something about his priorities.
   KAREN  He probably thought he'd told you already.
   JULIE  Oh, no. You don't get a way with that one. If he'd told me he wouldn't have had any doubt about it. I'd have seen to that.
   KAREN  For goodness' sake calm down. You're getting a bit illogical.
   JULIE  (furious) Don't expect me to be logical! Not about a two-timing rat like that. And I thought you were supposed to be my friend!
   KAREN  Two-timing? Honestly, Julie, it wasn't like that at all. We just had an occasional bit of fun together. 
   JULIE  (bitterly) Yes, I know about his "bits of fun." They're not so funny when the chickens come home to roost. All right for him, I suppose. He can just walk away from his responsibilities.
   KAREN  Responsibilities?
   JULIE  (subdued) Yes.
   KAREN  Oh, so that's it, is it? 
   JULIE  Mum'll be furious. And Dad will hit the roof. He's always going on about teenage promiscuity. As if everyone wasn't doing it these days.
   KAREN  Well, not everyone. Not by a long chalk.
   JULIE  (sarcastic) So I suppose you're strictly virginal?
   KAREN  As it happens, yes.
   JULIE  And you can afford to sneer at the "fallen woman."
   KAREN  (conciliatory) Julie, who's sneering? No one talks about fallen women these days. I know as well as you do what the pressures are - inside and out. They're agonising at times.
   JULIE  But you've resisted.
   KAREN  Let's say I've been lucky. Opportunity and real inclination never coincided.
   JULIE  You call that luck?
   KAREN  On the whole, yes. In my saner moments. Though there's a nagging wonder about what I'm missing.
   JULIE  A hell of a problem, for a start.
   KAREN  You wouldn't consider …
   JULIE  No, I wouldn't. I know Mum and Dad. As it is, they'll explode at first, but they'll soon come round. Do everything they can to help. Not if I got rid of it. "Abortion is murder," and all that. I couldn't do that to them. But I'm certainly going to give Joe a piece of my mind.
   KAREN  I'm afraid you may have a bit of a problem there.
   JULIE  Why, he hasn't left town already, has he?
   KAREN  It's more difficult than that. You may find it hard to take.
   JULIE  Oh, stop being so mysterious, and come out with it!
   KAREN  All right. You see, Joe gave me a lift home last night.
   JULIE  Another of his "bits of fun," I suppose.
   KAREN  No, it wasn't like that at all. He was actually rather worried about leaving you behind - wondering how you'd take it, saying how much he'd miss you, that he'd be lucky to find anyone half so nice …
   JULIE  For goodness' sake cut the flannel, and get to the point.
   KAREN  So perhaps his reactions were a bit slower than they might have been. He couldn't stop in time to avoid the crash. Then two other cars piled in behind, and the skidding truck crushed the lot.
   JULIE  But the report said that everyone in the cars had been killed.
   KAREN  That's right. We were. Both of us.
   JULIE  You mean …?
   KAREN  I'm afraid I told you a little fib before - wanted to break the news gently. Your door was firmly locked. I came through anyway.
   Julie gives a little moan, and subsides into the position in which she was first seen.
   KAREN  (tenderly) Goodbye, Julie. 
   Exit silently.
   CURTAIN
   **********
   Return to Contents
   INN MEMORY
   Characters
   Anne  A vigorous, no-nonsense country girl
					     					 			/>   Beth  Her more delicate friend and fellow-student from the city
   Set
   A hillside overlooking a rural valley
   Time
   The present