If you disappeared tomorrow, who would look for you?
If you drove away from your life next week, who would wonder where you had gone?
Who would feel your absence keenly enough to question it? To keep questioning it?
Ever since the remains of a tiny girl were found in a dumped suitcase by a South Australian highway in July this year, the question has been: Why was no-one missing her?
How can no-one notice the space a child had left in the world?
Why wasn’t there a little girl’s face on our television every night, flanked by desperate family members determined to find her?
Then, three days ago, came the information that answered one small part of that question. The little girl’s mother was dead.
The one person who would – in a world where everything was in its place – never sleep until you were safe, was gone. Unable to her miss her, and unable to protect her.
We may never know how Karlie Jade Pearce-Stevenson and her little girl Khandalyce came to be more than 1000kms apart, discarded like so much rubbish in bleak, far-flung locations where they would lie undiscovered for years.
But we do know, at least, that there is not a mother somewhere, living with the absence of her child and holding it inside her.
Mothers miss their children. It was Karlie’s mum who was the only person to tell the police that the girls were gone.
No-one had seen 20-year-old Karlie since she and Khandalyce – the two-year-old daughter who had a favourite quilt, a pretty pink dress and a beautiful smile – were seen driving along a desert stretch of the Stuart Highway, south of Coober Pedy in November 2008.